Bed linen, external blinds, marquees, saddles, furniture handles, mangles, hammers, dog collars, revolvers, model trains, cameras, Russian flags, salad dressing, ham, mushroom spawn, monkeys, coal and beer. In fact, if you want to know the price of just about anything in 1913, this is the place to look. The two volumes run over 1200 pages.
Obviously the beer bit interests me most. Quite a lot of beers are included, mostly draught, but also quite a few bottles.
There's this little notice at the start of the beer section to remind you of the idiocy of UK licensing laws:
"SPECIAL NOTICE.While in the revolver section there are no restrictions on sales.
Under the conditions of our Licence we cannot supply leas than 3 dozen Imperial Pints; 4 dozen Reputed Pints; 6 dozen Imperial Half-Pints of Bottled Ales and Stout. 2 dozen Reputed Quarts; 4 dozen Reputed Pints of Cyder.
Quantities can be made up, assorted, to suit our Customers' requirements."
It also claims: "Any Ale or Stout not quoted in these Lists can be procured at short notice." I'm not sure that's 100% true. I'm betting that they couldn't have got hold of the beer from a tint brewery in rural Scotland.
The bottled Stouts they had as regular offerings were mostly from the London area, with the exception of Usher, Allsopp and Guinness. They mostly look pretty weak, based on the price.
I've assumed that Whitbread Copper is their Porter, and Stout is London Stout. And that seems to tally with their strength. Draught Porter was 2d per pint and bottled beer sold at a premium. So 2s 6d a dozen (2.5d per pint) is about the cheapest you'd ever expect to see a beer described "Stout".
Guinness is probably the strongest beer in the list. And that wasn't super-strong for a Stout. There were much stronger ones. For example, Whitbread SS and SSS were 1086º and 1095º, respectively. At just 2d per pint, Whiteley's own brand Brown Stout must have been under 1050º.
Not sure why the Guinness bottled by M.H. Foster was more expensive. They must be the same beer, as Guinness only made Extra Stout and the export version Foreign Extra Stout.
Bottled Stouts in 1913 | ||||
Brewery | Place | beer | price (per doz) Imperial pint | OG |
Whiteley | London | Whiteley’s London Brown Stout | 2s | |
Whiteley | London | Whiteley’s Nourishing Stout (specially selected) | 2s 6d | |
Whitbread | London | Whitbread's Cooper | 2s 4d | 1053 |
Whitbread | London | Whitbread's Stout | 2s 6d | 1054 |
Usher | Devizes | Usher’s Court Luncheon Stout | 2s 6d | |
Usher | Devizes | Usher's Oatmeal Stout | 2s 6d | |
Watney, Combe, Reid | London | Reid's Stout | 3s 6d | |
Watney, Combe, Reid | London | Reid's Invalid Stout | 3s | |
Watney, Combe, Reid | London | Reid’s Family Stout | 2s 6d | |
Sedgwick | Watford | Sedgwick's Stout | 2s 6d | |
Fremlin | Maidstone | Fremlin’s Stout, Elephant Brand | 2s 6d | |
Fremlin | Maidstone | Fremlin’s Oatmeal Stout | 2s 6d | |
Allsopp | Burton | Allsopp’s Luncheon Stout | 2s 6d | |
Waltham | London | Waltham’s Brown Stout | 2s 6d | |
Waltham | London | Waltham's S. N. Stout | 3s | |
Allsopp | Burton | Allsopp's Special Stout | 3s 3d | |
Raggett | London | Raggett's Nourishing Stout | 4s | |
Guinness | Dublin | Guinness’s Extra Double Stout | 3s 4d | 1074 |
Guinness | Dublin | Guinness’s Extra Stout (bottled M. H. Foster & Sons) | 4s | 1074 |
Sources: | ||||
William Whiteley General Price List October, 1913, Volume 2, page 1196. | ||||
Whitbread brewing record held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/09/107. | ||||
Whitbread Gravity book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/02/001. |
Hi
ReplyDeleteI'm writing an article about a shop in Dunbar, East Lothian about a grocer's shop which sold Raggett's Nourishing Stout. Can I have your permission to use your advert for the stout and credit your blog? Best wishes,
James