Friday

Temperance pressures

In the closing years of the eighteenth century less beer was brewed at home, with major brewing companies being spawned to supply beer to the millions employed in the newly developing industries. Only country folk retained their brewing traditions. The develop­ment of roads and railways provided distribution systems for the big brewers.
By 1810, there were 48,000 alehouses for some 8 million people in Britain (King 1947). Captains of industry were perturbed about wages being 'wasted' on excess drinking. This led to a tightening of licensing laws and many counties declared that public houses should be closed at 9 pm in winter and 10 pm in summer. Some were not satis ed even with that and the temperance movement developed. The rst pledge of 'teetotalism' was signed in Preston in 1832 (King 1947). [The word teetotal is said to have originated in an English temperance meeting, when a stammering man said 'We can't keep 'em sober unless we have the pledge total. Yes, Mr Chairman, tee-tee-total' (Fleming 1975).]
However, there were those who championed the merits of consuming beer. Savage (1866) wrote in the United States (where beer was very much the drink of moderation as compared to the much more prevalent distilled concoctions) that:

The most useful temperance lecturer is he who advocates the temperate use of beverages which custom has sanctioned and which . man will have. A reform may, and we trust will be effected in favour of healthful and comparatively mild drinks; but it is more than doubtful if hard working, energetic and withal social people, such as form the bone and sinew of the Republic, will or can be induced to give up all drink which custom, and the large majority of clergymen and physi­cians, have sanctioned as refreshing.

Savage reminded the reader that in Bavaria at the time the average frugally drinking labourer consumed a gallon per day. With reference to England, Savage championed beer thus:

With an impartial catholicity of palate the votary of the amber ale loves to see its 'beaded bubbles winking at the brim' and yet is never forgetful of the darker charms possessed by porter or stout. Boating men ... cricketers, and the whole of the manly English sporting community, are sensible alike to the charms of the long, thin, narrow glass, the simple and unassuming tumbler, and the thorough going pewter pot. The prudent and industrious mechanic prefers the wholesome brew of native malt and hops to the ery foreign distillations that madden the brain and shatter the nerves. The statistics of beer drinking are simply stupendous. Mr. Gladstone . computed that every adult male in England consumed the astounding quantity of six hundred quarts per annum. Despite all the arguments and invectives of the agitators who advocate what is paradoxically described as a 'permissive bill', on account of its prohibitory character, we adhere to our faith that sound honest malt liquor does far more good than harm; nor should we dream of opposing any system of nancial legislation which would make it cheaper without in icting an extra burden upon the community.

And the beer strength in England at the time was formidable (Dunn 1979). In 1843 Burton Ale had original gravities between 1077 (19.25°P) and 1120 (30°P), while Common Ale was 1073 (18.25°P) and Porter 1050 (12.5°P) (see Chapter 3 for de ni-tions of beer strength).
Early nineteenth-century diets, though, retained beer as an integral feature, indeed the recommended 'family economy' for 'moderate persons in a frugal family' for 1826 comprised (per person, per week):

6 pounds meat (undressed)
4 pounds bread (quartern loaf)
0.5 pounds butter
2 ounces tea
0.5 pound sugar
1 pint per day of beer (Porter)

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