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McMenamins Brewery Collection, 1983-2015

By Tiah Edmunson-Morton

Collection Overview

Title: McMenamins Brewery Collection, 1983-2015

Predominant Dates: 1985-2010

ID: MSS McMenamins

Primary Creator: McMenamins Pubs & Breweries.

Extent: 18.0 gigabytes. More info below.

Arrangement: The McMenamins Brewery Collection is arranged into five series: 1. Ephemera, 1990-2014; 2. Events, 1996-2014; 3. Operational Records, 1983-2015; 4. Photographs, 1985-2010; and 5. Brew Sheets, 1985-2002.

Date Acquired: 00/00/2014

Languages of Materials: English [eng]

Abstract

The McMenamins Brewery Collection includes digitized brew sheets, digital images, brochures, coasters, decals, event programs, flyers, newspaper clippings, tap handles, posters, labels, a wooden cask, and a six-pack of Hammerhead beer. McMenamins is a family-owned chain of brewpubs, breweries, historic hotels, and theater pubs in the Pacific Northwest.

The brew sheets and some event materials were provided to the Special Collections & Archives Research Center in 2015 and 2016 for digitization. The original items have been retained by McMenamins.

This collection contains digital folders described in each series. The materials in these digital folders are available upon request.

Scope and Content Notes

The McMenamins Brewery Collection includes digitized brew sheets, digital images, brochures, coasters, decals, event programs, flyers, newspaper clippings, tap handles, posters, labels, a wooden cask, and a six-pack of Hammerhead beer.

In addition to the brewery activity and the various beers released by McMenamins, this collection also contains information on events organized by the company, such as homebrew competitions and festivals. The cask held in the collection was used at the Oak Hills Pub and is decorated with a pen drawing created by brewer Chris Haslett. The photographs show art installation, artists, and property renovation.

The brew sheets and some event materials were provided to the Special Collections & Archives Research Center in 2015 and 2016 for digitization. The original items were retained by McMenamins.

This collection contains digital folders described in each series. The materials in these digital folders are available upon request.

Biographical / Historical Notes

McMenamins is a family-owned chain of brewpubs, breweries, historic hotels, and theater pubs in the Pacific Northwest. It was founded by brothers Mike and Brian McMenamin, who grew up in Northeast Portland. In 2021, they operated 56 properties, with twelve hotels; dozens of breweries, pubs, and restaurants; movie theaters; spas; music venues; and a coffee roaster, winery, cidery and distillery. Many locations are rehabilitated historical buildings and at least nine are on the National Register of Historic Places. McMenamins only sells its beer in its own pubs, restaurants, hotels, and movie theaters.

Early businesses

Mike and Brian McMenamin both graduated from Oregon State University, Mike with a Political Science degree (1974) and Brian with a Business degree (1980). Mike and two college friends purchased the Produce Row Café, a bar known for all-night, high-stakes poker games, in Portland's warehouse district in 1974 and sold more than 100 types of beer. The building was built in 1951 and opened as a breakfast café for produce dockworkers in 1953; in later years, it was a barbershop. Mike and Brian bought Bogart's Joint, another Portland-area pub on 14th and Flanders. At various points in history, many beer-related activities occurred in this building: Kurt and Rob Widmer brewed in this location, and it was later space occupied by Portland Brewing and Rogue Ales Public House. By 1980, they'd sold Produce Row, Bogart's Joint, and a third tavern, the Stockyard Café.

Mike opened a wine distributorship and Brian opened the McMenamins Pub in Hillsboro. By 1983, Mike’s distributorship had failed, and the brothers decided to try the bar business again. Rather than the smoky, male-dominated taverns common in Portland, they were inspired by the community hubs they’d seen in Europe. They bought the Fat Little Rooster tavern on Southeast Hawthorne and renamed it the Barley Mill Pub; in addition to a varied beer selection, the pub was known for Grateful Dead memorabilia and anniversary parties. The namesake “barley mill,” which can still be found onsite, was used by Chuck Coury at Cartwright Brewing Co., Portland’s first post-Prohibition brewery. It was originally a kitty litter grinder but is now used annually to grind the grain for anniversary ales.

One major event that impacted the trajectory of the beer industry in Oregon in the 1980s was legislation that married production and sales. Fred Bowman and Art Larrance (Portland Brewing), Dick and Nancy Ponzis (BridgePort Brewing) and their brewer Karl Ockert, Kurt and Rob Widmer (Widmer Brothers Brewing), and the McMenamins lobbied to legalize on-site sales. On July 13, 1985, Governor Vic Atiyeh signed Senate Bill 813, the “Brewpub Bill,” into law. It allowed brewers to make and sell beer on the same premises, key for increasing revenue and gaining new customers.

First brewpubs

The McMenamins took advantage of the new law, and by the early 1990s had opened several brewpubs, each with its own small brewing system attached. They opened the Hillsdale Brewery and Public House October 31, 1985 in the Southwest Portland neighborhood of Hillsdale. Not only was it their first brewery, it was also the first brewpub in Oregon since Prohibition. Known as “Captain Neon's Fermentation Chamber,” a nod to Mike McMenamin’s nickname, the first several batches of beer were brewed with old Tillamook dairy equipment. On October 25, 1985, Hillsdale's first brewer Ron Wolf, who had previously worked at Anchor Steam, brewed the first beer in a small copper kettle and called it "Hillsdale Ale.” It fell loosely into the “Special Bitter” classification of beer styles and was a malt extract brew. Hillsdale Ale was brewed 29 times at the Hillsdale location and 14 times at Cornelius Pass Roadhouse between 10/25/1985 and 11/28/1986. In the first year, several brewers moved through the facility and made Hillsdale Ale, including Ron Wolf (who only brewed 13 batches before leaving), Conrad Santos (who replaced Wolf as brew master), Mike McMenamin, Brian McMenamin, John Harris, Scott Barrow, and Alex Farnham (the company’s first female brewer).

In 1986, they purchased a 125-year-old farmhouse in Hillsboro, Oregon, and turned it into the Cornelius Pass Roadhouse. Later that same year, they opened the Lighthouse Brewpub in Lincoln City. The Fulton Pub and Brewery opened in Portland in June 1988 and the Highland Pub and Brewery opened in Gresham in July 1988.

Eventually, 27 breweries would operate under the McMenamins umbrella and they became a training ground for new brewers, many of whom have gone on to found breweries of their own. Alumni include John Harris (Hillsdale, Cornelius Pass Roadhouse), Jack Harris (Cornelius Pass Roadhouse, Lighthouse Brewery), Jason McAdam (Edgefield, Hillsdale, Crystal Ballroom), Alex McGaw (Fulton, Crystal Ballroom), Ben Nehrling and Kevin Lee (Edgefield, Highland, Kennedy School), and Mark Goodwin (Old Church, Crystal Ballroom).

In addition to serving beer at their brewpubs, the company also hosted festivals, concerts, and other public programming events at their properties, including Dad Watson’s Brew Fest, Edgefield Brew Fest, Highland Pub and Brewery Eurofest, Hillsdale Brew Fest, Lighthouse Brew Fest, Mid-Valley Brew Fest, and the Thompson Barley Cup.

Beer and Other Beverages

The McMenamins’ beers could be unsettling to brewing traditionalists; they used ingredients like apples, spices, and candy bars, as well as lesser used malts like Chocolate and Crystal. They introduced fruit beers to Oregon and early batches featured blackberries from the Hillsdale brewpub parking lot. Hand in hand with their experimentation, McMenamins developed three core beers that are brewed at all their breweries. Terminator Stout (1985) is a dark, English-style brew; Ruby (1986) is a light, raspberry-flavored beer; and Hammer Head (1986) is a classic Northwest Pale Ale. Ruby and Hammerhead are iconic company characters as well; artist Lyle Hehn created Ruby Witch and Hammerhead, and both are staples of murals, posters, and coasters.

Terminator Stout made its debut in 1985 at the Hillsdale Brewery & Public House as the 12th beer brewed. Old Hammerhead, as the strong ale was first called, was brewed January 25, 1986 and was the 37th brew and made with malt extract. John Harris, who later created Mirror Pond for Deschutes Brewery, was the first to make Hammerhead an “all-grain” beer. Harris was hired in 1987, and when they transitioned away from extract brewing, he decided to rewrite the Hammerhead recipe; besides changed the grain, he also added more hops. Ruby, originally called “Ruby Tuesday” before the food chain objected, was first brewed in 1986 and used 42 pounds of pureed Oregon raspberries.

The company made more than beer. They planted 3 acres of Pinot Gris fruit in 1990 and looked to regional vineyards for additional grapes; McMenamins Edgefield Winery was established in 1992 and began by making Rhone-style wines, including grenache and viognier. The Edgefield Winery produces 20 different white, rosé, dessert, and sparkling wines and supplies 350 tons of wine to McMenamins pubs. Also in 1992, and predating the boom by more than 20 years, McMenamins started making cider at the winery and in 2018 sold as much cider by volume as wine.

In 1995, they began experiments with distillation and made brandy under contract by Carneros Alembic, a California distillery owned by Remy-Martin. In 1997, they built their first distillery in an old root vegetable storage barn on the Edgefield property. Their most popular whiskey is Hogshead, but they make several others, including Money Puzzle, which is dry hopped with Teamaker hops (which has 0 IBUs) and is sweetened with blackberry honey harvest from hives on their property.

Historic preservation

The brothers’ love of historic structures directed business growth and community involvement, and preserving important historical buildings is integral to their business. When the McMenamins started, they couldn’t afford new construction, so they purchased old buildings, which came with stories. They employ a small staff of historians to research and document the history, and those are in turn incorporated into each property’s art, murals, menus, place names, and architectural details.

In 1987, the company opened its first theater, the Mission Theater Pub, in downtown Portland. The converted 1890s Swedish Tabernacle, a church-turned-union hall, was also the state's first theater pub. In 1991, McMenamins turned a 1927 art deco theater that was slated for demolition into a second pub and movie house. These businesses were significant and ushered in a new way to watch movies with beer and food.

In 1987, the brothers purchased Edgefield, which was built in 1911 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places. They paid $560,000 and invested another $2.5 million to transform the farm's 80-year-old buildings into a multi-utility complex. Edgefield was once the Multnomah County Poor Farm, a self-sufficient facility with a meatpacking plant, power station, large rooming house, and infirmary. When the remodeled Edgefield Manor opened in 1991, the meatpacking plant was a brewery, power station a pub with a movie theater, infirmary a winery, and rooming house a 100-room hotel. There was also a meeting space, catering operation, restaurant called the Black Rabbit, herb and flower gardens, four liquor and cigar bars, distillery, golf course, and amphitheater. One of the more outstanding features of Edgefield, and something that would become the McMenamins' signature, was the extensive art installations created by local artists. Art popped up in surprising places throughout the complex (on ceilings, exposed heating pipes, eaves, fuse boxes) and showed local subjects (former residents, Northwest Indians, 19th-century brewers, the Columbia River Gorge). Within a few years, the company had a set of 12 freelance artists ready to work on new property acquisitions. Edgefield brewery is still the company's largest property.

In 1997, they purchased the Crystal Ballroom in Portland, which had been vacant for 30 years, and filled it with murals depicting the building's history, a brewpub, and a bar. The building was famous for its swaying dance floor, which sat on ball bearings. The Crystal Hotel was built in 1911 and became a dance hall and concert facility that hosted national music acts. Around the same time, they partnered with the Portland Development Commission and invested $4.5 million to remodel the Kennedy Elementary School. What was once a boarded-up building was transformed into a 35-room multi-use hotel with an onsite brewery, restaurant and four bars, a movie theater, a jazz hall, cigar bar, and soaking pool.

In 1999, the McMenamins opened McMenamins Hotel Oregon in downtown McMinnville, Oregon. The building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places and had been a hotel since its first two stories were erected in 1905; five years later, two more floors were added. In 1932, the hotel was renamed Hotel Oregon. In addition to renovating guest rooms, the McMenamins renovation added two bars and an art gallery with old photographs and new paintings that showed the history of the hotel and McMinnville.

Many property renovations followed. In 2000, they opened the Grand Lodge in Forest Grove, Oregon, which was formerly a Masonic home built in 1922. In 2001, they opened the 27 room Olympic Club Hotel and Theater, which was an expansion of the McMenamins Olympic Club Pub in downtown Centralia, Washington. The original Oxford Hotel was built in 1908 and Olympic Club was built in 1913. In 2003, they reopened the Rock Creek Tavern in Hillsboro, Oregon, which they had purchased in 1995 when the original tavern burned down. In 2016, the Anderson School in Bothell, Washington opened. The original Anderson School was built in 1931 and opened in 1936. In April of 2018, McMenamins opened their latest project, the Kalama Harbor Lodge in Kalama, Washington. Other properties include the White Eagle Saloon & Hotel in Portland, which was built in 1905; Boon’s Treasury in Salem, built in the 1860s; and Old St. Francis School in Bend, which opened in 1936.



Author: Tiah Edmunson-Morton

Administrative Information

More Extent Information: Approximately 9,300 digital items, including 112 digital photographs. 3 cubic feet; 3 boxes, including 2 oversize boxes.

Statement on Access: Collection is open for research.

Acquisition Note: The collection was donated in 2014 by John Richen and Lyle Hehn of McMenamin's Brewery. The brew sheets and some event materials were provided to the Special Collections and Archives Research Center in 2015 and 2016 for digitization. The original items have been retained by McMenamins.

Related Materials:

The McMenamins Brewery Collection is complemented by several other collections. The Brewing and Fermentation Research Collection (MSS BFRC) contains information pertaining to the history, growth, and culture of the Pacific Northwest brewing industry; included are newsletters for homebrew clubs such as the Oregon Brew Crew and Cascade Brewers Society, as well other noteworthy industry periodicals and publications. The Oregon Hops and Brewing Archives Oral History Collection (OH 35) includes interviews from industry professionals, journalists, and community members.

Further information regarding the values, logistics, and goals of the burgeoning regional brewing community can be found in organizational collections like the Heart of the Valley Homebrewers Records (MSS HOTV)Ninkasi Brewing Company Collection (MSS Ninkasi), and the Oregon Brewers Guild Records. The personal research collections of Fred Eckhardt, Denny Conn, Pete Dunlop, Fred Bowman, Abram Goldman-Armstrong, and Robert Daly contain additional information regarding the beer writing process and beer culture.

Collections linked to Oregon State University research, as well as other manuscript collections, are described on the Oregon Hops and Brewing Archives research guide. More information pertaining to the history of hop growing and brewing in Oregon can be found on the Oregon Hops and Brewing Archives website.

Preferred Citation: McMenamins Brewery Collection (MSS McMenamins), Oregon State University Special Collections and Archives Research Center, Corvallis, Oregon.

Creators

McMenamins Pubs & Breweries.

People, Places, and Topics

Artists--United States.
Brewing.
Brewing industry--Oregon.
Historic buildings--Oregon.
Hops and Brewing
McMenamins Pubs & Breweries
Natural Resources
Oregon State University--Alumni and alumnae.
University History

Forms of Material

Born digital.
Cultural artifacts.
Digital images.
Digital photographs.
Ephemera (general object genre)


Box and Folder Listing

Series 1: Ephemera, 1990-2014
This series contains ephemeral items produced by the company. Of note is the set of coasters, which feature art inspired by individual properties, the rare 6-pack of Hammerhead beer, and a wooden cask with a hand drawn picture. Digital Folder 1 is available upon request.
Box-Folder 1.01: Coasters, 1990-2002
Box-Folder 1.02: Coasters, 2004-2008
Box-Folder 1.03: Coasters, 2008-2013
Digital Folder 1.01: Digital Images of Coasters, 1990-2013
Digital Folder 1.02: Posters, 2000-2014
Box-Folder 1.04: Coaster Envelopes, 2014
Envelopes for individual coasters with information provided by artist Lyle Hehn.
Box-Folder 1.05: Coaster Descriptive Inventory, 2014
Box-Folder 1.06: Labels, circa 2000
Including Kris Kringle, Irish Stout, Hammerhead, Workingman’s Red, Erntedank Oktoberfest Ale, Kon-Tiki Kolsch.
Box-Folder 1.07: Stickers and Pin, circa 2010
Box-Folder 1.08: Tap Handles, undated
Box-Folder 1.09: Tap Handles, undated
Box-Folder 2.01: Posters, undated
Growler advertisement, ale sampler.
Box-Item 3.01: 6-Pack of Hammerhead, 1997
Hammerhead was first bottled in 1997 and bottles were released before Christmas. Most were not distributed publicly, but instead gifted or purchased by employees.
Box-Item 4.01: Beer Cask, circa 1997
This cask from the Oak Hills Pub has a hand drawn picture of the pub label, which was drawn by house brewer Chris Haslett. Pub staff filled up these mini casks with a special beer, usually a dark or strong beer, cask condition it for natural carbonation for about 5 days, and release it on a Friday for Happy Hour. It would be set on the bar by 5:00 and beer was poured directly from the barrel through the attached wooden tap until it was empty. These small oak barrels had a fairly short shelf life because with each successive use the wood character imparted to the beer lessened. This particular barrel was probably in service for around 6 months to 1 year total before being retired.
Series 2: Events, 1996-2014
This series contains physical and digital surrogates of fliers, event schedules, and beer information. McMenamins hosts a variety of different events, many of which include live music or public talks, food, brewing competitions, vendor booths, parades, running races, or facility tours. Digital Folder 2 is available upon request.
Box-Folder 1.10: Dad Watson's Brewfest, 1997-1998
Dad Watson’s brewpub opened in 1996 in Seattle's Fremont Village Square; it closed in 2011.
Box-Folder 1.11: Edgefield Brewfest and Property Map, 1999
Folder also includes undated items. Edgefield opened in 1987, but the first festival wasn't held there until 2018.
Box-Folder 1.12: Highland Pub and Brewery EuroFest, 1999
Highland Brew Pub is in Gresham, Oregon, a suburb east of Portland.
Box-Folder 1.13: Hillsdale Brewfest, 1998-2001
The first Hillsdale brewfest was held in July 1985 in the parking lot of McMenamins Hillsdale Pub; it is significant to note that McMenamins hadn’t started brewing yet. Breweries included Columbia River Brewery (which became BridgePort Brewing Co.), Hales Ales Ltd. (Colville, WA), Hart Brewing (which became Pyramid Brewing, Inc.), Independent Ale Brewery (which became Redhook Brewing), Sierra Nevada, Widmer Brewing Co., and Yakima Brewing Co.
Box-Folder 1.14: Lighthouse Brewfest, 1997-2006
The Lighthouse brewpub opened in 1986; it was the third McMenamins’ brewpub, fifth brewpub in the state, and first brewery to open on the Oregon Coast since Prohibition. The Lighthouse Brewfest was first held in 1996.
Box-Folder 1.15: Mid-Valley Brewfest, 2001
Folder also includes undated items. The Mid-Valley Brewfest started in 1997. It is a showcase of Eugene Breweries and regional craft breweries held every September.
Box-Folder 1.16: Mill Creek Festival, 1996-2000
The McMenamins Mill Creek Brewery was established in 1995 and is located in Mill Creek, Washington, a city north of Seattle. Each summer the city has a festival with performances, arts, and beer.
Box-Folder 1.17: Miscellaneous Festivals, 1996-2014
Box-Folder 1.18: Thompson Barley Cup, 1998-2000
The Thompson Barley Cup was started in 1997 by brewer Chris Oslin, who loved hockey. He and Mark Gunz, the Brewery Manager wanted to hold the Stanley Cup of brewfests. They set up a beer competition among McMenamins' breweries and the winner would receive the trophy. Like professional hockey's Stanley Cup, the winner would hold it temporarily before it returned to its home at the Thompson Brewery. The event engaged the community and the local Salem Brew Club did the judging. The Thompson brewery opened in 1990.
Box-Folder 2.02: Brewfest posters, 2010-2012
Digital Folder 2: Brewfest fliers, 1996-2007
Series 3: Operational Records, 1983-2015
This series contains information related to individual properties and beers, but also includes promotional materials and digital files of art sketches or labels. Digital Folder 3 is available upon request.
Box-Folder 1.19: Company and Property Information, 2010-2015
Includes Kennedy School and Hillsdale information, McMenamins' brewer list from 2011, List of Portland breweries from 2015.
Box-Folder 1.20: Beer Information Sheets, 1996-2013
Sleepy Hollow Nut Brown, Seasonal Beers For 2003, McMenamins Pilsner, Proletariat Pale, Southern Sky, Rastafarye, Purple Haze, Mystery Ale, Expedition Stout, Roy Street, Mill Creek, New Horizons Millennium Ale, Erntedank Oktoberfest Ale, Ramshead Maibock, Ruby, Working Man’s Red.
Box-Folder 2.03: Company Newsletter and Newspaper Clippings, 1984-2001
Digital Folder 3: Operational Records, 1983-2011
Fliers, Fred Eckhardt article, art sketches (including first sketch of Hammerhead), labels, example of fonts, list of brewers and properties in Portland.
Series 4: Photographs, 1985-2010
These photographs show the installation of artwork at facilities that were in the process of renovation and operation. They include pictures of the artists in group shots and in the process of creating their art. Digital Folder 3 is available upon request.
Box-Folder 1.21: Hillsdale Brewfest, 1985
Digital Folder 3: Photographs, 1985-2010
Pictures include Mike McMenamin and Carlos Santos at the Hillsdale brew kettle in 1985; murals and other art by Jenny Joyce, Lyle Hehn, Joe Cotter, Mike Bland, Myrna Yoder, Olivia Behm; photographs of artists. Properties include Crystal Ballroom, Hillsdale, Hotel Oregon, Greenway, Fulton, Rock Creek, Kennedy School, Lincoln City, Vancouver.
Series 5: Brew Sheets, 1985-2002

This series contains digital surrogates of brew sheets for the years indicated in the date range, as well as a spreadsheet with the batch number, brew date, name of the beer and brewer, and notes.

Brew sheets are the recipes and fermentation logs that brewers use to track the brewing process. They record the name of the brew, brewer, date, ingredients (hops, yeast, grain), temperature and time, water adjustments and mash procedures, fermentation conditions, and other important notes.

Digital Folders 4-8 are available upon request.

Digital Folder 4: Cornelius Pass Roadhouse brew sheets, 1986-1995
Brew sheets and inventory for batches 0001-1386. The Cornelius Pass Roadhouse opened in Hillsboro, Oregon in 1986. The first ten brewers were: Conrad Santos, John Harris, Scott Barrow, Jerry Emmitt, Peter Kane, Jack Harris, Daniel Rothman, Chris Terp, Torin Sandoval, Bart Hance. Between May 22, 1986 and July 23, 1986 brewers made 27 batches total. The beers made were Ruby Tuesday (raspberry), Hillsdale, Crystal Ale, Hammerhead, Terminator, Cornelius Pass Ale (formerly Heavy), Pin Head (pineapple), Big Pink (cherry ale), Barley Mill, Moby Grape.
Digital Folder 5: Fulton Pub and Brewery brew sheets, 1988-2000
Brew sheets and inventory for batches 0001-2015. The Fulton Pub and Brewery opened in Portland, Oregon in June 1988. The first ten brewers were: Scott Barrow, Rich Conrad, Keith Mackie, Jay Somers, Lee Medoff, John Richen, Daniel Rothman, Todd Meister, Jeff Kennelly, Craig Gulla. Between June 25, 1988 and September 23, 1988 brewers made 36 batches total. The beers made were Cascade Head, Crystal, Hammerhead, Terminator Ruby Tuesday, Fulton Ale (Raspberry Wheat), Pale Ale, Pale Ale Pirhana, Terminator, Oktoberfest.
Digital Folder 6: High Street Brewery brew sheets, 1988-2002
Brew sheets and inventory for batches 0001-1822. The High Street Brewery opened in Eugene, Oregon in June 1988. The first ten brewers were: Rich Conrad, Conrad Santos, Tom Erwin, Steve Van Rossem, John Rich, Matt Beatty, Lane Fricke, Chris Foster, Charlton Fulton, Hanns Anderson. Between Hillsdale December 23, 1988 and March 2, 1989 brewers made 23 batches total. The beers made were Crystal, Terminator, Cascade Head, Ruby Tuesday, Nut Brown Ale, Hammerhead, Hearty Hotcake Ale, Passionfruit, Marionbeery, Raspberry Stout.
Digital Folder 7: Hillsdale Brewery and Public House brew sheets, 1985-1998
Brew sheets and inventory for batches 0002-2007. The Hillsdale Brewery and Public House opened in Portland, Oregon in June 1988. The first ten brewers were: Ron Wolf, Conrad Santos, Mike McMenamin, Brian McMenamin, John Harris, Alex Farnham, Mike Burns, Scott Barrow, Lars Larson, Jay Somers. Between Hillsdale October 25, 1985 and November 27, 1985 brewers made 13 batches total. The beers made were Hillsdale Ale, Full Moon - Marion/Blackberry, Halloween Beer, Choco Ale, Hils Heavy Brew, Carma Ale, Bluebeery Ale, Monster Mash, Heavy #2, Cristal #2 (Brian's Wedding Beer), Real Heavy - Terminator (First Terminator and First Barrel Aged), Full Moon - Blueberry 2.
Digital Folder 8: Murray and Allen Pub brew sheets, 1990-1999
Brew sheets and inventory for batches 0001-1374. The McMenamins Murray and Allen Pub opened in Beaverton, Oregon in 1990. The first ten brewers were: Scott Barrow, Eric Lengvenis, Charlie Sullivan, John Richen, Duncan Saffir, Tom Kerns, Doug Goding, Brian Gabriel, Andrew Collins, Craig Gulla. Between April 13, 1990 and June 6, 1990 brewers made 22 batches total. The beers made were Cascade Head, Crystal, Terminator, Ruby, Hammerhead, Bock, Stella Blue, Summer Wheat, Fruit-rose festival, Porter.

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