News
23rd February 1823
23rd February 1823
Johann Baier was born in Göpfersgrün, Bavaria. He was trained as a brewer but fled Europe during the economic recession and political turmoil of the 1840s. Stories of the new world were resonant in Europe and Baier was one of the many young European men with whom they enthralled. He emigrated to America, settled in Baltimore, and apparently found work with Conrad Herzog in his brewery there.
Soon Baier met married fellow Bavarian émigré Anna Maria Hartmann. In 1850 the Baiers established a brewery on 390-392 Canton (now Fleet) Avenue. It was the three-story brick structure with a residence for the family in front and brewing facilities in back. By accounts both Anna and Johann had a hand in running the operation. The factory was equipped to produce about 10,000 barrels a year and it met that capacity every year. This put it on par with the largest of Baltimore's 29 beer makers of the 1850s.
In around 1861 Baier brought on Franz Schlaffer as brewmaster. He was a lager beer brewer and was put in charge of converting the brewery over to the new and popular style of beer. But Baier would not live to enjoy for long the fruits of his labor as he died on June 6th, 1866 at the age of only 43 years.
His wife, now aged 37, carried on the business alone and in 1869 married 28-year-old Frederick Wunder, a worker in her brewery. As the brewery was in essence a family business, Wunder's marriage was a drastic professional promotion; one with which the brewmaster (age about 46) disagreed. As a result Schlaffer found a new position in the newly established Bay View Brewery.
Brewmaster Schlaffer's instincts about Wunder would prove prescient. Still reeling from the loss of Baier and the brewmaster, Frederick and Anna Wunder embarked on the task of relocating their brewery to a new and "more pretentious" location. The move to the site of the lagering cellars on O'Donnell & Conkling Streets was expensive. It was costly, not only for the price of the facility and the trasportation, but in the fact that Anna had to pay her children - who wanted nothing more to do with the newly-named Fred. Wunder Brewery - for their share of the inheritance.
The disruption lowered the production of the brewery to 5000 barrels. Profits were no longer enough to keep up with the bills. When Frederick Wunder died in 1881 Anna was left with an unproductive brewery, an unseasoned brewmaster, and rapidly mounting debt. The brewery fell into default and the primary creditor, the Malting firm of Strauss Bros. & Bell, took possession in 1885.
The Strauss Brothers renamed the company The National Brewery and expanded it further, and despite two devastating fires the firm became a state-of-the-art factory with a capacity of 150,000 barrels. In 1899 the Straus Brothers sold the brewery to an English Syndicate called Baltimore Breweries for $500,000.
The brewery Johann and Anna Baier started in 1850 would go on to survive Prohibition and thrive, and their National Bohemian Beer would become one of Baltimore's iconic institutions.
Johann Baier was born in Göpfersgrün, Bavaria. He was trained as a brewer but fled Europe during the economic recession and political turmoil of the 1840s. Stories of the new world ... View More
1850 FoundedJohann John Baier30 Fell Street near Thames Street
News
12th October 1852
12th October 1852
Frederick H. Gottlieb, future president of the Gottlieb-Bauernschmidt-Strauss Brewing Co., of Baltimore, Maryland, was born in Nagywarad, Hungary. His family came to America in 1864 at age 11. His father was a shoe maker in New York City and young Frederick's first job was as a messenger for the New York Stock Exchange. It was here he gained a wider view of the world and came to see the limits of his education. In 1876 Frederick married a West Virginia girl named Christina B. Butterfield, a union that would produce six children. They settled in Baltimore, Maryland where Frederick obtained a position at Francis Dandelet's Ale brewery. Within four years he rose in the firm to proprietor. He was just twenty-eight years of age. In ten years his brewery, now called the Globe, already the oldest in Baltimore, would become the largest. Ten years after than his name would be first in the Gottlieb-Bauernschmidt-Strauss conglomerate of the 11 largest breweries in Baltimore. When he died on a sea voyage in 1929, however, Gottlieb's business accomplishments were just a footnote. Newspapers remembered him first as a patron of the arts, a liberal benefactor, and a musician. During his decades in Baltimore Gottlieb had studied the arts, and he had became a well-known flutist in the Johns Hopkins Orchestra. He was president of the Charcoal Club, an officer of the Floristan Club and was honorary president of the Journalist Club. He accumulated a valuable collection of rare instruments. But the brewery he guided into prosperity would be his lasting legacy. The Globe Brewery re-emerged after Prohibition and became a dominant regional brewery and its Arrow Beer was distributed from Pennsylvania to Florida. The artifacts of his breweries are prized collectibles today.
Frederick H. Gottlieb, future president of the Gottlieb-Bauernschmidt-Strauss Brewing Co., of Baltimore, Maryland, was born in Nagywarad, Hungary. His family came to America in 1864 at age 11. His ... View More
Photos
Circa: 1862
Circa: 1862
Baier's Lager Beer Brewery
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Circa: 1863
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Circa: 1864
1866 Anna Baier390/392 Canton Avenue
1869 Anna & Frederick Wunder3rd (later Conkling) & 0’Donnell Streets
1872 Frederick Wunder3rd (later Conkling) & 0’Donnell Streets
Photos
Circa: 1876
Circa: 1876
An early drawing of Fr. Wunder's Brauerei in Baltimore.
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Circa: 1878
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Circa: 1879
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Circa: 1880
1881 Mrs. Anna M. Wunder 3rd (later Conkling) & 0’Donnell Streets
1885 Joseph L. Straus & Brother (Wm. L.), National Brewery3rd (later Conkling) & 0’Donnell Streets
News
28th November 1887
28th November 1887
Trouble with the Brewery Workers Union at the National Brewery of Maryland.
Trouble with the Brewery Workers Union at the National Brewery of Maryland.
News
28th November 1887
28th November 1887
Trouble with the Brewery Workers Union at the National Brewery of Maryland.
Trouble with the Brewery Workers Union at the National Brewery of Maryland.
1889 National Brewing Co.3rd (later Conkling) & 0’Donnell Streets
Products
BavarianLager
1889-1899
Bohemian Lager
1889-1899
Photos
Circa: 1890
Circa: 1890
Anetching of the National Brewer as it was in the late 19th century.
1899 Maryland Brewing Co., National Brewery3rd (later Conkling) & 0’Donnell Streets
1901 Gottlieb-Bauernschmidt-Strauss Brewing Co., National Brewery3rd (later Conkling) & 0’Donnell Streets
News
11th March 1901
11th March 1901
The trust known as the Maryland Brewing Co. begins the process of bankruptcy. It will get reorganized under the name "Gottlieb-Bauernschmidt-Straus Brewing Co." by the end of the year.
The trust known as the Maryland Brewing Co. begins the process of bankruptcy. It will get reorganized under the name "Gottlieb-Bauernschmidt-Straus Brewing Co." by the end of the ye... View More
News
25th March 1901
25th March 1901
Despite being unable to pay their creditors, the Maryland Brewing Company trust vows to continue the price war that has in part helped cause their current financial situation.
Despite being unable to pay their creditors, the Maryland Brewing Company trust vows to continue the price war that has in part helped cause their current financial situation.
Logo
Begin: 1901 End 1920
1901 - 1920
Photos
Circa: 1905
Circa: 1905
Peter Schultz, his wife and daughter pose in front of his National Brewery tied saloon.
1934 The National Brewing Company3602 O'Donnell, Conkling, Dillon & 5th Streets
Products
National Beer
1934-1950
National Bock
1934-1950
National Bohemian Beer
1934-1950
National Bohemian Light Beer
1934-1950
National Bohemian Pale Beer
1934-1950
National Premium Beer
1936-1995
Old Bohemian Beer
1934-1950
Old Bohemian Pale Lager beer
1934-1950
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Circa: 1935
Advertisement
Circa: 1938
1939Capacity 200000 Barrels
Photos
Circa: 19th December 1939
Circa: 19th December 1939
The National Bohemian Beer display at the National Beer Wholesaler's Convention in Chicago.
Photos
Circa: 1940
Circa: 1940
A woman balances some potted plants on her head with the help of a National Bohemian Beer box.
News
14th February 1942
14th February 1942
The National Brewery of Baltimore released an ad imploring its customers NOT to purchase their beer in cans due to the War Effort.
The National Brewery of Baltimore released an ad imploring its customers NOT to purchase their beer in cans due to the War Effort.
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1942
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1944
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1945
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1946
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1947
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1950
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1951
Photos
Circa: 1952
Circa: 1952
A billboard for the National Brewing Co. of Baltimore.
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Circa: 1955
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Circa: 1956
Photos
Circa: 1958
Circa: 1958
The National Bohemian Beer satelite POP display.
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Circa: 1959
Photos
Circa: 1960
Circa: 1960
Sputnik-inspired Space-Age large display for National Bohemian Beer. Unknown if it was ever produced.
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Circa: 1960
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Circa: 1961
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Circa: 1968
Photos
Circa: 1970
Circa: 1970
The National Brewing Company rolls out its aluminum-coated "Stay Cold Pack" for 12 cans.
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Circa: 1974
1975 Carling National Breweries, Inc. (National Plant)3720 Dillon Street
Products
Black Label Beer
1960-1975
Colt 45 Silver Malt Liquor
1975-1976
Red Cap Ale
1960-1975
Tuborg Gold Beer
1975-1979
1979 G. Heileman Brewing Co.3720 Dillon Street
1995 Brimstone Brewing Co.3701 Dillon Street
1997 ClosedBrimstone Brewing Co.