1. THE PILGRIMS HAD TO LAND ON CAPE COD BECAUSE THEY WERE RUNNING OUT OF BEER.
TheMayflowerwent askew in its 1620 voyage to Virginia , landing instead on the cold shores of what would become Massachusetts . Dwindling beer supplies were part of the grounds they did n’t keep sail toward their address . The ship was due to return to England after dropping them off , and the headwaiter needed enough beer to supply his bunch for the voyage , and the Pilgrims need to get on shore and start mark up their own brewing operations as soon as possible . “ We could not now take time for further search or consideration , our commissariat being much spend , especially our beer , ” settler William Bradford wrote of the ocean trip in 1622 .
2. THE PURITANS BROUGHT 10,000 GALLONS OF BEER WITH THEM.
Ten years after the Pilgrims landed in America and establish Plymouth , the Puritans followed , with 10,000 gallons of beer , 120 casks of malt for brewing , and 12 congius of Dutch snare . Each one of the 700 men and women also brought three barrel of seed — wheat , rye , and barley .
3. ONE OF THE FIRST STRUCTURES BUILT IN PLYMOUTH WAS A BREW HOUSE.
Because beer was generally considered healthy than pledge water in the Pilgrims ’ English homeland , they drank a lot of it . In scarcer times , they figured out how to make beer out of almost anything , including oats , carrot , and corn . However , they did n’t necessarily excuse drunken behavior . In 1635 , the Plymouth Colony outlaw public drunkenness . penalisation include fourth dimension in the stocks or public whippings . “ The Pilgrims — men , women , and youngster — were all impaired a great trade of the clock time , ” as Cheever write .
4. TAVERNS WERE THE EARLY AMERICAN COURTHOUSES.
Boston got its first governing edifice in 1658 . Before that , colonist hold court in public house like John Turner ’s Tavern . By 1689 , the urban center had one pub for every 20 grownup mankind .
5. INITIALLY, HARVARD HAD A BREWERY.
The nation ’s old university , founded in 1636 , place great grandness on beer . In the 1600s , it had one brewery . By 1703 , it had three . alas for beer lovers , Harvard began placing more accent on academics than its fermented beverages as the century progressed . The only stay on Harvard breweryburned down in 1814 .
6. THE BOSTON TEA PARTY WAS A DRUNKEN AFFAIR.
Originally , 19 men who crept onto the three afternoon tea ship in Boston Harbor and wrest mastery from their headwaiter were just supposed to keep the tea from being unlade , forcing the ships to return their cargo to England . But , fuel by a planning session at the Green Dragon Tavern , the Sons of Liberty got a little carry away . or else of just making trusted the tea could n’t be unload , they dumped it overboard . The political dissent and its aftermath would become a major catalyst lead to the revolution .
7. PAUL REVERE’S RIDE INCLUDED A STOP FOR A DRINK.
In 1775 , British soldier set out from Boston to destroy military supplies in Concord , Massachusetts , and capture John Hancock and Samuel Adams in Lexington . As the soldier prepared to march , Paul Revere set out from Boston on horseback to discourage Hancock and Adams . He had quite a lead on the slow - butt on army , though , and midway through his drive , Revere stopped for a drink at a friend ’s tavern in Medford . He had two tall glasses of rum before continuing on to Lexington .
8. WHISKEY HAS DECIDED AMERICAN BATTLES.
In 1862 , Confederate soldiers stopped a Union supplying railroad train in Virginia . alternatively of agitate the Union scout group , the soldier plundered the whiskey on board the train , and reserve the Union force to slink away .
9. WHISKEY BUILT THE ERIE CANAL.
The workers digging the vital canal tie the Hudson River to Lake Erie , mostly Irish immigrants , were pay 50 centime and 32 snow leopard of whiskey a twenty-four hours , include a 2 - apothecaries' ounce shot when they waken up at 6 a.m.
10. PROHIBITION DIDN’T STOP WHITE HOUSE PARTIES.
Warren G. Harding loved whiskey , and he did n’t let a piddling thing called the 18th Amendment stop him from enjoying it . His company were occasionally even supplied by confiscated booze from the IRS ’s Prohibition Unit , which was task with enforcing the alcohol ban .
11. SEVERAL PRESIDENTS HAVE BEEN BREWERS, DISTILLERS, AND WINE MAKERS.
Liquor was Mount Vernon ’s most profitable output — in 1798 , the distillery create 10,000 gallons of whisky . Washington later on ramify out into brandy , wine , and beer . After becoming haunt with wine during his metre as Minister to France , Thomas Jefferson build two vinery at Monticello . Warren G. Harding was a part owner of Old Overholt , the rye whiskey still .
