Welcome to the
Brooklyn Centre WIKI

Cleveland, Ohio

A Neighborhood Exploration
Currently 301 articles regarding its history


Cuyahoga Soap

From Brooklyn Centre Wiki

Revision as of 22:01, 11 February 2010 by Sandy (Talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

Owner:

August W. Stadler

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

Advertisement for the Cuyahoga Rendering and Soap Company - appeared in the Cleveland City Directory of 1919
Advertisement for the Cuyahoga Rendering and Soap Company - appeared in the Cleveland City Directory of 1919



REFERENCES

  1. A history of Cleveland and its environs By Elroy McKendree Avery, Lewis Publishing Company; 1918; pg.406
  2. Cleveland Plain Dealer, Jan 25, 1953, pg.6-B, obituary for Mrs. Anna B. Stadler
  3. Encyclopedia of Cleveland History, http://ech.case.edu/ech-cgi/article.pl?id=CS7
Return to Main Page



Help support this website by visiting some of the Ads provided by Google.

Personal tools