Lemp Mansion

Lemp Mansion

Front of the Lemp Mansion

Front of the Lemp Mansion
General information
Address 3322 DeMenil Place (formerly 3322 South 13th Street)
Town or city St. Louis, Missouri
Country United States
Coordinates 38°35′36″N 90°12′58″W / 38.5932°N 90.216°W / 38.5932; -90.216Coordinates: 38°35′36″N 90°12′58″W / 38.5932°N 90.216°W / 38.5932; -90.216
Completed 1868
Website
lempmansion.com

The Lemp Mansion (3322 Demenil Place, Saint Louis, Missouri) is a historical house in Benton Park, St. Louis, Missouri. It is also the site of four suicides by Lemp family members after the death of the son Frederick Lemp, whose William J. Lemp Brewing Co. dominated the St. Louis beer market before Prohibition with its Falstaff beer brand. The mansion is said to be haunted by members of the Lemp family.

Architectural history

The house was built in 1868 by St. Louisian Jacob Feickert. William J. Lemp and his wife, Julia, moved into the mansion in 1876. In 1911, the house underwent major renovations including conversion of some space into offices for the Lemp Brewery. The Lemps lived in the house until 1949 when Charles Lemp committed suicide in the office.

In 1950, the mansion became a boarding house; throughout the next decade, it lost much of its ornate charm. The construction of Interstate 55 during the 1960s led to the destruction of much of the grounds and one of the carriage houses.

Although many of the original details of the home have been replaced, there are still some remaining pieces.[1] The decorative iron gates from the open-air elevator can be viewed from the basement restaurant.[1] In the office where William Lemp, Jr. committed suicide, there is still an Italian marble mantle.[1] The ceiling in the parlor is hand-painted, and the mantles are intricately carved African mahogany.[1] The main bathroom includes a glass-enclosed shower that Lemp brought back to St. Louis from an Italian hotel.[1] The three vaults where the Lemps stored their art pieces are located in the rear of the home.[1]

The Lemp Mansion is currently a restaurant and inn owned by the Pointer family; tours both historical and haunted are offered, and it is a venue for murder mystery dinner theatre and Halloween parties.[2] Although the area has lost its former charm, there are other nearby buildings of historic interest, including the Chatillon-DeMenil House at 3325 Demenil Pl.

Lemp family history

Adam Lemp and the Western Brewery

The original patriarch of the Lemp Family was Johann "Adam" Lemp, born in 1798 in Grüningen, Germany.[3] He became a naturalized citizen in November 1841.[4] He arrived in the United States in 1836, eventually settling in St. Louis in 1838. In the St. Louis city directory of 1840–41, he is listed as a grocer.

Adam Lemp started a grocery store at Sixth and Morgan, called A. Lemp & Co., family grocery. This site is now occupied by the middle of the south side of the Edward Jones Dome. In addition to typical groceries, Lemp sold his own vinegar and beer. By 1840 he focused solely on the manufacture and sale of beer, forming Western Brewery at 37 South Second Street (about where the south leg of the Arch now stands). Adam Lemp’s beer became very popular due to the increase of German population in the area. Lemp was one of the first in the country to produce German lager, which was a great difference from the English ale and porters.[5] The business prospered, and when a large storage space became necessary, a cave in south St. Louis was used for this purpose as it provided natural refrigeration. The cave was below the current locations of the Lemp and Chatillon-DeMenil House and the Lemp Brewery.

By the 1860s there were 40 breweries in the St. Louis area taking advantage of the caves along the Mississippi, with the Western Brewery emerging as one of the most successful.

William J. Lemp Sr.

Adam's son William J. Lemp was born in Germany in 1835. After completing his education at St. Louis University, he worked at the Western Brewery until he left the company to form a partnership with another brewer. In 1861, he enlisted in the United States Reserve Corps, and achieved the rank of Orderly Sergeant. On December 3, 1861, he married Julia Feickert.

On August 23, 1862, Adam Lemp died, and William returned to the Western Brewery as owner and operator. In 1864 he began building a larger brewery above the caves where Western had been storing its goods.

Under William Lemp, the Western Brewery became the largest brewery in St. Louis, and then, the largest outside of New York with a single owner. William began to brew and bottle the beer in the same facility to meet growing demand, a practice that was rare at that time. Further demonstrating his innovation and business sense, in 1878 he installed the first refrigeration machine in an American brewery, and then extended the idea to refrigerated railway cars, in a successful attempt to be the first beer in the United States with a national reach. Soon, Lemp Beer was sold worldwide.

In 1892, the William J. Lemp Brewing Company was founded from the Western Brewery with William as President, his son William Jr. as Vice-President, and his son Louis as Superintendent.

William J. "Billy" Lemp, Jr., was born on August 13, 1867. Like his father, he went to St. Louis University and then studied the art of brewing. However, it was William Sr.'s fourth son, Frederick, born in 1873, whom he hoped to groom to take over the company. Unknown to William Sr. and his family, Frederick had significant health problems. On December 12, 1901, Frederick died of heart failure due to complication of diseases. William Sr. became despondent and slowly declined. He was dealt another blow on January 1, 1904, when his best friend Frederick Pabst died.[6] On the morning of February 13, 1904, William Lemp committed suicide by gunshot, and died at 10:15 a.m.[7]

William J. Lemp, Jr.

On November 7, 1904, William J. "Billy" Lemp, Jr., took over the brewing company as president. Billy had married Lillian Handlan five years earlier, and they moved to a new home at 3343 South Thirteenth Street.

Lillian Handlan Lemp was, allegedly, nicknamed the “Lavender Lady” for her lavender colored wardrobe and carriages. She filed for divorce in 1908, charging Billy with desertion, cruel treatment and other indignities. Their divorce proceedings lasted 11 days and ended in Lillian being granted her divorce and custody of William III - their only child - with Billy given only visitation rights.

After the trial, Billy built "Alswel" - his country home overlooking the Meramec River. The home was located in what is now the western edge of Kirkwood. By 1914, he lived at Alswel full-time.

The Lemp Brewery suffered in the 1910s when Prohibition began. The brewery was shut down and the Falstaff trademark was sold to Lemp's friend, "Papa Joe" Griesedieck. The brewery itself was eventually sold at auction to International Shoe Company for $588,500. On December 29, 1922, Billy Lemp shot himself in his office a room that today is the front left dining room.

Elsa Lemp Wright

Elsa Lemp Wright, the youngest child of William Sr. married Thomas Wright, president of the More-Jones Brass and Metal Company in 1910. They separated in 1918 and in February, 1919, Elsa filed for divorce. She cited, among other things, damage to her mental and physical health. The divorce was granted after a trial, but Elsa and Thomas soon reconciled and remarried in March 1920. Later that month on March 20, Elsa shot herself while in bed at their house at 13 Hortense Place.

William Lemp III

In 1939, William J. Lemp III, the only son of Billy Lemp, licensed the Lemp name to Central Breweries of East St. Louis. Central Breweries renamed itself the William J. Lemp Brewing Company and began a grand marketing campaign resulting in increased sales of the new Lemp Beer. The contract was terminated by Ems Brewing, which bought out Lemp in 1945.

Charles Lemp

Charles Lemp, the third son of William Sr., was the final Lemp to live in the mansion, starting in 1929.

He had left the brewery in 1917, to go into banking and finance. He had also dabbled in politics, influencing many south side wards. He never married and lived with his dog in the mansion with two servants, a married couple.

April, 1941, Charles Lemp sent a letter to a south St. Louis funeral home requesting that in case of his death, his remains should be taken by ambulance to the Missouri Crematory. His body should not be bathed, clothed, or changed. His ashes should be put into a wicker box and buried on his farm. There were to be no funeral held or a notice put in the papers.

On May 10, 1949; eight years later, he shot his dog, then himself in the head, leaving the following suicide note: "St. Louis Mo/May 9, 1949, In case I am found dead blame it on no one but me. Ch. A. Lemp".

Edwin Lemp

After Charles' death, the only surviving son of William Sr. was Edwin Lemp. (Louis Lemp, the second oldest son, had died of natural causes in 1931.) Edwin, the youngest son, had worked in the brewery until 1913. He then retired at "Cragwold", the estate he had built overlooking the Meramec River in 1911. "Cragwold", in western Kirkwood, had an observation tower, two servants' houses, and a collection of birds, antelope, sheep, yaks, buffalo and other animals. After his retirement, Edwin dedicated himself to many charitable causes, primarily the St. Louis Zoo.

In 1970, Edwin died at the age of 90. His final order to his caretaker was to destroy his art collection and family heirlooms.[1]

Folklore

According to local legend, Lemp Mansion is haunted by spirits. According to the Missouri History Museum, Life magazine included the Lemp mansion in an article on America’s nine most haunted houses in 1980.[5]

One spirit called "the monkey faced boy" is said to be William's illegitimate son, Zeke, born with Down's Syndrome and hidden away in the attic. A variation of the legend states that Zeke was William's brother, born deformed or mentally disabled. No records exist to substantiate any of the claims.[8]

In popular culture

MTV featured the tunnels below Lemp Mansion and the former Lemp Brewery as a location on their short-lived reality show, FEAR, disguising it as "The Boettger Brewery".

In 2011, the caves below the mansion and brewery were featured on the show Off Limits, when locations in St. Louis were highlighted (episode 1.11). Exterior shots of the Lemp Mansion were shown.

In 2010 the mansion was investigated by The Atlantic Paranormal Society, which was featured on the September 29 episode of Ghost Hunters.[9]

In 2009, the mansion was investigated by the Discovery Channel program Ghost Lab during its December 29 episode entitled "If Walls Could Talk".[10]

In October 2013, the mansion and its history was featured as part of the Travel Channel's "Most Terrifying Places In America 2" program.

In 2014, the mansion, brewery and the Cherokee Cave system were featured on a tenth season episode of Travel Channel's Ghost Adventures, for their lockdown investigation, which aired on October 18, 2014.[11]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "The Lemp Mansion // St. Louis, Missouri // 314-664-8024". www.lempmansion.com. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
  2. "The Lemp Mansion Restaurant and Inn". LempMansion.com. Retrieved 2012-03-18.
  3. "Rise of the Lemp Dynasty". LempLager.com. Retrieved 2012-03-18.
  4. "Lemp Family. Papers (1841–1910.)". collections.mohistory.org. Missouri History Museum. Retrieved 2012-03-18. John Adam Lemp became a naturalized citizen in November 1841. He is listed as a grocer in the St. Louis city directory of 1840–41. He later founded the Lemp Brewery.
  5. 1 2 Shepley, Carol Ferring. "The Lemp Family of St. Louis". Voices, the online magazine of the Missouri History Museum. Missouri History Museum. Retrieved 15 April 2012.
  6. Shepley, Carol Ferring. Movers and Shakers, Scalawags and Suffragettes: Tales from Bellefontaine Cemetery. Missouri History Museum: St. Louis, 2008.
  7. MILLIONAIRE BREWER W.J. LEMP SUICIDES WHILE DESPONDENT, in the Tacoma Times; published February 13, 1904; retrieved December 26, 2014 (via Chronicling America)
  8. Janice Tremeear (18 August 2011). Wicked St. Louis. The History Press. pp. 75–. ISBN 978-1-60949-298-4. Retrieved 15 April 2012.
  9. "Ghost Hunters Season 6, Episode 16". TV.com. 2010-12-18. Retrieved 2012-03-18.
  10. "Ghost Lab Season 1, Episode 13". Discovery Channel. Retrieved 2012-03-18.
  11. http://www.travelchannel.com/tv-shows/ghost-adventures/episodes/lemp-mansion-and-brewery

External links

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