Schlitz beer is no more.

Wow, this brings back memories. When I was going to college I worked part time at Walgreens in the liquor department. Walgreens was the place to go for people to buy their liquor in Arizona at the time and Black Label, Old Style and Schlitz beer were often on sale for $2.69 for a twelve packs. I have vivid memories of the old men (I am at that age now) filling the shopping cart with 12 packs. Most of them had moved to Arizona from the Midwest and were very loyal to those brands.
 
A lot of well known brands have disappeared in the UK. The oldest existing beer brand is Shepherd Neame, an independent brewery which has been based in the market town of Faversham, Kent, for over 300 years. While 1698 is the brewery's official established date, town records show that commercial brewing has occurred on the site since 1573.
 
I didn't even know they still made it. Haven't seen it for at least a decade in any beer store around me. I used to buy it sometimes. It was good beer, imo.
 
Back in the 1960s and 1970s, Schlitz was one of the biggest beer brands in America. But in an effort to cut costs and speed production, the company changed brewing methods and ingredients. That hurt the beer’s quality and reputation. Many beer historians call it “the Schlitz mistake.” Sales collapsed, competitors like Budweiser and Miller took over, and the original company effectively died in the early 1980s.

It may have made Milwaukee famous, but after Pabst Brewing Company acquired Schlitz in 1999, the beer was contract brewed primarily by Miller breweries under a long-term agreement with MillerCoors. More recently, production shifted around as Pabst changed brewing partners: For many years, Schlitz was brewed at Miller/Molson Coors facilities and by 2026, reports said Schlitz was being brewed at an Anheuser-Busch plant in Texas under contract.

Schlitz moved between contract brewing partners because Pabst itself has not owned major brewing facilities for decades.

There will apparently be one final commemorative batch brewed in Wisconsin using the old 1948 recipe as a sendoff. But who knows how close to the original, without the original folks and equipment having hands on, that will be.

Link: Various interwebs
 
The onslaught of artisan beers have really hurt the old standbys a great deal.
True, but it also introduced Americans to a whole slew of yummy beers and ales.

My cousin and I owned a liquor, beer, and wine store when craft-beer breweries started springing up hither and yon. Some petered out fairly quick (probly mainly due to shipping/delivery costs) and some are still around. A few here in Calif gained even greater success and branding after adding restaurants and outdoor beer gardens to their brewery sites.

Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. is one of those. Their brewery is in Chico, California, which is where our liquor store was. Well, still is.
(I sold my half to my cousin several months after buying in, and he sold the whole store about 2 years later.)
 
This should be interesting. I just sent another load of various stuff from my hoard to auction. I kept some of the husbands beer memorabilia and his uniform jacket and some uniform shirts. But most of it went to auction. Neon , lighted signs, signs, clocks, badges, blow ups, and uniform shirts. I need to make sure the auctioneer knows about this.

The husband drove a truck for a Schlitz distributor in the early 1970's for a while. He drove a big delivery truck and delivered
kegs and cases to bars and restaurants. He acquired a lot of promotional signs and neon from when he worked there in the early 1970's
 
All of America's best-selling beers were German; Busch, Budweiser, Schlitz, and Coors.
Much of the early German American beer was made by winemakers that immigrated to the United States.

Establishing new vineyards and wineries would have taken too much time and money so they went into the brewery business and were able to offer up a salable product within a few months, often starting in their home kitchens.

Syracuse had several German breweries that thrived, a few managed to survive prohibition by making health drinks.

The last to close, in 1962, was Haberle’s the makers of Congress beer.

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https://www.syracuse.com/drinks/201...g_co_whose_lager_inspired_a_retro_remake.html
 
Didn't see that one coming. Granted I've been out of the loop for years, but Schlitz was big one back in the Chicago area. I was trying to remember the big three made in Montana beers. All of them were second rate, but when I googled, they have been pushed aside by these little micro breweries all over the state.
 
Beer is not all the same. I have no idea what causes subtle differences, but what surprised me was that Schlitz, it's own brand was turned over to Pabst to manufacture. Wouldn't that spoil the individuality of a popular beer? Or are there secret formulas that get passed along in the process?
 
In the 60s the US Navy had some sort of contract with Schlitz. That was the only brand offered at Navy recreation centers in the part of SE Asia where I was. It was beer, it was usually sort of cold so I drank it.
 
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