CALL TO RAVE and (maybe) SAVE Burma-Shave
By Steve Sandberg
Thanks to The Alley Newspaper for its willingness to highlight a rare opportunity; the opportunity to save the Burma Shave building, a building loaded with history that has been on the corner of 21st Avenue and East Lake Street since the year 1900. Many if not most of you have passed that building, now covered with white vinyl siding, unaware of its history. (See excellent accompanying article by historian Shari Albers)
It was early October when friend and Corcoran resident Tom Manley noted that asbestos had been removed, utilities cut off, and that the building was slated for demolition.
Since then, a handful of heritage-preservation minded local historians and myself have been working hard to demonstrate that this would be a waste of a unique historic opportunity and resource.
Forestalling demolition does not in any way impede the planning for the site.
The new owner of the building is the Minneapolis Public Schools who will eventually develop the site to replace the Adult Education Building being torn down (they have up to 10 years to continue using the building at Hiawatha and Lake St.),… Read the rest “CALL TO RAVE and (maybe) SAVE Burma-Shave”
“I Didn”'t Know That!” Don”'t be misled/by white vinyl siding/a lot of history/ in these walls is hiding
- Burma-Vita moved into 2019 East Lake Street in 1925. Built in 1900, the building had once been home to Hugnad Hall, a Scandinavian workingman”'s lodge, and then the Winget Mfg. Co.making aprons, sunbonnets, and dust caps.
- The same building today after many different owners and occupants. The building has had a variety of cosmetic coverings that conceal the original exterior in the photo on the left. A Museum of the Streets plague describes the building across the street near the YWCA.
BY SHARI ALBERS
Burma-Shave and its iconic signage was at 2019 East Lake Street
Remember when highway speed limits were 55 miles per hour and billboards were not common sights? Many of us who grew up in the 40s and 50s may recall the sequenced red and white signs that once dotted the roadway landscape. Positioned one hundred paces apart, each sign displayed one line of verse. Together, the signs created a whole poem. The last sign, like a well-placed exclamation mark, sported the familiar Burma-Shave logo.… Read the rest ““I Didn”'t Know That!” Don”'t be misled/by white vinyl siding/a lot of history/ in these walls is hiding”















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