Home » A GM Factory Worker Once Owned A Bar Next To The Factory And Plant Employees Got So Desperate They Climbed Over Cars To Get There On Their Breaks

A GM Factory Worker Once Owned A Bar Next To The Factory And Plant Employees Got So Desperate They Climbed Over Cars To Get There On Their Breaks

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For many Americans, there’s nothing quite like cracking open a cold one while you decompress from a hard day of work. Bars have people from all walks of life just blowing off steam. But what happens when that bar ends up in the parking lot of the factory of a major American automaker? For decades, workers of the General Motors assembly plant in Janesville, Wisconsin, had a bar and restaurant right in the parking lot. Workers were so desperate to get to this bar, which was owned by a GM worker, that they climbed over their own cars and a fence to get there on their lunch breaks. Now, both the factory and the bar are gone.

This story comes to us from Automotive News, and it’s just about the most Wisconsin story you’ll be likely to read this month. One of the stereotypes about Wisconsin is that its residents drink so much booze that there’s practically a bar for every person. It’s not that extreme, but the reality is still funny. According to 2019 data from the United States Census Bureau, the state of Wisconsin sits in fifth place for most bars in America with 2,732 bars across America’s Dairyland. First place, for reference, was New York with 3,389 bars. However, Wisconsin ranks third for most bars per capita at 46.92 bars per 100,000 people.

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What I’m getting at here is that Wisconsin loves to drink. I’m a Wisconsin native and lived in Kenosha briefly as an adult. There was a bar on practically every corner, and my all-time favorite restaurant is a bar. Wisconsin even has drive-through liquor stores so you can get your fill on the go.

Janesville Gm Assembly Plant N
Cliff – CC BY 2.0

Wisconsin is also steeped in car culture. Kenosha was once its own ‘Motor City’ and was one of American Motors’ greatest manufacturing hubs. Ford briefly had manufacturing in Wisconsin, and General Motors had an iconic plant nestled in the land of cheese castles and booze.

The Janesville Assembly Plant was GM’s oldest operating factory until it was idled in 2008 and demolished in 2018. The last surviving part of this plant’s legacy, the Zachow’s and Zoxx bar that stood proud in the factory’s parking lot, sadly met its end on February 26. But why was a bar even in a GM factory parking lot, anyway?

GM’s Presence In Janesville, Wisconsin

Gm Janesville
GM Janesville Assembly in 1973. Credit: G.R. Brown Co. via eBay.

Zachow’s was more or less created by GM employees for GM employees, and at first, Zachow’s wasn’t on GM’s territory. As Automotive News writes, GM worker Roy Zachow and his wife, Geri, purchased the 900-square-foot former Tom Sawyer Cottage Grill bar in 1961. Zachow worked at the GM Janesville Assembly Plant, and at the time, the bar was in a residential neighborhood. Zachow’s bar was just a neat place for him and other GM employees to enjoy a good lunch while on break or after work. Then, GM started moving in.

The Janesville Assembly Plant nearby was a massive facility, covering over 4,800,000 square feet in its peak. In the 1910s, Hemmings writes, General Motors wanted to compete with Ford in the tractor market. Janesville Machine Company general manager Joseph A. Craig heard news of this and managed to convince William C. Durant to let Janesville Machine Company handle farm implement production for Durant.

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1920 Samson Model M tractor. Credit: From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

In 1918, Durant scooped up California’s Samson Sieve-Grip Tractor Company, then bought the Janesville Machine Company for $1 million. Samson had also been a General Motors entity since 1917, and GM decided to combine its two farm implement firms, merging Samson and Janesville Machine into the Samson Tractor division of General Motors.

General Motors considered moving Samson to the Midwest. Ultimately, Janesville Machine Company general manager Joseph successfully convinced GM that Janesville was the perfect place to plant its stakes, given the city’s large labor force, proximity to rail lines, and roughly central location in the United States. General Motors would move Samson Tractor to Wisconsin, and the plant, employing 3,000 workers, cranked out its first tractor on May 1, 1919.

Then the whole thing fell apart. There was a tractor boom that ended after the conclusion of World War I, and the new market wasn’t large enough for Samson. The division would fail only a few years after it built its first tractor. As the Janesville Gazette Xtra reported, GM then considered abandoning Janesville, but Joseph came to the rescue. He noted that Janesville upheld its end of the deal by building a school, paved roads, and houses for GM employees. All of this infrastructure was still useful.

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The factory in 1940. Credit: E.C Kropp Co. via eBay

GM moved truck assembly from Flint, Michigan, to Janesville in 1920. In 1923, Fisher Body moved in, allowing the Janesville plant to build Chevrolet cars. The University of Wisconsin-Madison History Department, the Wisconsin Historical Society, and Wisconsin Public Radio’s Wisconsin Life program have created the ‘Wisconsin 101: Our History in Objects‘ project. Part of the project explains what happened with the Janesville GM facility:

General Motors’ entrance into Janesville in the early 20th century drastically boosted the city’s population and recognition on the national scale. The city’s population of 14,000 at the time Samson Tractor began production in 1919, boomed to 20,000 in just eighteen months. At the company’s peak in the 1970s, the plant employed over 7,000 workers; about 1 out of every 7 people of the city’s population of 46,000, was employed by General Motors. The company’s presence in the city and success have played an immeasurable role in the prestige and national recognition of the city. For many years Janesville’s identity has been bound to and defined by the success of the assembly plant, exemplified by the company’s production of the 100 millionth General Motors vehicle in 1967. This vehicle celebrated both the accomplishments of General Motors and of GM workers throughout the country, especially those in Janesville.

Although General Motors brought many good things to the city of Janesville and its workers, their relationship was not one-sided. Janesville brought GM recognition on the world stage and hard work for decades. In 1933, 200 workers from the Janesville Assembly Plant represented the company in the GM Pavilion at the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair. In 1932, GM had decided to temporarily close the Janesville plant due to the Great Depression and Wisconsin’s increased corporate tax rate, but the company offered employment at the pavilion for plant employees looking for work. The fair, called The Century of Progress. was planned to celebrate Chicago’s centennial and promote American technology. The 200 workers from GM Janesville created quite a spectacle as they worked on an assembly line that was visible to onlookers, producing Chevrolet Master Eagle sedans that could be purchased right off the line by fair visitors. This exhibit was a massive success for General Motors and so it was continued again in 1934. The pavilion not only afforded publicity for General Motors and demonstrated to the public how interesting the car-building process was, but it also celebrated the skill of Janesville’s plant employees as the model workforce of the American automotive industry.

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via Wisconsin 101: Our History in Objects – Public Domain

Janesville GM’s hardworking employees made the assembly one of the company’s most successful. A 1954 article of the Janesville Gazette reported that the plant had produced the fourth highest cumulative number of Chevrolet vehicles of any plant nationwide, despite the fact that Janesville Assembly had begun production over a decade after Chevrolet was founded. The article goes on to state that Janesville workers had been putting in more work to keep up with current demand, producing 167,000 cars per year on average between 1949 and 1954, compared to their previous peak output average of 100,000 per year. Their high level of production demonstrates Janesville workers’ hard work, as they ramped up production and were able to rise to the occasion.

The project continues by saying that the workers of the Janesville Assembly Plant were instrumental in the creation of the United Auto Workers labor union. To summarize this in far fewer words, Janesville was an important fixture in American automotive history. Janesville also became the place of a weirdly inspirational battle between a corporate titan and a small business.

The Bar On GM’s Grounds

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Google Maps

The Gazette Xtra reports that Zachow’s was an interesting experiment at first. The Zachows had just purchased a house and a new van when Roy got the bar idea. Geri thought running the bar on top of having to raise five kids was a bad idea. Yet, the bar turned out to be a smash hit. As GM plant employees discovered the place, Roy had to increase his beer orders from 10 cases to 100 cases. Eventually, he had so much money flowing in that he remodeled the bar’s kitchen and started serving burgers and fries to go with the beer.

It took some time, but GM brass eventually figured out where Janesville plant workers were disappearing to on their breaks, and learned that it had a bar right there at its doorstep. It must have been a twist to find out that the bar’s owner was an employee of that factory. Below is a satellite image from 1985, the bar is circled in red:

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Google Maps

As GM expanded its Janesville operations, it purchased the residential properties in the neighborhood and bulldozed them down to make more room. There was one impediment to GM’s progress, and it was the bar. Zachow wasn’t interested in selling his hangout.

The Gazette Xtra reports that GM treated the Zachows to a fancy dinner at a Holiday Inn, offering $96,000 for the couple to sell their property. The Zachows countered, saying that they were making much more money by selling beer and burgers to GM employees. Geri Zachow offered a compromise. GM could move the bar off the land it wanted and place it in an old lumberyard in the neighborhood. Allegedly, GM wouldn’t accept anything but the bar’s entire removal from the neighborhood.

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In this satellite photo from 2005, the bar is dead center; note all of the cars surrounding it. Credit: Google Maps

Allegedly, Roy was fired from GM soon after he refused to sell his bar.

GM also never gave up. In 1987, GM flew Roy out to Detroit and offered $200,000 for the property. From Gazette Xtra:

“They paid for his trip over there, but he told them he wouldn’t take less than $500,000,” [Geri] said. “I think he probably would have taken $350,000.” “He came back, saying, ‘Those bastards will never get the bar.'”

Plant Workers Got Crafty To Reach The Bar

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Google Maps

Since GM couldn’t buy the bar out of existence, it instead tried its hardest to deter workers from going there. By now, the factory had expanded to the point where the bar was in the factory’s parking lot. To deter workers from going to the bar on their breaks, GM erected fences. This meant that the official way to get to the bar from the plant was to walk around the block. Workers had only 30-minute breaks, and there just wasn’t enough time to walk around the block, grab a bite at the bar, and then walk back.

So, the workers started getting crafty. Some climbed the fences while others parked their cars next to the fence and then climbed over their cars to jump the fence more quickly. Geri Zachow described how crazy it got, from Gazette Xtra:

“Some of them broke their legs going over that fence,” she said. “They only had a half hour to eat, and they couldn’t walk clear around the block to get here.” “They came everyday to eat, not get drunk. You could hear ’em coming like a herd of buffalo on the plains.”

As Automotive News notes, serving the plant’s workers was such good business that Zachow’s operating hours reflected those of the factory. That meant that the bar was closed on weekends and on the same holidays that the plant was. That alone is insane. There are lots of folks who go bar-hopping in Wisconsin on weekends, but Zachow’s was doing so well from factory workers that it didn’t even need to be open then.

The Bar Outlasts The Factory

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Zoxx Social Club

In 1989, the Zachows sold their bar to their son, Jim Zachow. Jim later sold the bar to Andrew Sigwell, his stepson and the grandson of Geri Zachow. Along the way, the bar was renamed to the Zoxx 411 Club. Sigwell had worked at the bar since 2000 and saw the writing on the wall that GM wasn’t going to keep the plant open forever.

The Zoxx 411 Club began opening on weekends and, in 2006, focused on being a destination for dart-throwing teams. The Zoxx 411 Club hosted 14 teams, some of which went on to become world champions. But when General Motors idled the Janesville plant in 2008, it was a blow to the community.

The plant had a rich history up until that point. In 1977, Janesville Assembly’s 7,100 workers built 274,286 cars and 114,681 trucks. In the 1980s, full-size car production left the plant, and Janesville built J-platform cars like the Buick Skyhawk, Cadillac Cimarron, and Chevy Cavalier. Other GM vehicles in the Janesville Assembly’s past include the Chevy Blazer, the Chevy C/K pickup, the B-body Chevy Caprice and Impala, the Chevy El Camino, the Chevy Kodiak, the Chevy Bel Air, the Chevy Biscayne, and so many more. The plant even made 16 million 105mm Howitzer shells as well as Isuzu trucks, Chevy motorhome chassis, and school bus chassis.

1967 Chevrolet 100 Millionth Veh
A 1967 Chevrolet Caprice Custom Coupe was GM’s 100 millionth vehicle, and it was built in Janesville. Credit: GM

By the early 1990s, Janesville was GM’s capital of SUV manufacturing. In its final years, the plant was known for building GMT900 SUVs like the Chevy Tahoe, Chevy Suburban, and the GMC Yukon and the GMC Yukon XL. In 2006, the plant produced its 500,000th SUV capable of running E85 FlexFuel.

Janesville was a winner in the SUV boom of the 1990s and the 2000s, but those fortunes quickly turned to woes during the financial crisis in 2008. As SUV sales cratered, GM scaled production back to only a single full-time shift. Then GM enacted its employee buyout program. The last vehicle was manufactured within the halls of Janesville Assembly on December 23, 2008. That vehicle was a 2009 Chevy Tahoe, which was donated to the United Way of North Rock County for a raffle.

Only a part of the plant remained open until April 23, 2009, as 57 workers continued building Isuzu medium-duty trucks. The full factory never reopened, and in 2018, the wrecking balls came for GM’s oldest plant.

Janesville Gm Assembly Plant Ext (2)
Cliff – CC BY 2.0

Sigwell was smart to shore up the Zoxx 411 Club as a bar for everyone. Some former GM plant workers continued going to their old hangout spot, but the bar had been attracting younger patrons interested in darts.

Sigwell sold the bar to Andy and Desiree Wilson in 2020. The couple transformed the bar into the Zoxx Social Club, which expanded on the idea of turning the bar into a local gathering place. Zoxx Social Club hosted open mic nights and Green Bay Packers potlucks, plus monthly meetings of the Janesville Deaf Society. Amazingly, the bar managed to thrive without GM, sitting on its own in an otherwise deserted swath of land that used to sit in the shadow of the plant.

Janesville Makes Way For A Data Center

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Google Maps

Janesville worked through plans to possibly fill the empty space with housing or an industrial park. Then came an offer the city couldn’t refuse. Viridian Acquisitions LLC wants to plant a potential $8 billion data center on the 240-acre site. The project calls for the creation of 13,200 construction jobs. When finished, the data center will consume 800 MW of power.

 

There was only one thing in Viridian’s way, and it was the little bar that beat GM decades ago. Sadly, this time, the bar met a foe it couldn’t beat: the city. As Automotive News reports, Janesville forced the Zoxx Social Club out through eminent domain, paying the owners $280,000 in the process, and then the building was destroyed on February 26, 2026 (video embedded above). The owners ended the bar’s run with the Zoxx’s End of Days party before its last operating day on August 1, 2025. At least one attendee came from as far as Minnesota to celebrate the bar.

It was a sobering end to what was a local legend and a part of automotive history. Zoxx was the tiny bar that battled GM and won, even outlasting the GM factory. It was the place where countless GM employees blew off steam and made memories with their compatriots. Later, it was the social spot for the deaf community, Packers fans, and serious dart players. Now, it’s going to be another data center, and the bar, like the GM factory before it, will have to live on in memories, photos, and stories online.

Many will likely think about those olden days, back when GM workers tried to make the best of their 30-minute breaks by clambering over cars to hop a fence to get a burger or a work-break beer. All the while, GM brass was offering the bar’s owner increasing sums of money to go away, and failing. This feels like a story that could only have happened in a place like Wisconsin and with a corporation like GM. Hopefully, that history will never be forgotten.

Top graphic images: Cliff – CC BY 2.0; Zoxx Social Club; DepositPhotos.com

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Steve Balistreri
Steve Balistreri
1 month ago

My great uncle worked at that plant for decades. As you said, this is the most Wisconsin story ever. Another excellent historical piece from Mercedes!

MikeInTheWoods
Member
MikeInTheWoods
1 month ago

That was a great read Mercedes! Thanks. Nothing like an energy sucking data center to ruin things for people.

TroubledTroubadour
TroubledTroubadour
1 month ago

Nothing like the good ol’ days where you could have a beer or six on your lunch break.

Cars? I've owned a few
Member
Cars? I've owned a few
1 month ago

Or a martini or three if you were management.

TroubledTroubadour
TroubledTroubadour
1 month ago

WE USED TO BE A PROPER COUNTRY GOBBLESS

Redapple
Redapple
1 month ago

Misc. points:
-at one time, GMAD Janesville was the most profitable plant on earth.
-5,000,000 ft2 is no joke. My plant was 1 million and it was yuge.
This feels like a story that could only have happened in a place like Wisconsin and with a corporation like GM……………. TRUE

Tj1977
Member
Tj1977
1 month ago

I’ll go one even better….Willow Run had a “social club” nicknamed “Lily’s Pad” within the factory!

I stumbled on this while researching, editing and writing the Willow Run Wikipedia page.

Turn the Page
Member
Turn the Page
1 month ago

Mercedes, great article, thanks!

“Rivethead: Tales from the Assembly Line” by Ben Hamper was published in 1991. If you want to read about certain assembly workers’ exploits beyond a burger & beer, you may find it amusing, and it includes some introspection by the author. To be clear, I am a proponent of being sober during working hours in any kind of job. Regarding the storyline, as I used to say to my sons when they were young, “it was a different time”.

Last edited 1 month ago by Turn the Page
Bill C
Member
Bill C
1 month ago

Wisconsin. Not shocked.

Aaronaut
Member
Aaronaut
1 month ago

I get it, times change and the economy and blah blah blah but… it sucks to see that the remains of technological ingenuity and human socializing will now be replaced with acres and acres of servers that probably make no money for the people of Janesville.

RAMbunctious
RAMbunctious
1 month ago
Reply to  Aaronaut

It will probably actually HURT the people of Janesville, it seems like the deals these data centers are getting has the residents of these towns subsidizing their ridiculous energy use through higher energy rates.

Black Peter
Black Peter
1 month ago
Reply to  Aaronaut

The 200k offer in 1987 is over half a million in today’s money, meanwhile the 280K the city just gave the owners is worth 200K today’s money.

Maymar
Maymar
1 month ago

The folks of Janesville built the most important object in pretty much the whole universe – they earned their bar.

BMG1
BMG1
1 month ago

As a younger Man back in the 80’s, I work Aerospace in the high desert of SoCal.
At lunch time, you’d better get out of the way when in the employee parking lot, we were on our way to a small local watering hole with great cheeseburgers !
We even phoned our orders in, and they were on the table when you walked in.
Please note: I NEVER got tipsy, only drank 1 beer to washed down the meal.
GOD bless America

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
1 month ago

Excellent story Mercedes. There are similar stories about a couple taverns that were extremely close to the AMC plant east of Janesville in Kenosha.
Workers took their Lunch breaks and got all tuned up.
I’ve been working at a fortune 500 company in Milwaukee since 2002. And my first boss told me they were drinking on Fridays in the office all the way up to the mid 90s.
Definitely a very Wisconsin thing.

Ron Gartner
Ron Gartner
1 month ago
Reply to  CTSVmkeLS6

There are stories of rattles in AMC cars being diagnosed at the dealership and the techs finding empty cans of Schlitz or Blatz in the door panel lol.

Plenty of folks drink in the office in Wisconsin. I may or may not know someone who has a bottle of Buffalo Trace in his desk that we enjoy on Friday afternoons.

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
1 month ago
Reply to  Ron Gartner

I heard that story myself last summer at the AMC car show in Kenosha! Too funny. Also, I like the cut of your jib sir.

Ron Gartner
Ron Gartner
1 month ago
Reply to  CTSVmkeLS6

It’s pretty crazy, the Milwaukee plant became the epitome of “bad American manufacturing”. I forget what book I read, might have been “The Last Independent”, which talked about terrible management of the Milwaukee plant. There was a story about a guy who took his lunch on the line and would put stuff he didn’t like from his wife in the car. This would lead to the doors and trunks being filled with rotting apples and tuna sandwiches.

The problem was that the Milwaukee plant was a body plant, so QA and issues weren’t caught until they reached Kenosha. The Milwaukee guys knew that management from Kenosha wasn’t going to just drive up and complain and they knew that any issues would be fixed by Kenosha so they could just slap shit together and call it a day. There are also some tall tales that AMC was hiring people fired from the Allis-Chalmers factory down the street so they weren’t getting the best and brightest either.

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
1 month ago
Reply to  Ron Gartner

Never knew that there was a Milwaukee plant, just googled that and sure enough there is a cross street there where now-removed train tracks are (Nash Street.) It all makes sense now!

Ron Gartner
Ron Gartner
1 month ago
Reply to  CTSVmkeLS6

Yes sir, Milwaukee used to be a giant manufacturing hub. It’s coming back but will never be to Post War levels. I highly recommend checking out the Wisconsin Auto Museum in Hustisford, WI. It’s built on the old Kissel Car Company plant and is a really cool piece of history that covers all the auto plants that resided in Wisconsin.

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
1 month ago
Reply to  Ron Gartner

I checked that out last spring and spent 3 hours in there. What a cool place! It’s a gem.
I also dragged my wife down to the Crazy 80s car museum in Illinois last early fall and that delivered as well.
Wisconsin does have a great manufacturing base and pays well for a lot of jobs.
Are you in Wisconsin as well.. great car culture here. Winter sucks but I am fixing up the Plymouth Neon at least

Ron Gartner
Ron Gartner
1 month ago
Reply to  CTSVmkeLS6

Volo? I love taking people there!

I am in Wisconsin, used to spend many weekends down Highway 100 and going to Iola with my grandpa checking out the cars and learning all sorts of stories. We used to help a buddy show his 67′ Chevy truck at the Waukesha Car Show on the river every year. Love it here!

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
1 month ago
Reply to  Ron Gartner

Haha! Yep, good old HWY100 cruising, I used to do that back in the day with my friends, great memories. Bumping Limp Bizkit in my Shelby Daytona with the T-Tops off.
Iola car show, I’ve gone every year since Y2K. Wisco is great.

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