Pennsylvania Breweries History: Stegmaier Brewing Company
The Baer & Stegmaier Brewery was opened in 1863 on South Canal Street
by a partnership between Charles Stegmaier and his father-in-law, George Baer.
It was later called the C. Stegmaier & Son brewery before finaly becoming
Stegmaier Brewing Company in 1897.
Between 1910 and 1913 Stegmaier won eight gold medals at expositions
in Paris, Brussels and Rome. After prohibition it became one of the largest
independent breweries in North America, reaching an output of a half million
barrels in 1940. Using a 60-truck fleet and rail services, the distribution
areas eventually covered the East Coast from Maine to Florida - a considerable
evolution from the days of 1857 when Charles Stegmaier personally delivered
each barrel of beer with an express wagon drawn by a husky goat.
The company enjoyed many productive years before closing during long
years of slow decline of the local brewers in October, 1974. The Stegmaier label
was sold to Lion, Inc. of Wilkes-Barre. The vacated Stegmaier brewery, was
purchased for back taxes in 1978, by the City of Wilkes-Barre. The brewhouse
structure has been restored as a modern office building, and continues to stand
in the center of town as a stately local landmark.
Stegmaier beer is still produced by Lion,
Inc., of Wilkes-Barre (The Lion Brewery), and remains one of the firms best selling products.
Enjoy a cold, frosty "Steg" and appreciate the history that the Stegmaier
Brewing Co. has left behind.
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