HomeMy WebLinkAboutBozeman_brewery_district NPS Form 1090a OMB �9
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United States Department of the Interior O�
National Park Service
231987
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Bozeman Brewery Historic District
Section number 8 Page 20
Historic Name: Bozeman Brewery Historic District
Common Name: Lehrkind Brewery Complex
Location: 700-800 blocks of North Wallace Ave.
Classification: Historic District
private ownership
public acquisition: n/a
occupied
restricted access
residential and commercial use
Ownership: Multiple
Location of Legal Description: Gallatin County Courthouse, Main Street, Bozeman,
Montana
Representation in Existing Surveys: Historic Resource Survey of Bozeman,
Montana, 1982-1986, sponsored by the Bozeman City-County Planning Office.
Repository of Survey Records: Montana State Historic Preservation Office, 102
Broadway, Helena, Montana.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION: Bozeman Brewery Historic District
Contributing structures: 5
Non-contributing structures: 0
The Bozeman Brewery Historic District is composed of five historic buildings that
are directly associated with the Julius Lehrkind family and the family-owned and
-operated Bozeman Brewery business. The remains of the brewery, a four-story
brick structure, stand at the north end of the district. Across the street is
the one-story, brick bottling plant. To the south of these two industrial
buildings is the Lehrkind family compound, consisting of the large, Queen Anne
style Julius Lehrkind House, and the more modest houses of Henry Lehrkind and
Edwin Lehrkind, which were built a decade later. The district is located in the
northeastern corner of the city near the Northern Pacific Railroad depot.
The Bozeman Brewery building, built in 1895 at 803 N. Wallace, was the largest
building in Bozeman until the construction of the Montana State University Field
House in 1957. Since the closure of the brewery after the passage of prohibition
in Montana in 1919, the three-bay, eastern portion of the building with the
attached malting house has been demolished, and new entrances have been cut into
the remaining bays. The present facade of the brewery building is asymmetrical
and consists of an off-center entrance bay with three flanking, vertically
fenestrated divisions to the south and five unfenestrated divisions to the north.
The tall, round-arched window openings have cut sandstone sills and wood frame,
double- or triple-hung, one-over-one sash. The exterior brick and concrete
NPS Fam 10*00-a allB Approval No. 1024-WIS
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United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Bozeman Brewery Historic District
Section number 8 Page 21
bearing wall construction features 1 8" walls set on a rubblestone foundation,
which was laid on a 2-foot bed of washed sand. The sand improved drainage and
may have acted to cushion the building from the reverberations of the 1959
earthquake. Three water wells were dug beneath the brewery, one to a depth of
200' . Approximately 12,000 square feet of the brewery building was devoted to
refrigeration rooms. The floors and walls of the refrigeration rooms have 7"-8"
of cork sandwiched between layers of concrete. At present, four York
compressors, which were installed in 1917, are still in place, although not
operational. A tall parapet with a semi-circular nameplate reading: "Julius
Lehrkind, 1895, Genuine Lager Brewery" has been removed from the building and the
corbelled cornice is now level and finished with metal coping. The roof is flat
and has four, large skylights. In 1948, a two-story addition was constructed in
the place of the malt house by Haynes, Incorporated for use as a photographic
studio, gallery, and museum. Although this addition reads as a separate
building, it is actually an incompatible addition to the historic brewery
building. The brick veneer of the west sidL- of the brewery building fell off the
building in 1979 and has been replaced with white sheet metal.
The Julius Lehrkind House, a two-and-one-half-story Queen Anne residence, built
in 1898 at 710 N. Wallace, forms the central focus of the district today. This
well preserved, large, irregular plan, brick house responds to its corner lot
location with a wrap-around porch set at the base of an octagonal corner turret
and a corner, etched glass front entrance. The porch has arched wooden detailing
and a decorative balustrade. The windows are diamond-paned, six-over-one or
single-pane, one-over-one double hung units with flat brick arches and concrete
sills. The combination gable roof is covered with cedar shingles and features
gable end decorative detailing in wood and a second story porchette with a gothic
arch on one side and a Roman arch on the other. A substantial, wood frame
carriage house is located at the west end of the lot.
To the south of the Julius Lehrkind House are the residences constructed by
Lehrkind's nephew, Henry, and son, Edwin. The Henry Lehrkind House, built ca.
1908 at 707 N. Wallace, is a one-and-one-half-story, clapboard-sided residence of
an irregular plan with a cut-away corner entry. The two-bay facade is
asymmetrical and consists of an offset, glass-paned front entrance. Windows are
one-over-one double hung units and there is a bay window on the front facade.
The combination garribrel-hipped-gable roof is covered with brown asphalt shingles
and features a hip-roofed dormer on the north elevation.
The Edwin Lehrkind House, at 701 N. Wallace, was constructed in 1912. This one-
and-one-half-story, gable-front, Bungalow style residence has a rectangular plan
with a recessed stone porch across the front. The frame construction is finished
with narrow reveal bevel siding to the window sill level, and alternating rows of
wide and narrow reveal shingles above. Windows are one-over-one double hung
units and the roof is covered with cedar shingles.
NPS Foam 10-M" OMB AW-0 No. 1024-W 18
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United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Bozeman Brewery Historic District
Section number 8 Page 22
During Prohibition, the Lehrkind family diverted their energies to the soft drink
business, and Carl Lehrkind, Julius' grandson, had Fred Willson design the one-
story, brick bottling plant constructed at 802 N. Wallace in 1925. A note in
Willson's diary says "given commission to do as cheap a building as possible. "
This commercial structure has an irregular plan with a diagonal corner entrance.
The facade of the bottling plant is asymmetrical and the windows are one-over-one
double hung units with segmental arches. The header bond brick construction
rests on a concrete foundation. The parapet is finished with brick corbelling.
A concrete block addition is appended to the north. A small, sheet metal clad
addition has been built to the south of the bottling plant.
All of the buildings included within the Bozeman Brewery Historic District retain
a high degree of historic architectural integrity, with the exception of the
Brewery building itself, which has been reduced in size by the demolition of the
eastern three bays and compromised by the construction of a two-story, concrete
masonry unit addition in 1948. The brewery nevertheless retains sufficient
historic architectural integrity to accurately recall its early function and
remains an important, integral component of the historic district. The six
residential and industrial buildings that compose this small historic district
stand as a cohesive group that serve to reflect an important aspect of Bozeman's
historical development.
STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Bozeman Brewery Historic District
Period of Significance: 1895-1925
Areas of Significance: Architecture, Industry
The compact Bozeman Brewery Historic District, composed of two industrial and
three residential buildings, represents important aspects of Bozeman's
industrial, social, and ethnic history. Julius Lehrkind came to Bozeman in 1895,
bought out the local Spieth and Krug brewery, which was located at 240-246 East
Main Street, and carried on the "Bozeman Brewery" name and business in the large
new brewery he had built in the northeastern corner of the city, a sparsely
developed area located adjacent to the Northern Pacific Railroad facilities.
Lehrkind's German heritage likely influenced his decision to locate his family
home adjacent to his brewery, rather than in the rapidly developing residential
districts on the south side. In the tradition of his native country, where he
served his brewmaster apprenticeship, Lehrkind brought numerous members of his
family into the business as the enterprise prospered due to expansion and
diversification. The small, residential, family compound that grew lap adjacent
to the brewery between 1897 and 1912 reflects the family's active involvement
with various aspects of the business enterprises.
Lehrkind's Genuine Lager Bozeman Brewery also represents a period of heightened
technological development in the beer making industry. During the 1860s, lager
breweries surpassed ale breweries in both number and production in the United
States. With the introduction of mechanical refrigeration during the 1880s,
NPS Form 10-W" OMB Approvrrl No. 1024-W 18
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Bozeman Brewery Historic District
Section number 8 Page 23
lager brewery architecture took on its characteristic appearance. Typical of the
period construction, enormous refrigeration rooms with cork-lined walls were
constructed within the Bozeman Brewery building. Beer would be aged in the
refrigeration rooms for approximately 6 months prior to marketing. The Bozeman
Brewery, at full production, turned out 40,000 barrels of beer annually. The
malting plant (now demolished) where barley was treated prior to brewing had a
3,000,000 pound capacity. Barley became an important crop in the Gallatin Valley
by the 1890 's and the Bozeman Brewery provided a local market for the colony of
Dutch farmers that settled near Manhattan. As world lager production doubled
between 1880 and 1890, and tripled by 1900, the Lehrkind family business
prospered. In 1899, Lehrkind opened another brewery in Silesia, Montana, which
was followed in 1910 by a brewery in Red Lodge, Montana. In addition, Lehrkind
also owned saloons and operated an ice company during this period.
Construction of the Lehrkind Brewery was overseen by Julius Lehrkind, himself,
but it is not known whether plans were drawn by an architect or adapted from
published sources. Lehrkind was familiar with the brewing business from a
lifetime of experience, beginning with an apprenticeship in Germany. Lehrkind
fled Germany and compulsory military service by stowing away on a ship to the
United States at the age of 17 in 1860. Arriving in New York during the Civil
War, Lehrkind found work in a Philadelphia brewery. In 1868, Lehrkind inherited
a portion of his father's fortune and moved to Davenport, Iowa where he and his
brother Fred opened their own brewery.
In Davenport, Julius Lehrkind married Emelie Lambach and had six children.
Lehrkind's brother Fred married Emelie's sister Bertha and had four children, who
became Julius' charges after the early deaths of their parents. Julius sold the
Davenport brewery in 1 894 and traveled in three special railroad cars to Bozeman
in March, 1895, with his family and a crew of brewery workers. He was attracted
to Bozeman by the young city's central location, high quality water, and
proximity to large barley producers. In 1897, the year that the Queen Anne style
Lehrkind residence was completed, Emelie Lehrkind died. In 1899, Julius married
yet another Lambach, Lina, his wife's niece, and had one child, Herman Lehrkind,
in 1900. Herman finished high school in 1918 and joined Julius' nephew Fred at
the Red Lodge Brewery just before Prohibition. Julius Lehrkind's nephew, Henry,
and his son, Edwin, built their houses adjacent to the family mansion in 1908 and
1912, respectively.
The passage of Prohibition in 1919 was said to have broken Julius Lehrkind's
heart. He died a few years later, in 1922. The Lehrkind family operated the
Lehrkind Coal and Pure Ice Company out of the brewery building during
Prohibition. In 1925, Carl Lehrkind, Julius' grandson, opened a bottling plant
devoted to soft drink production across the street from the brewery. Upon the
repeal of Prohibition in 1932, Edwin Lehrkind brought a brewmaster from Butte
named Ottman into partnership, and revived the brewery business for a short time
under the label of "Old Faithful". Subsequent uses of the brewery building
N
f"Form 1040" OMB AWOvd No.1024-0o18
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Bozeman Brewery Historic District
Section number 8 Page 24
include an ice plant and warehouse, the Ressler Creamery operations, and most
recently a music recording studio.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bozeman Daily Chronicle, May 20, 1899.
Burlingame, Merrill G. , Gallatin County Heritage, Artcraft Printers, Bozeman,
Montana, 1976.
The Coast: The Gallatin Valley, Montana, Volume 15, #6, Seattle, Washington,
1908.
Interviews with Herman Lehrkind and Gretchen Uhlrich, August, 1985.
Tax Certification Application, Patrick McMullen, April 11, 1985.
VERBAL BOUNDARY:
The boundary for the Bozeman Brewery Historic District includes two east-facing
half blocks and one west-facing half block of the 700 and 800 blocks of North
Wallace Ave. Only the Lehrkind brewery, bottling plant, and residences are
included within the boundaries described as follows:
Northern Pacific Addition: block 104, lots 29-32,
block 108, lots 11-22, and block 109, lots 13-16.
UTM REFERENCES: ACREAGE: approximately 6 acres
X: 12/4 97 850/505 92 80
Y: 12/497950/5059100
Z: 1 2/4 97 80 0/50 5 91 0 0
Bozeman Brewery Historic District
p: primary c: contributing nc: non-contributing
Address Building Name Date Style Status
701 N. Wallace Edwin Lehrkind House 1912 Bungalow c
707 N. Wallace Henry Lehrkind House c.190 8 Colonial Revival c
719 N. Wallace Julius Lehrkind House 1898 Queen Anne p
802 N. Wallace Lehrkind Bottling Plant 1925 Vernacular c
803 N. Wallace Bozeman Brewery 1895 Commercial Italianate c
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Bozeman Brewery Historic District #1
Bozeman Brewery, looking NW
Bozeman Multiple Resource Area
Bozeman , Gallatin County, Montana
Photographer: Patricia Rick: , SHPO
Date of Photograph: April , 1987
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Bozeman Brewery Historic District #2
Brewery Bottling Plant , looking NE
Bozeman Multiple Resource Area
Bozeman, Gallatin County, Montana
Photographer= Patricia Bick , 5HPO
Date of Photograph: April , 1967
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Bozeman Brewery Historic District #3
Lehrkind Mansion, looking W
Bozeman Multiple Resource Area
Bozeman , Gallatin County, Montana
Photographer: Patricia Dick , SHPO
Date of Photograph: April , 1927
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Bozeman Brewery Historic District #4
Wallace and Cottonwood Streets, looking N
Bozeman Multiple Resource Area
Bozeman, Gallatin, County, Montana
Photographer: Patricia Bick , SHPC
Date of Photograph: April , 1987