George Juenemann

George Juenemann (1823–1884) co-owned and operated Humphrey and Juenemann's Pleasure Garden, a Washington DC brewery and early example of an American beer garden. The facility was also known as Juenemann's Brewery.

Immigration to the United States and brewery operations

George Juenemann, with his wife Barbara, immigrated to the United States in 1851 and eventually settled in Washington, D.C. Juenemann opened Humphrey and Juenemann's Pleasure Garden, also known as Juenemann's Brewery, with Owen Humphreys in June 1857. The brewery and beer garden sat on 4th and 5th Streets Northeast between E and F Streets Northeast in Washington City.[1]

George was born in 1823 in Bischhagen, Thuringia, Germany to Joannes Josef Juenemann from Heuthen, Thuringia, Germany and Catharina Staender from Dingelstaedt, Thuringia, Germany.

Juenemann purchased Humphreys share of the business five years later and renamed the facility Mount Vernon Lager Beer Brewery and Pleasure Garden. The brewery was the largest in the District of Columbia during the Civil War, but dropped to second largest by the 1870s when Christian Heurich Brewing Company claimed the title.[2]

gollark: I honestly don't think CC is particularly overpowered even with turtles. While it can technically do basically anything, most bigger packs will have special-purpose devices which are more expensive but do it way better, while CC is very annoying to have work.
gollark: Out of all the available APIs in _G the only ones I can see which allow I/O of some sort directly and don't just make some task you can technically already do more convenient are `fs`, `os`, `redstone`, `http`, and `term`. You can, at most, probably disable `http` and `redstone` without breaking everything horribly, and it would still be annoying.
gollark: What other stuff would you disable, anyway? I don't think there's much which isn't just a utility API of some sort which you can disable without more problems.
gollark: Because that won't be hilariously annoying at all!
gollark: > disabling HTTP

References

  1. Humphrey and Juenemann Advertisement - Evening Star - June 30, 1857 - Front Page
  2. Peck, Garrett (2014). Capital Beer: A Heady History of Brewing in Washington, D.C. Charleston, SC: American Palate: A Division of The History Press. ISBN 978-1-62619-441-0.
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