| By Andy Tarnoff Publisher E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Andy Tarnoff |
| Published Nov. 21, 2007 at 5:29 a.m. |
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In the last few years, several Milwaukee landmarks either closed their doors or prepared to shut down, leaving local kitsch lovers and sentimental fools shaking their heads, wondering why they didn't visit just one more time.
These weren't the kind of places people put on postcards: the venerable old Goldmann's Department Store, Art's Concertina Bar, Drew's Variety, The National Liquor Bar and Bryant's Cocktail Lounge. These were the sort of places that Milwaukee insiders kept to themselves -- and when they faded away, many didn't notice because they didn't know they existed in the first place.
Fortunately, a handful of Milwaukee's under-the-radar landmarks remain -- but for how long? In this increasingly homogenized, upscale version of Brew City, these secret treasures seem like anachronisms -- businesses from another era. In October, OnMilwaukee.com staff writer Molly Snyder Edler asked readers in a blog if Milwaukee was losing its retro, and listed seven places that she feared were in jeopardy. Here's a list of 10 more businesses that persevere ... and we at OnMilwaukee.com hope they stick around for many, many years to come.
American Science and Surplus
6901 W. Oklahoma Ave.
(414) 541-7777
Possibly the funniest, most unique store in Milwaukee now, it must've been the wackiest business far and away when it opened sometime around 1937 (even they don't know for sure). The place to go for science experiments, bong-making materials or a donkey cigarette dispenser that shoot butts from the ass's ass (think about how clever that is). Many of the thousands of items serve no purpose to people other than chemists or engineers, but the hand-written descriptions alone are worth an hour-long visit. But just try to spend only one hour there; before you know it, you'll have strolled the aisles for much, much longer. Their slogan is "incredible stuff, unbelievable prices," and the store still does a brisk business. It also has a comprehensive and well-built eCommerce section on its Web site, sciplus.com.
At Random
2501 S. Delaware Ave.
(414) 481-8030
Legend has it that this one-of-a-kind ice cream bar was the brainchild of former employees of the now shuttered Bryant's Cocktail Lounge. And if that's true, then a little bit of Bryant's lives on this awesome tavern, the perennial winner of OnMilwaukee.com's readers' pick for "best bar for a secret rendezvous." Increasingly, the bar is also at randomly open, which leads us to fear for its future as ownership gets older. Soak it in while you can -- with a giant Tiki Love Bowl, a grasshopper or any of their other delicious drinks. It's a true, old-school Milwaukee landmark.
The Downer Theatre
2589 N. Downer Ave.
(414) 964-2720
Fortunately, Landmark Theatres owns both the Downer and the Oriental (see below), so these vintage cinemas aren't going anywhere anytime soon. This neighborhood mainstay first opened its doors on Dec. 3, 1915. At a construction cost of nearly $65,000, it was considered one of the finest and most modernly-equipped movie houses in a residential district in the United States. At the time, it held 1,200 moviegoers, entertaining them with a Weickhardt pipe organ and a live orchestra. When Landmark bought the Downer in 1989, it divided it into two screens, remodeling the dark and musty old building. They painted the auditoriums a bright shade of cream, and restored the building's decorative molding sand gaslight-type lanterns. They even matched the original vintage carpeting, breathing new life into Milwaukee's oldest operating movie theater.
Dretzka's Department Store
4746 S. Packard Ave., Cudahy
(414) 744-8832
At 106 years old, Dretzka's is actually five years older than Cudahy, the city in which it resides. And if that isn't old-school, nothing is. Believe it or not, the store is managed by the great grandson of the original owners, and he keeps the business in the family working with his mom and his brother. If the future of retail is Wal-Mart and Target, then hats off to a local, indie department store still going strong after a century of doing business the old-fashioned way.
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