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Ian Walker
Ian Walker

Where Can I Buy Narragansett Beer [UPDATED]


ZOILO is a pale amber lager. This beer is crisp and toasty with a touch of residual caramel sweetness from the Vienna and Munich malts used. We hopped it with Patagonia Red hops from our friends Lupulos Patagonicos in Argentina. These hops impart subtle notes of fresh lemon blossom and peach.




where can i buy narragansett beer



In 1890, 6 German immigrants came together with $150,000 to construct this building and start Narragansett Beer. Less than a decade later, Narragansett Beer was the largest selling beer in New England.


By February of 1982 the brewery was shut down entirely and production of Narragansett was moved to Ft. Wayne, Indiana. Falstaff attempted to reopen the brewery in 1983 to produce kegged beer, but those beers never reached market and the brewery was officially closed for good. From that moment forward, the brewery quickly fell out of favor with our once loyal fanbase.


The History Lesson: Narragansett Lager is old reliable. It was the first beer brewed by "The Original Six" back in 1890, and the best selling beer in New England from the 1930's to the 1970's. It has crossed paths with Dr. Seuss, it was famously crushed by Captain Quint in Jaws, and it was the first alcoholic beverage to partner with a professional sports team - the Boston Red Sox from 1944-1975. Drinking a Lager is drinking to New England history. Hi Neighbor! Have a 'Gansett!


The moment you've all waited for is finally here. The limited edition retro can is now available in package stores where Narragansett lager beer is proudly sold. Featuring our award winning lager beer and only in 18 packs of 12oz cans, ask for these today at your local retailer. These are only available for a limited time and just like summer they'll be gone before you know it. This is the same design the brewery used for their labels throughout the 1970's. Yes, it is the same can that Quint crushes in JAWS. To celebrate, we are running a "Crush It Like Quint" contest. Recreate this memorable scene to the best of your ability with this can. Snap a photo and send it to us. The best and most creative "Crush It Like Quint" entry will win a Gansett prize pack including a Blu-Ray copy of JAWS. We'll pick the winner on August 31st. Make sure you use the hashtag #CrushItLikeQuint when posting to Twitter, Instagram, and Tumblr so we can find it. Or email it to us at contact@narragansettbeer.com. With that, we leave you with some fun facts about 1975 after this image of the captain himself.


The History Lesson: This beer is a unique collaboration between two iconic Rhode Island companies. A custom blend of Narragansett's bittersweet milk Stout with dark, delicious Autocrat Coffee makes for a delightful beer that is more Rhode Island than Roger Williams himself. Since the 1890's, Narragansett Beer and Autocrat Coffee have been home-grown Rhode Island favorites.


Narragansett Brewing Company was founded in 1890 with US$150,000 in capital. A brick brewing house was built in Cranston, Rhode Island, and in December 1890, the first beer was produced. The following year, the company officially incorporated.


In 1914, when the company built the most modern bottling plant in the region, it became official: Narragansett Brewing Company was the largest lager beer brewery in New England. Rudolf F. Haffenreffer, a Rhode Island industrialist and philanthropist with Massachusetts brewing interests, would eventually become president and chairman of Narragansett Brewing Company and remain involved until his death in 1954. The Haffenreffer brewery in Boston survived until 1965, at which time brands Haffenreffer Lager Beer, Pickwick Ale and Pickwick Bock Beer were licensed to the Narragansett Brewing Company.


The brewery officially closed on July 31, 1981. When production of the beer moved to the Falstaff plant in Fort Wayne, Indiana in 1982, many felt that the quality of the beer was not the same, and the decline in sales accelerated. After sitting abandoned for over a decade, demolition began on the main brewery buildings on October 27, 1998. The brewery's Trolley Barn located across the street was spared for redevelopment, but eventually succumbed to the wrecking ball in June 2005. The Cranston Municipal Courthouse and the Sanford-Brown Institute were both built on the site of the brewery proper, with the trolley barn lot still remaining vacant. In a large lot south of the former brewery grounds is the Cranston Parkade, originally opened in 2000 as the Brewery Parkade, a retail plaza anchored by a Kmart, a Lowe's and a Stop & Shop. The original name was a nod to the neighboring brewery.


After changing hands several times, the brand was bought in 2005 by a team of local Rhode Island investors led by former juice executive Mark D. Hellendrung, who announced plans to expand its market share and reinvigorate the Narragansett brand identity. Since the purchase, the brand has been revitalized with the help of former brewer Bill Anderson, and new packaging. Narragansett beer, now contract brewed by Genesee Brewing Company, has been available again throughout Southern New England since spring of 2006. The lager and light beers are brewed at their brewery in Rochester, New York, while the bock and porter are craft-brewed in Providence, Rhode Island and Pawcatuck, Connecticut. The brand also produces a summer ale, available during the summer season and a cream ale, a year-round offering. On April 3, 2016, it was announced that the Narragansett Beer brewery would be relocating to Pawtucket, Rhode Island.[5] Brewing in Pawtucket began early in 2017, with the first batch produced in March 2017, an IPA appropriately named, "It's About Time".


Most recently, Narragansett Brewing Company opened its official brewery located along the famous East Bay Bike Path near India Point Park in Providence, Rhode Island. The brewery offers a variety of craft beer selections brewed on site by head brewer Lee Lord.


In October 2012, coinciding with Shark Week, Narragansett reintroduced a can design from 1975, which was featured in the movie Jaws. In the 1975 film, Captain Quint, the shark hunter played by Robert Shaw, crushes a can of Narragansett with one hand to intimidate the oceanographer, Matt Hooper played by Richard Dreyfuss. The campaign featured the tagline "Honor the man. Crush the can." and the Twitter hashtag #CrushItLikeQuint.[6] A variety of Narragansett beers are drunk by characters in the 2020 horror film The Block Island Sound. A can of Narragansett is also drunk by Greg Kinnear's character in the third episode of the 2020-21 miniseries The Stand.


Gone were the glory days of the 1960s, when the beer was the official sponsor of the Red Sox, produced up to two million barrels a year, and ran its brewery at close to capacity to meet demand. Narragansett so symbolized New England that eccentric shark hunter Quint in Jaws literally crushed it in a now iconic scene.


In Providence, production will center on smaller batches of its established craft brands, like Autocrat Coffee Milk Stout and its beer series inspired by the macabre writer and Rhode Islander H.P. Lovecraft. It will also give the team more opportunity to create new, limited releases.


Narragansett Town Beach IPA will be available in six packs of 16-ounce tallboy cans ($8.99-$9.99 SRP) and will be distributed throughout New England, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Maryland, North Carolina, Florida, Portland, Ore. and Nashville and Chattanooga, Tenn. The timing and availability of Town Beach IPA will vary per market. The beer will be available alongside classic Narragansett Lager through mid-October.


Built in 1890 by a group of German Americans, the sprawling factory once boasted its own barrel-making operation and a stable of 70 horses. It was taken over in 1965 by the Falstaff Brewing Company and then sold to a California businessman. When the brewery shut down in 1981, 600 to 800 people lost their jobs. In its heyday, the Cranston Street plant brewed 65 percent of the beer in the region.


my uncle worked at the brewery, and i remember my dad stopping there every so often to get a case of beer. free, of course. i remember my uncle saying there was no water in the water fountains, just gansett!


I remember this building we made our own beer unique to RI here, I remember seeing those lights on in the factory at night, and the numbers of trucks getting ready for transporting their products. And I remember hearing the clanking of full bottles. Narragansett Beer unique and oh so special to us Rhode Islanders.


My Uncle Al Faenza was sales manager of the brewery and he employed our whole family just about. My uncle Joe Bielawski was superintendant of the Bottling department and he lived across the street from the brewery. It was our family business. When I was a kid, I would not let my friends in my car unless they had the right beer which was Gansett of course. 041b061a72


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