The Emu Brewery was a brewery in Perth, Western Australia, which traced its history to the first decade of the colony. Founded in 1837 by James Stokes as the Albion Brewery, it was located beside the Swan River on a block bounded by Mounts Bay Road, Spring Street and Mount Street. The business changed hands — and names — several times, until its ultimate acquisition by competitor the Swan Brewery in 1927.

Map
The Emu Brewery was situated on a block bounded by Mounts Bay Road, Spring Street and Mount Street.
Emu Brewery

New brewery buildings were constructed over the years. The most notable of these was an imposing Art Deco building erected between 1936 and 1938. This building continued to be used to produce Emu-brand beer until the late 1970s, when production was shifted to a new factory in Canning Vale. Emu beer continues to be produced as a brand of Swan Brewery owner Lion Nathan.

Albion Brewery: 1837–1848 edit

In the early 1830s, the Swan River Colony was in its infancy and did not have a substantial local beer industry.[1] Preachers from the Temperance League lobbied against the drunkenness prevalent in the Colony, however the lack of locally produced beer meant that they focused their attention on spirits drinkers.[2] Governor James Stirling believed that the construction of a local brewery may reduce the Colony's drunkenness problems by allowing the men to drink beer instead of spirits.[2]

Scotsman James Stokes had arrived in Western Australia in 1834 at the age of 24.[1] He saw the opportunity in the market for a brewery, and investigated potential sites. Surveyor-General John Septimus Roe had set aside a small triangular lot for use as a brewery; this block was bounded by Spring Street, Mount Street and St Georges Terrace.[2] Stokes preferred the much larger block across Spring Street, which extended almost all the way to the riverfront.[2] The site was more suitable because it featured a natural spring, there was a sufficient different in elevation to enable the use of gravity in the brewing process without the need for a large tower.[2] The proximity to the river also made river transport an attractive option.[3] Stokes bought this land from George Leake, and was operating his brewery by 1837.[4] Although the brewery was named the Albion Brewery after the ancient name for Great Britain,[1] it was more popularly known as Stokes' Brewery.[3] It was the colony's first major stand-alone brewery.[1][5]

At the time, darker beer varieties were popular in Britain, however Stokes believed that the pale ales that were being exported to India would become popular locally.[1] Contrary to what Governor Stirling had hoped, Stokes began distilling spirits at the brewery in 1838.[4]

In 1839 Stokes mortgaged the brewery site back to the original owner, Leake, to fund the purchase of the adjacent block.[6] There, he built himself a house; around this time he also bought the small portion of river frontage immediately in front of the brewery from the government for £13/5s/-.[6] In the same year, Stokes also formed a partnership in land and commission agents with Dubois Aggett,[4] however in 1840 Aggett maimed himself while attempting suicide, and Stokes severed the partnership.[7]

1840 also saw the market for Albion Brewery's beer fall away due to a sluggish economy.[7] It did not escape Stokes' attention that duties were levied on imported spirits, but not on those produced locally.[7] Seizing upon the business opportunity, he imported a large still and expanded the brewery's distillery.[7] The Government responded to this by imposing a tax on locally produced spirits as well, leading Stokes to stop Albion's distilling efforts.[7]

Stanley Brewery: 1848–1908 edit

Eventually the market situation improved for Stokes to the point that in 1848 he opened a new brewery on the site to replace the old Albion Brewery.[7] The Stanley Brewery opened on 1 November 1848, selling what it described as a "nutritious body ale superior to any imported", costing £4/– per hogshead.[8]

Along with other local businessmen, Stokes successfully lobbied for the transportation of convicts to Western Australia to help alleviate the chronic labour shortage.[9] It has also been speculated that he saw it as a potential new market for his beers, believing that the convicts would have less discerning tastes.[9]

Stokes returned to England in 1857, where he married his cousin Julia.[10] He returned to the Swan River Colony with his pregnant wife, however she died after giving birth.[11] Stokes quickly lost his interest in brewing and died in 1861.[11] The brewery continued to be operated by Henry Saw and William Meloy, who had worked in the business for many years and to whom Stokes had bequeathed interests in the business.[12] Saw died in November 1870, and since Meloy did not want to remain in the operation, the lease over the brewery was advertised.[12]

John Maxwell Ferguson took over the lease,[12] and in 1872 recruited the German expatriate brewer William Mumme.[13][a] Over the following decades, the business changed hands several times.[14]

In January 1875 the brewery was advertised for rent with the previous operators being Mumme and J. M. Ferguson. In May 1875 George Hamersley applied for a licence to operate the Stanley Brewery and by September 1875 it had been re-equipped and was open for business. The licence was then held by brothers George and Hugh Hamersley. On 1 April 1876 he formed a partnership to operate the brewery with his brother Hugh and D. W. Harwood who was a brewer. In November 1876 it was advertised that the licence was to be transferred from G & H Hamersley to the new partnership. In November 1877 it was advertised that the licence was to be transferred from G & H Hamersley to Harwood. In March 1882 the licence was transferred to John Jones and Robert Hall. In May 1882 there was a Supreme Court case between Sir John Forrest, who was the husband of George and Hugh's sister, and Harwood concerning a breach of contract in the amount of £160 relating to the lease of the Stanley Brewery which had expired in February 1882.

In 1887, a new brewery building was constructed on the site.[15] The brick structure was imposing, featuring blind brick arches, and was topped with a Mansard-roofed tower containing a 10,000-imperial-gallon (45,000 L) tank.[15]

 
The brewery in the 1900s

After the successful initial public offering of the rival Swan Brewery, the Stanley Brewery felt the pressure to follow the same path.[16] In 1905 the business re-formed as the Stanley Co-operative Brewery Ltd, and had former politician Michael O'Connor as chairman of its board of directors.[16] This new company was majority-owned by the Stanley Brewery Co Limited.[17]

Emu Brewery: 1908 onwards edit

The Stanley Brewery's most popular brand of beer was an ale sold under the "Emu" trademark.[18] In order to ensure that drinkers knew from which brewery the Emu brand came, as well as to avoid confusion between the Stanley Co-operative Brewery Limited and its similarly named holding company, the company was renamed on 6 March 1908 to the Emu Co-operative Brewery Ltd.[17]

The Emu Brewery had been turning out beer of variable quality, and only managed a quarter of the output of the Swan Brewery.[19] However, the recruitment of Ernest Terry in 1909 led to a turnaround in the fortunes of the newly renamed Emu Brewery Ltd.[19] The brewery became profitable once more, and even won awards for its beers at the Royal Agricultural Show, which dismayed the traditional award winner, Swan.[19] Emu continued to compete with Swan by introducing Emu Bitter, a bottom-fermentation beer to compete with the bitter beer Swan introduced in 1923.[20]

Acquisition by Swan Brewery and subsequent history edit

On 3 February 1927, the brewery's directors approached the Swan Brewery to sell Emu's assets.[21] Swan proceeded with this acquisition of the Emu Brewery, and continued to operate it as a separate business from Swan's own operations.[22] Arthur Jacoby was appointed as the general manager of both breweries.[22]

During the 1930s, a significant amount of land was reclaimed from the river, and the brewery lost its river frontage.[15] Also, between 1936 and 1938, a new brewery building designed by Perth architectural firm Oldham, Boas and Ednie-Brown was constructed on the site.[15] Constructed in the Art Deco style,[15] this new building replaced the old Stanley Brewery building.[3]

 
An aerial view of the new complex in 1938

The building was built from reinforced concrete and steel, and was visibly divided into two halves: one with windows to allow in a maximum of daylight, and the other with no windows at all, to exclude daylight.[5] A central tower housing a lift and staircases delineated the two areas.[5] A border frieze at the top of three of the building's sides depicting different stages in the brewing process was designed by John Oldham and executed by sculptor Edward F. Kohler.[5][23] An image of the 1938 building featured on Emu beer labels for over fifty years.[15]

Unlike the dark and dingy interiors usually associated with the older type of breweries, the Emu Brewery will be finished to secure brightness, airiness and a maximum of natural light.

— The West Australian, 22 February 1936

Distinguished by its simplicity of line in the vertical style and the absence of overhanging cornices it is an outstanding example of modern design as applied to industrial building.

— The Western Mail, 19 January 1939

The Emu Brewery continued manufacturing on the site until the late 1970s,[15] when production of both the Swan and Emu brands was shifted to a factory in Canning Vale.[24] After this, the Emu Brewery building was left derelict.[5] In 1991, the Emu Brewery was the "last major industrial structure" in Perth's central business district.[15]

Despite having been placed on the Register of the National Estate, the complex was allowed to fall into disrepair.[5] The Art Deco Society of Western Australia[25] was set up in 1987 to lobby for the protection of Perth's art deco heritage, including the Emu Brewery.[26] After heritage minister Jim McGinty refused to place the building on the Western Australian Register of Heritage Places,[26] the building was demolished starting in late 1991 and ending with its implosion on 23 February 1992.[5]

Subsequent plans to build high-rise offices or apartments on the site consistently fell through for almost a quarter of a century, leading to the site being labelled "seemingly jinxed".[27] Eventually, in 2017 the first of three towers planned as part of a development called Mia Yellagonga was completed.[28][29] Called Karlak, this tower has 32 levels and is the new headquarters for Woodside.[30][31][32]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ William Mumme, brother of Emil Mumme, arrived in Adelaide September 1857 with the family of Frederick and Marie Mumme from Hamburg aboard Peter Godefroy.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Spiller, p. 17
  2. ^ a b c d e Spiller, p. 18
  3. ^ a b c Seddon, George; David Ravine (1986). A city and its setting: images of Perth, Western Australia. Fremantle: Fremantle Arts Centre Press. pp. 54, 76, 193, 260. ISBN 0-949206-08-3.
  4. ^ a b c Spiller, p. 19
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "Emu Brewery (former), Spring St, Perth, WA, Australia (Place ID 18139)". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government. Retrieved 13 February 2009.
  6. ^ a b Spiller, p. 20
  7. ^ a b c d e f Spiller, p. 21
  8. ^ Spiller, p. 27
  9. ^ a b Spiller, p. 29
  10. ^ Spiller, pp. 29–30
  11. ^ a b Spiller, pp. 30–31
  12. ^ a b c Spiller, p. 31
  13. ^ Spiller, p. 32
  14. ^ Spiller, pp. 33–34
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h Spearritt, Peter (1991). "Emu Brewery, Perth: assessment of cultural heritage significance". National Centre for Australian Studies, Monash University. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  16. ^ a b Spiller, p. 75
  17. ^ a b Spiller, p. 77
  18. ^ Spiller, p. 76
  19. ^ a b c Spiller, p. 78
  20. ^ Spiller, p. 80
  21. ^ Spiller, p. 81
  22. ^ a b Spiller, p. 82
  23. ^ Taylor, Robyn (1988). "Edward F. Kohler, Perth sculptor 1890–1964". In Bromfield, David (ed.). Essays on Art and Architecture in Western Australia. Nedlands: University of Western Australia Centre for Fine Arts. pp. 1–11. ISBN 0-86422-070-7.
  24. ^ Brown, Pam (15 November 2007). "Brewery's birthday". The West Australian. p. 3.
  25. ^ The official website of the Art Deco Society of WA Archived 11 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine includes an architect's perspective drawing (thumbnail) of the Emu Brewery on its home page.
  26. ^ a b Staff writer (7 October 2008). "Preserving precious art deco". Western Suburbs Weekly. p. 9.
  27. ^ Hatch, Dan (29 October 2008). "Leighton to build offices on Emu site". The West Australian. p. 67. Perth City Council was expected last night to approve a two-tower office development on the seemingly jinxed old Emu Brewery site on Spring Street.
  28. ^ "Capital Square, Perth". Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  29. ^ Lenaghan, Nick (30 October 2016). "Capital Square rises on Perth's old Emu brewery". Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  30. ^ Shield, Helen (2 August 2017). "Intrigue over $600m Central Park tower". The West Australian. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  31. ^ "Multiplex appointed to deliver fit-out for new woodside headquarters". Multiplex. 21 June 2017. Archived from the original on 23 May 2018. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  32. ^ Milne, Peter (17 September 2018). "Inside Woodside's new high-tech 32-storey offices at old Emu Brewery site". The West Australian. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  • Spiller, Geoff (2003). Norton, Suzanna (ed.). Micro-breweries to monopoly and back: Swan River Colony breweries 1829–2002. Perth: Western Australian Museum. ISBN 1-920843-01-9. ("Spiller").

External links edit

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