![]() | dinfinite: Anybody know of any good dive bars or anything cool near the Denver Airport? Might be hanging out there for a little while. about 3 days ago |
| Kangenwaterhelp: Bottled water for making up baby milk? Or tap water? - Baby Club Forum: Hi, I've been living in Germany for a coupl... link about 3 days ago |
![]() | vesztes: @tdhurst Or more broadly, our drinks of choice define us. People love their dive bars, etc. And I'm the guy that drinks water. about 5 days ago |
![]() | hydratingH2O: RT Bottled water for making up baby milk? Or tap water? - Baby Club Forum: Hi, I've been living in German.. link about 5 days ago |
| myhiredhelper: about 5 days ago |
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Jamos is a year round hide away for a dive bar crowd. |
| By Maureen Post OnMilwaukee.com Staff Writer E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Maureen Post |
| Published July 12, 2009 at 4:07 p.m. |
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In some Milwaukee neighborhoods, nearly every corner is pegged with a small, local tavern catering to the surrounding community. As such, the connotation of the "dive bar" becomes a hazy one. Usually typified by outdated surroundings, cheap drinks and a crowd of regulars rounding the bar each and every night, "dive bar" has come to mean something specific yet something very vague.
Recently, a friend described their neighborhood bar saying, "It was a dive bar; literally someone took a dive off their bar stool around 8 p.m." Joined by another friend visiting from Europe, I began to wonder what kind of impression the dive bar makes on the foreign lens and more specifically, if I had to choose ones to visit, which dive bars surpass junky and jankety to become something iconic and treasured.
So what are Milwaukee's hidden gems?
Places like The Palomino or The Nomad set out to embody the dive bar feel; hoping to attract low key patrons, keen on cheap drinks and consequently sporting down home attitudes. But these aren't the neighborhood establishments that have survived decades of gentrification and without marketing, without altering the menu. Their "dive bar" sense, while enjoyable, is perhaps created more than intrinsically authentic.
The Swinging Door, popularized by the bike messenger culture of downtown business, sees a good deal of business but chooses to keep their old school style with old time values. Divided into two rooms, the walls are covered with photos of former customers from a bygone era, drinks are dirt cheap and red pleather wooden tables and chairs offer ample but basic seating.
Jamos hides just off Brady Street. Aside from the red glowing signing, everything about Jamos is dim, worn in and vintage. Weathered booths are complimented by old oil paintings and a selection of liquors meant for classic cocktails. Right down the street, Wolski's Tavern falls between row houses as a hole in the wall attracting low maintenance customers from around the area.
In the suburbs, the dive bar presence is not diminished. Places like Club Tap in Wauwatosa, The Village Pub in Shorewood and The Jock Stop in West Allis are iconic to the neighborhood and demand a nightly crowd not because they offer the latest in beverages or newest in Top 40 music but simply because they have sustained and survived for so long.
What's your criteria for a dive bar? Is there strickt categorization or do bars qualify on a place to place basis? Use the Talkback feature below to toast your local favorite.
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22 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by KirstinR on July 17, 2009 at 9:50 p.m. (report)
The Harp & Shamrock, on 21st & Wells, is a "dive" bar in the sense that it is a neighborhood tavern that has been around forever, has cheap drinks, is populated by regulars of all ages, the seats are worn and torn, and the pool table only costs 50 cents. However, not all dive bars are in dangerous neighborhoods. The H&S is right off the Marquette campus, one block off Wisconsin Ave., within walking distance of the Rave, and has a police substation next door. Stop by sometime, OnMilwaukee!
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Posted by Southern_Ex_pat on July 15, 2009 at 3:51 p.m. (report)
Those are not row houses on Pulaski St. near Wolski's. Most houses on Pulaski are Polish Flats. Row houses have shared walls, like what many consider townhouses.
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Posted by speakthetruth on July 15, 2009 at 12:00 p.m. (report)
Loppy's Bar in Ixonia is better than anything in the city of Milwaukee. You can get a wide array of pickled foods in jars, beer is $1, tips are rare and appreciated, they don't have any "cooked up" food other than frozen pizzas (and you can bring your own food in, too), there are often animals in the bar, fights are normal in the parking lot, people drive their tractors to the bar, and you can buy an entire round and get change back from a $20.
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Posted by kinnickinnic on July 15, 2009 at 3:26 a.m. (report)
You wouldn't know a really dive u woke up under a table in one! Is there a baseball bat to wake up drunks behind the bar? Does the bartender have to yell out, "Who crapped their pants?" Do the regulars get sentimental about a puddle of puke??
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Posted by Milwmike01 on July 15, 2009 at 12:20 a.m. (report)
I think that is mostly due to the fact that OM doesn't want to send people where they could be robbed, beaten, and/or murdered.
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