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Old Potrero

Anchor Brewing Company
Private
Industry Alcoholic beverages
Founded 1896
Founder Ernst F. Baruth
Otto Schinkel, Jr.
Headquarters San Francisco, California, United States
37°45′49″N 122°24′02″W / 37.7636°N 122.4005°W / 37.7636; -122.4005Coordinates: 37°45′49″N 122°24′02″W / 37.7636°N 122.4005°W / 37.7636; -122.4005
Key people
Frederick Louis Maytag III
Joseph Kraus
August Meyer
Henry Tietjen
Mark Carpenter
Joe Allen
Lawrence Steese
Products Beer
Production output
132,000 barrels (2013)
Owner Keith Greggor
Tony Foglio
Website anchorbrewing.com

Anchor Brewing Company is an American alcoholic beverage producer, operating a brewery and distillery on Potrero Hill in San Francisco, California. The brewery was founded in 1896 and was purchased by Frederick Louis Maytag III in 1965, saving it from closure. It moved to its current location in 1979. It is one of the last remaining breweries to produce California common beer, also known as Steam Beer, a trademark owned by the company.

In 2010 the company was purchased by The Griffin Group, an investment and consulting company focused on beverage alcohol brands. The brewery is now known as Anchor Brewers & Distillers, LLC.

On 3 August 2017, it was announced that Sapporo Breweries would acquire the company.

Anchor began during the California Gold Rush when Gottlieb Brekle arrived from Germany and began brewing in San Francisco. In 1896, Ernst F. Baruth and his son-in-law, Otto Schinkel, Jr., bought the old brewery on Pacific Avenue and named it Anchor. The brewery burned down in the fires that followed the 1906 earthquake, but was rebuilt at a different location in 1907. There is no record of what Anchor did during Prohibition, but it resumed serving Steam Beer after Repeal, possibly as the only steam brewing company still in operation. However the brewery burned down yet again within the year, and it relocated once more, this time to a building a few blocks away.

The brewery continued operations into the late 1950s, but suffered heavily from the country's increasingly strong preference for the light lagers produced by the megabreweries. Whereas there had been more than 4,000 breweries at the turn of the twentieth century, only 70 remained by the 1960s.

Anchor shut its doors briefly in 1959, but was bought and reopened the following year. By 1965, however, it was doing so poorly that it nearly closed again. Anchor's situation continued to deteriorate largely because the current owners lacked the expertise, equipment, and attention to cleanliness that are required to produce consistent batches of beer for commercial consumption. The brewery gained a deserved reputation for producing sour, bad beer.


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