Friday 13 January 2023

The ups and downs of Porter and Stout

I'm moving back a little further in time to see how Whitbread Porter and Stout fared in the late 19th and early 20tth centuries.

It's a rather more complicated story than between the wars, when the trend was always downwards. 1880 to 1899 is one of general decline, but then turned around and was rising all the way until 1910.

In 1880, Porter and Stout made up 38% of Whitbread’s output. But by 1899 had fallen to 29%. The fortunes of Stout seem to have been transformed by the introduction of Country Stout, which was soon selling over 100,000 barrels a year and boosted Black Beer’s share to over 40%.

Sales of Double Stout also shot up with the dawn of the new century, hitting over 40,000 barrels.

To put these numbers into context, most years Whitbread brewed more of one beer, X Ale, than all the Porter and Stout combined.

The last couple of decades of the 19th century were happy times for brewers, as can be seen in the increase in Whitbread’s output, which more than trebled between 1880 and 1910.

P = Porter
C = Country Porter
S = Stout
CS = Country Stout
LS = London Stout
SS = Double Stout
SSS = Treble Stout 

Whitbread Porter and Stout output 1880 - 1910
year P C S CS LS SS SSS Total Porter & Stout Total Ale & Porter % Porter & Stout
1880 75,898   471     8,411 15,069 99,849 261,785 38.14%
1881 75,423   217     9,143 14,366 99,149 284,391 34.86%
1882 79,605   523     9,577 15,682 105,387 297,645 35.41%
1883 78,595   541     10,352 15,213 104,701 292,671 35.77%
1884 89,925   323     12,160 16,049 118,457 320,769 36.93%
1885 91,885   970     12,290 17,146 122,291 322,140 37.96%
1886 88,017   720     11,445 17,531 117,713 304,472 38.66%
1887 90,397   841     12,422 17,426 121,086 329,214 36.78%
1888 91,008   425     14,138 15,515 121,086 347,267 34.87%
1889 94,097   392     14,819 15,859 125,167 354,835 35.27%
1890 100,250  
    18,110 16,950 135,310 381,026 35.51%
1891 113,027  
    20,602 15,335 148,964 416,814 35.74%
1892 94,027 29,124       17,887 15,029 156,067 451,176 34.59%
1893 80,067 39,543       17,355 13,679 150,644 457,418 32.93%
1894 75,553 35,516       17,194 13,542 141,805 464,323 30.54%
1895 73,459 37,043   2,706   17,796 12,743 143,747 473,435 30.36%
1896 73,994 39,188   10,132   19,205 12,206 154,725 508,008 30.46%
1897 79,624 42,933   17,003   19,490 12,263 171,313 545,887 31.38%
1898 84,316 41,162   26,549   20,039 11,576 183,642 603,695 30.42%
1899 78,190 44,556   36,138   23,238 10,962 193,084 664,164 29.07%
1900 77,183 43,102 4,252 50,286   28,316 11,087 214,226 671,579 31.90%
1901 76,080 37,766 7,946 68,719   34,541 10,398 235,450 706,223 33.34%
1902 81,926 35,700 8,315 82,752   41,017 11,333 261,043 741,806 35.19%
1904 82,848 32,620 12,904 110,689   44,874 13,187 297,122 759,324 39.13%
1905 89,170 29,352 13,669 119,703   42,062 14,009 307,965 778,152 39.58%
1906 84,261 5,686 13,512 152,418   38,968 17,219 312,064 802,427 38.89%
1907 99,864   15,235 152,880   40,447 16,181 324,607 823,499 39.42%
1908 92,529   4,023 170,830   45,252 14,833 327,467 811,599 40.35%
1909 85,610     187,934   45,660 14,060 333,264 860,823 38.71%
1910 108,166       199,761 43,041 10,879 361,847 850,828 42.53%
Sources:
Whitbread brewing records held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document numbers LMA/4453/D/01/045 to LMA/4453/D/01/075 and LMA/4453/D/09/076 to LMA/4453/D/09/104.

And, just for those who complained last time, here's a chart of the data.


3 comments:

Anonymous said...

What did "country" mean in this context? I've seen references to it in posts like this, but I'm not clear on the meaning.

https://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2014/08/whitbread-porter-quality-1922.html

Ron Pattinson said...

Anonymous,

everywhere outside London.

Christoph Riedel said...

Nice graph. So 1899 was the peak year for Whitbread's ale production, at least percentage-wise. Interesting to see that Porter and Stout made such a comeback after having been on the decline for such a long time.
That means the fact that the wars wiped them out nearly completedly is extra sad.