ELGIN'S
OLDEST AREA BUSINESSES
In 1879 Elgin was described as a "thriving
depot town" of 400. By 1884 Elgin had five general stores,
two druggists, three cotton gins, and a saloon. In 1886 the Missouri,
Kansas and Texas Railroad came through, adding to Elgin's business
as a shipping point for cotton, wool, and livestock. By 1890 the
community had a population of 1,100 and supported two hotels, a
broom factory, two doctors, a dentist, and the Elgin Courier. This
strong business heritage remains a part of Elgin's economy. Five
of the City's oldest businesses which are still in operation are:
Elgin Butler Brick
- 1873
Southside Market and
BBQ, Inc –
1882
Elgin Courier – 1890
Elgin Cotton Mill - 1906
Meyer’s Sausage
Company and Meyer’s Elgin Smokehouse
– 1949
1. Elgin Butler Brick
(1873)
In 1866, Michael Butler arrived in New York with
aspirations of discovering great opportunity in the United States.
Like many Irish immigrants, he traveled west from New York to Wisconsin
and Missouri seeking opportunity and acquiring different skills
along the way. With time, Mr. Butler honed his craft as a brick
mason as he continued to move westward— and eventually south—to
Dallas, Texas.
Mr. Butler built his first brick manufacturing
plant in 1870, then sold it to his brother Patrick only three years
later. In 1873, Mr. Butler moved to Central Texas where he founded
Butler Brick Works, one of the first great mercantile establishments
in the area and the predecessor to Elgin-Butler Brick Company. After
being passed through four generations of Butler family members,
Elgin-Butler Brick Company remained family-owned until it was sold
in December 2005.
Michael Butler built a successful brick business,
but also established a heritage of civic involvement and accomplishment,
which is still followed by Elgin Butler Company management today.
After being passed down with pride and care through
many generations, Elgin Butler Company remains loyal to the principles
on which it was founded. The Elgin Butler tradition of employee
dedication continues. Their employees are experts in product knowledge
and general industry information.
Elgin
Butler Company - manufacturing and distributing quality architectural
products since 1873, including Structural Glazed Brick and Tile,
Architectural Trim Units, Ceramic Base Wall Units, Decorative Tile,
Stone, and much more. Used in both load bearing or non-load bearing
applications, Elgin Butler products combine the beauty of ceramic
glaze with the structural solidity of masonry.
2. Southside Market
and BBQ, Inc (1882)
Southside Market & BBQ has a long history of
community involvement and deep roots in Elgin. As the story is told,
a man by the name of William J. Moon owned some property on a small
farm-to-market road in Elgin back in 1882. The Moon’s slaughtered
beef and pork and sold it house to house from the back of a wagon.
This practice lasted until 1886 when the Moons set up a location
in town on Central Street. The first Southside Market was born at
this location.
Records show that Lee Wilson took over the business
in 1927. Wilson was in and out of business until the early 1940's.
He sold Southside to Jerry Stach and Van Zimmerhanzel in 1944. The
two men joined in various partnerships after purchasing the business,
including a long-time partnership with Jerry's brother, Edwin. Eventually,
Jerry bought out the other interests and ran the market for almost
twenty-five years, selling it to Ernest and Rene Bracewell in 1968.
Since that time, Southside Market has been managed by three generations
of the Bracewell family, and it still sells the original Elgin Hot
Sausage, which is made today just as it was in 1882. They also carry
an exceptional variety of meats and sides and their meat market
is a great place for fresh cuts of choice meat. In addition, Southside
offers wholesale distribution, nationwide shipping, deer processing
and full service catering.
" We have been making our famous Elgin Hot Sausage for over
126 years right here at Southside
Market and BBQ, Inc.® in Elgin, Texas. Part of what makes
"Elgin Hot Guts," as the old timers call it, different
from other sausages in the area is the seasoning and the quality
of fresh ingredients. And, it comes in only one flavor - hot. Don't
let that scare you, though, we lightened up on the pepper back in
the 1970's so that everyone would be able to enjoy it. For those
who still like the original, we took the extra pepper and put it
into our authentic Elgin Hot Sauce."
Southside Market & Barbeque was recently chosen as the BEST
in the category of “Best Lunch” by the Texas Travel
Counselors during their six-day Study Tour of the Texas Hill Country
Region. The Texas Travel Industry Association sponsored this 33rd
annual tour which passed through 14 cities, eating at 15 of the
best restaurants the Hill Country has to offer. In addition, Southside
Market has been selected as one of the stops on the
“Texas BBQ Trail”.
In addition to feeding the BBQ coinsurers in and outside of Elgin,
Southside Market & BBQ is proud of its commitment to “Adding
Value to the Community.” Among the many community related
activities that its involved in, Southside Market & BBQ is the
proud sponsor of the Annual Sausage Stampede in Elgin - benefitting
the Cattlemen for Cancer Research Patient Assistance Fund and the
Greater Elgin Chamber of Commerce. This fund assists patients and
their families from Bastrop, Travis, Williamson, Lee and Hayes Counties
who need financial assistance with lodging, meals and similar services
while receiving cancer treatment at MD Anderson in Houston. The
7th Annual Sausage Stampede is set for October 10, 2009 and expects
over 300 participants from all over Central Texas.
This past year Southside Market & BBQ added to new product
lines – Jalapeño Cheddar Sausage and Pork & Garlic
Sausage, but the basic formula for Southside’s success has
remain the same at the pit – quality meat and exceptional
seasoning.
Stop in and enjoy Texas-style barbeque in this restaurant. And
be sure to visit the old-fashioned full-service meat market where
experienced butchers gladly cut your favorite meats to your specifications
or simply give you grilling tips. Southside Market & BBQ provides
fresh quality cuts of beef, pork, poultry, and of course its world
famous Elgin Hot Sausage. In addition to fresh meats, they also
offer a variety of smoked meats including their own summer sausage
(available in jalapeño and regular), pork sausage, dried
sausage, and smoked Elgin Hot Sausage. And no stop is complete at
Southside until you have yourself a hand-dipped cone of Blue Bell
ice cream from the ice cream counter, where you will find a wide
range of flavors – from Chocolate to Mango!
3. Elgin Courier (1890)
The Elgin
Courier has been reporting Elgin news since 1890. Miles Hill,
Elgin's first lawyer founded the Elgin Courier. A year after its
establishment, the Courier was purchased by S.T. Cain and moved
upstairs over O'Connor's store where the paper was published for
the following ten years. The paper was pasted on through various
owners until in 1901 when J.O. Smith and his father, Dr. W.C. Smith
purchased the paper. The son became sole owner shortly thereafter
and continued building the paper over the next 46 years. Smith grew
the Courier from a small operation into one of the most modern and
well equipped plants found in any small Texas town. Many young men
learned the printer's trade in Smith's plant. Some established papers
of their own elsewhere. Others joined the dailies in some of Texas'
larger cities.
4. Elgin Cotton
Mill (1906)
Elgin has had cotton gins in operation
since July 1878 when
Silas Chatfield built the first gin and grist mill. Elgin Oil Mill
was organized in 1906, with Charles Berg serving as manager. Later
E. O. Lundgren, Sr. became owner-manager of the business.
5. Meyer’s
Sausage Company and Meyer’s Elgin Smokehouse (1949)
It all started way back in the late 1800s. That
is when Henry Meyer hitched a ride from Germany to the United States,
bringing his recipe for smoked sausage all the way to Texas. Then,
around 1915, Henry taught his son, Rudolf Karl Georg (R.G.) Meyer,
the secrets of his mouthwatering sausage. Soon, R.G. was the hit
of his friends, making up big batches of sausage for them every
chance he got. With some prodding from his fans, R.G. was persuaded
to start marketing the tasty sausage, and founded Meyer’s
Elgin Sausage Company in 1949. The famous sausage was made without
any fancy preservatives, and was smoked in a little smokehouse right
on the Meyer’s property. R.G. had great success selling his
product locally, and figured he might as well sell it to Austin
and other Central Texas communities. This started the wholesale
end of the business, which is now the largest part of the Meyer’s
sausage operation. In 1959, R.G.’s son, F.W. (Buddy) Meyer,
took over his father’s company. Buddy continued to build the
family business, and Meyer’s sausage became legendary throughout
the state of Texas. Buddy stuck firmly to his family’s commitment
to quality, and the company continued to grow. Finally in 1989 Gregg
and Gary Meyer became the fourth generation of sausage makers to
carry on the family tradition and opened and in 1998 they opened
Meyer’s Elgin Smokehouse BBQ restaurant, where not only is
their famous sausage sold, but also brisket, pork ribs, pork steaks,
turkey breast, and pepper lime chicken halves. Meyer's Smokehouse
has been continuously voted Best BBQ in Elgin from 2004 –
2008 along with winning many other honors and awards. Meyer's also
serves up some of the best steak and fajita catering in Texas.
Today, it’s still high quality meats, special blends of spices,
natural casings and that hickory smoke flavor that make Meyer’s
sausage so incredibly tempting. But most say the success of Meyer’s
Sausage Company and Meyer’s Elgin Smokehouse is based on one
not-so-secret ingredient: 75 years of family pride and four generations
of tradition. Right in the heart of ‘Cue-topia and directly
adjacent to Meyer’s Elgin Smokehouse Restaurant is its retail
market. Meyer’s feature our famous Meyer’s Elgin Sausage
in six hickory smoked flavors: original, garlic, sage, hot, tejano
and jalapeño & cheese sausage, as well as its original
and jalapeño summer sausage, beef or turkey jerky, all beef
snack sticks, smoked pork tenderloin, smoked turkey breasts, garlic
or sage seasoned bulk breakfast (pan) sausage seasoned with garlic
or sage, and of course, Grandma Meyer’s BBQ Sauce, now in
three flavors: original, hot and honey mesquite.
Meyer’s continues to bring new products to the market. Meyer’s
latest smoked sausage, “Jalapeno and Cheese” went into
production last summer and won third place in the Hot category at
the People’s Choice BBQ contest in Long Island, New York in
the summer of 2008 (Meyer’s also won first place in the standard
category with its Garlic, and second in the specialty category with
Tejano against sausage makers from California, Oregon, Washington,
Wisconsin, New York, Louisiana and Texas). To add to its awards,
People Choice BBQ named Meyer's “Grand Champion” of
the 2008 contest. In addition, Meyer'st has been selected as one
of the stops on the “Texas
BBQ Trail”.
Meyer's products continue to be sold in grocery stores throughout
the Central Texas area and can be shipped nationwide @
www.meyerselginsausage.com or by calling 1-800-MRS-OINK. Meyer’s
just launched the third flavor in its BBQ sauces, Honey Mesquite,
which began going on the grocery shelves on the first of March 2009,
and its newest jerky, Sweet and Hot, started production last fall.
All of Meyer’s delicious meats are made at its sausage plant
in Elgin, Texas.
As for 2009, Meyer’s will start shipping its Smoked Pork
ribs through its web site and has a new product for Meyer's Smokehouse
(not at liberty to talk about yet, so please standby) that should
be available at the restaurant by early summer. And if that is not
enough for you BBQ fans, Meyer’s has a new BBQ seasoning,
another jerky flavor and another BBQ sauce that is currently in
development. Cue-topia’s R&D elf was very busy last year,
and this coming year appears destined for even more strides in the
BBQ market as Meyer’s continues looking to the future, while
maintain an eye on its barbeque roots.
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