Monday 15 March 2021

Heineken Ireland merger timeline

More not-actually-pub related content today - and realistically not even Dublin related; but this can be seen as part two of a probably* only two part series on "how two companies ended up owning the entire pre-1990s Irish brewing industry".

A previous post showed how Guinness bought every rival in the East of the country in a period between 1952 and 1966 (albeit with a joint venture partner who did not exit until 1988); and this post is going to cover how Heineken and its predecessors assembled the breweries of the South West. 

I suspect the earlier acquisition sprees than I'm aware of for Guinness happened due to the Cork practice of tied houses - common in the UK, rare but not unheard of in Ireland outside Cork (see my Dublin coverage); and long divested before Heineken came on the scene.

Something of note is that the same efforts the East Coast breweries were going though - tie-ups with UK breweries, joint marketing arrangements and so on - were being played out in Cork also.

Unlike the Guinness timeline, much of this is already (and better) documented in "Beamish & Crawford - The History of an Irish Brewery" by Donal and Diarmuid Ó Drisceoil, which has some coverage of Murphys activities as well as extensive coverage of the Beamish side of things.

*I may eventually look in to what happened to brewing in the rest of the country, seeing as by the 1960s there were no breweries operating except for those that became part of Guinness or eventually Heineken

1792

Beamish & Crawford (hereafter just Beamish) founded in Cork with a brewery at South Main Street

1856

James J Murphy (hereafter Murphys) founded in Cork with a brewery at Lady's Well

1901

Arnott brewery company of Bandon bought by Murphys - had two breweries, both were closed

Lane brewery company of Cork bought by Beamish and closed.

1913

Brewing and tied house business of Allman, Dowden & Co of Bandon bought by Beamish and brewery closed but bottling operation maintained. Allman's distilling operations continued to 1925.

1962 

Beamish bought by Canadian Breweries of Canada

1964 

Murphys enter trading agreement with Watney Mann of the UK to market Watneys Red Barrel ale across the island of Ireland

1965

It is announced that Watneys have agreed to take an "up top 30%" shareholding in Murphys. It appears this was actually 41%. This is part of a deal to brew Red Barrel at Lady's Well.

1966

United Breweries of Ireland (UBI) formed between Canadian Breweries and Charrington United of the UK, albeit owned 99.98% by Charrington. 

Charrington owned the Ulster Brewery in Belfast, and were connected in ownership to Carling. 

UBI takes control of marketing and management Beamish and Ulster Brewery operations.

1967 

Controlling stake in Murphys bought by Watney Mann

Bandon bottling plant closed by Beamish

Charrington United bought by Bass 

1969 

Canadian Breweries bought by Rothmans of the UK

1970 

UBI cease to control Beamish operations. Oddly, the holding company continued to be used by Bass Plc for Irish operations and now exists as the trading firm for Ladbrokes in Ireland via Bass's past ownership of Coral. Beamish retains contract to produce Bass Charington products.

Watney Mann seek (and fail) to have Murphys wound up over failure to repay loans

1972

Murphys fails financially and is sold to the Irish Government via Fóir Teoranta for £100,000

Canadian Breweries renamed Carling O'Keefe (hereafter Carling)

1974

Beamish express an interest in purchasing Murphys from Fóir. This does not proceed

Beltons, a Dublin pub chain, expresses an interest in purchasing Murphys. This does not proceed

Murphys purchased by a publicans co-op, which does include Beltons.

1979 

Heineken Ireland formed

1981

Murphys is in financial trouble again, and a potential merger with Beamish is discussed, but does not proceed.

1982

Murphys enter receivership

1983

Murphys bought by Heineken of the Netherlands

1986

Elders IXL of Australia (primarily known for Fosters) purchases Courage of the UK

1987 

Elders purchase Carling

As a result of this, Carlsberg pull their contract brewing arrangement with Beamish and transfer this business to Guinness on competitive grounds - not wishing their product to be produced by a significant rival. This would have contributed to the eventual significant loss of jobs during the 1990s modernisation of Beamish as it contributed a significant percentage of volume.

1990 

Elders renamed Fosters

1995

Fosters sell Beamish and Courage to Scottish & Newcastle of the UK

2008

Scottish & Newcastle jointly bought and split between Carlsberg and Heineken - Heineken taking over Beamish

2009

South Main Street brewery closes, production moved to Lady's Well.

1 comment:

  1. I wish I could remember where I saw this, but there were minutes of the pub co-op which owned Murphy's warning members that the whole enterprise would collapse if people didn't pay their invoices. It looks like there was a widespread belief that now we own the brewery we don't have to pay for the beer. That, it turned out, wasn't very sustainable.

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