Fellows, Morton & Clayton: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:Fellows 1.jpg|thumb|Note the name above the windows.]] | [[Image:Fellows 1.jpg|thumb|Note the name above the windows.]] | ||
[[Image:Fellows 2.jpg|thumb]] | [[Image:Fellows 2.jpg|thumb|The brewery was located in the first floor of the modern rear extension.]] | ||
A [[Whitbread & Co. Ltd]] home brew house founded 1980 and was named after a former canal transport company whose offices they occupied. | <big>'''Fellows, Morton & Clayton''', ''54 Canal Street, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire.''</big> | ||
A [[Whitbread & Co. Ltd]] home brew house founded 1980 and was named after a former canal transport company whose offices they occupied. A malt extract plant. | |||
Brewing became spasmodic from about 2000 but ceased in early 2008 with their beers being brewed at The Nottingham Brewery for a short period before this stopped too. | Brewing became spasmodic from about 2000 but ceased in early 2008 with their beers being brewed at The Nottingham Brewery for a short period before this stopped too. | ||
As at 2019, staff confirmed that the brewery was still in place, but brewing has not occurred for many years. | |||
[[File:Fellows Moreton & Clayton Nottingham 25.10.94.jpg|400px]] | |||
''The brewery in 1994. Courtesy Roy Denison'' | |||
[[Category:Nottinghamshire]] |
Latest revision as of 18:41, 7 April 2020
Fellows, Morton & Clayton, 54 Canal Street, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire.
A Whitbread & Co. Ltd home brew house founded 1980 and was named after a former canal transport company whose offices they occupied. A malt extract plant.
Brewing became spasmodic from about 2000 but ceased in early 2008 with their beers being brewed at The Nottingham Brewery for a short period before this stopped too.
As at 2019, staff confirmed that the brewery was still in place, but brewing has not occurred for many years.
The brewery in 1994. Courtesy Roy Denison