![]() | aardvark24: Huh? RT @wienerman: June bugs for Christmas appetizers,with Schlitz about 31 minutes ago |
![]() | SchlitzMKE: And tomorrow is Monday again! But, there's $1 Schlitz at The Tracks! about 2 hours ago |
![]() | davidjwidmann: @Lucers I think the closest you'll get from Dial-A-Bottle is tall cans of Schlitz. about 5 hours ago |
![]() | njstacie: @sotosofties Holy Schlitz, lady, that's a whole lotta cute! about 5 hours ago |
![]() | meingolf: [Golf 5] golf 5 R 32 Heckstoßi .: Hey an Alle ,
Habe gehört das ein kleiner Schlitz bleibt bei der Radhausschal... link about 9 hours ago |
| By Andrew Wagner OnMilwaukee.com Staff Writer E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Andrew Wagner |
| Published June 18, 2009 at 4:12 p.m. |
|
(page 2)
The company continued to grow, even after Schlitz's death in an 1875 shipwreck. By the early part of the 20th Century, Schlitz was producing a million barrels a year. In 1903, Schlitz surpassed its crosstown rival, Pabst, to become the No. 1 selling beer in the United States, a position the company held until the onset of prohibition.
When the federal ban on booze went into effect, Schlitz stayed afloat by producing non-alcoholic items, including a line of chocolates. Once the ban was lifted, the brewery was one of the first in town to resume production. Quickly, the company regained its position as the country's top seller and would stay there until a 1953 strike -- that effectively closed all of Milwaukee's breweries during the summer -- allowed Anheuser-Busch to take over at the top.
"All the breweries in Milwaukee closed down because of that strike," says Leonard Jurgenson, an unofficial historian of Schlitz. "When you close down in the summer months, your closest competition steps in and Anheuser-Busch became No. 1."
After the strike, Schlitz briefly regained the top spot in sales but fell back to No. 2 again and stayed there until the 1970s, when things began to unravel for the giant. The company was operating 11 breweries and none were operating at capacity. Schlitz was paying more for barley and other costs were going up.
To save money, the company changed the brewing process, but that led to flat beer that wouldn't keep a head. To counteract that, Schlitz added a seaweed extract. But when left in the bottle for a few weeks, the additive solidified, leading to "floaters" in the beer.
"All of that killed the market," Jurgenson says. "Schlitz never recovered from that."
A workers' strike in 1981 was the final nail in the coffin for the once-mighty brewer, and Detroit-based Stroh bought Schlitz a year later. Stroh closed the Milwaukee facility, ending more than a century of tradition.
Aside from being a titan of the brewing industry, Schlitz also had a major presence in Milwaukee. The Uihlein family was a major benefactor in the community and you could find somebody employed by Schlitz on just about every block of the city.
"In the '50s and '60s, you either had a relative or friend working at the brewery," Jurgenson says. "Everybody knew somebody that worked at the brewery. It touched everybody. Not just beer; distribution, all the things that go with it."
The fabled Schlitz Hotel and Palm Garden were among the hottest spots in town during their heyday. The Uihleins also sponsored the first years of the original Great Circus Parade, complete with the fabled 40-horse hitch pulling the Schlitz Bandwagon.
The beer was big in town. Sure, Miller and Pabst had a presence but Schlitz was king.
"We served it at my wedding," Jurgenson says. "If you were having an event, a wedding or something big, it was expected you would have Schlitz."
The Uihlein family ran the company until the end and treated its employees like members of the family. The owners knew employees by name and everybody was treated as an equal, whether they were executives or on the maintenance staff.
"That was the important thing," Jurgenson said. "The Uihleins took very good care of their employees; they appreciated them."
In an odd twist of fate, Pabst -- once itself a titan on the Milwaukee brewing scene -- bought the Schlitz brand from Stroh in 1999. Now a brewery in name only, Pabst contracts with Miller to brew the beer.
The former brewery complex, located just north of the old Park East Corridor, was reconfigured into the "Schlitz Park" office complex. When Schlitz made its return a year ago, a kick-off event was held at Libiamo, formerly the Brown Bottle Pub, in what's left of the old facility.
Not long after its reintroduction, production was transferred to Miller's Milwaukee brewery. The decision made financial sense, considering the brand's popularity in Milwaukee and the Midwest, but it was more of a nostalgic call for the company.
"It wasn't so much business but more of it makes sense," Wortham says. "That was more an emotional decision as opposed to profits."
With the beer being brewed again in Milwaukee, things have come full circle. Schlitz is no longer the king of the industry, but it is returning to its Milwaukee roots and another generation of beer-drinkers are experiencing what their fathers and grandfathers did before.
A year after its launch, Schlitz is selling well and exceeding original estimates and projections by over 100 percent. Not long after the bottles were launched, the draft version became available in Milwaukee bars and has also sold well.
"I'll be the first to admit that I was naive," Wortham says. "It's good to hear folks say this is a real beer. This wasn't about finding the new drinkers; we wanted to bring it back to folks that remembered it the most."
For now, Schlitz will remain available in select markets. After Milwaukee, it was reintroduced in Madison and La Crosse and recently became available in Oshkosh, Appleton and the Fox Valley. As of now, there are no plans to expand nationally, but that could change.
"If demand gets there, sure," Wortham says. "But we're happy where we are right now."
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8 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by usa_all_the_way on June 25, 2009 at 8:25 p.m. (report)
Awesome beer! My wife's 86 year old grandfather worked at Schlitz for 30 years. It almost put a lump in my throat when, after he tasted the re-release of Schlitz, he said, "I thought I'd never live to taste real Schlitz again". That was Fourth of July 2008. True Americana!!
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Posted by aceatlaw1 on June 19, 2009 at 10:04 a.m. (report)
The "new" old Schlitz takes me back to 1961. Memories of stealing beers out of my old man's frige, double dating in my buddies old Ford and stealing a kiss at the Starlight Drive Inn from the still beautiful Elizabeth. Tasted good then, still does. The beer stupid!
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Posted by Dusty_Bottoms on June 19, 2009 at 9:12 a.m. (report)
So, Danno, if you know that the "Original Schlitz recipe," which obviously predates the "1960s formula" recipe, is good, you must be, what, 90? You're very computer-savvy for a nonagenarian.
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Posted by schubert65 on June 19, 2009 at 8:21 a.m. (report)
I've only been truely enjoying beer for about the past 3/4 years. I cannot get over how enjoyable it is to sit down and have an ice cold Schlitz. It's a beer that you almost need to drink out of a glass, of course a Schlitz glass. The coloring is amazing! I have issues finding it on tap, I know of only a few places. From what I have heard, Schlitz has been so popular in Milwaukee that distributers cannot even keep up with the demand. It's good stuff, anyone that hasn't tried it , give it a whirl. It's like sitting back and enjoying Milwaukee History in a glass. "Cheers"
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Posted by CoolerKing on June 19, 2009 at 6:49 a.m. (report)
Mandatory knowledge for any Milwaukeean. It's enlightening that Schlitz saved Chicago from being beerless.
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