All About Beer Magazine » The Beer Hunter https://allaboutbeer.net Celebrating the World of Beer Culture Fri, 18 Oct 2013 17:31:12 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.1 Preserving a Beer Legacy https://allaboutbeer.net/live-beer/people/people-features/2013/09/preserving-a-beer-legacy/ https://allaboutbeer.net/live-beer/people/people-features/2013/09/preserving-a-beer-legacy/#comments Sun, 01 Sep 2013 19:13:44 +0000 Stan Hieronymus https://allaboutbeer.net/?p=30178

A view of beer writer Michael Jackson's office, the contents of which are now at a library in the United Kingdom. Photo courtesy of Oxford Brookes University.

The world’s best-known beer writer did not claim to get everything right at first.

“Obviously, I’m learning all the time, and revising my ideas. Nor did I start with the assumption that I knew better than anyone else,” Michael Jackson wrote to American beer importer Charles Finkel in 1981. “My initial contribution was not knowledge but a willingness to research.”

Jackson and Finkel were near the beginning of a friendship and business relationship that would last until the Englishman Jackson died in 2007. Finkel once said finding Jackson’s World Guide to Beer in 1978 “was to me like a heathen discovering the Bible,” and it was an essential reference in building the portfolio for his company, Merchant du Vin. Finkel had recently visited the author in London, and that the two were at ease with each other was obvious. Jackson suggested Finkel must have had a good time, because there was part of the evening the American apparently did not remember.

Jackson corresponded with total candor. “There is, in fact, no limit to the egomaniac self images I can conjure up, and will do, as raw images for anything you care to put together in Alephenalia [a newsletter Finkel created for Merchant du Vin],” he wrote. “Let me put it in another, mock-modest way: here are some of the aspects of my work in which I take pride.”

In the paragraphs that followed, Jackson did indeed forgo modesty, but more extraordinary in retrospect is how accurately he forecast, in 1981 and well before he became known as The Beer Hunter, a good portion of what he would be remembered for:— being the first writer to attempt an international study of beer styles, championing beer at the table, and using a “literate” vocabulary in his beer writing. Perhaps that vision explains why much of what he wrote before the current generation of beer drinkers was even born remains relevant today.

The Michael Jackson Collection

The typed carbon copy of what Jackson wrote to Finkel is filed along with more letters, promotional material and other documents related to Merchant du Vin inside a folder labeled MJ/4/14/211 in an archival box in the special collections room at the Oxford Brookes University library. In May of 2008, nine months after Jackson died, Don Marshall at Oxford Brookes supervised a crew that moved almost the entire contents of Jackson’s office in London to Oxford.

They packed up 83 linear feet of books (1,500 from his personal library and 300 copies of his own books, often with versions in multiple languages), the contents of 29 filing cabinets and 26 linear feet of archival material. The movers left behind only considerable quantities of beer and whisky, as well as most of the glassware.

Included among the objects moved were several pairs of Jackson’s glasses, Beer Hunter business cards, Christmas cards and a tattered copy of The Penguin Dictionary of Modern Quotations. Cut-up Post-it notes protrude from the top, acting as tabs, labeled with page and item numbers plus key words like beer, drink or porter. The last marks a quotation from J.P Donleavy, who wrote The Ginger Man.

It reads: “When I die, I want to decompose in a barrel of porter and have it served in all the pubs in Dublin. I wonder would they know it was me?”

The Beer Hunter’s place in history, as the world’s most prominent writer about whisky as well as about beer, was secured long before Jackson died. By donating all that he had accumulated, the executors of his estate, Paddy Gunningham and Sam Hopkins, assured the massive amount of information he collected would remain available to future historians.

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Ten of Our Favorite Columns by Beer Writer Michael Jackson https://allaboutbeer.net/daily-pint/whats-brewing/2013/07/ten-columns-by-beer-writer-michael-jackson/ https://allaboutbeer.net/daily-pint/whats-brewing/2013/07/ten-columns-by-beer-writer-michael-jackson/#comments Wed, 10 Jul 2013 18:34:50 +0000 Staff https://allaboutbeer.net/?p=30134

Michael Jackson’s first column in All About Beer Magazine was titled “The Thinking Drinker” and appeared in November of 1984.

When famed beer writer Michael Jackson died in 2007, he left behind much more than a library of educational books on beer and whisky. The entirety of his archives—including 1,800 books, the contents of 29 filing cabinets, and countless handwritten notes—is now housed at the Oxford Brookes University library.

In the September issue of All About Beer Magazine, Stan Hieronymus takes a peek into the Beer Hunter’s collection and the efforts to preserve his legacy. While the collection at Oxford isn’t available to the general public, we asked former All About Beer Magazine editor Julie Johnson to dig through our own archives and pick her 10 favorite columns by Jackson. During the coming weeks, we’ll be posting them here. Enjoy.

  • Calagione,” September 1999, Vol. 20, No. 4. Long before Dogfish Head Craft Brewery and founder Sam Calagione gained national fame, Jackson spent a day with Sam in Delaware, talking literature and tasting what he called “extraordinarily adventurous beers.”
  • Finally, the Kiss of Magic Malt,” January 2000, Vol. 21, No. 1. This tour of Moravia is a perfect example of Jackson on the road—part history, part travelogue, with brewery visits and brief but tempting tasting notes.
  • Tasting Beer Under the Sea,” November 2000, Vol. 21, No. 6. In a PR exercise to promote his Great Beer Guide to a group of booksellers, Jackson hosts an all-day beer tasting on a train as it travels from London, under the Channel and on to Belgium.
  • Just Words,” January 2001, Vol. 22, No. 1. A playful exploration of the origins of words used in brewing, with the help of a friendly priest.
  • Blue Collar Brews,” May 2001, Vol. 22, No. 3. Jackson recalls his immigrant background and working-class roots, and the English beer styles formulated to slake the thirst of laboring men.
  • Celebrating a Great 21st … But This is not Kansas City,” September 2002, Vol. 23, No. 5. At the 21st Great American Beer Festival in Denver, he recalls the visit of its founder, Charlie Papazian, to the Great British Beer Festival years earlier and the role of that meeting in launching the GABF.
  • Farewell, Father … It’s Beer War, November 2002, Vol. 23, No. 6. Readers love lists, but woe betide the writer who omits a favorite beer from one titled The Ten Best Belgians.
  • My Tribute to The Coach,” July 2005, Vol. 26, No. 4. A touching remembrance of a favorite publican in a portrait of the pub he tended and the community that gathered there.
  • The Silence of the Ram,” September 2006, Vol. 27, No. 5. A rare flash of anger over the closing of a venerable brewery.
  • Did I Cheat Mort Subite?” September 2007, Vol. 28, No. 5. Jackson’s final essay for All About Beer, published after his death.
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