It's hard to imagine now, but Brown Ale was a really big deal in the 1950's.
As the Mann's advert below states: "Brown Ale is cbecoming more and more popular with Britain's beer drinkers".
|
Birmingham Daily Gazette - Thursday 11 September 1952, page 5. |
Thouigh I'm sure that "no finer malts" stuff is guff. It implies that the colour came from the malt, whuich it almost certainly didn't.
Mann's weren't the only brewery to use the adjective "rich" to describe their Brown Ale:
|
Coventry Evening Telegraph - Thursday 24 June 1954, page 31. |
This is one of the few Brown Ales that have survived:
|
Shields Daily News - Wednesday 20 April 1955, page 9. |
Interesting the way the advert emphasise that it's good value for money. As you can see in the table below, it was more expensive than most other Brown Ales. Though it was much stronger than the average of about 3% ABV.
I've included this advert, just because it's weird:
|
Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Saturday 20 December 1952, page 7. |
Here's what 1950's Brown Ale was really like. Actually quite diverse:
Brown Ale 1952 - 1954 |
Year |
Brewer |
Beer |
Price
per pint |
OG |
FG |
ABV |
App.
Atten-uation |
colour |
1954 |
Barclay Perkins |
Doctor Brown Ale |
19 |
1032.6 |
1010.6 |
2.85 |
67.48% |
110 |
1954 |
Charrington |
Brown Ale |
19 |
1033.1 |
1009.1 |
3.11 |
72.51% |
120 |
1954 |
Courage |
Nut Brown Ale |
19 |
1032.1 |
1008 |
3.12 |
75.08% |
110 |
1953 |
Duttons |
Nut Brown Ale |
18 |
1031 |
1006.1 |
3.23 |
80.32% |
52 |
1954 |
Gibbs Mew |
Moonraker Brown Ale |
16 |
1034.8 |
1009.5 |
3.28 |
72.70% |
135 |
1954 |
Ind Coope |
Nut Brown Ale |
19 |
1030.7 |
1009.7 |
2.72 |
68.40% |
80 |
1956 |
Mann |
Brown Ale |
22 |
1035.5 |
1013.2 |
2.88 |
62.82% |
115 |
1955 |
Mitchell & Butler |
Sam Brown |
23 |
1036.9 |
1011.2 |
3.33 |
69.65% |
85 |
1954 |
Newcastle Breweries |
Brown Ale |
26 |
1048.9 |
1010 |
5.06 |
79.55% |
51 |
1952 |
Samuel Smith |
Taddy Ale |
15.5 |
1034.5 |
1008.5 |
3.37 |
75.36% |
90 |
1952 |
Shipstone |
Nut Brown Ale |
15 |
1033.3 |
1006.7 |
3.45 |
79.88% |
60 |
1952 |
Simonds |
Berry Brown Ale |
19 |
1032 |
1005.5 |
3.44 |
82.81% |
60 |
1952 |
St. Anne's Well |
Brown Ale |
19 |
1034.1 |
1005.1 |
3.77 |
85.04% |
100 |
1952 |
Steward &
Patteson |
Brown Ale |
23 |
1032.5 |
1010.3 |
2.87 |
68.31% |
67 |
1952 |
Tamplin |
No.1 Ale |
20 |
1034.1 |
1009.7 |
3.16 |
71.55% |
80 |
1952 |
Taylor Walker |
Nut Brown Ale |
19 |
1032.6 |
1011.7 |
2.70 |
64.11% |
80 |
1952 |
Tennant Bros. |
Brown Ale |
20 |
1032.5 |
1012.2 |
2.62 |
62.46% |
100 |
1952 |
Tetley |
Family Ale |
15 |
1035.5 |
1009 |
3.44 |
74.65% |
53 |
1954 |
Tollemache |
Country Brown Ale |
19 |
1032.5 |
1011.2 |
2.75 |
65.54% |
90 |
1954 |
Truman |
Trubrown |
19 |
1034.7 |
1011.9 |
2.95 |
65.71% |
110 |
1952 |
Ushers Trowbridge |
Brown Ale |
17 |
1033.6 |
1007.7 |
3.36 |
77.08% |
80 |
1953 |
Ushers Trowbridge |
Triple Brown |
36 |
1063.4 |
1013.6 |
6.50 |
78.55% |
85 |
1953 |
Vale of Neath |
???? Brown Ale |
30 |
1070.6 |
1019.3 |
6.68 |
72.66% |
34 |
1952 |
Vaux |
Double Maxim Ale |
23 |
1049 |
1009.8 |
5.10 |
80.00% |
48 |
1954 |
Watney |
Brown Ale |
30 |
1032.8 |
1010.2 |
2.92 |
68.90% |
120 |
1952 |
Wenlock |
Nut Brown Ale |
19 |
1032.5 |
1012.5 |
2.58 |
61.54% |
80 |
1954 |
Whitbread |
Forest Brown |
21 |
1034.8 |
1012.2 |
2.92 |
64.94% |
95 |
1953 |
Young & Son |
Chestnut Brown Ale |
26 |
1055.1 |
1016.5 |
5.01 |
70.05% |
250 |
Source: |
Whitbread Gravity book held at the London Metropolitan
Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/02/001. |
4 comments:
Ha, ha, ha, you and me
Little brown jug, don't I love thee!
Mmm, but what might be called the "Newcastle brown ale family" is totally different from the "Mann's brown ale family" in taste, ingredients, colour, origin - they're two quite separate styles of beer, and it's a great pity Michael Jackson lumped tghem together.
Martyn,
in the 1920s and 1930s there was little consistency in the character of Brown Ale from brewery to brewery. Loads of variation in London.
Interesting to see the ABV of Newcastle Brown and Vaux Double Maxim in those days. At over 5% it's no wonder that on Tyneside (where I grew up and lived until 1968) The Broon was, at one stage, called "Journey into Space" after the popular SF radio show of the time.
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