Cowboy State Dailyâs 'Drinking Wyoming' is presented by Pine Bluffs Distilling
EVANSTON â It can get a little creepy in the old Suds Bros. Brewery, which offers a refreshing slate of original craft brews on tap, as well as delicious bar food like hot wings and pretzels with beer cheese dip.
The workers, though, sometimes feel that they need a stiff drink after working there, particularly if itâs their turn to close. Once all the customers have all gone home, the employees find themselves there, alone, wiping down the bar counter in a place that has plenty of old building sounds to spook them.
But itâs not just the creaking and squeaking of old floorboards that cause that stiff drink feeling.
Itâs things like the ghostly handprints from a child that sometimes appear on freshly cleaned windows. Because of that, some employees pointedly refuse to look at the windows as theyâre leaving the bar late at night.
Then thereâs the occasional tugs on ponytails or, for the unlucky who have to go downstairs, the occasional shove in the back.
And letâs not mention the occasional plink of a piano with its cover closed. The ghosts have forgotten about that piano lately. They havenât been playing it as much. Letâs just keep it that way by not mentioning it too loudly.
âWe have three ghosts here,â General Manager Rhonda Berlener told Cowboy State Daily. âWe have a little girl, about 9, and she wears a little white dress and sheâs been seen running around upstairs.â
The girl ghost becomes particularly active whenever any of the waitresses are pregnant, Berlener said, and has been known to tug on the clothing of servers, particularly the new ones.
âSupposedly, thereâs a picture of her that the ownerâs mom still has,â Berlener added. âSheâs standing at the bottom of the steps. Someone was taking a picture of their groupâs table, and she happened to be in the background, watching.â
Another ghost at the restaurant is something of a prankster.
âHeâll like take the pizza cutter and hide it for about a week,â Berlener said. âAnd then, suddenly, itâll show back up. So, we just use knives to cut the pizza for a while, because we know the pizza cutter will eventually show back up.â
Meet Cowboy
And the third ghost? They call him Cowboy, when they speak of him at all.
Cowboyâs a little creepy, so most of the time people donât talk about him. They leave him alone and try not to think of him at all.
âHe is grumpy,â Berlener said. âHeâs actually, sometimes as youâre walking up the stairs, it gets like, cold, for no reason.â
Maybe that cold explains why Cowboy seems to prefer hanging out with the old boiler thatâs downstairs, way, way in the back. Itâs as far from people as Cowboy can possibly get.
Itâs also, perhaps coincidentally, right next to where an old tunnel entrance used to be.
Cowboy doesnât like it when people get too close to his boiler, Berlener said. That and its proximity to the old tunnel entrance is why sheâs taken to calling it her âFreddy Kruegerâ boiler.
âWeâre not sure what Cowboyâs story is, because I mean, these old tunnels used to run through Suds, and our boiler is the original heating for this (city) block,â she said.
Did Cowboy use the tunnels once upon a time? No one knows for sure. But those tunnels are why Berlener believes there are so many ghost stories in downtown Evanston.
âThey used to run all the way from the state hospital to town,â Berlener said. âAnd you know what the original purpose of those tunnels was? It was so the migrant Chinese workers â weâre talking the 1800s â and they didnât want to always see the Chinese workers, so they made them use these tunnels.â
Berliner said thereâs still an entrance to those tunnels from the state hospital, though she believes most, if not all, of the entrances in the downtown area have since been closed.
âThey were sealed because of collapsing, settling issues,â she said. âAnd they donât want people down in there because they donât want kids, I mean itâs been almost 200 years, so they donât want the kids down there playing and stuff.â
With several businesses in the four-block downtown area having tunnel entrances, itâs fueled lots of stories, Berlener said.
âIf you talk to a lot of the business owners down here, they do have little stories that theyâve been told,â she said. âAnd weâve had our issues here and there, too. It gets a little creepy in this old building. I mean it was built in (the 1800s), so it does have some history.â
Wyomingâs Second JCPenney Store
Everyone knows that Kemmerer is home to Americaâs first JCPenney store. Not as many know that Evanston is home to the second.
âSo originally, this was a feed store and then it was a JCPenneys,â Berlener said. âJames Cash Penney worked here as a manager at the Golden Rule store (in 1899), then he went to Kemmerer to open the first JCPenneys.â
Kemmerer opened his own Golden Rule store in Kemmerer in 1902, which eventually became the first JCPenney.
After the success of that first store in Kemmerer, Cash bought out his partners, including the Evanston Golden Rule store where heâd once been a manager, making it the second in what he envisioned as a six-chain store.
Ultimately, Cash was far more successful than heâd dreamed, though. His six-chain store became 26 stores, and then 2,053 at its height â one of Americaâs largest retailers.
Old-timers sometimes come into the brewery and tell Berlener stories about the Golden Rule store. Theyâve shown her where everything used to be in the old department store.
âBefore this area was the bar, it was all the menâs department,â Berliner said. âAnd upstairs, that was the womenâs area.â
Suds Bros. has kept quite a few things that were original to the JCPenney Store, Berlener added.
âThese lights are original to JCPenney,â she said. âTheyâve had the electrical upgraded, but the lights are still the original. And these floors are still the original floors that were here when this was built.â
About Those Child Handprints
Lukis Hill, who works at the restaurant, is one of the employees who has reported seeing child-like handprints appear on Suds Bros. windows.
âShe leaves little fingerprints everywhere,â he said. âAnd in the mornings, when you come in and like wipe down the windows, youâll see like little handprints sometimes.â
The first time that happened, Hill went outside to wipe the windows down again, thinking some little children must have walked by and done that as a prank.
âBut, no, the handprints were on the inside,â Hill said.
Inside, where there was no one with such small hands, because the business wasnât even open yet.
âOne time, I had to work a closing shift and so when I left, I looked at all the windows and they were clean, no fingerprints,â he said. âThen, the next day, when I came back, there was a little handprint on the door. It was on the inside.â
Berlener, meanwhile, has gone upstairs in the area where the child ghost is known to play and found that the jukebox, which doesnât even have any songs loaded up, is inexplicably on.
âWe have even unplugged it,â she said. âWeâre getting ready to open the bar upstairs, but we havenât had it open in a while. So we unplugged the jukebox, because it was turning on by itself.â
Unplugging it didnât solve that little problem, however.
âIâve walked up there many times and itâs been on and Iâm like, âOkay, Iâm holding the plug in my hand, so thatâs really weird.ââ
Another Photo Of The Playful Ghost
The restaurant still has a picture taken during its early JCPenney days. Some believe that the restaurantâs child ghost may be pictured in it.
The original photo is a rather small portrait that the owners decided to blow up to hang in the restaurant. They used Photoshop to add the words âSuds Bros. Breweryâ to the picture.
When they blew the photo up, however, they noticed that a tiny thumbnail-sized white blur in the original had become recognizable as the figure of a young girl, wearing a white dress, stepping into the JCPenney store. A white dress eerily similar to the aforementioned photo of the ghost girl, taken by a diner of her groupâs table.
There are no adults pictured with the girl, so some, including Berlener, have speculated the girl might have had a parent who worked at the store. Or perhaps she was just following a parent into the store who was shopping that day.
âWe couldnât find any back stories on her or anything, though,â she said. âSo, we still donât know anything about her, except that she likes to play. Sheâs our playful ghost.â
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.