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TEXAS
LEGENDS
Buckhorn Saloon & Museum |
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Way back
in 1881, a man named Albert Friedrich opened Albert’s
Buckhorn Saloon on Delorosa Street in downtown San Antonio,
Texas.
An enterprising entrepreneur, Friedrich opened the saloon with the
offer: "Bring in your deer antlers and you can trade them for a
shot of whiskey or a beer." And so, the world’s most unique
collection of horns and antlers began. Albert’s father, Wenzel,
soon joined in on the act, making handmade horn furniture fro the
saloon. In no time at all, cowboys and hunters began to bring in
horns and trophy mounts from all kinds of animals.
Some ten
years later Albert married a gal by the name of Emilie Derr and the
two came up with the idea to expand the offer to include rattlesnake
rattlers, which Emilie fashioned signs and artwork from. For a
free drink, this too, was a huge success.
By 1896, the saloon was so popular that it needed bigger quarters and
moved to Houston and Soledad Streets. Just two years later, the
most popular
saloon in San Antonio welcomed Teddy Roosevelt and Will Rogers.
A coupla’ years later, the
saloon acquired the
world’s record whitetail "78 Point Buck" is acquired for $100 and put
on display at the Buckhorn.
In 1922 the Buckhorn moved to even a
larger space at the southwest corner of Houston Street and South
Flores Street. Then Friedrich got himself a full size
gorilla, which he placed in the front window for all to see. The
most popular meeting spot in San Antonio soon stopped with the advent
of Prohibition. But, in 1932, Prohibition was repealed, and in
no time the Buckhorn reopened providing vaudeville entertainers.
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In 1956, the Lone Star Brewing Company
purchased the world-famous Buckhorn Collection and opened the Lone Star
Buckhorn Hall of Horns. After the World’s Fair, Hemisphere, was held
in San Antonio in 1968, the Hall of
Texas History Wax Museum relocated to the
site of the Buckhorn Hall of Horns. Almost twenty years later, in
1973, the Hall of Feathers and Hall of Fins were opened.
In 1998, the Lone Star Brewery closed
and the new owner, Stroh's Beer, moved the brewing of Lone Star to the
Stroh's Brewery in Longview,
Texas. However, in order to keep The
Buckhorn collection in San Antonio, the granddaughter of Albert Friedrich,
Mary Friedrich Rogers and her husband, Wallace Rogers, acquired the
collection. On December 22, 1998, the new Buckhorn Saloon & Museum opened
on Houston Street - a few blocks from the original 1881 location.
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Inside the Buckhorn Saloon Museum
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The world famous Buckhorn
Saloon and Museum has delighted hundreds of thousands of visitors for over
120 years. Today, the Buckhorn Saloon and Museum features thousands of
dead animals and dead animal parts for your enjoyment. Don't miss the
4,000-antler chandelier and the chair made for Teddy Roosevelt out of 62
pair of buffalo horns. This massive assemblage of
Texas-style stuff also includes a dead baby
giraffe, a bottle cap collection, and portraits made from rattlesnake
rattlers and a large Indian chief silhouette "drawn" in sheet metal with a
.22 caliber rifle.
At the San Antonio Buckhorn
Museum you can discover a whole new
Wild West
experience...Texas
Style!
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The Buckhorn is next to the
Hyatt Hotel, a short two block walk from the Alamo and only 50 feet from
the River Walk at the corner of Houston Street and North Presa Street.
Contact Information:
Buckhorn Saloon and Museum
318 E. Houston St
San Antonio,
Texas 78205
210-247-4000 |
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Old
West Wanted Posters and Wild West Prints - From
outlaws wanted
by the authorities, such as
Jesse James,
Billy the Kid,
and the
Wild Bunch, to other
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Stagecoach Rules, Buffalo Bill's Wild
West Show and more. Prints measure 11"x17" are are produced on glossy,
12 point paper. See the entire collection
HERE! Just $7.99.
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