Michigan Breweries History: Bosch Brewing Company
Joseph Bosch, founder of the Bosch Brewing Company, had always
yearned to enter the brewing industry. He had learned much from his
father, a brewer in his native country of Germany, who had brought the
family to Lake Linden, Michigan in the 1867. A desire for more knowledge
and experience led the young Bosch to Cleveland, Fort Wayne and finally
Milwaukee, where he worked for the Schlitz brewery. He returned to Lake
Linden in 1874, erected a small wooden building and began brewing
operations as the Torch Lake Brewery, Joseph Bosch & Company. Bosch
operated the brewery on his own for the first two years, but in 1876
admitted several men on a partnership basis. The company continued as a
partnership until around 1894, when the reorganized firm issued stock
under its new name, the Bosch Brewing Company. The company continued
in operation for nearly a century, closing the last of its facilities
in 1973.
In the early years of brewing in Michigan's Upper Peninsula,
little if any beer was sold in bottles. Bosch saw the potential of
this packaging, however, and the company began bottling on a small scale
before 1880. By 1883, the original wooden building in Lake Linden had been
enlarged and the company was producing 4,000 barrels of beer annually,
one quarter of which was bottled. The brewery was completely destroyed
in a great fire that swept through Lake Linden in 1887, but the demand
for its product fired quick construction of new facilities. By the turn
of the century the Bosch Brewing Company had brewing facilities in Lake
Linden and Houghton, as well as branches and storehouses in Calumet/Laurium,
Hancock, Ishpeming, Eagle Harbor and Ishpeming. Having survived the difficult
years of prohibition, the company finally closed the Lake Linden facility in
favor of the better-situated facilities in Houghton.
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