SweetWater Brewing Company

SweetWater Brewing Company is a craft brewery founded in 1997 by Freddy Bensch and Kevin McNerney in Atlanta, Georgia.[1] SweetWater's beers are unpasteurized and distribution is limited to select states.

SweetWater Brewing Company
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryAlcoholic beverage
Founded21 Feb 1997
FounderKevin McNerney
Freddy Bensch
Headquarters,
Area served
United States
ProductsBeer
ParentTilray
Websitewww.sweetwaterbrew.com
SweetWater Brewing Company

History edit

Founders Freddy Bensch and Kevin McNerney were roommates at the University of Colorado at Boulder, where they also worked part-time cleaning kegs at a local brewery. After graduation in 1993, Bensch moved to California to study at the American Brewers Guild, while McNerney went on to work in several breweries in Colorado and California, including Rockies Brewing Company, Avery Brewing Company and Mammoth Brewing Company.[2] Bensch visited Atlanta during the 1996 Summer Olympics and saw an opportunity to bring a West Coast style brewery to the Southeast. McNerney soon joined Bensch in Atlanta raising initial funds to open the brewery's first location off Interstate 20 on Fulton Industrial Boulevard.[3]

Bensch named the brewery after kayaking down Sweetwater Creek, a tributary of the Chattahoochee River, in Georgia's Sweetwater Creek State Park located a few miles west of the brewery. The brewery also adopted the official motto "Don't Float the Mainstream" as a tribute to its namesake. Bensch and McNerny began brewing in January 1997 and sold their first keg on February 21, 1997 - SweetWater ESB and Blue. SweetWater's most popular beer, SweetWater 420 Extra Pale Ale, named after the date it was first brewed (April 20), soon followed.[3]

Two years later, SweetWater hosted the World Beer Cup, an international brewing competition.[4] In 2002 SweetWater won Small Brewery of the Year at the Great American Beer Festival in Denver. In 2003 the brewery outgrew its space on Fulton Industrial Boulevard and moved to a 25,000 square-foot facility in Atlanta's Armour Circle Industrial Park on Ottley Drive. In 2004 SweetWater signed with United Distributors, one of the largest volume beverage distributors in the U.S., increasing SweetWater's distribution from 200,000 to 700,000 cases in six years.[3] Kevin McNerney resigned from SweetWater Brewing Company in 2008 to spend more time with his family, and later became brewmaster at 5 Season's Brewing Company.[2] In 2012 SweetWater completed a three-phase expansion project adding additional office and event space, a bottling line and packaging hall, and a tank farm that increased capacity from 100,000 to 500,000 barrels per year.[5]

In 2013 SweetWater ranked 26th among the top 50 U.S. breweries and 19th among the top 50 U.S. craft brewing companies based on sales volume.[6]

On September 29, 2014, SweetWater announced that it was selling a minority interest[7] to TSG Consumer Partners.

In July 2015, SweetWater promoted Kim Jones from Chief Financial Officer to Chief Executive Officer. She was the CFO since 2013 and before that, she held senior financial and management positions with Spanx Inc. and The Coca-Cola Company.[8]

On November 4, 2020, Aphria Inc., a large producer of cannabis based in Canada, acquired SweetWater for $300 million.[9] [10]

In July 2021, the company acquired the Fort Collins, Colorado, brewery of Vancouver-based Red Truck Beer.[11]

Environmental and community commitment edit

SweetWater sponsors a number of programs designed to give back to the Atlanta community as well as environmental causes. The brewery also implements a variety of sustainability practices within its day-to-day operations, and has partnered with Gas South to purchase direct carbon offsets to reduce their carbon footprint. In 2013, SweetWater recycled more than 9.5 million pounds of spent grain, 165,000-lbs of spent hops and 150,000-lbs of yeast for local farmers to feed livestock and use for compost. Water reclamation practices used during brewing and bottling also reclaim more than six million gallons of water annually to be used in future brewing.

Beers edit

Perennial Brew edit

  • 420 Extra Pale Ale, ABV: 5.7%
  • Blue, ABV: 4.6%
  • Georgia Brown, ABV: 5.1%
  • IPA, ABV: 6.3%
  • Hop Hash Easy IPA, ABV: 4.2%
  • Take Two Pils, ABV: 5.5%
  • G13 IPA, ABV: 6%
  • G13 Mango Kush IPA, ABV: 5%

Catch N' Release series edit

  • Road Trip, ABV: 5.2%
  • WaterKeeper Hefeweizen, ABV: 5.7%
  • Crank Tank Helles Lager, ABV: 5.8%
  • Whiplash White IPA, ABV: 6.2%
  • Festive Ale, ABV: 8.5%
  • Spinnerbait Belgian-Style Red Ale, ABV: 6.0%
  • Happy Ending, ABV: 9%
  • Triple Tail Tropical India Pale Ale, ABV: 5.5%

Dank Tank series edit

  • DP Barleywine, ABV: 10.2% (June 2009)
  • Big Ol' Belgian Blue Balls, ABV: 8% (August 2009)
  • Wet Dream Ale, ABV: 7.5% (October 2009)
  • BSP Quad Ale, ABV: 11% (February 2010)
  • Magnum IP Imperial Pilsner, ABV: 9% (July 2010)
  • Border Hop-per Ale, ABV: 8.6% (October 2010)
  • Mean Joe Bean Imperial Porter, ABV: 8.5% (February 2011)
  • Ghoulash, ABV: 8.5% (October 2011)
  • Fresh Sticky Nugs, ABV: 8% (November 2011)
  • 420 India Pale Ale, ABV: 8.5% (February 2012)
  • Danktoberfest, ABV: 8.5% (October 2012)
  • The Gimp, ABV: 10.3% (December 2012)
  • Some Strange II Black IPA, ABV: 10% (January 2013)
  • The Price is Wrong, ABV: 9% (August 2013)
  • Red Hot Mama, ABV: 8.6% (October 2013)
  • Second Helping IPA (Collaboration with The Giving Kitchen), ABV: 7.5% (January 2014)
  • Johnny Ha$h, ABV: 8.5% (April 2014)

Anniversary beers edit

  • 15 Years of Heady Beers, ABV: 10% (2012)
  • 16 So Fine Red Wheat Wine, ABV: 11% (2013)
  • 17th Saison Farmhouse Ale, ABV: 9% (2014)
  • 18 Belgian-Style Tripel Ale, ABV: 10% (2015)

Retired beers edit

  • ESB, ABV 5.6% - Retired 2000
  • Hummer White Ale, ABV: 5.1% - Retired 2008
  • Sch’Wheat Pale Wheat Ale, ABV: 4.7% - Retired 2012
  • Exodus Porter, ABV: 6.5% - Retired 2018
  • LowRYEder IPA, ABV: 6.2% - Retired 2014
  • Motor Boat, ABV: 5.6% - Retired 2014

SweetWater 420 Fest edit

The SweetWater 420 Fest is an annual three-day craft beer, music and arts festival formerly held in Atlanta's historic Candler Park. As of 2014 the fest is held in Centennial Olympic Park on or around the weekend of April 20. The Earth Day inspired festival was first hosted in 2004 and features live music, local art, standup comedy, food trucks, craft beer tasting and a 5k.[12]

References edit

  1. ^ Martin, Jill (12 June 2013). "Small Beer: US Brewers With Big Passion To Succeed". BBC News. Retrieved 13 June 2013.
  2. ^ a b "Brewmaster Kevin McNerney". 5 Season Brewing Company. Archived from the original on February 19, 2011. Retrieved 2013-03-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  3. ^ a b c Endolyn, Osayi (6 June 2012). "Sweet Dreams". Atlanta Magazine. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  4. ^ Endolyn, Osayi (June 2012). "Sweet Dreams". Atlanta Magazine. Retrieved 6 August 2015.
  5. ^ Cooper, Carly (12 October 2012). "SweetWater Founder Freddy Bensch on Expansions, New Brews, and More". Atlanta Eater. Retrieved 12 October 2012.
  6. ^ "BREWERS ASSOCIATION LISTS TOP 50 BREWERIES OF 2013". 28 March 2014. Retrieved 28 April 2014.
  7. ^ "SweetWater Sells Minority Stake to TSG Consumer Partners | Brewbound.com". Brewbound.com. 29 September 2014. Retrieved 2017-10-26.
  8. ^ Couret, Jacques. "SweetWater names Kim Jones CEO, Bill Waters CFO". Atlanta Business Chronicle. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
  9. ^ "Aphria Inc. Closes Accretive, Strategic Acquisition of Sweetwater Brewing Company". Aphria Inc. Retrieved 2021-02-07.
  10. ^ "Canada's Aphria Enters U.S. in $300 Million Craft Beer Deal". Bloomberg.com. 2020-11-04. Retrieved 2021-02-07.
  11. ^ Udell, Erin. "Fort Collins' Red Truck brewery acquired by Atlanta-based SweetWater Brewing Co". The Coloradoan. Retrieved 2021-07-23.
  12. ^ Horton, Lauren. "Sweetwater 420 Fest in Candler Park". About.com Guide - Atlanta. Archived from the original on 29 March 2013. Retrieved 26 March 2013.

External links edit