Defunct Massachusetts Craft Brewers
While creating our list of current Massachusetts breweries for part 1 of the series, we learned of several that had closed, some during what is often described as the bubble of the late 1990s, others more recently. While this list includes all the defunct craft breweries we could verify, it is a work in progress, and by no means complete.
Craft beer drinkers of today are familiar with East Coast pioneers Sam Adams and Harpoon, but Boston’s first brewpub, Commonwealth Brewing Company (1986-2002), was widely respected as one of the best breweries in the country. Specializing in cask conditioned beers, the popular brewpub churned out world class beer for nearly two decades before its owner, more of a restauranteur than a beer drinker, shifted his focus from beer to food and eventually decided to close. Other Beantown breweries, including Atlantic Coast Brewing, better known as Tremont (1994-2001), Back Bay Brewing (1996-2000), Fort Hill Brewhouse (1996-1997) and Northeast Brewing Company (1997-2002) were also short lived. Check out Norm Miller’s excellent book, Boston Beer: A History of Brewing in the Hub for more on Boston’s pioneering role in craft beer.
The 1990s saw a wave of breweries that opened and closed in other places around the state as well, like Worcester’s Main Street Brewing Company (1996-1997), Marlborough and The Underground Brewery (1994-1998) or contract brewer Old Marlborough (1989-1993), who brewed at the old Catamount Brewery in Vermont. Pittsfield had Arrowhead Brewing (1994-2004) and Old Saddleback (1997-2000). A chain brewery called Brew Moon opened locations in Boston, Saugus, Cambridge, and Braintree (1994-2002) and eventually sold out to Rock Bottom. Others who fell victim to the boom-then-bust period included The Brewhouse of Danvers (1995-1997), Ould Newbury Brewing (1992-1997) in Newburyport, Old Harbor Brewing or Pilgrim Brewery (1995-1998) in Hudson, contract brewer Dornbusch Brewing (1995-2002), Lowell Brewing Co./Mill City Brewing (1994-2003) in Lowell, Z Street Brewing (1999-2003) in Fitchburg, Quincy Ships Brewing (2001-2002), and Maplewood Farms Restaurant & Brewery (2001-2004) in Amherst. Highland Orchard Brewery, which had opened in Fiskdale in 1996, closed and sold the brewery to Pioneer Brewing. In all, there were more than two dozen brewery openings between 1998 and 2004, but nearly as many closings during that same period.
The twelve years since have been considerably better for local craft beer brewers, but still, the Bay State hasn’t been immune to brewery shut downs. Cape Cod’s only brewpub, Hyport Brewing (2002-2005) in Hyannis, stopped brewing and sold its equipment to Cape Cod Beer. Then another popular brewpub, Owen O’Leary’s (1996-2008) in Framingham, discontinued its brewing operations. Pittsfield Brew Works (2005-2009) closed a year later (owners Bill & Christine Heaton later opened Big Elm Brewery), and shortly after, Rock Bottom (2002-2010) closed all but its Boston location, which essentially became a restaurant when it announced it would no longer brew its own beer on site.
2010 was also the year that Rhonda Kallman, former longtime partner at Boston Beer Company, closed her contract brewery New Century (2001-2010), producers of Edison Light and Moonshot, a caffeinated beer. Some six years after it had been introduced, Moonshot got caught up in the Four Loko controversy and was labeled a “public health concern” by the FDA. Another notable change around that time was the decision by Buzzard’s Bay Brewing to change its brand to Just Beer (2009-2012). After dropping its national distributor, the rebranded brewery shifted focus to beer made with local ingredients and sold to local restaurants and customers. After three years, the name was sold to Alchemy & Science, an umbrella company of Sam Adams. The brewery returned to its original namesake but maintained its emphasis on being a local farm brewery.
In 2012 three more brewers closed down, including Honest Town (2008-2012) in Southbridge, 50 Back (2010-2012), a brewery and charity that donated half of all proceeds to veterans and their families, and contract brewer Sherwood Forest (2000 to 2012). A year later, Pioneer moved to Connecticut and sold its Fiskdale brewery to Rapscallion. More closings followed in 2014, including Frosty Knuckle (2012-2014), contract brewed at Mercury Brewing, Endurance (2004-2011) another contractor who failed after a brief comeback attempt, Cody Brewing (2006-2014) in Amesbury, and Waltham’s Watch City (1996-2014).
The first of three closings in 2015 was at Do Can Brewery (2012-2015) in Lowell when brewer Pat Slattery was tragically killed in an accident. The successful brewery had been the fulfillment of his lifelong dream. Two others, High & Mighty (2006-2015) and Howler Brewery*** (2013-2015), both contract brewers, called it quits that year as well. Another, Enlightenment Ales** (established in 2010) went on hiatus in 2015 when Ben Howe, also head brewer at Idle Hands, took a brewing job in Norway. Around the same time, Banner Beer** (established in 2013) also went on hiatus so that brewer Todd Charbonneau (previously at Harpoon) could pursue a new venture with Dorchester Brewing Company, which opened last summer.
Then of course there’s Pretty Things Beer & Ale Project (2008-2015), the self-proclaimed gypsy brewer that ended their successful run in late 2015 after veteran brewer Dan Paquette blew the whistle on the pay-to-play scandal. The following year was also relatively quiet, with just two brewers going out of business: Contract brew Wicked Pissa (2012-2016) faded away*, and Goodfellow’s Brewing (2013-2016), a farm brewery in Lakeville, ceased production of its beer in October. So far in 2017, we know of just two closures: Holyoke’s Paper City Brewery (1996-2017), known mostly for its contract brewing business, and Glass Bottom (2012-2017), who began as a brewery in Lee before converting to contract and then closing when Paper City went under.
Other defunct breweries we identified, but whose dates of operation we couldn’t fully verify include Panther Brewing, a Norwood company that contract brewed novelty beverages including a Three Stooges Beer, and the Brewhouse Cafe & Grille on Cabot Street in Lowell, where Beer Works sits now. Five others, who all appear to have closed in the 1990s, include Coastal Brewing Company in Duxbury, Clamtown Brewery in Ipswich, Olde Salem Village Brewing in Danvers, Pioneer Valley Brewpub in Springfield, and Broad Street Brewing in Boston.
If you know of a defunct Bay State brewery that isn’t listed, send us the details in the “submit a comment” section below.
* Wicked Pissa was dropped by it’s distributor and does not currently have a deal with any breweries accepting contracts, but they have not officially given up on the brand.
** Banner and Enlightenment have since been confirmed as closed for good.
Lefty’s of Greenfield, MA has shut down
Hi Eben: We’re well aware of these closures and have removed them from our Breweries A to Z list on the website. This blog post is from a couple of years ago so doesn’t include the dozen or so closures that have occurred since. Cheers
Down the Road Beer Co. of Everett, MA has shut down
Hi Eben: We’re well aware of these closures and have removed them from our Breweries A to Z list on the website. This blog post is from a couple of years ago so doesn’t include the dozen or so closures that have occurred since. Cheers
I worked at Ayer’s Rock in Boston in ’96 while the owner Christian and co built out Fort Hill Brewhouse — and when it was finished, a lot of staff moved across the street to the new brewery in the old ship fabrication building on Broad Street (what I was told at the time). The beer and food were good, and the people were interesting. It’s amazing how much history just gets washed away as the years roll by. Fort Hill was in the financial district of Boston, so busy happy hours and lunches – and Friday nights were crazy busy, but I’d be down there bartending on Saturdays and it was barely worth keeping the place open. I skated out of there in early ’97 so I don’t know how it ended, but I’m sad that it did. It existed for a brief time, but had a lot of impact in that short run. The Vegas comedian Butch Bradley worked at both bars, and our general get-it-done guy was Jimmy Murphy from Southie – he was sober, funny and always on point, with a slick haircut and immaculate car, I think it was a Chevy. I was sad to hear that Jimmy was killed in a bar in Southie by two brothers in a dispute over a girl not long after I left town. PBS, I believe, made a Frontline episode out of the story and the brothers went to prison, RIP Jimmy.
Thanks for sharing your memories. There’s a lot of history in Massachusetts beer, cheers!