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St. Louis Brewery
2100 Locust Street
St. Louis, Missouri 63103
www.schlafly.com
Few of the crowds of St. Louisans who witnessed the great warehouse fire
of May 1, 1976 could have imagined that the burned-out hulk of the Swift
Printing Company, as this building was then called, would be a St. Louis
landmark more than twenty years later. The beautiful little English
Renaissance building facing Locust Street and the classic commercial
building behind it were both designed in 1901 and completed in 1902 for
the newly organized Lambert-Deacon-Hull Printing Company. James Nixon
Hull, the company’s president, had years of experience in printing, but
Albert Bond Lambert and Arthur Deacon had the money. Lambert and Deacon
were president and secretary, respectively, of the Lambert Pharmacal
(later Pharmaceutical) Company, whose 1891 office building, right across
the street at 2001 Locust, was being enlarged by the same architect at
the same time. (It too has been restored.) That company was best known
as the maker of Listerine. Lambert later founded St. Louis’ airport,
which is named after him.
The architect of the complex, Samuel Sherer (1866-1928), had an unusual
career as an architect, never soliciting commissions or opening an
office, but working for some of the leading citizens of St. Louis,
including William H. Danforth, founder of Ralston-Purina (17 Kingsbury
Place) and J.D. Streett, founder of the oil company that bears his name
(14 Kingsbury Place). The house he designed for dried-fruit distributor
John Warren Teasdale (38 Kingsbury Place) has scrolled gables like this
building and included a suite for Teasdale’s daughter, the poet Sara
Teasdale. For Arthur Deacon, Sherer designed the largest house in
fashionable Webster Park (406 Hawthorne), including a carriage house so
big that it has become a separate house (410 Hawthorne). Sherer was
nationally known as a writer on architecture, and some of his
pronouncements still have a contemporary ring; for example: “The lack of
Civic Pride that has long characterized the citizens of St. Louis has
militated against its development as a beautiful city.” His 1903 series
for The Brickbuilder on brick and terra cotta in St. Louis suggests why
he was able to specify such beautifully detailed Flemish bond for this
building. In 1920 he became administrator of the St. Louis Art Museum,
and in 1922 the director, a position which he held until his death in
1928.
The opening of the Tap Room in the south building in 1991 was a triumph
not only for restoration architect Tom Cohen and developer Ann Watka,
but also for business partners Tom Schlafly and Dan Kopman, who played
David to Anheuser-Busch’s Goliath in opening the area’s first
microbrewery. Their success was crucial to the revitalization of this
neglected part of St. Louis. Cohen worked with them again in 1997 to
complete restoration of the north building.
Although its members may often be found at the Tap Room proselytizing
for the cause of unaccompanied music, the Chamber Chorus’ first concert
performance at the St. Louis Brewery was the April 9, 2000 program,
“Good For What Ales You.”
Notes by
Esley Hamilton and
Philip
Barnes
Photo by Roger Hill
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