Hamburger was born to a
Jewish family at Kerche Schönbache or
Altenschönbach, near
Würzburg,
Bavaria, in 1821. When young, he was
apprenticed to a
ropemaker. He came to the United States in 1839 and settled in
New York City, where he first worked in a
tassel factory, then moved to
Pennsylvania, where he began a small
general store. From there he went to
Alabama, where he was
naturalized in 1848 as a U.S. citizen and, in partnership with two brothers, he started in business, opening three stores along the
Tombigbee River. In 1849, after
gold was discovered in California, he and a brother went west, to Sacramento, where they founded a business, which was burned out twice in the fires which swept the city. In 1851 two of his brothers moved to
San Francisco, leaving Asher in charge of the Sacramento store. He and Hannah Bien were married in New York in 1855. A few years later, the brothers began a
wholesale dry-goods firm in San Francisco under the name
Hamburger Brothers, where they conducted the Maze, a large
department store. After 1865, Asher Hamburger returned to Sacramento to take over the old stores. In 1881 he went to Los Angeles and founded a business, A. Hamburger & Sons, operating as ''The People's Store,'' which became the largest dry goods (or department) store in
Southern California, catering to
working class customers. and in 1896 he was at 1424 McAllister in the same city. In that year, he was described in a voting register as five feet five and one half inches tall, with blue eyes and white hair. He was listed as a storekeeper. In 1908, his firm built the Hamburger Building, the "Great White Store" at Eighth and
Broadway, now better known as the
Downtown Los Angeles May Co. Building, which at that time was the largest retail building in the West and the country's largest
steel-frame structure. Attached to the south end was Hamburger's
Majestic Theatre, built for stage shows and
opera. It was turned into a
motion picture theater and later torn down to become a
parking lot. Hamburger died of a
cerebral hemorrhage on December 1, 1897, in the family home on McAllister Street, leaving his widow, Hanna, four sons and a daughter. He was interred at
Home of Peace Cemetery (East Los Angeles). ==Legacy==