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Author: Tom Acitelli

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    Acitelli on History - Blogs - Web Only

    Scotland’s Influence on American Beer

    September 15, 2014 - Tom Acitelli Shortly after Bert Grant filed incorporation papers with Washington State in 1981 to open the nation’s first brewpub since Prohibition, he and the critic Michael Jackson were talking about the inaugural beer produced at that brewpub, which was carved out of an old opera house in Yakima and named after the city. “Isn’t this on... View Article
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    The Vegetable Roots of the North Carolina Beer Boom

    September 9, 2014 - Tom Acitelli The Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. plans this month to start unveiling its East Coast operation in Mills River, NC, south of Asheville, to the general public. A gift shop is scheduled to open at the end of September and tours could begin in October. The potentially 850,000-barrel brewery emerges into perhaps the most robust beer... View Article
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    The Brits Rip a Beer Tax Page from the Yanks

    August 15, 2014 - Tom Acitelli Thirty-eight years ago next month, Congress passed a deep tax cut that helped spur growth in the number of smaller breweries in the United States. A similarly tax-spurred phenomenon is under way in the United Kingdom. In the U.S., the September 1976 congressional legislation chopped the federal excise tax on beer from $9 to $7... View Article
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    When Beer Really Took Off

    August 5, 2014 - Tom Acitelli In the fall of 2002, the five-year-old Oskar Blues Brewery out of tiny Lyons, CO, decided to can rather than bottle its beers for retail sale. It became, then, America’s first independently owned, smaller-scale brewery to can its beers in-house. (Others had done it under contract at other breweries, starting as far back as the... View Article
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    The Early Days of Maine’s Biggest Brewer: Shipyard Brewing Co.

    July 15, 2014 - Tom Acitelli The Shipyard Brewing Co., Maine’s largest brewer, is marking its 20th anniversary now with various events. The company’s origins stretch further back than 1994, however, to a couple of years before. In 1992, Fred Forsley, a Gray, ME, native and real estate entrepreneur, opened the Kennebunkport Brewing Co. and the Federal Jack’s brewpub above it... View Article
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    Once Upon a Time, Beer in Oregon ‘Wasn’t Great’

    July 14, 2014 - Tom Acitelli It’s Craft Beer Month in Oregon. With 214 breweries and brewpubs for a state of about 3.8 million people, Oregon remains undoubtedly one of the nation’s, if not the world’s, most enviable spots for beer variety. It was not always like that. In fact, Oregon as a Valhalla of independently owned breweries making small batches... View Article
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    Fred Eckhardt’s First Beer Column

    July 9, 2014 - Tom Acitelli On April 25, 1984, a Friday, the Portland Oregonian tucked two brief stories and a small photograph onto a page with ads for Atta Boy dog food and Diet 7-Up as well as an article about a rice-cooking competition. “Beer Expert Writes Column,” ran the headline over the shorter of the two stories. It, along with the... View Article
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    Drinking the History of American Beer

    July 2, 2014 - Tom Acitelli What better way to imbibe the legacy of American beer—and what better time to do it, over the Fourth of July—than to drink the five beers that evoke that history? These particular beers from particular breweries collectively represent the march of American beer over the last century and a half or so. Again, they are... View Article
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    How World War I Affected Beer

    June 30, 2014 - Tom Acitelli In July 1914, construction commenced on Adolphus Busch Hall on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, MA. It could not have picked a worst moment to consummate years of enthusiastic planning. Shortly before, on June 28, a Serbian terrorist had assassinated the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, sparking a chain of events that led... View Article
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