Bass Brewing Co., Bass Ale, England

Bass Ale, England

Bass Ale, England

 

 

Bass Brewery

From Wikipedia, 

Bass Brewery
Bass Logo
Industry Alcoholic beverage
Founded 1777
Founder(s) William Bass
Headquarters Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire (brewery); Luton, Bedfordshire (Bass brand), England
Products Beer
Production output 8.5 million UK barrels
(1.3 million hectolitres)
Owner(s) Molson Coors Brewing Company (brewery); Anheuser-Busch InBev (Bass brand)

The Bass Brewery (pronounced /ˈbæs/ with a short a) was founded as a brewery in 1777 by

William Bass in Burton upon Trent, England.[1] The main brand was Bass Pale Ale. The company

 became one of the main breweries in the UK, and Bass Pale Ale was exported throughout the

British Empire, the distinctive red triangle becoming the UK's first registered trademark.[2]

The company took control of a number of other large breweries in the early 20th century, and

 in the 1960s merged with Charrington United Breweries to become the largest UK brewing

company, Bass Charrington.[1] The brewing operations of the company were bought by

Interbrew (now Anheuser-Busch InBev) in 2000, while the retail side (hotel and pub holdings)

 were renamed Six Continents plc. The UK government's Competition Commission were

concerned about the monopoly implications arising from the deal, and instructed Interbrew

 to dispose of the brewery and certain brands (the Carling and Worthington brands) to

 Coors (now Molson Coors Brewing Company), but allowed Interbrew to retain the rights

to the Bass Pale Ale brand.[3]

Draught Bass Pale Ale (4.4 abv) is brewed under contract in Burton by Marston's for InBev,[4]

while bottled and keg versions (5.1 abv) are brewed at InBev's own brewery in Samlesbury for

 export.[5]

History

The Bass & Co Brewery was established by William Bass in 1777 and was one of the first

 breweries in Burton upon Trent. Prior to establishing his brewery, Bass transported ale

for another brewer by the name of Benjamin Printon; Bass sold this carrier business to

the Pickford family, using the funds to establish his own brewery.[6]

Early in the company's history, Bass was exporting bottled beer around the world with the

 Baltic trade being supplied through the port of Hull. Growing demand led to the building

of a second brewery in Burton upon Trent in 1799 by Michael Bass, the founder's son, who

entered into partnership with John Ratcliff. The water produced from boreholes in the locality

became popular with brewers, with 30 different breweries operating in the mid-19th century.

Michael's son, another Michael, succeeded on the death of his father in 1827, renewed the

Ratcliff partnership and brought in John Gretton, and created the company of 'Bass, Ratcliff

and Gretton' as it traded in the 19th century.

The opening of the railway through Burton in 1839 led to Burton becoming pre-eminent as

a brewing town. In the mid-1870s, Bass, Ratcliff and Gretton accounted for one third of Burton's

output.[7] The company became a public limited company in 1888, following the death of Michael

 in 1884, who was succeeded by his son, another Michael, later Lord Burton.[8]

Both Michael Bass and Lord Burton were considerable philanthropists with extensive charitable

donations to the towns of Burton and Derby. Early in the 20th century, in a declining market,

many Burton breweries closed down. The numbers fell from twenty in 1900 to eight in 1928.

Bass took over the breweries of Walkers in 1923, Worthington and Thomas Salt in 1927 and

 James Eadie in 1933.

Bass was one of the original FT 30 companies on the London Stock Exchange when the listing

was established in 1935.[9] Over the next half-century, Bass maintained its dominance in the

UK market by the acquisition of other brewers such as Birmingham-based Mitchells & Butlers

(1961), London brewer Charringtons (1967), Sheffield brewer William Stones Ltd (1968) and

Grimsby-based Hewitt Brothers Limited (1969) (with the overall company being known as Bass,

Mitchells and Butlers or Bass Charrington at various times).

By the end of the 20th century, following decades of closures and consolidation, Bass was left

 with one of the two large breweries remaining in the town. It also had substantial holdings in

hotels, now owned by InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG). The Mitchells and Butlers name

 lives on as the company that retained the licensed retail outlet business when it was separated

from the Six Continents plc company (the successor to Bass plc) in 2003.

Separation of brewery and beer

Bottles of Bass beer for sale at a liquor store in

Iizaka, Fukushima, Japan.

Bass plc's brewing business was bought by the Belgian brewer Interbrew (now InBev) in June

 2000, when the remaining hotel and pub holdings were renamed Six Continents plc.

After the Competition Commission had considered the potential monopoly concerns[10] arising

 from the deal, Interbrew disposed of Bass Brewers Limited (including the Carling and Worthington

brands) to Coors (now Molson Coors Brewing Company), but retained the rights to Bass beer

production.

The beer was produced under license by Coors, which retained the Bass brewing capacity.

Bass Brewers Limited was renamed Coors Brewers Limited. The production license came to

an end in 2005, and the license to brew draught Bass has been taken up by

 Wolverhampton & Dudley Breweries PLC, who started production at the Marston's Brewery,

also in Burton. Bottled and keg Bass, the types exported to the USA with a higher abv, are

no longer brewed in Burton and are now imported by Anheuser-Busch.

Next to the brewery, the Bass Museum of Brewing, renamed the Coors Visitor Centre & The

Museum of Brewing, was Burton upon Trent's largest tourist attraction until closed by Coors

in June 2008. A steering group was established to investigate re-opening the museum[11][12]

 and the museum relaunched in May 2010 as the National Brewery Centre.

Marketing

Bottles of Bass alongside the champagne in

 Edouard Manet's 1882 Bar at the Folies-Bergère

Bass was a pioneer in international brand marketing. The Bass Red Triangle was the first

 trademark to be registered under the UK's Trade Mark Registration Act 1875, as trade mark

 number 1.[13] The 1875 Act came into effect on 1 January 1876 and that New Year's Eve, a

Bass employee waited overnight outside the registrar's office, in order to be the first in the

queue to register a trademark the next morning. In fact, Bass, Ratcliff & Gretton Limited

received the first two registrations, the first being the Bass Red Triangle for their pale ale,

and the second the Bass Red Diamond for their strong ale.[14] The trademarks are now

owned by Brandbrew SA, an Interbrew subsidiary based in Luxembourg.[15]

Bottles of Bass with the Red Triangle logo have occasionally appeared in art and literature.

Bottles of Bass Pale Ale bearing the triangle can be seen in Edouard Manet's 1882 painting

 Bar at the Folies-Bergère.[16] Bottles of Bass can also be seen in over 40 paintings by Picasso,

mostly at the height of his Cubist period around 1914.[17][18][19] In the "Oxen of the Sun"

episode of James Joyce's Ulysses, Bloom remarks upon the Bass logo.[20]

Bass are the main sponsors of Bristol Rugby for the 2006/07 season and so the red triangle

logo appears prominently on the team's home and away shirts. Bass are also a major sponsor

 of Pontypridd RFC during the 2009-2011 seasons, and the red triangle will appear on the rear

 of the match shirts.[21]

Shandy Bass

In the UK there is also a fizzy soft drink called Shandy Bass, introduced in 1972. It is a shandy

made with Bass beer, which is mixed such that it contains 0.5% alcohol by volume. It is made

by Britvic.[22] Britvic also manufactured Top Deck brand of shandy until the mid-1990s.

Bass in Ireland

Bass was introduced in Ireland in the 1960s by Cork based brewers Beamish and Crawford. The

beer proved popular until the 1980s, when sales began to decline. The Bass slogan in Ireland,

 "Ah that's Bass!", became part of everyday language in Ireland[dubious - discuss] to describe relief

 from thirst. Many metal signs bearing the slogan are still visible on many pubs across Ireland.

 It enjoyed somewhat of a resurgence in the early 1990s under Tennents Ireland but once again

 fell away possibly due to a lack of any concerted advertising campaign. Attempts to revive the

beer under InBev also failed.

Bass sold in Ireland differs from the version on sale in Britain in that it consists of a fizzier

sweeter ale than the common version enjoyed in England. It is still sold in many bars in Dublin

and in pint bottles in Ireland's South East region.

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