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Roessle Brewery, Bock Beer, Boston, Massachusetts, 1894
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| Description: | An advertising poster from 1894 for the Roessle Brewery of Boston Massachusetts. This ad promotes the brewery's Bock Beer. The print features a glass of beer being admired by a mustached gentleman, and also by a goat, the traditional symbol of Bock Beer. Which one of them got to drink the beer we shall never know. |
Note: | A short history of the Roessle brewery from the 1903 book One Hundred Years of Brewing: "John Roessle founded a brewery in Boston (or what was then Roxbury) in 1846, and in that year commenced to brew the first lager beer in New England; and nothing but lager beer ever has been brewed. From the small establishment, whose output did not exceed three hundred barrels, has developed the Roessle Brewery, on Columbus avenue, with its present output of sixty-five thousand barrels of lager beer and its complete bottling and refrigerating apparatus... Mr. Roessle died in 1885, when his son, John Roessle, assumed the business, and remained thus actively engaged until April, 1896, when the present general manager, Alvin Carl, became his successor. The brewmasters employed during the early years of the career of this brewery were Henry Meyer, Christian Woernle, George Bieberbach and Fritz Viehauer, until the year 1869, when Robert Lieber became brewmaster, and remained such for over twenty years, until his death. Since his death, August 17, 1890, his son, Albert has been at the head of the brewing department. This brewery, with Haffenreffer & Company and the Suffolk Brewing Company, are now (1902) operated by the New England Brewing Company." The Roessle Brewery closed in 1918 for Prohibition, but re-opened upon repeal in 1933. It was operated as part of the Haffenreffer company until 1951, when it closed for good. |
Date: | 1894 |
Media: | Chromolithograph |
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