George Braun

George
Braun was born in Berlin, Germany, on
September 9, 1835. He
came
to the United States at an early age and
lived in St. Louis before
coming to Denison at the age of 44, in 1879.
In St. Louis,
George
had been employed with the Anheuser Busch
Brewing Company, successor of Mr. W.W.
Salisbury. (The Denison Daily News,
September 9, 1879, pg.4) In
Denison, he was appointed agent for that
company, which at the time
controlled virtually all sales of beer in
the city. Here he
established the Depot Saloon near the
MK&T Depot. In
addition
to the saloon enterprise, he also
established the Northern Lake Ice
Company, selling northern lake and river
ice...and erected an ice house in Denison, (Denison Daily
News, April 7, 1880, pg.4) which
led to the sale of fish, oysters, celery,
and other rare
foodstuffs that were almost unobtainable on
the sun-blistered Texas
prairie.
Denison Daily News
Wednesday, December 24, 1879
pg. 2

On June
13, 1873 Phillips Schuchert, a
fashionable boot & shoe maker
on Main Street, from the Denison Town
Company Lot 7 in Block No. 24 in
Denison, Grayson County, Texas and notarized
by Robert S. Stevens,
president of The Denison Town Company.
In a few months Mr.
Schuchert sold his business house, adjoining
McDowell's livery stable,
together with the lot to Mr. J.M. Shredder.
Mr. Shredder
transformed the building into a harness
shop. (The
Denison Daily News, September 29,
1879, pg.3)

In
November 1883 Mr. Braun commenced work on
his ice factory to be erected
at the foot of Gandy street near the
Missouri Pacific freight depot.
(The
Sunday Gazetteer, Sunday, November
4, 1883, pg.4)
George
Braun
constructed a home
on the southwest corner of Austin Avenue
&
Morton Street between 1882 and 1883.
The house was completed by
fall 1883 when Mr. and Mrs. Braun
entertained a few friends at their
elegant residence on Thursday evening,
November 22, 1883. (The Sunday
Gazetteer, November 25, 1883,
pg.4) It remained there for 108
years before being moved by owner Joe
Pollaro to a site north of Munson Park
in the year 2000. It is listed on
the National Register
of
Historic Places.
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The Sunday Gazetteer
Sunday, May 7, 1893
Monday,
May 1, 1893 - Workmen began tearing away
the Geo. Braun residence,
corner of Austin Avenue and Moton Street,
this morning prepatory to the
erection of a much larger and finer
building.
The
Sunday Gazetteer
Sunday, June 11, 1893
Sunday,
June 4, 1893 - Mr. George Braun's new
residence, corner of Austin
avenue and Moton street is assuming an
imposing appearance. When
finished it will be one of the prettiest
homes in Denison.

"Geo.
Braun's fondest hopes were realized last
Tuesday at ten minutes to 2
p.m. by the birth of a boy. It is
reported that when the sex of
the little stranger was announced to
him, he jumped up 3 feet and
shouted, "sugar, by damn." He
telephoned at once to the ice house
to reduce the price of ice 1c per pound,
and thus carried joy to nearly
every household in the city. Braun
is a brick and don't you
forget it." (The Sunday Gazetteer,
Sunday, July 22, 1883, pg. 4)

Braun House
421 North Austin Ave
Denison, Texas
Robinson,
Frank M., comp. Industrial
Denison.
[N.p.]: Means-Moore Co., [ca. 1901].
pg.13
Since
the great houses of St. Louis had been
designed in the fashionable
Italianate
style,
a house of similar opulence was selected
for the
Braun family. This is one of
the few known examples of this
style in
Denison. Designed by
architect-builder John B. McDougall, also
designer of St. Patrick's Church and St.
Xavier's Academy, the
two-story residence was constructed of
wood with a pier-and-beam
foundation supporting the balloon framing.
As with many
buildings
of this style, the roof is flat, with
elaborate cast-iron balustrades
and finials around its perimeter. An
elegant belvedere that
once
graced the entrance pavilion was removed
many years ago because of
deterioration. Braun brought in
carpenters from his native
Germany to construct the house, as well as
a Bavarian woodcarver to
create the ornate fireplaces and woodwork
that grace the interior.
An original detached greenhouse has
since been removed.
The
George Brauns were foster parents to Franz
Kohfeldt (1885 - 1938), who
was orphaned soon after being born of German
immigrant parents in
Illinois. The Brauns were family
friends and brought Franz
with
them to Denison in 1879. He managed
the Brauns' ice and
wholesale
food business, briefly sold fish in the
MK&T Depot, and
apprenticed
in Harrison Tone's abstract office.
Later Franz opened his
own
real estate office at 118 West Main Street.
Starting around
1910,
he played a key role in the development of
the port of Texas City on
the Gulf Coast.
George Braun's contributions to the growth
of
Denison ended with his death on November 17,
1903. He left
his
entire estate to his wife, Minna Beltz Braun
(1847 - 1934), who lived
in the house until 1919. Minna died in
1934 and was buried
with
her husband George in Fairview Cemetery,
Denison.
George Braun Residence
National Register
of Historic Places
Ref. No. 75001986
Also in the Texas
Historic Sites Atlas
Virtual Tour
The
George Braun residence, located at 421 North
Austin avenue in Denison,
Texas, was built in 1882 for one of the
town's leading businessmen.
Designed by a local architect, J.B.
McDougall, in the Italian
Villa style, the two-story residence was
constructed of wood with a
pier and beam foundation supporting the
balloon framing. As
with
many buildings of this style, the roof is
flat with elaborate cast-iron
balustrades and finials around its
perimeter. An elegant
belvedere that once graced the entrance
pavilion was removed many
years ago because of deterioration.
The property chosen
for Mr.
Braun's residence was lots 1, 2, and 3 of
Block 24 of the
original town plat of Denison. Upon
its completion in 1883,
the
residence and its gardens were one of the
showplaces of the city.
A cast-iron fence encircled the
property which included a
gazebo,
greenhouse, carriage house, and formal
gardens. All of the
out
buildings have been demolished and another
residence built on the east
half of the site.
The plan of the
house is asymmetrical with
rooms opening into each other in rambling
fashion. The
stairwell
on the west end is rather small in scale
when compared to the spacious
adjoining rooms. Ceilings are fourteen
feet in height
throughout
the house. Handsomely crafted doors of
Louisiana curly pine
with
elaborate hood molds grace the formal rooms
of the first floor.
Cast-iron mantles in the dining room,
library, and drawing
room
are embellished with gargoyles, rosettes,
and floral motifs.
Four
spacious bedrooms and a bathroom on the
second floor open onto a narrow
hallway. The sitting room at the head
of the stairs has been
converted into a bathroom and the stairs
leading into the belvedere
removed. Alterations at the rear of
the house include the
enclosure of the south end of the veranda
and the addition of kitchen
ell.
Evidence of the
Italian Villa style is further alluded to
in the facades of the house. A wide
one-story veranda follows
the
projecting and receding configuration of the
north and east facades,
and is supported by tall, slender posts with
fan motif brackets.
Windows, originally shuttered, are
tall and narrow with one
pane
of glass per sash. An elegant
balustrade which once graced
the
porch has also been removed. A simple
cornice with dentils
and
paired brackets is terminated with a
cast-iron balustrade and finials
at the corners. Six chimneys with
corbeled caps protrude
through
the flat roof in asymmetrical fashion.
Constructed in 1882
for
one of the most prominent business men in
Denison, the George Braun
House is an interesting example of the
Italian Villa style as
interpreted in Texas. Once among the
showplaces of the city,
the
house at 421 North Austin Avenue is
significant as the only extant
example of the architectural style in the
community, and the last
opulent residence on North Austin Avenue.
George Braun
moved
to
Denison from St. Louis in 1879 where he
had been employed as distributor with the
Anheuser-Busch Brewing Company. It
was here that he
established
the Depot Saloon near the prestigious
Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad
Station. In addition to the saloon
enterprise, he also
established the Northern Lake Ice Company,
the first ice house in Denison, which led
to the sale of
fish, oysters, celery, and other rare
foodstuffs that were rare on
the sun-blistered Texas prairie.

113 East Main Street
Denison, Texas
1887 - 1888 Denison
City Directory
Mr. Braun contracted with a local
builder-architect, J.B.
McDougall, to build a residence suitable
for a man of his stature.
The house was begun in 1882 and
completed in 1883.
Carpenters from his native Germany
were summoned for the
construction. The great houses of
St. Louis having been
designed
in the fashionable Italian Villa style, a
house of similar opulence was
selected for the Braun family.
Therefore, this is the only
know
example of this style in the city.
After his death in 1903,
George Braun's wife Minna was the sole
recipient of his estate.
She lived in the house until 1919,
at which time it was sold
to
Charles J. Harrison. Joseph G. Cain
bought the house from
C.J.
Harrison in 1923 and lived there until
1952. Mr. Cain sold
the
house to his son-in-law Bryan Steen, who
lived there until 1975, at
which time it was sold to Joe Pollaro.
Mr. Pollaro plans to
restore the house and grounds to their
former elegance, and maintain
his
office as well as his residence there.

Braun-Pollaro
House
421 North Austin Avenue
The house was moved to private property just
north of Munson Park
George Braun,
deceased, a conservative business man, who,
nevertheless, was connected
with various interests of commercial and
industrial importance in
Denison, was born in Berlin, Germany in
1835, and came to American soon
after the close of the Civil War, settling
in St. Louis, Missouri.
In his native country he had acquired
a good practical
education and had become a civil engineer,
following that business
until his removal to the United States.
In St. Louis he
conducted a restaurant in one of the large
parks, being engaged until
he came to Texas in 1879. Here he
became the agent in Denison
for the Anheuser-Busch brewing Company of
St. Louis, acting as its
representative for several years. In
connection with others
he established an ice plant in Denison and
was successfully connected
with varisou business enterprises. He
was always conservative
and careful in making investments and his
judgement was sound and
reliable in all busines matters. In
his trade relations he
was strictly honorable and his prosperity
was atributable entirely to
his own labors.
In 1873, in Illinois, was celebrated the
marriage of George Braun and
Miss Minna Beltz, who was born in Germany,
but was raised in St. Clair
County, Illinois, a daughter of Charles
and Julis (Graff)
Beltz. Her father, a native of
Germany, came to American in
1850 and settled in Illinois, where he
followed the occupation of
farming and also ran a general merchandise
store in Mascoutah,
Illinois, until his death, which occurred
when he was fifty-four years
of age. Mr. and Mrs. Braun became the
parents of five
children, of whom three are living: Lottie,
the wife of Harry J.Bettis,
a resident of South McAlester, Indian
Territory, by whom she has one
child, Dorothy; George; and Tonie, now wife
of R.S. Vann of Dallas.(Braun's Meat
Market Advertisement 1906, The Denison Daily Herald (Denison,
Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 79, Ed. 1, Monday,
October 15, 1906)
The death of the husband and father occurred
at Denison on the 17th of
November, 1903. He was a Republican in
politics but was
without polotical aspiration. In a
financial way he was very
successful, for he carefully planned his
advancement and every step was
thoughtfully made and his life was an
exemplification of the
possibilities that are afforded in America
to young men where effort
and enterprise are not hampered by caste or
class.
The Denison Press
19 November 1903
George
Braun, who has been an invalid for the past
year or more, died at his
residence at the corner of Austin avenue and
Morton street this
morning. The deceased had periodical
attacks of rheumatism for
the past year, but his condition was not
considered serious until a
fortnight ago.
Mr. Braun came to
Denison in 1879. He was a
resident of St. Louis before coming to
Texas. He immediately
identified himself with he business men of
the city. He was
appointed agent of the Anheuser-Busch
Brewing corporation, which at
that period virtually controlled the sale of
beer in this city and
section. He also supplied the city
with ice and was an extensive
dealer in oysters. He was for a number
of years a part and parcel
of the history of Denison. Industrial
Denison owes much to him,
he was ever ready with time and money to
further the best interests of
his home town.
At the time of his
death, Mr. Braun was 68 years of
age; he came to this country at an early age
from Berlin, Germany.
He was married in St. Louis in 1873 to
Miss Minz Beltz, who with
one son and two daughters survive him.
Judge Pearson conducted
the simple funeral services at the home and
Dr. Yeidel officated in
German at the grave in Fairview.
George
Braun, Jr. died Saturday night, January 20,
1912 in Denison from
tuberculosis. He was the youngest
member of the family, being 31
years old and a bachelor. He is
survived by his mother; 2
sisters, Mrs. Harry Bettes of McAlester,
Oklahoma; and Mrs. Roy Vann of
Dallas. Funeral services were held
Monday afternoon with
interment in Fairview Cemetery. (San Antonio
Express, Wednesday, January 24,
1912)
The
house
was purchased by Joe Pollaro in 1974 in need
of restoration.
The home was restored; the interior of
the home exhibits
exquisite Victorian detail from massive
carved pocket doors to heavily
carved fireplaces. The home was moved
from a crowded lot to a
sprawling 10 - acre hillside site in
2000. The tiered front
lawn is lush with multiple gardens - 2 long,
winding rock bed streams,
seven waterfalls, a beach front style pool
and tranquil pond. The yard
is an entertaining paradise with
multi-tiered Victorian decking
overlooking the pond and pool with separate
columned gazebo with thick
Wisteria roofing.
Source: B.B.
Paddock, History and
Biographical Record of North and West
Texas (Chicago: Lewis Publishing
Co., 1906)

Biography Index
Susan Hawkins
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