I was looking up the oldest Breweries in America and an interesting thing I have noticed is that nearly all large, long-standing breweries in the United States are descended from German immigrant brewers.
This is interesting because while Germans are well known for their love of Beer, the English, Irish, and Scotts immigrants to the 13 colonies *also* drank Beer and brewing was very popular among the original settlers. Founding Father Samuel Adams operated a brewery at one point.
So how come none of these breweries got big and survived to modern times?
In my very unscientific research, I can only find an example of one brewery that rose to national or even regional prominence after prohibition ended that wasn't started by a German immigrant: The now defunct Ballantine beer company which was started by a Scottish immigrant. (I would guess that even though it was popular around WW2 and Ronald Reagan liked their beer most Americans on the internet don't know about this brand anymore)
I'm sure you can find some small town local brewery in Maine that lasted for over a hundred years but it seems odd that absolutely none of the English/native brewers would be able to make the successful leap to 20th century conglomerate. Especially since Canadian brewers formed national conglomerates with Molson and Labatts.
Sure, Prohibition was a natural bottleneck, but why would the Germans be uniquely equipped to survive it?
Did pre-prohibition temperance movements create a cultural shift so 'native' brewers exited the industry willingly? Did WASPY old money people regard investing in things like beer and liquor to be unseemly? (Why was Canada different? They had temperance too.)
The corollary to all this, is that the successful breweries are all German and not some other nationality. There are no Czech, Polish, Dutch, Swedish, Danish, or other brewing cutlure origin conglomerates that began in the 19th century.
Just seems odd.
This is interesting because while Germans are well known for their love of Beer, the English, Irish, and Scotts immigrants to the 13 colonies *also* drank Beer and brewing was very popular among the original settlers. Founding Father Samuel Adams operated a brewery at one point.
So how come none of these breweries got big and survived to modern times?
In my very unscientific research, I can only find an example of one brewery that rose to national or even regional prominence after prohibition ended that wasn't started by a German immigrant: The now defunct Ballantine beer company which was started by a Scottish immigrant. (I would guess that even though it was popular around WW2 and Ronald Reagan liked their beer most Americans on the internet don't know about this brand anymore)
I'm sure you can find some small town local brewery in Maine that lasted for over a hundred years but it seems odd that absolutely none of the English/native brewers would be able to make the successful leap to 20th century conglomerate. Especially since Canadian brewers formed national conglomerates with Molson and Labatts.
Sure, Prohibition was a natural bottleneck, but why would the Germans be uniquely equipped to survive it?
Did pre-prohibition temperance movements create a cultural shift so 'native' brewers exited the industry willingly? Did WASPY old money people regard investing in things like beer and liquor to be unseemly? (Why was Canada different? They had temperance too.)
The corollary to all this, is that the successful breweries are all German and not some other nationality. There are no Czech, Polish, Dutch, Swedish, Danish, or other brewing cutlure origin conglomerates that began in the 19th century.
Just seems odd.