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Saint Louis Brewery (Schlafly) Regional: St. Louis: St. Louis Show-Me Brewing [41] Microbrewery Springfield: Springfield: 2016 Side Project Brewing [38] Microbrewery Maplewood: St. Louis Six Mile Bridge [38] Microbrewery Maryland Heights St. Louis Shortleaf Brewing Microbrewery O'Fallon St. Louis 2019 Shortleaf Brewing Microbrewery Camdenton ...
Returning to St. Louis after the Civil War, Busch entered his wife's family's brewery business. He bought out Eberhard's partner, William D'Oench. In 1879, the company was renamed Anheuser-Busch. [3] At the death of Eberhard Anheuser in 1880, Busch became president of the business, and became wealthy due to the success of the brewery.
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Wainwright was born on August 3, 1850, and although the family hailed from Godfrey, Illinois, he grew up in nearby St. Louis, where he also spent much of his adult life. [1] [3] The son of a prominent brewer and building contractor, an English immigrant named Samuel and Catherine Dorothy, Wainwright was an important figure in railway development in the region. [4]
Anheuser-Busch Brewery is a brewery complex in St. Louis, Missouri. [4] It was opened in 1852 by German immigrant Adolphus Busch. It a National Historic Landmark District. The Lyon Schoolhouse Museum is on the grounds at the Anheuser-Busch Brewery. It is considered to be one of oldest school buildings in St Louis.
German immigrant Anton Griesedieck brought his family brewing tradition (dating from 1766 in Stromberg, Germany) to St. Louis in about 1866.He owned a series of breweries, employing his four sons, including Henry Jr. and Joseph "Papa Joe", and nephew Henry L. Griesedieck, who would later found Griesedieck Western Brewery Co. [1] The four sons established the National Brewery Co. in 1891, which ...
In 2006, he published A New Religion in Mecca: Memoir of a Renegade Brewery in St. Louis (Virginia Publishing), which recounted the founding of the Saint Louis Brewery. [3] He is also an attorney, working as a partner [4] in the St. Louis office of Thompson Coburn. He is a nephew of St. Louis conservative commentator Phyllis Schlafly. [5]
In 2011, the brewery applied for a trademark on the Schlafly name. Relatives of the conservative Phyllis Schlafly filed a lawsuit, led by her son Andrew Schlafly, an attorney and cousin of the founders. In 2018, the U.S. Federal Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of The Saint Louis Brewery. [5]