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City Park Brewery, also known as the Louis Bergdoll Brewing Company, was a brewery in North Philadelphia, built in 1856. Several brewery buildings were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 as a historic district. Louis J. Bergdoll started his brewery business in 1849 at 508 Vine Street, Philadelphia, and briefly operated as ...
At its peak, 700 breweries operated across Philadelphia, several in a ten-block area of Brewerytown. With the collapse of local industry later in the 20th century, originally started by the implementation of Prohibition in the United States , and later beer production moving primarily to the Midwest , no brewer was operating in that ...
This is a partial list of breweries in Pennsylvania. In 2017 there are 300 licensed craft breweries in Pennsylvania. [1] One of these breweries is America's longest established, D.G. Yuengling & Son. Yuengling is also the largest craft brewery in the country based on volume of sales. [2]
Neuweiler Brewery was founded by Louis Neuwiler, who bought out longtime local brewer Benedict Nuding in 1900. Nuding's operation was limited by its location, and in 1911 Neuweiler and his son, Charles, eager to expand, hired Philadelphia architects Peukert and Wunder to build a new complex some distance away, at Front and Gordon streets.
Straub Brewery is a historic brewery in St. Marys, Pennsylvania. In 2007, Fodor's Travel named it one of the "5 Best Places in America to Drink American Beer." [ 1 ]
[1] [2] [3] The brewery plant is across from Reading Viaduct. [4] It is historic. [5] After prohibition, Koelle & Co. built a new plant for the brewery. [5] It was one of only four breweries to survive in Philadelphia into the 1950s. Ronald Perelman and his father bought Esslinger's for $800,000 in 1961 and then sold it a few years later at a ...
John F. Betz and Sons Brewery was a beer brewery in Philadelphia, founded in 1775 as the Robert Hare & J. Warren Peter Brewery, it closed in 1939. The brewery was located at 415 Callowhill, 5th & Lawrence Streets, Philadelphia, PA .
A brewery that was sited here as early as 1855 was established by J. Henry Kalvelage. [3] The Eagle Brewery merged into the Erie Brewing Company in 1899. [2] The Erie Brewing Company closed in 1978. [2] This brewery building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982, [1] but was demolished in 2006. [4]