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Lighted Erin Beer Advertisement Display

  Lot # 025
Listing Image
Payment Options Seller Accepts PayPal
Seller Accepts Credit Cards
Details
Condition
Good see description
Size
7 3/4" x 10" x 6 1/4"
Location
2nd Bedroom
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Lot # 025
System ID # 930339
End Date
Start Date
Description

Lighted Glass Erin Brew Beer Counter Advertisement Display Sign Chicago. Colored Graphics still very bright but white writing at bottom left underneath shamrock for Standard Brewing Company are worn as can be seen in photograph. 

STANDARD BREWING CO. was founded in 1904 by Stephen S. Creadon and John T. Feighan. In 1905 they located their plant in an old flour mill at 5801 Train Ave. on Cleveland's near west side, where they produced Old Bohemian beer and, later, in recognition of their Irish heritage, Erin Brew. After WWII, Standard initiated a 6-year, $5 million expansion program. It added a new cold-storage and fermentation plant, and in 1950 opened a new bottling and canning plant, raising capacity to more than 550,000 barrels annually. Standard claimed to be the first brewery in Ohio to introduce flat-topped cans. In 1950 the brewery employed 400 and broadened its market to include southern Michigan, western Pennsylvania, and New York, in addition to northern Ohio.In 1961 Standard sold out to the F. & M. Schaefer Brewing Co. of New York, then 7th nationally in sales volume. Only 3 years later, however, the New York brewer found production in Cleveland uneconomical and sold the Train Ave. brewery to C. Schmidt & Sons, Inc., of Philadelphia. Schmidt continued production there until 1972, when it relocated to the Carling Brewing facility on Quincy Ave. The name Erin Brew was resurrected in 1988, however, when Craig Chaitoff and David Lowman formed the Cleveland Brewing Co. to market a new beer locally under a familiar name. Although their product was brewed in Pittsburgh, one of its backers was Edward Feighan, great-grandson of Standard's cofounder.