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Georgetown, Seattle The Beer-Making Machine Amber Johnson 12/3/2012 Envir 221 Courtesy of History of Rainier

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Page 1: Georgetown, Seattle - University of Washingtonfaculty.washington.edu/lnash/221/Student Work/Johns… · Web viewSeattle Outfits the Klondike Gold Rush. Retrieved 11/19/12. Retrieved

Georgetown, SeattleThe Beer-Making Machine

Amber Johnson12/3/2012

Envir 221

Courtesy of History of Rainier Brewery

Page 2: Georgetown, Seattle - University of Washingtonfaculty.washington.edu/lnash/221/Student Work/Johns… · Web viewSeattle Outfits the Klondike Gold Rush. Retrieved 11/19/12. Retrieved

Figure 1: Courtesy of Peter Blecha

The Beer-Making Machine Johnson, 2012Final Draft

In the heart of the industrial neighborhood of Georgetown, Seattle, sits the dilapidated

brick building that once was the great Rainier Brewery. As a

former resident and self-proclaimed beer connoisseur, I have

frequented the saloons located across the street from the old

Rainier Brewery and would often wonder about the role of the

brewery on this historic neighborhood. Present day

Georgetown is often regarded as containing the artsy, industrial

folk with great restaurants and loud music. However, one

industry stands out among the rest by having exceptionally

great beer, Georgetown Brewery. In the late nineteenth, early

twentieth century it was the main alcoholic beverage for the

incorporated town of Georgetown as well as the nation.1 Rainier

Brewery wasn’t simply created on a whim; it was the combination of factors that led to the

company’s construction and overall success. An influx of a few key German immigrants with

capitalist intentions and the brewing tradition in their blood, along with the fertile soil creating a

hop grower’s paradise, and the easy access to waterways and railroads are what ultimately

allowed for the brewing business in Georgetown to boom during the late 1800’s.

When white European-American settlers moved west of the Mississippi in the 1840’s,

hopes of both the agrarian and capitalist vision were high.2 Ultimately, when John Holgate

arrived in 1850 along the banks of the Duwamish River, tall trees, wet meadows and diverse

1 Robinson, June. The Georgetown Story: That Was a Town, 1904-1910. Georgetown Designs. 2000. 2 Nash, Linda. Industrialization and Westward Expansion. Lecture. 10.11.12.

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plant life stood before him, giving him and future settlers a way to both farm and profit from the

land.3 However, Holgate did not stay long in the Duwamish River Valley and a man by the name

of Luther Collins took over Holgate’s claim while also staking out other claims along the

riverside.4 Joined by other settlers and European immigrants, the valley was renamed

Georgetown and was cleared of timber, and river banks were diked, thus transforming the

estuary into profitable farmlands. Because the valley had periodic flooding, the soil had frequent

inputs of nutrients thus creating fertile soil. This lent to the great success of early farmers who

would regularly sell their crops to urban Seattleites.5 Hops, the main crop used for making beer,

grew particularly well in this area due to the fertile soil and European-like climate, allowing for

the eventual creation and success of the brewing businesses.

While the soil was productive enough for hop farms, the growth of the brewing

companies in Seattle and Georgetown couldn’t have succeeded without the ability to transport

the beer locally and nationally. Farmers had used the Duwamish River, along with many

interconnected waterways, as a way to transport their crops as far as Kent, WA6. However, it was

the introduction of the railroad that jumpstarted the capability of transcontinental exporting.

During the nineteenth century the creation of the transcontinental railroad was a direct product of

the national groupthink.7 Many people had been thinking about settling the west for either

capitalist or agrarian visions; and the development of the railroad provided the ability for

transportation of people as well as products across previously unattainable areas.8 On a sunny

May Day in 1874, cannons fired and bells rang as nearly three hundred men started work on the

Seattle and Walla Walla transcontinental railroad that would provide increased exportation of 3 Robinson, June. The Georgetown Story: That Was a Town, 1904-1910. Georgetown Designs. 2000.4 Ibid5 City of Seattle. Georgetown, Part 1 of 2: Public Art and Culture Walking Map. Undated. 6 Robinson, June. The Georgetown Story: That Was a Town, 1904-1910. Georgetown Designs. 2000.7 Nash, Linda. Industrialization and Westward Expansion. Lecture. 10.11.12.8 Ibid

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Figure 3: Courtesy of UW Special Collections

Figure 2: Courtesy of UW Special Collections

The Beer-Making Machine Johnson, 2012Final Draft

goods for the Puget Sound area.9 The men slashed and burned local plants, leveled the ground

and laid the tracks, and in 1879 the project was finished and renamed the Columbia and Puget

Sound Railroad. By 1900, the lines ran through

Georgetown which provided the opportunity for the

support of a growing community as well as the creation

of new businesses, such as breweries.

Looking at images from 20th century

Georgetown, it’s easy to see how people would

transport goods. Taken in 1908 by an unknown

photographer, figure 2 shows the Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad passing through what is

present day the South Seattle Industrial District on South

Holgate Street and 4th and 6th avenue, about one mile

from Georgetown. The landscape in the photo shows the

railroad crossing the Duwamish River, highlighting the

multiple ways in which one could transfer and export

goods. Figure 3 was also taken in 1908 by photographer,

Curtis Asahel, and depicts the railroad line that crossed

directly in front of the Rainier Brewery Factory. This line supported

the transfer of beer beyond regional saloons and allowed for national exportation. Jules Mae

Saloon, visible across the street from the Rainier Brewery in the photograph, was established in

1888 and still remains as a local watering hole for Georgetown. The legacy of the local beer

industry dominates the buildings, layout and landscape of the neighborhood to this day.

9 Robinson, June. The Georgetown Story: That Was a Town, 1904-1910. Georgetown Designs. 2000.

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Ultimately, the Duwamish River Valley was a lush and fertile landscape in which farmers

cleared the land and were able to successfully grow hops along the river. This factor, in

combination with the introduction of the transcontinental Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad in

1879, is what fueled the desire and enabled the creation of three large brewing companies that

would eventually become known as the Rainer Brewing Company. Yet, the landscape is not the

only contributing factor in this story, Georgetown became the beer-making machine it is today

with the help from a few German immigrants who knew how to brew and sell beer.

While they didn’t directly own and operate a brewing company, Julius and Anne Horton

played a pivotal role in the distribution of hops to German settlers in the late 19th century. In

1834, baby Julius was born in Chemung County, New York. However, Julius and his family

didn’t remain their long and soon relocated to Illinois, where he and his brother Dexter would

finish up their educational training.10 Interested in agricultural pursuits, and with his seven years

of experience in the mercantile business, he made the long journey from Illinois to Seattle in

1869 where him and his new wife, Anne would meet up with his brother Dexter Horton11.

Although they were brothers, Julius and Dexter Horton shared capitalist ambitions, but

had different personalities and opposite views on alcohol consumption and distribution. Julius

was interested in the brewing business as well as land development, thus when he and his wife

bought 160 acres of the previous, Luther Collin’s Claim in what is now present day

Georgetown, they decided to clear the land of timber and replace it with a hop growing farm.12 In

the midst of hop growing, Julius and his wife realized that the recent development of the

transcontinental Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad created an organized system for land

10 A Volume of Memoirs of the citizens of Seattle and King County: Biography of Julius Horton. Pp. 725-728. UW Special Collections. Retrieved 11/16/1211 Ibid 12 Friends of Georgetown. Georgetown 101. 2012.

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distribution and transfer.13 The movement westward was already underway in the nineteenth

century and with the new railroads in Seattle, settlers would be searching for new land and new

ways to make money.14 Using money and property, Julius platted parcels along the navigable

river and railroads to prepare for the movement; which he consequently named Georgetown after

his son, Dr. George Horton in June, 1890.15 Julius’s speculations of movement to the Pacific

Northwest were correct in that the fertile soil and railroads were two important factors that fueled

the desire and ability for brewers to make the journey and ultimately succeed in creating a

profitable brewing business, which would later become Rainier Brewery.

Among the businessmen who traveled westward in pursuit of profiting from brewing ale

was Edward Sweeney. A native Californian and of German heritage, Sweeny brought his

brewing knowledge to the Seattle area in 1882 where he and his partner William J. Rule began

manufacturing steam beer in the Georgetown neighborhood.16 In 1883, Sweeney and Rule built a

small brewery in the heart of Georgetown, where they along with two other German immigrants

would combine assets and eventually build and operate what is now known as Rainier Brewery.

One of the German Immigrants that partnered with Edward Sweeney and was vital to the

creation of Rainier Brewery was Hans J. Claussen. Born in 1861 and schooled until the age of

ten in Holstein, Germany, Claussen accompanied his parents to the United States where they

made their way to San Francisco on the newly built transcontinental railroad in order to create a

new life for themselves.17 18 Interested in the brewing industry Claussen became a bookkeeper for

13 Nash, Linda. Industrialization and Westward Expansion. Lecture. 10.11.12.

14 Nash, Linda. Industrialization and Westward Expansion. Lecture. 10.11.12.15 A Volume of Memoirs of the citizens of Seattle and King County: Biography of Julius Horton. Pp. 725-728. UW Special Collections. Retrieved 11/16/1216 Flynn, Gary. Biography of Edward F. Sweeney (1860-1926). 2004. 17 A Volume of Memoirs of the citizens of Seattle and King County: Biography of Hans J. Claussen. Pp. 359-361. UW Special Collections. Retrieved 11/16/12.18 Digital Network Express. Rails West. Burbank California. 2012.

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the “Fredericksburg Brewing Company” in 1884 located in San Jose, California.19 This company

would plant the seed of desire for continuing with the brewing business. Once Claussen acquired

adequate knowledge of the brewing industry’s inner workings, he ventured via rail and ship to

the Seattle area in 1888, where he would join forces with Edward Sweeney. While Claussen and

Sweeney had a profitable brewing business, Claussen would soon tire from being held down by

the partnership with Sweeney and in May of 1901, he sold his stock and moved on to create his

own brewing business in the Interbay neighborhood of Seattle20. Although the partnership with

Sweeney did not survive, he was integral in the continuation of what would become Rainier

Brewery. He brought new steam brewing technology to the brewery which increased their

yield.21 This factor in combination with the ease of access to railroads and waterways helped

provide a strong base for the future success of Rainier Brewery.22 However, Rainier Brewery

wasn’t created by these two men alone, another German powerhouse with money and political

power had been building his own brewing company, and was interested in expanding.

Enter Andrew Hemrich, a German native with brewing knowledge in his blood as well as

a savvy business man.23 During the nineteenth century, a wave of German brewers immigrated

to the United States; among them was Hemrich, who first settled in Montana, where he used his

family’s brewing tradition to establish a brewery.24 After selling his business, he accepted a

position as manager superintendent of the Bozeman Brewing Company, in which he would take

19 A Volume of Memoirs of the citizens of Seattle and King County: Biography of Hans J. Claussen. Pp. 359-361. UW Special Collections. Retrieved 11/16/12.20 A Volume of Memoirs of the citizens of Seattle and King County: Biography of Hans J. Claussen. Pp. 359-361. UW Special Collections. Retrieved 11/16/12.21 Ibid22 Ibid23 A Volume of Memoirs of the citizens of Seattle and King County: Biography of Andrew Hemrich. Pp. 421-423. UW Special Collections. Retrieved 11/16/12.24 Ibid

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his experience and knowledge to the Seattle area in 1883 in hopes of founding and perfecting a

new brewing business with his friend John Kopp.25

Once settled in Seattle, Andrew Hemrich and his friend John Kopp applied their expertise

in the brewing industry to creating the Bay View Brewing Company, under the firm name Kopp

and Hemrich.26 They conducted business for two years in South Seattle until Hemrich’s father,

John Hemrich, and his brother in-law, Frederick Kirschner, joined the company in which they

continued to conduct business as it were before until 1893.27 The company made sure there was

no shortage of choices for Seattleites. They marketed three main beers: the Bayview, the

Bohemian, and their best seller, Rainier lager.28 Eager to accelerate profit growth, the Bay View

Brewing Company expanded their brewery by combining with Edward Sweeney’s

establishment, forming the “Seattle Malting and Brewing Company” in 1893. After naming

Edward Sweeney secretary of the new conglomerate, Hemrich needed more space to meet

demand, thus a new brick building, which would be named the Rainier Brewery, was built in the

heart of Georgetown.29 Andrew Hemrich was the last of the three German immigrants to finally

construct what is known today as the Rainier Brewery. He took advantage of the newly

developed railroad system, interconnected waterways as well as the local hop growing farmers in

order to brew and transport his beer across the nation. The brewery also benefitted from beer

demand from the new arrival of settlers.

Georgetown was uniquely situated as an outlying community, well connected to Seattle

but under its own governance until 1910.30 This allowed for many advantages to the brewing

25 Ibid26 Ibid27 Ibid28 Funding Universe. Rainier Brewery Company History. Website. Retrieved 11/19/12.29 A Volume of Memoirs of the citizens of Seattle and King County: Biography of Andrew Hemrich. Pp. 421-423. UW Special Collections. Retrieved 11/16/12.30 Robinson, June. The Georgetown Story: That Was a Town, 1904-1910. Georgetown Designs. 2000.

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industry unavailable elsewhere in the greater Seattle area. The brewery’s growth was fed by the

emergence of the Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad which gave Seattle the title as a major city

during the Klondike gold rush of the 1890s.31 During this time, the population grew from 43,000

to 81,000 in just ten years; among the newcomers were opportunistic businessman, such as

Andrew Hemrich, and their unique skills.32 Georgetown as an independent community was

unrestrained by restrictive Seattle laws regarding alcohol production and consumption.33

Georgetown’s breweries and saloons were popular destinations for both Seattleites and

newcomers looking for adventures not found within city limits. This unique arrangement helped

fuel the growth of Georgetown while also providing expanding markets for distribution of the

all-important Rainier Beer.

The Rainier Brewery building had modern technology, employed three-hundred workers

in Georgetown and had forty- eight hour work weeks as opposed to sixty hours required by most

other industries at the time.34 It also had the capacity to brew three-hundred thousand barrels a

year and was the largest brewery west of the Mississippi.35 With the demand high and happy

employees, the Rainier Brewery was integral to the community. Yet with prohibition enacted in

1916, Hemrich and his family would be run out of business and the once great Rainier Brewery

would become a feed mill until the sales of beer and liquor were legalized.36 Throughout the 20th

century the brewery continued to play a vital role in the region, even giving name to the present

day local minor league baseball team. The brewery was sold to a conglomerate in the mid 1990s

31 National Park Service. Gold Fever! Seattle Outfits the Klondike Gold Rush. Retrieved 11/19/12. 32 Boston University. Population History of Seattle 1890-1990. Retrieved 11/18/12. 33 Robinson, June. The Georgetown Story: That Was a Town, 1904-1910. Georgetown Designs. 2000.34 Robinson, June. The Georgetown Story: That Was a Town, 1904-1910. Georgetown Designs. 2000.35 Ibid. 36 Funding Universe. Rainier Brewery Company History. Website. Retrieved 11/19/12.

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and finally closed its doors. The building itself is presently a combination of office spaces and is

also rented out for parties.37 Despite being sold, the Rainier brand continues to be served today.

The Seattle Malting and Brewing Company and their premier Rainier Beer, owe its

existence to not only the German immigrants who worked hard to build a successful brand in the

nineteenth and twentieth century, but also to the settlers who cleared and farmed the landscape.

With fertile soils capable of growing hops, and the construction of the Columbia and Puget

Sound Railroad, the first settlers in the Georgetown area were able to create a pathway for

experienced brewers to harness the hops and sell it as beer. Today a myriad of popular beer

companies thrive in the immediate vicinity of the Rainier building, including Georgetown

Brewing, Emerald City Brewery, Elysian Brewery. Local residents take great pride in their

traditions of beer making and business success, and in turn these breweries continue to play a

significant role in the community. These companies leverage the same natural advantages that

led to the creation of Rainier and have become suppliers throughout the region and beyond.

Trains continue to run through the neighborhood, making stops at local business and whisking

away exports on the same rail lines used over a century ago. The history of the Rainier Brewery

has had a substantial impact on the neighborhood, the community and its future as a beer-making

machine.

Bibliography:

37 Ibid

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Boston University. Population History of Seattle 1890-1990. Retrieved 11/18/12.

http://physics.bu.edu/~redner/projects/population/cities/seattle.html

City of Seattle. Georgetown, Part 1 of 2: Public Art and Culture Walking Map. Retrieved

11/18/12. http://www.seattle.gov/arts/_downloads/walking_tours/gtownnorth.pdf

Digital Network Express. Rails West. Burbank California. 2012. Retrieved 12/2/12.

http://www.railswest.com/californiabeginnings.html

Flynn, Gary. Biography of Edward F. Sweeney (1860-1926). 2004. Retrieved 11/19/12.

http://www.brewerygems.com/sweeney.htm

Funding Universe. Rainier Brewery Company History. Retrieved 11/19/12.

http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/rainier-brewing-company-history/

Nash, Linda. Industrialization and Westward Expansion. Lecture. 10.11.12.

National Park Service. Gold Fever! Seattle Outfits the Klondike Gold Rush. Retrieved 11/19/12.

http://www.nps.gov/nr/twhp/wwwlps/lessons/55klondike/55klondike.htm.

Robinson, June. The Georgetown Story: That Was a Town, 1904-1910. Georgetown Designs.

2000.

A Volume of Memoirs of the citizens of Seattle and King County: Biography of Andrew Hemrich.

Pp. 421-423. UW Special Collections. Retrieved 11/16/12.

A Volume of Memoirs of the citizens of Seattle and King County: Biography of Hans J. Claussen.

Pp. 359-361. UW Special Collections. Retrieved 11/16/12.

A Volume of Memoirs of the citizens of Seattle and King County: Biography of Julius Horton. Pp.

725-728. UW Special Collections. Retrieved 11/16/12

Figures:

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Cover Page: Flynn, Gary. History of Rainier Brewery, Part 2.

http://www.brewerygems.com/rainier-2.htm

Figure 1: Blecha, Peter. Rainier Beer. Seattle’s Iconic Brewery. Essay 9130. August 26th, 2009.

Figure 2: Unknown author. Jackson st renegade between South Holgate Street between 4th and

6th Avenue South. June 10th 1908 . UW Special Collections. Gathered November 2012.

Figure 3: Asahel, Curtis.  Seattle Brewing and Malting CO (Rainier Brewery). 1908. UW Special

Collections. Gathered November 2012.

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