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John F. Betz & Sons, Philadelphia, founded in 1775 as the Robert Hare & J. Warren Peter Brewery, closed in 1939; Point Brewery, Fort Pitt, founded by James O'Hara in 1803 on the site of a smaller, pre-existing brewery that had been in existence since at least 1795; [7] [8] closed in 1860 [9]
In 1998, Iron Hill opened a second location in West Chester, Pennsylvania. [2] In May 2018, the restaurant opened its first location in the Southern U.S., in Greenville, South Carolina. Iron Hill launched the 20 for 20 initiative, in which it plans to have 20 locations open in 2020, including a restaurant in Atlanta, Georgia. [3]
Boston Beer Co. has since moved their operations to an old Schaefer plant [8] they purchased near Allentown, PA. [9] In May 2009, Iron City Brewing signed a deal with City Brewing Co to once again begin producing beer at the plant, [10] with brewing started in June and bottling/kegging production resumed in July 2009. [11]
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The CNJ freight yard was established in 1897 and still exists and operates in the Dutch Hill section of East Allentown CNJ built a railroad bridge crossing the Lehigh River in 1897 crossing the river at Canal Lock No. 6 to the east bank 40°37′25″N 075°27′32″W / 40.62361°N 75.45889°W / 40.62361; -75.45889 ( Lock #6 ...
Neuweiler Brewery was founded by Louis Neuwiler, who bought out longtime local brewer Benedict Nuding in 1900. Nuding's operation was limited by its location, and in 1911 Neuweiler and his son, Charles, eager to expand, hired Philadelphia architects Peukert and Wunder to build a new complex some distance away, at Front and Gordon streets.
The Duquesne Brewery, which had always been the foremost of the IBC's branches, [2] was the only to return in 1933, operating under the Independent Brewing Company's name. It had already obtained a permit to brew the new 3.2-percent beer allowed by the Cullen–Harrison Act by March 1933; [ 6 ] the company sent a case of the beer to President ...
Fogelsville is an unincorporated area in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania.It is a suburb of Allentown, in Upper Macungie Township, and is part of the Lehigh Valley, which has a population of 861,899 and was the 68th-most populous metropolitan area in the U.S. as of the 2020 census.