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By 1880 Cincinnati was recognized as the "Beer Capital of the World", [8] with Over-the-Rhine its center of brewing. Wielert's , one of Over-the-Rhine's most popular beer gardens , in 1875 During the nineteenth century, most Cincinnatians regarded Over-the-Rhine as the city's premier entertainment district. [ 6 ]
The new owner, Louis Mecklenburg, changed the name from "Mount Auburn Garden Restaurant" to "Mecklenburg Gardens," [2] and converted it from a saloon to a heavily German beer garden. [3] During this time, Cincinnati was receiving massive numbers of German immigrants; with as much as 25% of the city's population being German-born, cultural ...
Wielert's, built in 1873, was once a famous beer garden in the Over-the-Rhine neighborhood of Cincinnati, Ohio. [1] OTR Predevelopment, a subsidiary of 3cdc bought this property along with others on Vine St. on July 30, 2010.
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A dish from Opal Rooftop, which will be one of over 50 restaurants participating in Greater Cincinnati Restaurant Week from Monday, April 15, to Sunday, April 21, 2024. Cincinnati foodies rejoice!
32 beers from 32 different breweries will duke it out for the 2024 title of Cincinnati's Favorite Beer. Round 1 voting starts Monday. Cincinnati's Favorite Beer bracket revealed! 32 beers. 32 ...
They settled initially in New York, [10] but after selling hot dogs there for some time, the brothers followed their big brother Argir (Argie) to Cincinnati. [note 4] Born in 1880, he was a cashier of the Bulgarian Exarchate Church-School Board in Hrupishta. [7] Argie had settled in Cincinnati by 1918, where he opened a grocery store. [11]
Hudepohl Brewing Company became one of many Cincinnati breweries to thrive in the Queen City in the 1880s. Waves of German immigrants began settling in and around Cincinnati in the 1850s and '60s. These immigrants had a taste for the lager beer of their homeland and Cincinnati's German beer barons were