This time, they're all beers for domestic distribution. Though some were sort of going overseas.
First is a watery keg beer of around just 3% ABV,
McEwans Pale Ale
Holyrood brews kegged at Park Stores.
Distribution: In road tankers ex IIMV room to Contract Bottlers
Tyne - Bowser filtered for kegging.
Holyrood and Fountain beer specifications held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/8/1.
Nothing very interesting there.
Next is another watery Pale Ale of just 3% ABV.
Youngers Pale Ale
Holyrood brews kegged at Park Stores. Fountain brews kegged at Tyne.
Distribution - In road tanker ex HMV room to Contract Bottlers:
Belfast - Supplied rough. Processed at Belfast and bottled as Wee Willie Pale (1/2 pints) or Holyrood Ale (pints) - coloured to 36º.
Kendal - Supplied sheet filtered (colour 24º) for bottling.
London (Bates) - Supplied sheet filtered for bottling.
Holyrood and Fountain beer specifications held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/8/1.
Technically, Belfast is overseas from Scotland. Interesting that the pints and half-pints were sold under different names in Belfast. And that the beer was coloured darker. It was 24º, as brewed.
Finally, we have Brown Ale.
Brown Ale
Processed at Park Stores.
Distribution - In tanker ex HMV to Contract Bottlers:
Kendal - Supplied sheet filtered for bottling (LS 1/2 pints) as.
London (Bates) - Supplied sheet filtered for bottling (LS 1/2 pints) as.
Belfast - Supplied rough where it is processed and bottled in in pint crowns as Nut Brown Ale or S.D.A. or in 1/2 pint dumps as Wee Willie Brown.
Holyrood and Fountain beer specifications held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/8/1.
It's fascinating that they were still using third-party bottlers. At least, that's what I assume contract bottlers were. As S & N didn't have any breweries south of Newcastle, they also had limited numbers of sites to bottle. Economically, it makes far more sense to ship beer by tanker, then bottle, rather than moving bottled beer around the country.
Again, the pints and half-pints got different names in Northern Ireland. I'm guessing that S.D.A. stands for "Special Dark Ale". Which, if they mean specially weak, is an appropriate name.




























