Ahnapee Brewery | |
Location | 115 Navarino St., Algoma, Wisconsin |
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Coordinates | 44°36′35″N87°26′07″W / 44.60972°N 87.43528°W |
Area | less than one acre |
Architectural style | Mid 19th Century Revival |
NRHP reference No. | 94000597 [1] |
Added to NRHP | June 17, 1994 |
The Ahnapee Brewery building is located in Algoma, Wisconsin.
The building served as a brewery until 1890. It went on to be used as a warehouse, a fly net factory, a washing machine factory, and a feed storage facility. Currently, it serves as a winery. The building was added to the State and the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. [2]
In 2013, Ahnapee Brewery was re-imagined & reopened in a two-stall-garage-turned-taproom, two doors down from the original 1800s brewery location on Navarino St. In 2022, the taproom moved from Navarino St. to the corner of Clark St. & 2nd Street in Algoma. In 2020, Ahnapee Brewery opened a second location in Suamico, WI, which houses all of the brewery's production and another taproom. [3]
Kewaunee County is a county located in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. As of the 2020 census, the population was 20,563. Its county seat is Kewaunee. The county was created in 1852 and organized in 1859. Its Menominee name is Kewāneh, an archaic name for a species of duck. Kewaunee County is part of the Green Bay, WI Metropolitan Statistical Area as well as the Green Bay-Shawano, WI Combined Statistical Area.
Ahnapee is a town in Kewaunee County, Wisconsin, United States, on the Ahnapee River. The population was 940 as of the 2010 census. The Ahnapee State Trail passes through the town of Ahnapee.
Algoma is a city in Kewaunee County in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. The population was 3,243 at the 2020 census. Algoma is part of the Green Bay Metropolitan Statistical Area.
The Green Bay and Western Railroad served central Wisconsin for almost 100 years before it was absorbed into the Wisconsin Central in 1993. For much of its history the railroad was also known as the Green Bay Route. At the end of 1970 it operated 255 miles of road on 322 miles of track; that year it reported 317 million ton-miles of revenue freight.
The Ahnapee River is a 14.7-mile-long (23.7 km) river on the Door Peninsula in eastern Wisconsin in the United States. It rises in Door County, Wisconsin, and flows through Kewaunee County into Lake Michigan at the city of Algoma. Its name has been ascribed as coming from the Ojibwe word aanapii meaning "when?".
The Ahnapee and Western Railway (A&W) was a common carrier short line railroad located in northeastern Wisconsin.
The Algoma Foundry and Machine Company of Algoma, Wisconsin began its corporate existence in 1883 as a regional manufacturer of horse-drawn farm machinery. However, in 1920 the company started making the "OK" silo filler or stationary ensilage harvester. Immediately following its introduction the OK silo filler became very popular with the dairy farming market across the Upper Midwest of the United States. Sales of the OK soon made the Algoma Company a leading producer of silo fillers in the entire nation.
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Kewaunee County, Wisconsin. It is intended to provide a comprehensive listing of entries in the National Register of Historic Places that are located in Kewaunee County, Wisconsin. The locations of National Register properties for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below may be seen in a map.
William Waters (1843–1917) was an American architect who designed numerous buildings in Wisconsin that eventually were listed on the National Register of Historic Places. He was responsible for designing much of historic Oshkosh, Wisconsin. He was also responsible for designing the Wisconsin building for the Columbian Exposition. Waters died in 1917 and is buried at Riverside Cemetery in Oshkosh. After his death, Oshkosh honored him by naming the intersection of Washington Avenue and State Street as the "William Waters Plaza".
Melvin Withington Perry was an American businessman and Republican politician from Kewaunee County, Wisconsin. He was a member of the Wisconsin Senate, representing Wisconsin's 1st State Senate district from 1911 through 1919. His name was almost always abbreviated as M. W. Perry.
St. Agnes-by-the-Lake Episcopal Church, Algoma, Wisconsin, United States, is an Anglo-Catholic mission congregation of the Episcopal Diocese of Fond du Lac. The congregation first met in 1877, becoming an organized mission in 1897.
The Ahnapee State Trail is a multi-use trail along the Ahnapee River and the Kewaunee River in northeastern Wisconsin.
The Peoria Warehouse Historic District is a historic industrial district located to the southwest of downtown Peoria, Illinois. The district includes 68 buildings, 59 of which are considered contributing to its historic status; these buildings include warehouses and other industrial structures and were built from the 1880s through the 1920s. The buildings generally have utilitarian designs inspired by the Chicago school and are built with reinforced concrete frames and brick exteriors.
Big Wood Brewery is a brewery and taproom located in White Bear Lake, Minnesota, in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area. The company began in some empty warehouse space in Vadnais Heights in 2009, before moving into their newly built brewery in 2012.
The Art Dettman Fishing Shanty is located in Algoma, Wisconsin.
The Reedsburg Brewery is a historic brewery located in Reedsburg, Wisconsin. The company was founded in the 1860s, during the hops boom. The building was rebuilt in 1904, after a large fire destroyed the original structure. The Reedsburg Brewery served as the primary manufacturer of beer for the city, up until Prohibition, in the 1920s. It reopened again in 1933, but eventually had to close in 1950 due to decreasing sales. In 1984, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
The L. Hoster Brewing Company is set of historic buildings in the Brewery District of Columbus, Ohio, United States. The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2009.