Ryburn Brewery
Last week's post about Kitchen Brewery seems to have stirred a few memories. This time we're off to West Yorkshire again to have a look at Ryburn Brewery.In 1993 the brewery re-equipped with a bigger 10-barrel plant and also acquired its first (and ultimately only) tied house, the Ram's Head in Sowerby Bridge, a former Websters pub.
All seemed to be looking good. Two years later the brewery moved to Owenshaw Mill, Old Cawsey (which is near Sowerby Bridge) and doubled capacity again to 20 barrels. In 1996 some 40 barrels a week were being brewed but then it all seemed to go into reverse.
After a brief two-three year flowering, the Stanley Arms entered a period of long decline and it finally closed in February 1996, although the connection with Ryburn had ceased some time before then. In 1997 the brewery downsized and relocated again to the cellars of the Ram's Head. It then seemed to fade from view although when researching this piece I was surprised to see that brewing didn't actually stop until 2010. It last appears in the 2010 Good Beer Guide which tells us:
Some business is done with the local free trade but the main market for the brewery's products is via wholesalers, chiefly J D Wetherspoon.
The Ram's Head is also closed - the WhatPub website tells us that its license was suspended in January 2009 which, oddly, predates the cessation of brewing by a year. As you can see here the pub has been turned into a house.
I have to say, I do recall Ryburn beers with a great deal of affection and writing this post brought back many happy memories.
The Stanley Arms was something of a legend at its peak. It was really the first multi-beer free house in Stockport and stood out for the sheer variety of beers that passed through it. Its slow decline seems to have started with an in-house beer festival which Mike Belsham planned to be the biggest of its type ever staged. He probably achieved that with a huge multi-tiered stillage that occupied an entire wall of the pub. Trouble was, he had so much beer that it was impossible to get enough people in the pub to drink it before it went off.
The Owenshaw Mill was subsequently home to the Owenshaw Mill Brewery, which operated from 2011 to 2015. Who knew?
2 comments:
Remember the Stan and Ollie milds well. Myself and my good lady made many visits there.
I think the Stanley Arms' demise was helped along towards the end by a few violent episodes perpetrated by travelers encamped in the New Zealand Road and Carrington Road areas at the time.
We had to take cover one time as a full scale brawl broke out in the bar.
I think Mike lost the will to run what had become a frontier saloon.
I didn't know about the violent episodes but it was clear the pub was on a downhill slope for quite a while. And of course Mike had health problems too.
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