Posts tagged Wisconsin

Posted 4 months ago

Milwaukee Vice: Where the action was in 1972

Read the Milwaukee Sentinel’s November 6, 1972 remarkable state of the red-light nation,  revisited by freelance writer Matthew Prigge for the August 8, 2012 Shepherd Express.

After Blue Cross/Blue Shield redevelopment, Grand Avenue renewal, Wisconsin Center construction and Park East demolition, most of Fifth Street was neutered and erased from the downtown map.  Not a single business listed here (except the Marc Plaza / Hilton) still exists today — making this feature story all the more surreal.

What was once a deliciously colorful stroll, popping with pandemonium of the pimps, pushers and prostitutes variety, is now four of the most colorless blocks in the city.

And that’s a dirty shame.

Posted 5 months ago
One of Milwaukee’s deadest corners used to be its most alive. 

Thirty years ago, the historic Plankinton Hotel (Michigan & Plankinton) was razed for lifeless Grand Avenue parking — when it could have just as easily been restored and incorporated into the mall footprint.  

More on this Lost Milwaukee landmark soon.

One of Milwaukee’s deadest corners used to be its most alive.

Thirty years ago, the historic Plankinton Hotel (Michigan & Plankinton) was razed for lifeless Grand Avenue parking — when it could have just as easily been restored and incorporated into the mall footprint.

More on this Lost Milwaukee landmark soon.

Posted 5 months ago

Lost Milwaukee: the St. Charles Hotel

For generations, one of the city’s leading residential hotels was the St. Charles Hotel (786 N. Water St.)  Built in 1857 by Captain Uppmann, the 125-room St. Charles was among the oldest in the city when it was purchased and reconstructed by the Pabst family in 1895.  The new building was an eastern anchor to a gorgeous, European-style City Hall Square that included the Blatz Hotel, the Pabst Theater, the Henry Bergh animal drinking fountain, and City Hall (for awhile, the tallest building in America.)

Soon, the Pabst Hotel register was filled with the names of distinguished German royals and politicians of every level.  

By the 1920s, City Hall Square was no longer swank.  In 1923, the Pabsts sold the hotel to a new owner and removed their family name from the cornice.  Their timing couldn’t have been better, because the St. Charles Hotel promptly plunged into a scandalous moral decline.

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Posted 5 months ago

Lost Milwaukee: the Cross Keys Hotel

By 1964, the tired old building at the corner of Water Street and St. Paul looked like just another downtown dive waiting for the wrecking ball.  After all, “slum clearance” in the Lower Third Ward had already rezoned 34 acres, razed 85 buildings, and relocated 359 families.  Within a decade, the close-knit, colorful lifestyle of Milwaukee’s multi-generational “Little Italy” neighborhood had been erased, leaving behind disconnected buildings with disjointed purpose.

What most people didn’t realize was that the Cross Keys was the oldest building on the oldest street in the city — and probably one of the oldest buildings in the state.  Before being ravaged by fire and razed for parking, the Cross Keys had a long and colorful life, filled with disaster, violence and scandal.

Bailey Stimson, described as a “mutton chops Englishman” from Cambridgeshire, established the Cross Keys here as a two-story wooden frame house in 1843. It quickly became the favorite destination of visiting Englishmen. Everything about the Cross Keys was English, featuring heirloom silver pots of tea, plum pudding, racks of beef, Cornish hens and homemade divinity. Meatpacking pioneers Frederick and John Layton lived here when they arrived in Milwaukee in 1845. 

The tiny English inn was replaced with a modern four-story building in 1853. Although built of Cream City brick, the Cross Keys was painted in bold reds because Stimson found the Cream City color “sickly.”  Iron work was just coming into vogue, so the building was decorated with a wrought-iron balcony and iron balustrades fashioned by the Reliance Iron Works. During construction, a limestone plate was erected above the main entrance at 400 Water Street, reading “B. Stimson July 4, 1853.”

On December 16, 1853, the hotel’s grand opening was celebrated with an old-fashioned housewarming party, including punch with raisins, baked apples with maple syrup and hot corn bread with buttermilk. It was boom times in Milwaukee: mayor George Walker was expanding the city in every direction, gas pipes were being laid, wooden buildings were being replaced by fireproof brick, and the population had just cracked 25,000.  Clearing the remains of Solomon Juneau’s log shanty was considered a symbolic act of progress.

The Milwaukee River froze over on December 19, 1853 and was closed to navigation.  However, hot and cold water still ran from the pipes of the Cross Keys at the twist of a faucet. Before most Milwaukee homes and businesses were outfitted with city water, the Cross Keys installed wooden conduits which piped water from a spring at the lakeshore. The hotel didn’t fail to deliver on its promise of “running water at all times.”

On September 30, 1859, an American president put the hotel’s hospitality to the test.  Abraham Lincoln visited the Wisconsin Agricultural Society convention, held at 12th & Wells in the old Red Arrow Park. Although he stayed at the most fashionable Newhall House hotel 3 blocks away, Lincoln came to the Cross Keys for breakfast, gave a speech from the iron balcony, and then took a “long and leisurely” bath in a Cross Keys tub.  Apparently, the Newhall House didn’t have tubs large enough to suit the 6’4” president. For decades, antique vendors sought to locate Lincoln’s bathtub, but it was never found. After the hotel closed in 1879, the tub was used as a coal bin for decades and eventually discarded.

The building was forever known as the Cross Keys, even though it operated by that name for less than 20 years. Afterwards, it was known as Stimson’s Hotel (1861), Juneau House (1863), Russell House (1867), American House (1869) and European Hotel (1875). In the 1840s, the area was filled with travelers hotels supporting the Huron (Clybourn) and Detroit (St. Paul) sea passenger docks. When the railroads came to Milwaukee, the hotels moved to where the depots were (first, 2nd & Seeboth, then East Wisconsin Avenue, and then Fourth & Michigan.) By 1879, the old Cross Keys Hotel closed its hotel operation forever and the ground floor was renovated as commercial storefronts.

The hotel was fortunate enough to survive both an 1865 fire and the Great Third Ward fire of 1892, but a vicious fourth floor fire in 1923 destroyed its original Italianate features and required the removal of the building’s top floor. The Cross Keys went from heavily decorated to sparsely streamlined almost overnight.

By 1954, the Milwaukee Journal described the Cross Keys as “simply an old building that has long lost its name and purpose.”  Over 100 years’ time, Water Street had been raised three times and the old building continued to settle into the unstable marshland it had been built upon. The lobby of the old hotel had been above street level on opening day. By 1954, the same space, now a barbershop, was more than five feet below the street. 

In 1969, architectural historian H. Russell Zimmerman expressed doubt that the Cross Keys would survive the expressway era. It was recognized as the oldest surviving commercial building in the city.

Depopulated by urban renewal and amputated from downtown by freeway construction, the Third Ward became somewhat of a floating museum. While relatively busy by day, the area was almost completely desolate by night. By the late 1960s, gay bars began migrating to the down-low streets of the Third and Fifth Wards.  

The River Queen, one of the more popular, opened in the Cross Keys sometime in 1969.  Originally owned by Al Berry (proprietor of the Rooster Bar at 181 S 2nd St., now known as Just Art’s Saloon), the River Queen was rumored to be financed by organized crime. It is well-remembered today for its ornate decor, including a crystal chandelier.  The River Queen was also famous for celebrity sightings: LIberace, Milton Berle, Paul Lynde and others could be seen here after local performances. 

Of course, the bar was forever being slapped with trumped-up charges of disorderly conduct, serving after hours, underage loitering, prostitution, and fire code violations.  Its liquor license was in constant jeopardy for most of its existence.  

In January 1976, the River Queen was the scene of a massive scandal involving Milwaukee Police corruption.  To avoid police harassment, the former owner had given cash payoffs in excess of $1,000, expensive gifts (including 25 electric razors,) cases of liquor, and daily free drinks to over 50 police offers and their wives between 1973 and 1974.  He claimed that officers would stay in the bar after closing until 7am, while vice officers were serviced by prostitutes (female and male) at the bar. 

An intense investigation ensued, and the findings were bizarre.  After hearing how a drunken officer showed off his new gun by firing bullets into the bar’s ceilings, detectives removed wood paneling and found two bullets wedged in the walls.   One officer reported seeing a colleague staggering drunk down Wisconsin Avenue at 6:30 a.m. after having 8-10 after-hours drinks at the bar. Two police officers were accused of homosexual conduct with a minor in a nearby apartment. Investigators traveled to Minneapolis and Chicago to obtain shadowy testimonials from former bartenders and patrons.  ”Detectives say that homosexuals, like prostitutes, are often valuable sources of information about criminal activity,” reported the Milwaukee Journal.

Although the investigation did not result in any charges, mainly due to a lack of cooperation and hard evidence, the controversy caused the end of the River Queen. When it closed, its patrons took every souvenir they could get out of the bar, and some people still own barstools to this day.

In early 1977, a new owner tried to overcome the scandal by opening a “sophisticated” jazz club. Due to continued licensing problems and high rent ($1,000 a month in 1977), Sharon’s didn’t last long.  Side Door and Jocks opened and closed here within the next two years, and by fall 1979, the building’s only occupant was the Waterfront Cafe.

On Wednesday, November 28, 1979, a three-alarm fire broke out at the Cross Keys at 4:15 a.m.  It was fought by over 100 firefighters.  The fire started on the first floor, but the State Fire Marshal never found its cause. The loss was cited as only $200,000.

After 127 years at the corner of St. Paul and Water, the Cross Keys was finally razed in May 1980 for a parking lot. The land stayed vacant until 2005 when the Milwaukee Public Market was built on the exact footprint of the old Cross Keys Hotel.

Posted 2 years ago

Lost Milwaukee: The Princess Theater

If you’re under 40, chances are you’ve never even heard of the Princess Theater. And it’s probably impossible to believe there was a thriving “red light” district at Third and Wisconsin as late as the 1980s.  But there was. There really was.

In 1897, the Pabst Brewery bought land at 738 N. 3rd St to build a branded saloon. The beer business opened in 1903, but somehow failed within a year.  It was replaced in 1904 by The Grand, a 10 cent, four-shows-a-day “family vaudeville” theater that dabbled in motion pictures. 

The Grand tried hard to stay afloat, shifting quickly from vaudeville to moving pictures to talking pictures (with actors behind the screen, narrating the imagery.) The business eventually failed, and the operation was leased to emerging theater kings Thomas and John Saxe.  However, the land was retained by Clara Heyl, scandal-ridden Pabst Brewery heiress, whose son Helmuth would hold the title — as an on-again, off-again absentee landlord — well into the 1970s.

On December 16, 1909, the Saxes introduced a reinvented Princess Theater to great local fanfare.  The house now featured over 1,000 “elegantly cushioned” seats, an improved balcony with four box seats, elegant lobby fountains, mosaic tile floors, elegantly painted movie posters, stained glass windows, mirrored walls, and one of the first electric ventilation systems in the city. There was now a five-piece orchestra pit, with a $20,000 Barton pipe organ with 27 stops — one of the first in Milwaukee. This was no longer a “poor man’s vaudeville house,” claimed papers, but a gathering place for a “better class of people.” Mayor David Rose even dedicated the opening night affair.

Once the new 1,500 bulb marquee ignited that night, movies — of progressively declining quality — would be shown here continuously for over seven decades. 

In 1925, the now-wealthy Saxes invested over $50,000 to make the Princess Theater “the model picture house of Milwaukee.” The theatre’s famous terra cotta facade was revealed for the first time, elaborately decorated with neoclassical features and artificial windows.  These accommodations were supposedly modeled after the recently-opened Wisconsin Theater (530 W. Wisconsin Ave.), the largest movie palace ever built in Milwaukee and then the flagship of a 28-house chain.

If the Princess Theater was ever that elegant, the luster faded very, very quickly. The Saxes sold their theater chain in 1927, briefly regained control of the Princess and a handful of their former movie houses in 1933,  and then sold them off again. By 1943, the theater was showing “eighth run” films at a fraction of its neighbors’ ticket prices.

In 1957, the elaborate facade was “art-bricked” in a cheap and hideous attempt to modernize the neoclassical building. The sidewalk box office was covered. A new ticket counter was built indoors — and eventually, encased in glass.  The orchestra pit was covered.  The grand pipe organ disappeared. All traces of the “model picture house” disintegrated — the fountains, the mirrors, even the draperies.  The Princess was stripped down to her bare essentials.

With the glamour gone, the Saxes gone, and the downtown movie audience increasingly gone, the Princess was at a low point in her life at middle age. And then, she found herself in a “friends with benefits” relationship with a sketchy neighbor, The Brass Rail club.  The Brass Rail started as a downtown tavern, but became a hugely successful strip club in 1959.  Eight months later, 320-lb. owner Izzy Pogrob disappeared with $1,500 in a white Cadillac — and turned up blindfolded and shot dead in a Mequon field with 93 cents in his pocket. Rumors whispered that Pogrob had been rubbed out in a mobster hit.  The rumors continued when Milwaukee’s infamous Balistreri family took over the bar.

For a generation, the Brass Rail was *the* most notorious downtown “stag” bar — a strictly male space where wives weren’t welcome, and men could be men with neither courtesy or apology. Its racy burlesque posters beckoned to workingmen passing by, as well as young boys whose imaginations must have ran wild wondering what went on indoors.

But by 1959, nobody really cared anymore what was going on inside the Princess — and it was certainly no longer a “gathering place for a better class of people.”  There were other, better downtown theaters, and the one-story, dime-a-dozen Princess was pretty much played out.  Within a few blocks, you could visit the Alhambra, Esquire, Riverside, Towne, Warner, Wisconsin, Strand and Palace Theaters - all in arguably better shape than the Princess, and showing better movies. (OK, maybe not the Alhambra.) A Milwaukee Journal critic reported,  “The Wisconsin Hotel, still one of the town’s best, defies the wrath of time…but we’re not too sure about the Princess Theater, which continues to throw reels and reels of tired celluloid at patrons for fifty cents a turn.”

How soon the Princess would make her comeback! On January 14, 1960, the theater was showing Sophia Loren’s 1959 film “That Kind of Woman” — but on the next day, the Princess became known as “that kind of woman” with an adults-only program.  The ads for “Room 43” screamed, “DARING! FRANK! SENSATIONAL! A film for those who think they have seen everything!” Meanwhile, “Adventures in Sadie” was hawked as “the eyebrow-raising story of three men and a girl stranded on a desert island!”  

The Princess had found a speciality: topless movies. And what a big deal THAT was, during the Kennedy era. Milwaukee personality Art Kumbalek says it best: “I don’t believe the young people today could begin to understand what a triumph that was—to see a naked boob in a motion picture theater.”  Sneaking into the theater became a rite of passage for teenage boys — something to brag about to your less brave, but no less curious friends. The Princess was now a girl with a “reputation.”

With Helmuth Heyl barely noticing, the theater was passed from one out-of-town operator to another, and the films quickly went from mature to adult to X to XXX. The theater’s movie listings in local newspapers certainly captured both attention and imagination, but not everyone was ready to “out” themselves as a moral deviant by walking in the theater’s front doors. So the Brass Rail’s owners quietly installed a secret door connecting their club with the theater lobby. Anyone could now see a dirty movie - without anyone on the street knowing you had done so. While the Brass Rail was originally the raciest option on the block, it had become one of the more morally acceptable.  With the arrival of the lurid Central Danish World adult bookstore at Third and Wells, the block became Milwaukee’s red light district.  By the 1970s, there were 4 adult theaters and 15 adult bookstores in downtown Milwaukee — leading city officials to propose zoning regulations that would relocate these booming businesses to the Third Ward, where redevelopment efforts had erased a thriving Little Italy 20 years prior. The proposal to create a Third Ward “combat zone” ultimately failed.

The Princess didn’t get the Milwaukee premiere of DEEP THROAT, which went to the Parkway Theater (3417 W. Lisbon) in December 1972.  But Marilyn Chambers, Russ Meyer and other famous adult film celebrities signed autographs here throughout the 1970s. This publicity didn’t escape the attention of local police or state investigators. In 1976, the theater paid $2,000 for two counts of obscenity,  In 1977, the Milwaukee Police Department seized 77 films, of which the state only found 17 obscene, but eventually dismissed.

The continuous threat of a theater raid made the Princess seem like a very dubious and dangerous place, on top of its already scandalous reputation. Patrons reported that the appeal of the Princess Theater wasn’t even the movies themselves— it was the sheer thrill of being a spectator in such a forbidden place.  

And the theater’s moral integrity wasn’t the only problem. Its architecture was literally falling apart.  In 1967, both the auditorium flooring and the stage had to be replaced — because the cork lining had finally rotted. In 1977, a portion of the neighboring building crashed through the Princess Theater’s roof. Seating was often removed rather than repaired or replaced. Plumbing, lighting and heating were often unreliable —as was the cleanliness of the theater inside and out. Modern air conditioning had never been installed — and the building still had its original dirt basement floor throughout its entire lifetime.  

Nothing could make the Princess a morally acceptable destination again — nor would it be affordable or feasible to try.  Early VCRs and pay-per-view channels were starting to show up in the privacy of people’s homes. Nobody in their right mind was going to risk their reputation, safety or self-respect to visit a run-down theater. The thrill was gone. 

With Grand Avenue, the Hyatt, and a new Federal Building all being built within a one-block radius, it was increasingly obvious that the decadent and now decaying Princess Theater’s days were numbered.  

On December 10, 1982, the Sentinel reported that the Milwaukee Redevelopment Authority had voted unanimously to raze the theater.  However, the Authority refused to hear the arguments of Joseph Balistreri, owner of the Brass Rail, who was working with an architect to reopen the bar as a restaurant run by “established restaurant people.” Balistreri was the son of Frank P. Balistreri, who was documented as the head of organized crime in Milwaukee and indicted in ongoing FBI and Justice Department investigations. 

The Authority was asked to consider the plight of 62-year-old Violet Clemons, long-time cashier-manager and one of the seven Princess Theater employees, whose story was told in the Milwaukee Sentinel.  ”Vie” sat on the same ticket-taking stool for ten years, in a secure, glassed-in world, with a little TV, telephone and artificial Christmas tree, without ever once seeing an adult movie.  The surprisingly progressive Christian grandmother defended her customers as “quiet, hard-working men” who “weren’t bothering anybody” and needed this type of outlet in their lives.  ”It’s their money and their time, and they are all adults. A lot of guys are not married, will never marry…as long as they are hurting anyone, the government should keep their nose out of it.” She also noted, “I don’t think anybody has the right to deny anybody else the right to watch an adult movie.”

Clemon’s lawyer said “It’s very easy to view this as nothing more than a dirty movie theater, but even that is better than another hole in the ground in downtown Milwaukee.”  The owner of the Century Building on 3rd and Wells disagreed, “I, for one, just think it stinks.  Let’s face it, guys, it’s just a porno theater.” 

But was it? Two weeks later, historian Hugh Swofford came forward with a proposal that was ridiculed by city officials and papers. Since the Princess was the city’s oldest continuously operating movie theater, it was worthy of redemption, not razing. The proposal did have merit, according to the city’s historic preservation guidelines, and the discussion gained a foothold as the Redevelopment Authority fumed. The Brass Rail, however, attracted no preservation defenders.

Was there bias against these sordid downtown properties? Most certainly.  Even the Balistreri lawyers pointed this out, saying “As this (redevelopment) plan is being constructed, I think certain individuals are being singled out, and I think they’re being singled out unfairly.”  This statement could be applied to not only porn theaters, adult bookstores and strip joints, but the “undesirable” downtown denizens that frequented them. None were welcome in the new “everything must go” downtown of the 1980s.

By 1984, the Princess was the last remaining X-rated theater in Milwaukee — and one of two downtown movie theaters left standing after the Redevelopment Authority’s renovation rampage down Wisconsin Avenue. In March, the Authority seized the Princess and Brass Rail, ordered tenants to move out within 90 days, and began condemnation proceedings.  The Brass Rail was flattened at the cost of $14,300, but as preservation talks continued on the Princess, demolition was at a standstill. On August 31, 1984, a random hole was punched in the theater wall to prevent its designation as a local historic landmark. Within a few weeks, the city’s seizure actions — including this wanton vandalism —  were ruled legal by a local court, the oldest movie theater in Milwaukee was flattened, and Third Street had finally been exorcised of its demons. 

The Authority voted to turn the Brass Rail / Princess site into a surface parking lot “until a new development is decided upon.” When pressed for definite plans for the parcel, a smug Authority member sarcastically offered, “trees.” Almost three decades later, the cement lot remains vacant, undeveloped, and treeless — a testament to the pointless ruin of an intact city block.

In February 1985, the Milwaukee Journal reported, “Gone are the clusters of streetwalkers beckoning men who walked along 5th Street at night. Gone are the honky-tonks where go-go girls offered more than dancing for the right price. Gone is the Princess Theater, where several generations of young men learned about the birds and bees from Brigitte Bardot, Linda Lovelace and Marilyn Chambers. As the seamier types of entertainment have left downtown, more middle-class, family-style activities have moved in.”  Milwaukee’s red light district was gone for good. Good, it seemed at the time, had triumphed over evil — leaving behind an ugly, barren, lifeless half-block stretch of street.  

The Modjeska Theater, engineered by the Saxe Brothers in 1924 and still standing on Mitchell Street, has a street-level facade somewhat reminiscent of the Princess. However, the Princess Theater only lives on today in hazy, hush-hush memories — and in the eight marquee letters (P-R-I-N-C-E-S-S) salvaged by Times Cinema proprietor Larry Widen.

Posted 2 years ago

January 4, 1904: Captain Frederick Pabst is buried at Forest Home Cemetery, three days after passing away at his home at the age of 67.

The New York Times reported on New Year’s Day, “Capt. Frederick Pabst, president of the Pabst Brewing Company, which operates one of the biggest breweries in the world, died at his home, 2000 Grand Avenue, this noon… while he knew that was suffering from an incurable disease and…could not live more than a few months longer…Capt. Pabst was a daily visitor at the brewery until ten days ago…he leaves an estate worth about $12,000,000.”

Captain Pabst was Milwaukee’s most charming beer baron, a self-made man who had literally gone from rags to riches during the golden age of the German Athens. Despite amassing vast personal wealth throughout the Gilded Age, the Captain was known as the most giving man in Milwaukee, donating tens of thousands to local charitable causes. He supported his heritage by welcoming new immigrants with a traveling library of German books. The Milwaukee Sentinel reported on January 2, 1904 that nobody would miss him more than the city’s poor and underprivileged. Years after his death, people would still toast “To Frederick Pabst, Milwaukee’s most beloved citizen” in the city’s saloons and beer halls. 

“I like to treat people well, because it is pleasant to think that after I am gone there may be someone who will say that old Fred wasn’t such a bad fellow after all.” Well said, Captain Pabst. Well said.

Posted 2 years ago

Lost Milwaukee: Southgate

“Southgate has been a blight for some time now,” stated Alderwoman Annette Scherbert in the June 23, 1999 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.  But 48 years earlier, Southgate was the It Mall — and the scene of retail history in the making.

“Southgate’s family party was such a success Thursday that the hosts could hardly believe it,” cried the Milwaukee Journal.   With the release of several thousand silver balloons, Milwaukee’s first true modern shopping center opened to an excitable mob on Thursday, September 20, 1951. 

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Posted 2 years ago

The Secret History of Capitol Court

CAPITOL COURT CENTER, originally an open-air venue, was developed by Ed Schuster and Company and designed by Seattle’s John Graham, Jr. . The 745,000 square foot, $20 million dollar shopping hub was a single-level structure with a service basement / arcade level. 

Posted 2 years ago

Lost Milwaukee: The Kooky Cooky House

Capitol Court shopping center opened in 1956 at the intersection of Capitol Drive, 60th Street and Fond du Lac Avenue, then considered to be Milwaukee’s “golden triangle” for retail development.

Despite being surrounded by 500,000 potential shoppers within a five mile radius, family favorite Capitol Court was abandoned and razed 45 years later.

It’s funny. When you ask people what they remember about Capitol Court, it’s never the stores.  In fact, people often forget there were brand-name stores there.  They’ll talk to you at great length about the petting zoo, the Kiddie Land amusement park, the Christmas train… and the legendary Kooky Cooky House.

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