Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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]
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]
Derby Brewing went out of business in 1938, after which the brewery buildings were used for various purposes. [4] In 2017, the then-vacant property was purchased by a nonprofit organization and renovated to return it to brewery use. The renovated brew house is home to three separate breweries which share a common bottling line and beer garden area.
Beer brewing companies based in Pittsburgh (8 P) Pages in category "Beer brewing companies based in Pennsylvania" The following 29 pages are in this category, out of 29 total.
The Appalachian Brewing Company, commonly known as ABC, is an American brewery in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. [1] [2] It was founded in January 1997. [3] Appalachian also operates pubs in Gettysburg, Lititz, Mechanicsburg [4] and Shippensburg. The logo features the Rockville Bridge, which crosses the Susquehanna river just north of Harrisburg.
In naming Straub Brewery one of the "5 Best Places in America to Drink American Beer," Fodor's Travel specifically cited the Eternal Tap: "For the itinerant beer lover, a trip to St. Marys, Pennsylvania has the childlike appeal on par with winning the "Golden Ticket" to Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory—only there, instead of finding the ...
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.
The brewery shifted production to "near beer" and soft drinks and opened the H&G Ice Company. According to the April 7, 1933, DuBois Courier , the brewery won the honor of being one of only two breweries in the entire nation that had never violated or been suspected of violating the Prohibition laws since the 18th Amendment went into effect.