Last updated: July 2, 2018
Article
At the Forefront of Storefronts: Frank, Ben, and George Mesker

National Park Service
What is a Mesker? A Mesker is any building that displays the pressed metal, steel, cast and wrought iron architectural details created by either of two Mesker companies around the turn of the last century. From the 1880s through the 1910s the two manufacturing giants, Mesker Brothers Iron Works and George L. Mesker & Company, provided the source of these ornate and often colorful storefronts that can still be found today.
Sons of a metal worker, three competitive Mesker brothers gained skills in the field that quickly allowed them to become the leaders of the metal storefront industry in America. Frank and Bernard "Ben" Mesker together formed Mesker Brothers Iron Works in 1879, based in St. and Ben were able to improve their techniques to produce galvanized sheetmetal cornices, columns, and details that were much lighter and easier to ship by rail than the cast iron elements of their competitors. Their catalog business thrived allowing them to distribute over 500,000 catalogs annually during the height of their popularity between 1890 and 1910. Independently, George Mesker created George L. Mesker & Company in Evansville, Indiana, in 1885. He too sold thousands of façade and storefront components to locations across the United States.

Photo courtesy of the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.

Photo courtesy of the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.
Mesker storefronts have been identified throughout the United States, especially in the Midwest, where the two foundries were located. An ever-expanding database of identified Mesker storefronts is being maintained by the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. Several of the National Historic Landmark (NHL) Districts of our region feature Mesker façades on contributing structures, including Deadwood, South Dakota; Calumet, Michigan; Mackinac Island, Michigan; and Ste. Genevieve, Missouri. Lockport, Illinois, a community along the Illinois and Michigan Canal NHL, also includes a positively identified Mesker. Often brightly painted to both appeal to customers as well as to protect the castiron and metal beneath, these Mesker elements remain in commercial districts due to proper care and maintenance over time.

Photo courtesy of the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.
Originally published in "Exceptional Places" Vol. 3, 2008, a newsletter of the Division of Cultural Resources, Midwest Region. Written by Hallie Fieser.