Young's

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Young and Co.'s Brewery P.L.C.
Founded 1831
Founder(s) Charles Young and Anthony Bainbridge
Headquarters London, UK
Industry Hospitality industry
Products Public houses
Divisions Wells & Young's Brewery - 40% share

Young's (Young & Co.'s Brewery P.L.C.) is a British pub chain operating nearly 220 pubs.[1] The company was founded as a brewery in 1831 by Charles Young and Anthony Bainbridge when they purchased the Ram Brewery in Wandsworth. The company closed the Ram Brewery in 2006, and transferred the brewing operation to a new company, Wells & Young’s Brewing Company Ltd, which is a joint brewing venture with Charles Wells Brewery. Though Young's own 40% shares in the new company, and there is an agreement for Young's to take beers produced by Wells & Young’s, the new company is independent.[2][3][4]

Until its closure in 2006, the company's Ram Brewery in Wandsworth was claimed to be Britain's oldest brewing site in continuous operation, with a history dating back to the 1550s when a Humphrey Langridge, "beer-brewer at Wandsworth", leased the Ram pub.[5]

Contents

[edit] History

A Ram pub on Young's brewery site was recorded from a survey around 1550 which details the owner as Elizabeth Ridon, who leased out the premises. The first indication of brewing at the Ram are from 1576 when a Humphrey Langridge, "beer-brewer at Wandsworth" (then a village in Surrey), had his house broken into, and the thief was tried at the local assize court; this Humphrey Langridge is also recorded as being landlord of "the Rame" in 1581, and so it is surmised by Young's historian that Langridge would have been brewing at the Ram in 1576.[6] The site of this inn is today the Brewery Tap. Records from 1675 show that the brewery was run by the Draper family, and in the 18th century, the Trittons purchased the brewery. It was purchased by Charles Allen Young and Anthony Fothergill Bainbridge in 1831. Since then it has been associated with the Young family, and until 2006 the last chairman of Young & Co belonging to the Young's family was John Young, the great-great-grandson of the founder.

The brewery supplied Young's public houses, in London and the area to the south-west, which still number over 200. It also sold to many other pubs and supermarkets. Beer was also exported to many European countries, Canada, the United States and Japan. The company produced three regular and a series of seasonal and occasional cask ales, keg lagers, and several filtered and pasteurised bottled beers. Young's also contract-brewed several beers for InBev, such as Courage Best and Mackeson Stout.

On 23 May 2006 the company issued a press release announcing that the Ram Brewery was to close and brewing to be moved to the Eagle Brewery in Bedford then owned by Charles Wells.[7] Wells & Young's Brewing, with Charles Wells having a 60% stake and Young & Co 40%, went into operation on 2 October 2006. Wells & Young's are now responsible for brewing, distributing and marketing Charles Wells' and Young & Co's brands at the jointly owned Eagle Brewery in Bedford. The company is operated at arms length from both Young's and Charles Wells. However a combination of Directors from both companies sit on the Wells & Young's Board.

Chairman John Young died on 17 September 2006, days before the closure of the brewery, whilst the final brew was being run at the Ram brewery Wandsworth. Beer from the last brew was served at his funeral on 29 September 2006.

Young & Co are still based in Wandsworth. Until June 2007 they were based at the offices at the Ram Brewery however after that they moved into their new Head Office, round the corner from the former brewery site.

[edit] Ram Brewery

Young's claimed that the Ram Brewery was the oldest British brewery in continuous operation.[8] At the time of its closure in 2006, the brewery was a mix of ancient and ultra-modern plant, including a steam engine which had been installed in 1835 and had been in regular use until the 1980s.

A number of animals where resident in the brewery, including a ram, a number of geese and about a dozen working draught horses. Until the closure of the brewery in 2006, the horses and drays were still used for local deliveries of beer to locations within a mile or two of the brewery.

The Ram Brewery officially closed at the end of the business day on Monday, 25 September 2006. The brewery closing story was carried by BBC London news and as of December 4 2008 the old Ram Brewery has been approved for redevelopment into a new shopping / business centre. [9]

[edit] Wells & Young's

Wells & Young's Brewing, with Charles Wells having a 60% stake and Young & Co 40%, went into operation on the 2nd October 2006. Wells & Young's are now responsible for brewing, distributing and marketing Charles Wells' and Young & Co's brands at the jointly owned Eagle Brewery in Bedford. The company is operated at arms length from both Young's and Charles Wells. However a combination of Directors from both companies sit on the Wells & Young's Board.

[edit] References

[edit] Bibliography

  • Helen Osborn, Inn and Around London. Surrey Fine Art Press. ISBN 0-9518167-0-5.
  • Helen Osborn, Britain's Oldest Brewery: the story behind the success of Young's of Wandsworth, Young & Co, 1999, ISBN 0951816721

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 51°27′33.9″N 0°11′38.5″W / 51.459417°N 0.194028°W / 51.459417; -0.194028