Hall & Woodhouse
Industry | Alcoholic beverage |
---|---|
Founded | 1777 |
Headquarters |
Blandford St Mary, Dorset United Kingdom |
Products | Beer |
Owner | Woodhouse family |
Website |
hall-woodhouse |
Hall and Woodhouse is a British regional brewery founded in 1777 by Charles Hall in Blandford Forum, Dorset, England.[1] The company operates over 250 public houses in the south of England, and brews under the name Badger Brewery.
History
The brewery traces its roots to 1777, when Charles Hall founded the Ansty Brewery (Ansty being a village near Blandford). The Hall & Woodhouse partnership dates from 1847, when Charles' son and successor went into business with George Woodhouse.
In 1875, the firm's logo of a Badger was first introduced, and in 1900, when a new brewery was built to replace the original, it was named after the logo. The logo has evolved over the years.[2] The firm remains a family firm.
In 1991 the brewpub Gribble Inn was acquired. Though it was sold back to the landlord in 2005, Hall & Woodhouse retained the rights to the brand name Fursty Ferret, the brewpub's most famous beer.
In 2000 the King & Barnes brewery business in Horsham was acquired. Hall & Woodhouse retained the King & Barnes chain of pubs and the rights to the brand names of the King and Barnes beers, but the brewery premises was sold to be redeveloped as housing.[3]
Beers
Tanglefoot
Tanglefoot is a premium bitter, 4.9% as a cask ale, and 5% as a filtered beer in bottles and cans. According to a story presently written on the bottle, it was given its name when the Head Brewer drank "several tankards" and "fell on" a name for the beer.[4] The cask version is widely available in the south of England, and a pasteurised version is available in bottles or cans in supermarkets nationally.
Fursty Ferret
Fursty Ferret is a 4.4% abv bitter, originally brewed at the Gribble Inn, which was bought by Hall & Woodhouse in 1991. The pub was sold back to the landlord in 2005, with Hall & Woodhouse retaining the rights to the brand name Fursty Ferret.
Other brands
- England's Own
- First Gold - a fairly dark ale with orange and spices
- Flyer (formerly Blandford Fly) - a dark bottled ale flavoured with ginger and spices
- Golden Champion Ale - with an aroma of elderflower
- Hopping Hare - a light coloured cask ale available between February and May
- Long Days - a bottled raspberry flavoured summer ale
- Pickled Partridge - a spicy seasonal winter ale which comes in cask and bottle
- Poacher's Choice - a very strong (5.7%) bottled dark ale with an edge of liquorice
- Golden Glory - a premium ale with a peach and melon flavour
- River Cottage Stinger Organic Ale - a beer made with stinging nettles, branded by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall's River Cottage
Discontinued
- Badger Original
- Pumpkin Ale
- Harvester - a low alcohol ale
- Wandering Woodwose
- Long Days
- Ansty
Images
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Golden Champion Ale
Soft drinks
The company also markets soft drinks known as Rio (formerly Rio Riva) which are canned drinks made from fruit juices and sparkling spring water. Hall and Woodhouse also used to manufacture Panda Pops, but sold the brand to Nichols plc in 2005.[5]
References
- ↑ "Hall and Woodhouse - Independent Family Brewers - Hall and Woodhouse - Our Company - Heritage". www.hall-woodhouse.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-05-31.
- ↑
- ↑ "Realbeer.com: Beer News: King & Barnes sold". www.realbeer.com. Retrieved 2008-05-31.
- ↑ "Tanglefoot - The Beer". www.tanglefoot.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-05-31.
- ↑ Mesure, Susie (2005-01-22). "Vimto group toasts £5.5m deal for Panda Pops maker". The Independent. Independent News and Media. Retrieved 2008-10-14.
- Bibliography
- A Taste of Life (Hall and Woodhouse Celebrating 225 years), David Boag and Nick Wilcox-Brown, Hall and Woodhouse (2002), ASIN B000UTOJCG