BREWERY GEMS PROFILES:
Albert Braun - Brewer
"ALBERT
BRAUN, vice-president of the Seattle Brewing and Malting Company was
born at Dusseldorf, on the Rhine, Germany, in February, 1863. He was
educated in the schools of Germany and then traveled quite extensively
through the European countries. His business career began under the
direction of his father, who was an extensive manufacturer of
preserved fruits, vegetables, meats and fancy canned goods, and was
continued in the same industry, in partnership with his brother at
Mainz, on the Rhine.
Albert Braun took his own life, with a gun shot to the heart, on February
27, 1895, at the young age of 32.
While still holding a significant number of Seattle Brewing
& Malting Co. shares, he was not considered well-to-do in the matter of ready
cash. Additionally, Braun had left Seattle for Illinois, after millionair
brewer, Otto Huber,
indicated that he was interested in partnering with Braun in the purchase of the
LaSalle Brewing Co. For what ever
reason Huber went back on his promise, leaving Braun with no immediate prospects
and in a state of despair.
Braun's estate was $25,000, which would be approximately $700,000 today.
The
following was taken from
An Illustrated History of the State of
Washington, by Rev. H.K. Hines, D.D., The Lewis Publishing Co., Chicago, IL.,
1893
In 1888 Mr. Braun sold
his interest and came to the United States and, upon the advice of
Adolphus Busch, president of the Anheuser- Busch Association, of St.
Louis, Missouri, he entered the brewery of Peter Doelger, of New
York, and learned the practical workings of the business, completing
his instruction in the details at the Anheuser-Busch brewery in St.
Louis.
In 1889 Mr. Braun made a trip through the Northwest, and, after a short
visit in Seattle, he was so favorably impressed with the people and
location of the city that he decided upon the city as a location for
future settlement. He then returned to St. Louis and continued his
studies of the brewery business up to March 1, 1890, when he again
visited Seattle and at once engaged in the organization of the
Albert Braun Brewing Association, which was incorporated with a
capital of $250,000, he being duly elected president and general
manager. The brewery was erected six miles south of Seattle, very
complete in all its appointments, with a capacity of 70,000 barrels
per year, the Product finding a ready market in Washington, region,
Idaho and British Columbia. Continuing up to 1893, the
Albert Braun
Brewing Association was consolidated with the
Bay View Brewing Company and the
Claussen-Sweeney Brewing Company, and incorporated as the
Seattle Brewing and Malting Company, with capital stock of
$1,000,000. The affairs of the new association were conducted by the
managers of the old breweries, the official corps being:
Andrew Hemrich,
President; Albert Braun, Vice-President;
Edward F. Sweeney, Secretary; and Fred Kirschner, Treasurer.
The company expects to develop brewing and malting into one of the
leading interests of the city of Seattle, and as their product has
competed successfully with the best Eastern brands there is little
doubt of an auspicious future.
Mr. Braun is also interested in various other enterprises of the city
and he has perfect faith and confidence in the future of Seattle and
the Sound districts."
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