What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“BOTTLES wanted by ROBERT HARE and Co. at their Porter Brewery.”
During the first year of the Revolutionary War, Robert Hare and Company gained a following for “HARE’s best AMERICAN DRAUGHT PORTER.” Hare, the son of an English brewer, arrived in Philadelphia in 1773. He established a brewery, reportedly the first to produce porter in the colonies. As the imperial crisis intensified and Americans leveraged their participation in the marketplace for political purpose, Hare’s porter became a popular alternative to imported beer.
Tavernkeepers, innkeepers, and others promoted Hare’s porter when they invited patrons to their establishments. In the November 25, 1775, edition of the Pennsylvania Evening Post, for instance, William Dibley, the proprietor of the Fountain and White Horse Inn, announced that he would soon “open a TAP” of Hare’s porter and declared that he “has no doubt but that the sturdy friends of American freedom will afford due honor to this new and glorious manufacture.” Not long after that, Patrick Meade invited the “TRUE FRIENDS to LIBERTY” to the Harp and Crown in Southwark, just outside of Philadelphia, to enjoy “HARE’s and Co. AMERICAN PORTER, which he will sell in its purity.” Rather than offer a selection of beverages, he stated that he “intends no beer of any other kind shall enter his doors.” As far as Meade was concerned, it was the only beer for the “Associators of Freedom.” He hoped they would “give the encouragement to the American Porter it deserves.” Joseph Price also served Hare’s porter “in the greatest purity and goodness” to “all the SONS of AMERICAN LIBERTY” at the “sign of the Bull and Dog” in Philadelphia. Jeremiah Baker served Hare’s porter at the “sign of Noah’s Ark.” Lewis Nicola opened an “AMERICAN PORTER HOUSE” where he no doubt served Hare’s porter.
With all that buzz for their beer, Hare and Company did not need to advertise in the public prints, at least not to gain customers. They did, however, need supplies. At the end of February 1776, the brewers placed an advertisement soliciting bottles “at their Porter Brewery.” Readers could show their support for the American cause by drinking Hare’s porter, but that was not the only way. They could also supply the brewery with bottles to aid in distributing the porter to even more consumers who wanted to drink beer produced in America rather than imported from England.























