↓
 

Sebewaing Brewing Company

All things Sebewaing Beer!

  • Home
  • 1880-1933
  • 1933-1966
  • What Happened?
  • Photos
    • Brewers’ Best Campaign
    • Building
    • Business Documents
  • Appreciation!
  • Dedication
  • Feedback
  • Glossary
  • About
  • Image Test DB
Home - Page 9 << 1 2 … 7 8 9 10 11 … 49 50 >>

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Different Perspective of Sebewaing Beer

Sebewaing Brewing Company Posted on September 6, 2015 by Scott ThedeOctober 2, 2015
university apartments

One of the University Village Apartment Buildings

This story appeared in the Lansing State Journal on May 10, 2006.  The article was titled “MSU’s University Village Reaches Final Days”.

Razing reflects changing times,4-bedroom units to replace former married housing by Matthew Miller.

EAST LANSING – University Village Apartments once played home to Michigan State University’s married students – young couples starting their lives together in compact and affordable apartments away from the undergraduate throngs.

They’re mostly a home for birds now, who nest in the rusting metal beams supporting the walkways that ring the two-story brick buildings, and for the skeletons of bicycles, left chained when their owners moved out.  Of the hundreds of married, international and graduate students who were living there when classes started last fall, perhaps half a dozen are left, and even they will be gone by the end of the week.  Starting Tuesday, the 53-year-old buildings, built as temporary housing for soldiers returning from the Korean War, will be torn to the ground.

Make Way for New

They’ll make way for new four-bedroom undergraduate apartments, aimed at students who aren’t keen on close communal living in MSU’s other residence halls.  The apartments will hold 304 students and should by finished by fall 2007. The project will cost $16 million.  The buildings in University Village have been sliding into disrepair for years.  Now, according to Chuck Gagliano, MSU’s assistant vice president for housing and food services, “the cost to begin to maintain them or renovate them far outweighs the cost to build new.”

Meg Cowen remembers them when they were clean and new and buzzing with activity. She lived at University Village from 1954 to 1958 with her former husband, Don Bols, and their infant daughter, JoAnne.  What she remembers especially are the Saturday night pizza parties, when their neighbors, many of them international students, would gather at their apartment to watch “The Honeymooners” and drink Sebewaing Beer.  “All kinds of people came, people who didn’t speak English,” she said, “A lot of them would just sit and nod and smile, but we ate pizza, drank that awful beer and had a great time.”  Cowen, of Plymouth, said she won’t mourn the buildings’ passing; she’s 72 and “used to things changing.”

A Fond Farewell

Doreen Hannon will.  She and her husband, Mark, lived in apartment 1103J from 1980 to 1983, and it holds memories of their early life together.  “Even though we didn’t have much, we were really happy,” she said. “We were on the brink of our future.”  Hannon, of South Lyon, said she visited the apartment on a trip to MSU last month and was bothered by the fact that the screen door on a neighboring apartment was hanging open, broken.  “It just felt wrong, almost like a sin that the building wasn’t being taken care of,” she said. “Later, I realized that they weren’t going to fix the door because they were going to tear it down.”

The few people still living at University Village expressed few qualms about its passing.  “I think it’s time,” said Pam Prokop, standing in front of an apartment piled high with boxes.  Prokop and her husband, Larry, a professor in the College of Osteopathic Medicine, have been living there while they wait for a house they’re building in Mason to be finished.  She said they’ve enjoyed the quiet of the last few months – most residents left soon after news of the demolition spread last fall – but she won’t miss the place.  “From the outside, they actually look OK,” she said, “but from the inside, they need to be modernized.”

Modern Students

MSU won’t just replace them with modern buildings, the first new residences built at MSU since 1967, but with buildings geared toward what modern students want.  According to Gagliano, students in decades past came from families with more children. They often shared bedrooms. They didn’t have many possessions.  And that, he said, is “exactly opposite of today’s student.”  Those students, he said, “want to have more of an experience of living on their own.”  And the new buildings, with separate bedrooms and soundproof walls, are meant to give that to them.

Contact Matthew Miller at 377-1046 or mrmiller@lsj.com.

What’s Next

Demolition begins Tuesday on University Village Apartments to make way for new, four-bedroom units for 304 undergraduate students. The $16 million project is expected to be completed by fall 2007.

Posted in Article | Leave a reply

Bay City Brewing Company Bottles Beer From Sebewaing in 1937

Sebewaing Brewing Company Posted on August 24, 2015 by Scott ThedeAugust 24, 2015

ad-bc-brewing-co-1898In 1937, the Sebewaing Brewing Company was increasing its volume of product output.  As an article in the Sebewaing Blade reported on January 29, 1937:

“New brew kettle and mash tub to be added by about March 1st in the Brew House.  Awhile ago, a new labeling machine and new filtering machine were purchased.  Also, new special floors to be installed for the Bottling House and Racking Room.  Wages paid out in 1936 to 33 employees was $36,400.”

Today, the minutes from a May 24, 1937 Liquor Control Commission meeting surfaced (click here) and documents the approval of the Bay City Brewing Company to bottle beer brewed in Sebewaing.  As another article in the Sebewaing Blade reported on April 30, 1937:

“New brew kettle and other equipment is in place.  Brewing to begin again on May 1st. To house the brew kettle and other equipment, it has been necessary to add an addition of 18′ x 30′ on the second floor.”

Perhaps with the construction and increased production, Sebewaing needed temporary help to keep up with demand?  Or maybe due to World War II, construction materials were not as readily available and it took longer than anticipated to complete the new construction?  Either way, the ingenuity of the brewery executives at the time were prominent and they found a way to get the job done.

Posted in Article | Leave a reply

Grand Rapids Fox Brewery and Sebewaing

Sebewaing Brewing Company Posted on August 23, 2015 by Scott ThedeAugust 23, 2015

Fox BrewerySebewaing Blade, January 10, 1947 - AdDuring research in the Sebewaing Blade, I ran across a few months where Fox Brewery out of Grand Rapids placed some sizable ads.  The Sebewaing Brewery countered with their own ad campaign.  An example of one of the Sebewaing ads is to the right.

There were several different slogans from the Sebewaing Brewery.  This was an aggressive ad campaign where the first ad appeared in 1945 (large text ad in the same overall orientation as the bottle ad pictured) and then from January through August of 1947, it appeared 2-3 times per month.

Posted in Article | Leave a reply

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy

Type in anything to search the entire site . . .

Why This Website?

The pages here are to help capture the history of this remarkable place through documentation, the knowledge of people that were there, and information passed along.

Gold Nuggets of Information

  • Beer Nostalgia
  • Brewery Names
  • Brewery Sounds
  • Building Plans
  • Employees
  • Fiscal Year End Report
  • Labels of Beer
  • Memorabilia
  • Sources
  • Timeline

Most Read Posts Last 48 Hours

  • 1934 Serv-O-Draft Dispenser
    1934 Serv-O-Draft Dispenser
  • Pride of Michigan Label
    Pride of Michigan Label

RSS Michigan Beer Buzz

RSS Brewers Association

  • Tax Provisions in Congressional Budget Negotiations Update May 14, 2025
  • How Much Does Your Beer Really Cost? May 14, 2025
  • PFAS Compounds Found in Beer May 13, 2025
  • How To Score a Free Booth at the Great American Beer Festival (and a Free Competition Entry!) May 13, 2025
  • It’s Officially Beer Season: American Craft Beer Week is May 12-18 May 12, 2025

RSS Pure Michigan Connect

  • Five of the Coolest Coffee Shops in Michigan December 14, 2016
  • 5 Extreme Winter Sports that Michigan Does Best December 14, 2016
  • Seven Michigan Holiday Movies Worth a Watch December 14, 2016
  • 8 Holiday Gift Ideas for the Michigan Enthusiast on Your List December 14, 2016
  • Sledding and Snow Tubing in Pure Michigan December 12, 2016

You know you are from Sebewaing, MI when…..

Comments Box SVG iconsUsed for the like, share, comment, and reaction icons

My grandson is loving the Traverse City Festival of Trains as Sebewaing Beer is making an appearance. ... See MoreSee Less

1 years ago
Play
View on Facebook
· Share
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email
View Comments
  • Likes: 34
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 0

Comment on Facebook

Load more
©2025 - Sebewaing Brewing Company
↑
 

Loading Comments...