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Cuyahoga Soap
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--''Encyclopedia of Cleveland History''</p> | --''Encyclopedia of Cleveland History''</p> | ||
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+ | [[Image:Cuyahoga_Soap_ad_(1919).JPG|frame|''Advertisement for the Cuyahoga Rendering and Soap Company - appeared in the Cleveland City Directory of 1919'']] | ||
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Image:Cuyahoga_Soap_ad_(1894).JPG|<small>Cuyahoga Rendering & Soap Co.<br>'' (1894 ad found on Cleveland City Directory)''</small> | Image:Cuyahoga_Soap_ad_(1894).JPG|<small>Cuyahoga Rendering & Soap Co.<br>'' (1894 ad found on Cleveland City Directory)''</small> | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
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- | [[Image:Cuyahoga_Soap_ad_(1919).JPG|frame|''Advertisement for the Cuyahoga Rendering and Soap Company - appeared in the Cleveland City Directory of 1919'']] | ||
- | ==SOURCES== | ||
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==REFERENCES== | ==REFERENCES== |
Revision as of 22:01, 11 February 2010
Owner:
Vice-President:
- Charles W. Ehrke[1]
Location:
- 808 Denison Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
HISTORY
- August's father, Ludwig (Louis) Stadler [1828-1884], opened his soap factory in 1876[2] at a time when a medium-sized gully crossed from his property north of Archwood Avenue over to the northside of Willowdale Avenue.
- Ludwig's factory was located in that gully just west of West 25th St.. Presumably, the development of the residential area between Archwood and Mapledale Avenue proved to be incompatible with a firm that utilized animal fats and tallow which probably produced noxious odors. The gully was totally filled in and now is the site of housing and retail businesses.
- Louis' son, August, started up his own operation on the lower end of Denison Avenue.
CUYAHOGA SOAP, a small family-owned rendering firm, became a major domestic producer of tallow. The company was a major consumer of the waste from Cleveland's stockyard operations. Cuyahoga Soap & Rendering, as the company was originally called, was begun by August W. Stadler in 1876 with $98 capital. (A friend offered him $100, but he turned down the extra $2 as unnecessary.) A fire and flood ruined Stadler's early venture, but undaunted, he maintained an office in his home while he acquired the materials to start over.[3]
--Encyclopedia of Cleveland History
REFERENCES
- ↑ A history of Cleveland and its environs By Elroy McKendree Avery, Lewis Publishing Company; 1918; pg.406
- ↑ Cleveland Plain Dealer, Jan 25, 1953, pg.6-B, obituary for Mrs. Anna B. Stadler
- ↑ Encyclopedia of Cleveland History, http://ech.case.edu/ech-cgi/article.pl?id=CS7
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