Saturday, September 1, 2018

Wealthy Kraft family's butcher shop became 'Tea on the Tiber'

8081 Main St., a fine stone building, was built c1833 as a home then became a store.  In 1881 Dorothy Kraft bought the building for Kraft's Meat Market. The Kraft meat sign is seen on the first building.



Andrew Kraft (1836-1881) and Dorothy (1839-1916) were both from Germany - he arrived at age 15, she at age 6 and started working at the mills.  He worked for a butcher, then started out on his own. They married in 1858 and had a large family which continued the business after she died in 1916 as "one of the richest women" in the county leaving "$300,000 worth of property" to her family.


Andrew and his sons carved much of the beef in a building behind their home and sold it in his shop and "with a horse and wagon, sold meats in Elkridge, Oella and Ilchester." In 1879 one of his sons "tore one of his hands almost in half this morning by falling against a meat hook in his father’s wagon."  Andrew died two years later.

In 1904 "Mrs. D. Kraft's retail meat market at Ellicott City, Md., was considerably damaged by fire last week."       Lower Ellicott City Main St. in a c1890-1910 card (Library of Congress).
The Kraft meat shop.  The frame addition on the back of the building is over the Tiber River and behind that is a stone mill (left side of picture) built by 1860.  Before the last flood it was Tea on the Tiber.

The Kraft family bought the Dr. Denny home built by 1860.  It is now the Slack funeral home, and is located just above Main St at 3871 Old Columbia Pike.

From the 1910 Sanborn fire insurance map
from HO-894  Maryland Inventory of Historic Properties - 

The  Krafts, an extended  family of Ellicott  City butchers and property developers, lived at 3871 Old Columbia  Pike  from  the  1860s-1950s.  In 1851, Andrew  Kraft, then 15, immigrated  to the United  States from Germany.

Butcher and  farmer  William  Hughes  provided him with employment.  Upon  retirement,  Hughes  sold the business to William  H. Scott, who opened  a shop  on Main  Street  in Ellicott  City. 

In  1858, Andrew  Kraft  married  Dorothy Leimbach.  Dorothy  came to Union Mills  from  Germany  at age 6 and was employed  in the mills by age  8.  In  1864 and  1866, Andrew  Kraft  purchased  the two sections of property  on the Columbia Pike that comprise the  Kraft  Home  Property  from  Dr. William Denny  and his wife  Henrietta.   

 
In  1860, William  Denny  (aged 64) a physician,  lived with his  wife  Henrietta (aged 60), Mary Denny (aged 60) presumably William's  sister, William  and Henrietta's  daughter Henrietta (aged  16), and African-American  house servant Jacob  Hall (aged  17).

By  1870, the Kraft  family,  Andrew  (aged 35) a butcher, his wife  Dorothy  (aged  31), and children Mary (aged  11), Clara (aged 8), Charles (aged 6), Margaret (aged 3), and Andrew  (aged  1), lived next door to Henrietta and Mary Denny.

 
By  1873, the Kraft's  were  butchering  the meat for  their Ellicott  City shop and deliveries  at the home property.  "With  a horse and wagon,  [Mr. Kraft]  sold  meats  in Elkridge, Oella and Ilchester.  Several years  later, he opened a butcher  shop  in the  store that Mr.  Scott had recently vacated  on the south  side of Main  street."  
 
In  1881, Andrew  Kraft  died  at age 42.  Dorothy  Kraft  proved  to have outstanding business acumen  and continued  the enterprise  after  her husband's demise.   The  family  organization  "whose motto has been 'all  for  one and one for  all' and directed by a woman whose keen vision  and talents mark her as a genius" served thousands  over the years.  By  1900, Dorothy  lived  at the Kraft  home with Charles  (aged  36) -  a butcher,  Andrew  (aged  32)  -  a butcher,  Martin  (aged  29)  - a butcher,  John  (aged  29)  -  a  butcher,  Christina  (aged 25), Louis (aged 23) -  a butcher,  and William  (aged 20) -  a  student.
 
Dorothy  Kraft  died  in  1916.   It was  said  that "she was a keen judge  of human  nature and  did  everything  systematically.   ... she  was  reported to be the  richest woman in Howard  County."  [her obit in 1916 said "one of the wealthiest women in Howard county"] 

Clara, Andrew  H., Martin  L., John  H. and  Louis  Kraft  carried  on  the  business  under  their mother's  name.  

 
SOURCES
Baltimore Sun.  Feb 9, 1916
Baltimore Sun.  Sep 3, 1879 
Butchers' Advocate, Dressed Poultry and the Food Merchant.  Aug 17, 1904
MIHP  # HO-894

©2018 Patricia Bixler Reber
Forgotten history of Ellicott City & Howard County MD

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