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Court Opinion Offers Some Intriguing Insights and Lessons About the Rise of Large Brewers and the History and Culture of Brewing in the 1970’s

I recently came across a 1979 Second Circuit opinion in a case between a former brewery and the company that bought that brewery over a payment dispute.  The opinion made this statement as the preface to describing the 1978 lower court decision that led to the appellate court decision – “In an opinion that interestingly traces the history of beer back to Domesday Book and beyond…”  Obviously, I was intrigued.  The statement basically begs you to track down the lower court decision.  The full text of the lower court decision can be found here – Bloor v. Falstaff Brewing Company.

It doesn’t disappoint.  It’s the 1978 snapshot of the beer industry as testified to by “experts in the beer industry” and is not only a description of the antithesis of the current trend in beer, but also filled with the kind of trivia any respectable beer nerd will want to catalogue.  I’ll save you the time of reading through the whole thing and give you the best bits:

On the History of Beer:

On the Decline of Local Smaller Brewers and the Rise of National Brewers

On Advancements and Trends in Alcohol Advertising:

On the American Public’s Tastes and Beer-drinking Habits.

Even the opinion’s author is interesting:  Judge Charles L. Brieant wrote the opinion – the photo of him in his N.Y. Times obituary is great – and really makes him seem like the kind of person you’d want to meet:  “Judge Brieant once said that he considered his pointed mustache as much a personal trademark as his well-known bow ties. ‘I guess if I took it off, no one would know me,’ he said.”

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