Industry | Brewing |
---|---|
Founded | 1787 |
Founder | John Courage |
Products | Beer |
Owner | Marston's Brewery |
Website | takecourage |
Courage Brewery was an English brewery, founded by John Courage in 1787 in London, England.
Courage & Co Ltd was started by John Courage (1788-1854) at the Anchor Brewhouse in Horsleydown, Bermondsey, in 1787. He was a Scottish shipping agent of French Huguenot descent. [3] It became Courage & Donaldson in 1797. By 1888, it had been registered simply as Courage. The company was inherited by his grandson, Old Etonian Raymond Courage, Lord of the Manor of Edgcote (1866-1951). [4] [5] [6] [7]
In 1955, the company merged with Barclay, Perkins & Co Ltd. at the nearby Anchor Brewery to become Courage, Barclay & Co Ltd. Five years later, another merger, with the Reading based Simonds Brewery, led to the name changing to Courage, Barclay, Simonds & Co Ltd. In 1961, Georges Bristol Brewery was acquired. By the late 1960s, the group had assets of approximately £100m, and operated five breweries in London, Reading, Bristol, Plymouth and Newark-on-Trent. It owned 5,000 licensed premises in Southern England, South Wales, the East Midlands and South Yorkshire, employed 15,000 people and produced around 75 million imperial gallons (340,000,000 L) of beer annually. [8] Its name was simplified to Courage Ltd. in 1970 and the company was taken over by the Imperial Tobacco Group Ltd. two years later.
Its vast Worton Grange brewery opened on the Reading/Shinfield border in 1978. The Anchor Brewery closed in 1981 and all brewing was transferred to Reading. Imperial Tobacco was acquired by the Hanson Trust in 1986 and it sold Courage to Elders IXL, the renamed the Foster's Group, in 1990. The following year, the Courage section of Foster's merged with Grand Metropolitan. Its public houses were owned by a joint-company called Inntrepreneur Estates. Scottish & Newcastle purchased Courage from Foster's in 1995, creating Scottish Courage as its brewing arm.
In 2007, the production, marketing and sales rights of the Courage brands were sold to Wells & Young of Bedford, which reverted to Charles Wells once Wells bought out Young's shares in the venture. This is managed by Courage Brands Ltd. [9] Heineken retained a 17 per cent stake in the venture until 2011, when Wells & Young's acquired complete control. The Berkshire Brewery closed in 2010. [10] Courage Best has undergone a significant decline in sales from almost 421,000 hectolitres (9.3 million gallons) in 2003 to under 142,000 hectolitres (3.1 million gallons) in 2012. [11] The decline of Courage Directors has levelled off at around 60,000 hectolitres (1.3 million gallons), which is down from 140,000 hectolitres (3.1 million gallons) in 2003. [11] Wells & Young's reintroduced the historic brew, Courage Imperial Russian Stout, which was first brewed in the 18th century by Thrale's brewery; [12] but this has mainly proved to be produced for distribution in the US, with limited amounts available in the UK.
In 2017, Marston's Brewery acquired the brand as part of its acquisition of Charles Wells's Eagle Brewery. [13]
Beers bearing the Courage name include:
Beers bearing the John Courage name include:
Since the 1950s the brewery used the slogan "Take Courage" [21]
The Rockney duo Chas & Dave's songs "Gertcha", "The Sideboard Song", "Rabbit", "What a miserable Saturday Night", "That's what I like" and "Margate" were adapted for a series of television commercials for Courage Bitter shown in the South of England in the 1980s. [22] Also, the Director's Bitter is a favourite of the British television character Alan Partridge. He shares this passion during his short-lived friendship with Dan, who states that he has it 'coming out of his taps' in the episode "Brave Alan".
The brewery sponsored Reading FC from 1984 until 1990. [23] Courage sponsored the English Premiership rugby union league for ten years from 1987 until 1997. [24] Courage Best Bitter is a sponsor of rugby union club the Exeter Chiefs. [25]
John Smith's Brewery in Tadcaster, North Yorkshire, England, produces beers including John Smith's, the highest selling bitter in the United Kingdom since the mid-1990s.
Carlsberg Marston's Brewing Company (CMBC) is a British brewing company. It was formed when Marston's plc disposed of its brewing operations in 2020, selling the assets to a newly formed joint venture with the Carlsberg Group to create the Carlsberg Marston's Brewing Company (CMBC), in which Marston's plc holds a 40% share.
Boddingtons Brewery was a regional brewery in Manchester, England, which owned pubs throughout the North West. Boddingtons was best known for Boddingtons Bitter (Boddies), a straw-golden, hoppy bitter which was one of the first beers to be packaged in cans containing a widget, giving it a creamy draught-style head.
McEwan's is a brand of beer owned by Carlsberg Marston's Brewing Company. It was originally brewed by William McEwan's Fountain Brewery in Edinburgh, Scotland. The McEwan's brand passed to Heineken in 2008 after their purchase of Scottish & Newcastle's British operations. Heineken sold the brand to Wells & Young's in 2011, who sold their brewing operation, including the McEwan brand to Marston's in 2017. Cans and bottles are now brewed in Bedford, England.
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Wellington Brewery is a brewery in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. It was established in 1985 and was one of the first North American breweries to revive the ancient technique of brewing cask-conditioned cask ale. Phil Gosling was the founder. By 2011, the volume of sales required the company to expand its brewing capacity. Two new 150HL tanks were installed. In January 2013, four more tanks were installed to keep up with demand for Wellington products. In 2015, the company's facility was expanded with a 12,000-square-foot addition, including a 40-hectolitre brew house and new packaging line. At that time, the company employed a staff of 45. The company also has a distribution warehouse in Toronto.
The Houston Brewing Company was a brewery in the village of Houston, Renfrewshire, Scotland. It operated from 1997 to 2016.
Stones Brewery was a brewery founded in 1868 by William Stones in Sheffield, West Riding of Yorkshire, England, and purchased by Bass Brewery in 1968. After its closure in 1999, its major brand, Stones Bitter, has continued to be produced by the Molson Coors Brewing Company.
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Edgecote Hall , built between 1747 and 1752. One wishes that the porch in the centre of the facade had been saved : it is a splendid piece with a mass of decoration with ornamental pilasters , heraldry , statuary and a curved gable with ...
PAGE 495 ... Raymond Courage [1866-1951] of Edgcote Manor ...COURAGE , of Shenfield Place , Brentwood , Essex , b . 10 July , 1832 ; educ ... BURKE's Peerage ) . 1. Helen Beatrice , d . 5 May , 1922 . 2. Evelyne ... Dorothy , m . Herman de Zoete ...
Edgcote is a nine-bay two-story house erected between 1747 and 1752 for London merchant Richard Chauncey. Built of local ironstone with gray stone dressings, the interior is notable for its Chinese style drawing room. Edgcote House, together with 1,700 acres, was sold in June 2005 by Christopher Courage (of the brewing family) for £30 million. Edgcote is possibly most notable today as Netherfield, the country seat of Mr. Bingley, in the BBC's 1995 production of "Pride and Prejudice."...Courage family here 1926-2005.
Edgcote was sold by Christopher Courage, 43, scion of the brewing dynasty [as son of Edward Raymond Courage (1906-1982) and grandson of Raymond Courage (1866-1951)], who was born there and had lived there all his life. Courage and his .