Milwaukee, WI
Saying goodbye to the iconic Milwaukee antique store American Estates after more than 50 years
MILWAUKEE — An iconic retailer within the coronary heart of Milwaukee’s Bay View neighborhood is closing. The vintage retailer American Estates is shutting its doorways for good after greater than 50 years of service alongside Kinnickinnic Avenue.
“It actually doesn’t hassle me. The shop’s been good to me,” Leonard Budney, the shop proprietor mentioned.
Budney, who’s now 90, opened American Estates at 2131 S. Kinnickinnic Ave. in 1970. He mentioned famed Marquette males’s basketball coach Al McGuire preferred to return within the retailer.
“He use to return in right here and play playing cards with my brother.”
The vintage retailer bought previous magazines, stained glass home windows, data, and extra. At one level, he even had Milwaukee enterprise mogul John Plankinton’s previous elevator. He bought that for round $15,000 he mentioned.
Nevertheless, after hundreds of gross sales, now the ultimate prospects are strolling out the door.
“No, I’m not unhappy about it,” Budney mentioned. “Effectively, as a result of I met a variety of good folks, and it supported me and my household.”
Budney obtained his begin amassing antiques whereas working alongside house demolition crews. If a constructing was being taken down, he’d be there to gather any left-behind items. He additionally went door-to-door throughout town in the hunt for something he may get his arms on.
“I went door-to-door asking folks if they’d something of their basement or attic or storage that they needed to promote,” he mentioned.
Of all of the issues he purchased, none may be extra particular and attention-grabbing than his assortment of George Zieglar Firm chocolate molds. The corporate bought chocolate bars till 1972. That is when Budney approached the corporate asking if he may purchase their chocolate molds of Santa, the Easter Bunny, the Statue of Liberty, owls, penguins, flowers, and another form you would think about. At first, they mentioned no. However with somewhat persistence, he succeeded. He purchased all of their molds for $400.
From that second on, he was consumed with making his previous molds. As a substitute of utilizing chocolate, he poured hydrostone, a plaster-like concrete typically utilized in do-it-yourself tasks.
“On daily basis I’d come right here and earlier than I did the rest I made some,” he mentioned.
There are dozens of packing containers full of lots of if not hundreds of molds that he by no means bought.
“He knew what he needed to do with them was make – as a substitute of make sweet molds out of it, (he needed to) make the little ceramic items out of it,” his daughter Tammy Hablewitz mentioned.
Hablewitz helps her dad with the ultimate gross sales.
“However the different half is, yea, it is somewhat bit unhappy too while you grew up right here and you’ve got all of the reminiscences right here, and all of the stuff that you simply did down right here. It is somewhat laborious to see it going away, . However I assume, what would you say, bittersweet, is what I might say,” Hablewitz mentioned.
Proper now, all gross sales on the retailer are in money. If you wish to go to the shop another time, you higher act quick. The shop’s shares are rapidly depleting.
Round 1972, Budney purchased a lot of Ziegler’s remaining merchandise because it closed down. Now, in 2023 as Budney is closing his enterprise so too are folks shopping for the final of his inventory.
Doorways can be formally closed by the tip of April.
It’s about time to look at in your time. Stream native information and climate 24/7 by looking for “TMJ4” in your machine.
Accessible for obtain on Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fireplace TV, and extra.
Report a typo or error // Submit a information tip
Milwaukee, WI
Judge sentences Milwaukee rapper to 40 years in crash that killed pregnant Shorewood woman
Kia Boyz YouTube video driving dangerously around Milwaukee goes viral
Milwaukee YouTuber “Tommy G” recorded a group known as the Kia Boyz while they engaged in reckless driving with stolen cars. This video contains excerpts from the original Kia Boyz YouTube video.
Lou Saldivar, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
A Milwaukee rapper is going to prison for 40 years in connection with a crash last year that killed a pregnant Shorewood woman.
Frank Mosley Jr.’s mother fainted in the courtroom as Circuit Court Judge David Swanson handed down the sentence against him on Thursday afternoon.
Mosley, 21, of Milwaukee, was convicted in September of multiple felonies in the Nov. 2, 2023, crash in Milwaukee that took the lives of Erin Mogensen and her unborn child.
Mogensen was two months pregnant at the time of the crash, which occurred on the day of her fourth wedding anniversary.
“All her dreams were about to come true until she crossed paths with evil,” her father Mark Hagen said, calling Mosley “an extreme danger to society.” “Her killer should have been in jail. He was the one who was in the wrong place at the wrong time, not Erin.”
Prosecutors said Mosley, a rapper known locally as Lil Frank, led police on a chase that began in Wauwatosa for not having a license plate. The fleeing vehicle at one point hit speeds of 116 mph before police called off the pursuit.
Moments later, the officer came upon a crash scene between the BMW and a Toyota at Capitol and North 100th Street in Milwaukee. Mogensen, 32, was at the wheel of the Toyota.
In court, Mosley apologized to Mogensen’s family, and took responsibility for the crash, but asserted it was an accident. Swanson said although Mosley didn’t intend to hit anyone, he made the choice to drive a car “at an absurdly high speed.”
“If you didn’t hit Mrs. Mogensen, you could have hit someone else,” the judge said.
Mosley also was ordered to serve 10 years of extended supervision when he is released from prison.
This is a developing story. Stay with jsonline.com for updates.
Milwaukee, WI
What are the road conditions in and around Milwaukee Thursday morning?
Drone view: Winter wonderland from the snow in the Milwaukee area
Check out a drone view of the winter wonderland from Thursday’s snow around the Milwaukee area.
As Milwaukee sees its first snowfall of the season Thursday morning, you should brace for some tricky road conditions on your morning commute.
Two to four inches of wet, heavy snow is possible in the Milwaukee area, making for a “messy morning commute,” the National Weather Service Milwaukee wrote on X. Motorists should drive slowly and with caution throughout the morning, NWS said.
Here’s what to plan ahead for if you’re commuting in Milwaukee on Thursday.
What are the road conditions in and around Milwaukee this morning?
As of 8:15 a.m. Thursday, all of Milwaukee and its surrounding areas — including Interstates 41, 43 and 94 — were seeing “slippery stretches,” according to 511 Wisconsin. Several highways are also seeing one or more lanes blocked due to crashes or stalled vehicles.
If you’re traveling on I-94 this morning, NWS wrote on X that conditions south of the I-94 corridor, especially between Milwaukee and Madison, would “quickly deteriorate” as snow continues.
In affected areas, drivers should plan for slushy snow accumulation and low visibility on the roads, NWS said.
Accidents reported in Milwaukee on Thursday morning
As of 8:15 a.m. Thursday, several crashes or incidents have been reported in Milwaukee that could affect traffic, 511 Wisconsin reported:
- 7:49 a.m. – I-794 West 1.3 miles beyond the ramp from Carferry Road. The center lane is blocked due to a crash.
- 7:44 a.m. – I-43 South at ramp from Wisconsin Avenue. The left shoulder is blocked due to a crash.
- 7:50 a.m. – Ramp from I-94 East to I-43/94 South. Shoulders are closed due to a disabled vehicle.
- 7:51 a.m. – I-794 West at Michigan Street. The right shoulder is blocked due to a disabled vehicle.
- 7:52 a.m. – I-43 South at I-794 East. The center lane is blocked due to a crash.
- 7:57 a.m. – I-43/94 North at Ramp from 6th and Mineral Street. The center lane is blocked due to a disabled vehicle.
Accidents reported in Milwaukee suburbs on Thursday morning
- 7:15 a.m. – Disabled vehicle on ramp from Burleigh Street to I-41/US 45 North.
- 7:22 a.m. – I-94 West 1.3 miles beyond the ramp from Highway 100. The right shoulder is blocked due to a crash.
- 7:23 a.m. – I-43 North at Hampton Avenue East. The left shoulder is blocked due to a crash.
- 7:37 a.m. – I-94 West at ramp from Moreland Boulevard East. The right shoulder is blocked due to a crash.
- 7:42 a.m. – Highway 38 South at Air Cargo Way (by the Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport). The right lane is closed due to a crash.
- 7:52 a.m. – I-41/894 South 0.3 miles beyond the ramp from National Avenue. The right shoulder is blocked due to a disabled vehicle.
- 7:54 a.m. – Ramp from I-94 West to I-41/US 45 North. The right shoulder is blocked due to a disabled vehicle.
- 8:05 a.m. – I-41/US 45 North at North Avenue. The 3 right lanes are blocked due to a disabled vehicle.
To look up road conditions on your morning commute, check out 511 Wisconsin’s live map.
Milwaukee, WI
Family: Missing Milwaukee girl found safe, gas station taped off
Winter Weather Advisory
from THU 6:00 AM CST until THU 12:00 PM CST, Racine County, Sheboygan County, Dodge County, Ozaukee County, Washington County, Milwaukee County, Fond Du Lac County, Jefferson County, Waukesha County, Kenosha County, Walworth County
-
Business1 week ago
Column: OpenAI just scored a huge victory in a copyright case … or did it?
-
Health1 week ago
Bird flu leaves teen in critical condition after country's first reported case
-
Business5 days ago
Column: Molly White's message for journalists going freelance — be ready for the pitfalls
-
World1 week ago
Sarah Palin, NY Times Have Explored Settlement, as Judge Sets Defamation Retrial
-
Politics4 days ago
Trump taps FCC member Brendan Carr to lead agency: 'Warrior for Free Speech'
-
Science2 days ago
Trump nominates Dr. Oz to head Medicare and Medicaid and help take on 'illness industrial complex'
-
Technology3 days ago
Inside Elon Musk’s messy breakup with OpenAI
-
Lifestyle4 days ago
Some in the U.S. farm industry are alarmed by Trump's embrace of RFK Jr. and tariffs