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Loop Brewing Company: McCook [41] 2011 Lost Way Brewery: Holdrege [42] 2017 Lucky Bucket Brewing Company: La Vista [43] 2009 Lumen Beer Co. Omaha [44] 2022 Monolithic Brewing Company Omaha [45] 2021 Nebraska Brewing Company: Papillion [46] 2007 Pals Brewing Company: North Platte [47] 2017 Peg Leg Brewing Company North Platte [48] 2020 Pint Nine ...
Pages in category "Beer brewing companies based in Omaha, Nebraska" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Omaha architect Henry Voss designed the complex for the Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association of St. Louis, Missouri in 1887. Once covering more than a block, today the Anheuser-Busch Office Building is the only remaining structure of what was the original Krug Brewery , the largest brewery among Omaha's original "Big 4" brewers.
The release said Big Grove hopes to open the Omaha taproom in spring 2025. It said the new outpost will be similar to the 12,000-square-foot Des Moines taproom Big Grove opened in 2022 in the ...
The Storz Brewing Company reopened on August 8, 2013, in Omaha by Thomas Markel and his cousin John Markel. Storz has 5 major beers dating back to the founding of the brewery with Storz Triumph as its flagship lager, Storz Gold Crest Amber Ale, Storz Wood Duck Wheat, Storz Mugs Pale Ale (named after Mugs a Chesapeake Spaniel born Aug 28, 1936 ...
No longer functioning in Omaha. [7] New York Life Insurance Company: 1845 Omaha Country Club: 1899 Omaha Public Power District: 1946 Omaha World-Herald: 1885 Founded in 1885 by Gilbert M. Hitchcock as the Omaha Evening World. It was absorbed by George L. Miller's Omaha Herald in 1889. Peter Kiewit Sons: 1884 Packaging Corporation of America: 1959
The Gottlieb Storz House is located in the Blackstone neighborhood of Midtown Omaha, Nebraska.Built in 1905 by Omaha beer magnate Gottlieb Storz, the mansion was designated an Omaha Landmark on December 21, 1982, and was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on August 7, 1974.
Brought to Omaha from Iowa in 1866, Willow Springs began as a "little one-horse concern" owned by J.C. McCoy. The company was seized by the federal government in 1869 in lieu of McCoy's defaulted revenue tax payments. The same year the government sold it to James G. McGrath and Peter E. Iler, operating as Iler and Company.