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America's Oldest Brewery (Maybe) Is For Sale

20070629brewery.JPGOne of America's oldest breweries is for sale on Craigslist. Well... it might be. Joe Sixpack has some background info over at the Daily News on the "was it a brewery or wasn't it" question about the house in Burlington County, NJ:

The evidence is sketchy.

There is nothing in the house that shows any sign of beer-making. It's possible the brewery was razed completely and this old house was built in its place.

But Kimmel points to the location of the original main entrance, on the side of the house, as proof of its age. If it was a re-built house, he said, you'd expect the door to face toward the street and the scenic river. Instead it faces toward the location of what historians believe was the old malt house.

Could this really be America's oldest standing brewery?

"If it's true, it's certainly very exciting," said Dale Van Wieren, an area beer historian and author of "American Breweries II," a chronology of American breweries. Currently, he said, the title of oldest standing brewery goes to the Patrick Creagh house in Annapolis, Md., circa 1749.

Gregg Smith, an author who has written about American beer history, said it's possible Kimmel is on solid ground. "But then again," he said in an e-mail, "most substantial farms and settlements had one and could in one way or another make the same sort of claim."

Either way, the Craigslist post makes a great read. Recommended.

Did this old house make brewing history? [Daily News]
The Oldest Brewery Building in the United States, 1690s [Craigslist]

[Photo via Curt Hudson / Daily News]

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1 Comment - Add yours

  • I handed Joe Sixpack a stack of historical research done by others in the 70s, then showed him the late 1600s construction methods clearly revealed by removing other layers. The house is charted on the research as the late 1600s brewhouse, and is backed by visual evidence revealed by me and shown to him and many others. It was turned into a Georgian home about 1770, and all the other construction techniques in the rest of the main house as well as all the extant woodwork show that to be correct as well. I showed him the doorway as one part of a thorough explanation of the whole structure and its relationship to the other buildings, current and long gone, on the site. The 'sketchy' quote in his article was dismissive, asinine, shoddy journalism, irresponsible and pretty infuriating. In that one lazy stroke he chose to discard an important piece of beer history, instead of using that moment of discovery to trumpet the find to all.

    By Todd Kimmell on 05/25/2009 at 9:57 AM

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