One note: this table is for the whole of Ireland, including the part still in the UK.
Guinness sales in Ireland 1922 - 1938 | ||||
Year | Extra Stout | Porter | total | % Porter |
1922 | 724,894 | 416,594 | 1,141,288 | 36.50% |
1923 | 696,582 | 378,085 | 1,074,667 | 35.18% |
1924 | 640,974 | 367,708 | 1,008,682 | 36.45% |
1925 | 583,730 | 351,040 | 934,770 | 37.55% |
1926 | 544,008 | 337,620 | 861,628 | 39.18% |
1927 | 520,923 | 315,636 | 836,559 | 37.73% |
1928 | 508,483 | 303,641 | 812,124 | 37.39% |
1929 | 508,158 | 302,002 | 810,160 | 37.28% |
1930 | 493,669 | 291,194 | 784,863 | 37.10% |
1931 | 468,272 | 265,538 | 733,810 | 36.19% |
1932 | 441,568 | 226,759 | 668,326 | 33.93% |
1933 | 432,064 | 248,115 | 680,179 | 36.48% |
1934 | 425,519 | 263,675 | 689,194 | 38.26% |
1935 | 446,908 | 277,124 | 724,032 | 38.28% |
1936 | 455,521 | 271,220 | 726,741 | 37.32% |
1937 | 466,541 | 274,882 | 741,423 | 37.07% |
1938 | 479,506 | 278,321 | 757,827 | 36.73% |
Source: | ||||
"A Bottle of Guinness please" by David Hughes, pages 276-279. |
The quantity of Porter brewed by Guinness must have been more than the total brewed by all London brewers.
Here are a couple of examples of Irish pre-war Porter.
Irish Porter before WW II | |||||||
Year | Brewer | Beer | Price per pint (d) | OG | FG | ABV | App. Atten-uation |
1933 | Guinness | Porter (as sold in Belfast) | 7 | 1041.6 | 1009.9 | 4.12 | 76.20% |
1934 | Beamish & Crawford | XX Porter | 1035 | ||||
Sources: | |||||||
Whitbread Gravity book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/02/001. | |||||||
"Classic Porter and Stout", by Roger Protz. |
The one from Guinness is a good bit stronger than London versions, looking like a 6d per pint beer. It’s also better attenuated, at a bit over 75%. While Beamish & Crawford Porter looks very much like those from London.
Guinness porter sales may have held up, but that is likely to be the popularity of the drink in Dublin and Belfast. Elsewhere in Ireland, porter appears to have been struggling. Beamish dropped single stout/porter in 1904. Murphy's stopped selling porter in Cork City in 1926, and in country pubs in 1943.
ReplyDelete