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Meux's Brewery Co Ltd was a London brewery owned by Sir Henry Meux. Established in 1764 the company was a major supplier of porter in the area. The company had several breweries around London and was eventually sold off in 1961.

Contents

[edit] Owners and mergers

Breweries frequently exchanged hands and many were bought and sold by other companies in the trade.

One early purchase by Henry Meux was The Horse Shoe Brewery, located on the junction of Tottenham Court Road and Oxford Street. In 1921 the Thorne Brothers brewery of Nine Elms Lane was also acquired by Meux and the company brewed there for 43 years.[1] In 1961 Meux's Brewery Co Ltd itself was sold to Friary, Holroyd and Healy's Brewery Ltd of Guildford, which then named itself Friary Meux Ltd. This new organisation only lasted for three years before being bought by Ind Coope Ltd.

[edit] 1814 vat failure

The Horse Shoe Brewery featured a giant porter vat measuring 22 feet high and containing 3,555 barrels. In October of 1814 the vat burst when the securing hoops failed. The contents rushed out of the vat into the streets and surrounding buildings. At the time the brewery was surrounded by small housing owned by the poorer classes of London; some of the buildings could not withstand the force of the flowing beer and collapsed. Eight people are known to have died either from falling debris, drowning, poisoning by the porter fumes, or from inebriation.[2][3]

The company found it difficult to cope with the financial implications of the disaster, with a significant loss of sales made worse because they had already paid duty on the beer. They made a successful application to parliament reclaiming the duty which allowed them to continue trading.[2]

[edit] Trivia

  • Since the 1920s the site of the company's Horse Shoe Brewery has been the home of the Dominion Theatre.[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Brewery History Society. "Questions and Answers". Accessed 11 March 2007.
  2. ^ a b British History Online. "Industries: Brewing". Accessed 11 March 2007.
  3. ^ a b RateBeer.com. "Pub Crawls of London". Accessed 11 March 2007.