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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lemp_MansionLemp Mansion - Wikipedia

    The Lemp Mansion (3322 DeMenil Place, St. Louis, Missouri) is a historical house in Benton Park, St. Louis, Missouri. It is also the site of three 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 ...

  2. Feb 21, 2019 · Two years before Billy's death, another Lemp child succumbed, although not in the family home. As a young woman, Elsa Lemp married the president of a prominent metal-producing company in 1910. The marriage ended in divorce in 1918.

    • Audrey Webster
  3. Aug 16, 2024 · Between 1862 and 1883, William Lemp and his wife had nine children. Only eight Lemp children survived. They included Anna, William Jr., (Billy) Louis, Charles, Frederick, Hilda, Edwin, and Elsa...

  4. Oct 18, 2012 · His favorite is about his aunts -- socialite Lillian Handlan "the Lavender Lady" and first wife of William Jr., and her sister-in-law, William Sr.'s youngest daughter Elsa Lemp Wright.

    • Leah Greenbaum
    • Origin
    • Death and legacy
    • Significance
    • Early history
    • Business
    • Death
    • Ownership
    • Marriage
    • Facts
    • Story

    The Lemp Family began with Johann Adam Lemp who arrived in St Louis from Eschwege, Germany in 1838. Building a small grocery store at what is now Delmar and 6th Streets, he sold common household items, groceries, and homemade beer. The light golden lager was a welcome change from the darker beers that were sold at the time. The recipe, handed down ...

    A millionaire by the time of his death, Adam Lemp died on August 25, 1862 and his son, William, began a major expansion of the brewery. He purchased a five-block area around the storage house on Cherokee, above the lagering caves. In 1864, a new plant was complete at Cherokee Street and Carondolet Avenue. Continually expanding to meet the product d...

    By the 1870s the Lemp family symbolized both wealth and power, as the Lemp Brewery controlled the St. Louis beer market, a position it maintained until prohibition.

    In 1868, Jacob Feickert, William Lemps father-in-law, built a house a short distance from the Lemp Brewery. In 1876 William Lemp purchased it for his family, utilizing it as both a residence and an auxiliary office. While the home was already impressive, Lemp immediately began renovating and expanding the thirty-three room house into a Victorian sh...

    By the middle 1890s, the Lemp Brewery gained a national presence after introducing the popular Falstaff beer, which is still brewed today by another company. The Lemp Western Brewery was the first brewer to establish coast-to-coast distribution of its beer. At the same time he was building his own business empire, William, Sr. also helped Pabst, An...

    In the midst of this success, the Lemp family experienced the first of many tragedies when Frederick Lemp, William Srs favorite son and heir apparent died in 1901 at the age of 28. Frederick, who had never been in extremely good health, died of heart failure. The devastated William Lemp was never the same, beginning a slow withdrawal; he was rarely...

    In November 1904, William Lemp Jr. took over as the new president of the William J. Lemp Brewing Company. Inheriting the family business and a vast fortune, he and his wife, Lillian, began to spend the inheritance. Filling the house with servants, the pair spent huge amounts on carriages, clothing and art.

    Lillian was a beautiful woman who came from a wealthy family herself. She and William Lemp, Jr had married in 1899 and William J. Lemp, III was born on September 26, 1900. Before long Lillian became known as the Lavender Lady because of her fondness for the color. In addition to her lavender attire and accessories, she went so far as to have her ca...

    When William began to tire of his beautiful wife, he demanded that she must spend her time shopping. Allotting her $1,000 a day, he gave her an ultimatum that if she didnt spend it, she would get no more.

    Wills shenanigans caught up with him when he sired a son with a woman other than his wife. Today, there is no official documentation that this boy existed. However, the rumors that this boy was hidden in the mansion attic for his entire lifetime have been prevalent over the years. According to St Louis historian, Joe Gibbons, when he interviewed a ...

  5. Feb 22, 2012 · His wife filed for divorce in 1908 charging Billy with desertion, cruel treatment, and other indignities. Billy was only granted visitation rights for their only son, William III.

  6. The documentary "Lemp's Last Wright" will debut next year. About ...

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