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Monday, 13 January 2025

Beer Guide to the 1970s (part thirty-nine)

This is easily the longest series of posts I've ever done. We've go to the last independent brewery. But there's still a way to go. Starting with homebrew pubs.

The two we have today were amongst the handful that had managed to survive until the 1970s. A hundred years earlier, there had been literally thousands. In 1870, there were 26,506 brewers producing fewer than 1,000 barrels a year. The vast majority of those would have been homebrew pubs.

Westcrown
Newark,
Nottinghamshire.
Founded:    1977
Closed:            1980
Tied houses:    0

Here’s a new brewery whose beers I definitely did drink. As it was based in my hometown of Newark. Regal Bitter was a pretty decent drink. The brewery’s big problem was that most of the pubs in the area were tied, limiting possible outlets. And the few free pubs in town didn’t stock their beer.

beer style format OG description
Regal Bitter Pale Ale draught 1037.5 hoppy and bitter
Regal Conqueror Strong Ale draught 1072.5  



All Nations
Madeley,
Shropshire.
Founded:    1789
Closed:            still open
Tied houses:    1

A homebrew pub which briefly stopped brewing between 2001 and 2003. It was one of the handful of homebrew pubs left in 1970.

beer style format OG description
Light Mild Mild draught 1032 more  like a Bitter



Blue Anchor
Helston,
Cornwall.
Founded:    1400
Closed:            still open
Tied houses:    1

It supposedly started life as some sort of monastic building, becoming a pub after the dissolution of the monasteries. Not sure how true that is. But the place is fucking ancient.

beer style format OG description
Medium Bitter Pale Ale draught 1050 distinctive and fruity
Best Bitter Pale Ale draught 1053 heavy
Special Bitter Pale Ale draught 1060 magnificent and heavy


 

5 comments:

  1. Blue anchor is on my bucket list.
    Oscar

    ReplyDelete
  2. I need to go to the Blue Anchor, but it's a bloody long trip from Scotland. I've been to the All Nations and the beer was fantastic. The bar is one of those that is rather oppressively small and intimate.

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  3. Went to the Anchor on Market Day in the 70s. Open all day at a time when drinking hours were limited. Packed out. This old bloke came in and asked for a pint of Dregs which was all the stuff in the beer trays left underneath the pumps. Cost him 21p rather than the 25p I paid for a pint of bitter.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Surely better to spend the 4p more.
      Oscar

      Delete