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“American Brewery” Sign

National Museum of American History

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Object Details

Description
This painted shop sign for Baurenschmidt’s American Brewery features a patriotic shield with the initials “FB” (for the brewery’s owner, Frederick Bauernschmidt) incorporated into the flag-inspired shield design. The sign’s gold lettering and red, white, and blue shield are set against a black background. The sign is made of wood and dates to the period of Baurenschmidt’s American Brewery, which Frederick Baurenschmidt operated in Baltimore between 1899 and 1919.
Born in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1863, Frederick Bauernschmidt was the son of brewer George Baurenschmidt, who had emigrated from Wambach, Germany, in 1853, and his wife Margaretha, whose family (Weissner) was also involved in the city’s brewing business. George, who started life in America working for another Baltimore brewery, opened his own beer plant in 1864. As his family grew, his sons, including Frederick, learned the business and, in 1897, Frederick began construction of his own modern brewery. The following year, George sold his plant to the Maryland Brewing Company, a conglomerate that aggressively acquired various independent companies, many of which had been established by immigrants from Germany.
Frederick borrowed money to complete his new production plant, which he named “American Brewery,” when it opened in 1899. His business grew and by the dawn of Prohibition in 1919, Frederick Bauernschmidt was producing around 350,000 barrels of beer annually. With the adoption of the Eighteenth Amendment, prohibiting the production and sale of alcoholic beverages in the United States, Baurenschmidt’s American Brewery closed. Bauernschmidt remained active in the civic life of Baltimore and made significant contributions to support the Union Memorial Hospital and other organizations and associations devoted to providing care to Baltimore’s citizens. Frederick Baurenschmidt died in 1933.
This wooden sign is part of a large collection of brewing material donated to the museum in 1967 by former brewmaster Walter Voigt, of Ruxton, Maryland, near Baltimore. Voigt’s collection consists of objects and archival materials reflecting the history of brewing in the mid-Atlantic region between 1870 and the beginnings of consolidation and large-scale, industrial production in the 1960s. His correspondence reveals an interest in preserving the history of brewing in America before brewmasters were “replaced by chemical engineers and highly trained chemists in modern laboratories.” Voigt’s papers are housed in the museum’s Archives Center, Collection #ACNMAH 1195, “Walter H. Voigt Brewing Industry Collection, 1935-1967.”
Location
Currently not on view
Credit Line
Walter H. Voigt
ID Number
AG.MHI-M-9502
accession number
276730
catalog number
MHI-M-9502
Object Name
sign, corporate, beer brewery
See more items in
Work and Industry: Agriculture and Natural Resources
Food
Work
Industry & Manufacturing
National Museum of American History
Record ID
nmah_871504
Metadata Usage (text)
CC0
GUID (Link to Original Record)
http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a6-e4d9-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

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