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Shut up about Barclay Perkins - One of a kind
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British beer gravities used to be a big secret. Until CAMRA had every cask beer analysed and published the results, no-one had any idea how strong British beers were. Though there was one brewery that wasn't so secretive.
Just about the only breweries founded between 1910 and 1970 were clubs breweries. They were set up just after the end of WW I by clubs who felt exploited by brewers and who decided they'd be better off brewing their own beer. They were usually co-operatives, jointly owned by the clubs they supplied.
Yorkshire Clubs, Midlands Clubs, Northants And Leicestershire Clubs, South Wales & Monmouthshire United Clubs and Northern Clubs Federation. The last is the only one still open, though in the hands of multinational Heineken. A bit sad really.
Northern Clubs Federation did something unique. They listed their beers' gravity on the label. Very sporting of them.
In ascending order of gravity, you've got:
Mild Ale 1032
Pale Ale 1032
Light Brown Ale 1032
Special Ale 1041
Sweet Stout 1044
Export Ale 1046
Championship Brown Ale 1050
Between 1960 and 1966 Mild Ale seems to have changed itself into Light Brown Ale. Both, I assume, were simply bottled versions of their Dark Mild.
Based on the Whitbread Gravity Book, usually my only source for this period, Pale Ale and Special Ale appear to be bottled versions of their Ordinary Bitter and Special Bitter, respectively.
Let's take a look at those gravity book entries, shall we?
Northern Clubs Federation beers
Year
Beer
size
package
atten-uation
1959
Sweet Stout
halfpint
bottled
1959
Sweet Stout
halfpint
bottled
1955
Brown Ale
halfpint
bottled
1960
Brown Ale
pint
bottled
1961
Sweet Stout
halfpint
bottled
1964
Sweet Stout
halfpint
bottled
1964
Special Bitter
pint
draught
1964
Ordinary Bitter
pint
draught
1967
Special Bitter
pint
draught
1967
Ordinary Bitter
pint
draught
Source:
Whitbread Gravity Book
What am I doing? Trying to fill in some of the 1960's chapter of my book, that's what. It's weird. I've far more information for the 1860's.
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