Brewing up a Milwaukee beer museum

Growing up in the seventies and eighties, one of the first things that comes to mind when I think of Milwaukee is the opening of “Laverne & Shirley“.

“One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight! Schlemiel! Schlemazl! Hasenpfeffer Incorporated!”

While the Shotz Brewery where Ms. De Fazio and Ms. Feeney worked was fictional, multiple beer pioneers actually made their mark in The City of Festivals.

But there’s no museum to commemorate this brewing heritage. That may change soon, however, as two different groups are working toward opening museums.

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

It’s the beer that made Milwaukee famous. But that’s not just a slogan; it’s a fact. It was Milwaukee’s beer that gave our town its reputation.

That’s a part of our history worth remembering, which is why a brewing museum in Milwaukee makes so much sense.

Two groups in the city are working to create a museum. The Museum of Beer & Brewing, headed by Jim Haertel, hopes to open a museum in one of the buildings he owns at the old Pabst Brewing works. The other group, the Milwaukee Beer Museum, has a storefront on S. 5th St. Both groups have memorabilia and a dream. But it will take a major backer to create such a museum.

Surprising, to me anyway, is that the 800-pound gorilla in Milwaukee, Miller, isn’t behind at least one of these endeavors or have their own plans.

Museum of Beer and Brewing

Milwaukee Beer Museum

Five centuries of drinking in Edinburgh

The Museum of Edinburgh, on the Royal Mile, will be running an exhibition on the full social and cultural impact of alcohol and drinking in the Capital going back over 500 years.

The exhibition, entitled “Here’s Tae Us!” and will be at the museum from December 10 to March 3.

It will chart the history of some of the Capital’s oldest bars, the rise of temperance societies in the 19th century, the cultural change in the 1960s – when women first began to regularly socialise in the city’s bars – and the relaxation of laws curbing Sunday drinking in the early 1990s.

Famous landlords and landladies will be recalled, including Willie Ross, the famously rude boss of the Oxford Bar in the city centre, and Betty Moss, who used to signal last orders at the Old Chain Pier, in Newhaven, by firing a starting pistol and would clear drinkers with the use of a sword.

It will also have a large collection of products featuring the Tennents “Lager Lovelies”, who began appearing on the Tennents’ cans and remained a staple for over 30 years.

They came about by accident after Tennent’s, which was already featuring scenic pictures of Scotland on their cans, started using pictures of model Ann Johanson, who featured in a series of images.

TV presenter Carol Smillie has previously spoken of her disappointment at missing out on the chance to be a “can-girl” when she was an aspiring model.

Edinburgh Evening News: Show cheers bevvy of beauties

Tennent’s Lager Lovelies Archive