Beer in the Old West (2024)

Bellying up to the bar for a brew was the main attraction in frontier towns.

Classic westerns and series like Deadwood and Hell on Wheels would have us believe that the only liquid served at saloons was whiskey, or, rather, a rough approximation of it. But after the Civil War, beer started showing up in Western saloons and became very popular, as well. It had as many colorful monikers as whiskey: John Barleycorn, purge, hop juice, calobogus, wobbly pop, mancation, let’s mosey, laughing water, mad dog, Jesus juice, pig’s ear, strike-me-dead, even heavy wet. (Bar tenders in the Old West had to have a big vocabulary!)

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What was beer like in the 1800s Old West? Lager or ale, dark or pale, hopped or sweet? It depended on where you were. In some outer reaches and there were plenty of those in the early West, most beer was home-brewed and devoid of hops since they didn’t grow well in many hot places. Most brews would have come from grains but lower quality grains not used for bread making. And it would have tasted sweet like a whiskey mash before distillation. But beer in the Old West suffered the same bastardizations as whiskey; saloon keepers and bartenders would often dilute beer with “enhancers” or water to maximize their profits. In 1870, a glass of beer cost about 10¢, about $1.77 today.

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As more German immigrants who knew the art of brewing moved West or to places like Wisconsin and Missouri from which beer could be easily transported West, kegged beer started to pick up in popularity. (See America’s Top Ten Oldest Beers.) German brewers introduced better grains, better water sources, better yeasts, and hops. They brewed mostly lagers in the beginning. As keg beer began to show up in saloons, patrons noted the marked improvement of the professionally brewed beer over previous home brews they had been accustomed to, which had been mostly home-brewed, rancid and weak, with no hops

The earliest brewery in the U.S. was Yuengling founded in 1829 in Pottsville, PA. Of the top ten oldest breweries in the U.S., five of them were in Wisconsin, which had a very heavy German population. (Consequently, Wisconsin would grow to have more bars per capita, by far, than any other state in the Union.)

Saloons in the U.S. began to have a close association with breweries in the early 1880s. The brewing industry was growing so rapidly that competition became very keen. Breweries began to adopt the British "tied-house" system of control where they owned saloons outright. Schlitz Brewing Companyand a few others built elaborate saloons to attract customers and advertise their beers.

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Beer was not bottled widely until 1873. Up to that point it was mostly kept in kegs, sometimes stored in barrels the patrons would sit upon. Up until the 1870s, beer was served at room temperature in the European tradition. Though the beer had a head, it wasn’t sudsy as it is today. Patrons had to knock back the beer in a hurry before it got too warm or flat.

Thefirstcommercial, or "industrial", refrigeration ofbeerbegan in the United States in 1870 at the Liebmann's SonsBrewingCompany in Brooklyn, NY. It would have been fermentedcold, shippedcold, and eventually stored and served cold. Anheuser-Busch soon followed suit, as well as other major breweries.

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Refrigeration took decades to make it to many places in the West. But ice houses began to crop even in the most isolated places. And some towns and cities harvested ice in winter from their rivers and stored in caves or deep stone cellars. The West was a hot place in summer and cowboys would pay a pretty penny for a cold beer after sweating in leather chaps and eating dust all day in the saddle!

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"Beer in the Old West" was first published on Facebook and NotesfromtheFrontier.com on April 20, 2020.

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Beer in the Old West (2024)

FAQs

What beer did they drink in the Old West? ›

But after the Civil War, beer started showing up in Western saloons and became very popular, as well. It had as many colorful monikers as whiskey: John Barleycorn, purge, hop juice, calobogus, wobbly pop, mancation, let's mosey, laughing water, mad dog, Jesus juice, pig's ear, strike-me-dead, even heavy wet.

How did they keep beer cold in the Old West saloons? ›

Answer and Explanation: In the Old West, people did not always enjoy their beer cold, for their were no modern refrigerators. To keep beer cold, people would keep kegs of beer in caves and rock cellars, lined with harvested river ice. Sometimes, they would even use wet gunny sacks full of sawdust to cool beer, as well.

Did they drink warm beer in the Old West? ›

Beer was often served at room temperature since refrigeration was mostly unavailable. Adolphus Busch introduced refrigeration and pasteurization of beer in 1880 with his Budweiser brand. Some saloons kept the beer in kegs stored on racks inside the saloon.

What is the beer of the Cowboys? ›

Miller Lite: The ONLY beer of the Dallas Cowboys.

What was the official drink of Cowboys? ›

The Original Cowboy combines the two for a satisfyingly sweet, sour, and fizzy drink. Pendleton®️ Original Whisky adds a warm, sweet and spicy flavor, while fresh lemon juice and simple syrup balance out and lighten the drink. Top it off with soda water and enjoy this co*cktail fit for a true cowboy.

What was the drinking age in the Old West? ›

U.S. history of alcohol minimum purchase age by state
StatePre-Prohibition (prior to 1919)Post-Prohibition (after 1933)
CaliforniaPre 1891: Regulated by municipality/county (common age was 16) 1891: 18 (statewide)1933: 21
ColoradoNone(Dec) 1945: 18: for 3.2% near-beer 21: for wine and liquor
Connecticut2121
DelawareN/A21
40 more rows

Did they really drink that much whiskey in the Old West? ›

Yep, a lot of whiskey was consumed. There was good whiskey and there was bad. Or, as some would say, “It was all good, but some was better.” Other than church's, saloons were about the only place where men could gather and socialize.

Why did saloons in the Old West have swinging doors? ›

The style of the doors was praised by saloon owners as they let fresh air in and smoke out while allowing a cross breeze to cold the air. They also were able to maintain some privacy by having empty doors while still enticing people to come in when they heard the laughter and music.

Did they actually drink beer on Gunsmoke? ›

The Gunsmoke actors actually drank beer, but the whiskey was tea or colored water. Marshall Trimble is Arizona's official historian and vice president of the Wild West History Association.

How much was a mug of beer in the Old West? ›

Saloons served beer for 10 cents a glass (paying that in 1870 would equal $1.77 for a glass today). In warmer climes the beer was a little warm, usually served at 55 to 65 degrees.

Was the beer cold on Gunsmoke? ›

In old episodes of Gunsmoke, Miss Kitty frequently offers Marshal Dillon a cold beer at the Longbranch Saloon.

How bad was alcoholism in the 1800s? ›

In fact, in the early republic, Americans drank quantities we would consider astounding today. In 1790, we consumed an average of 5.8 gallons of absolute alcohol annually for each drinking-age individual. By 1830, that figure rose to 7.1 gallons!

How much did a glass of whiskey cost in the Old West? ›

On the other hand, “Boomtown Saloons: Archaeology and History in Virginia City” by Kelly J. Dixon, discloses that the cost of any drink containing liquor in the Old West was approximately 25 cents — 10 times that of a bullet cartridge.

What did kids drink in the 1800s? ›

So instead of drinking water, many people drank fermented and brewed beverages like beer, ale, cider, and wine. Children drank something called small beer. One of the first steps in brewing beer is to boil the water, which kills the germs and bacteria and makes it safe to drink. This first brewing has alcohol in it.

What beer did Laverne and Shirley bottle? ›

Likewise set in the 1950s, Laverne and Shirley centered on the lives of two twenty-something roommates who worked on the bottling line at the Shotz Brewery, a fictional factory born of Milwaukee's beer-centric reputation with a name not too far away from the city's own Schlitz, the "beer that made Milwaukee famous." ...

What kind of alcohol did cowboys drink? ›

Cowboys never had a reputation for being very sophisticated connoisseurs. The whiskey they drank was simply fuel for the saloons' many other pastimes, whatever those happened to be. Quality and flavor among whiskies in the late 1800s varied widely.

What beer did they drink in Urban Cowboy? ›

Lone Star Beer is featured prominently in the Houston-based film Urban Cowboy of 1980. The beer is featured in the diner scene of the 1982 film, Six Pack.

What was the most popular drink in the Old West? ›

Author and Frontier Fare columnist Sherry Monahan says, “While it's true that wine, beer and whiskey were largely consumed in most Western saloons, many also offered fancy mixed drinks.

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