Latitude: 52.801 / 52°48'3"N
Longitude: -1.6445 / 1°38'40"W
OS Eastings: 424066
OS Northings: 322663
OS Grid: SK240226
Mapcode National: GBR 5DV.C25
Mapcode Global: WHCG5.QV3K
Plus Code: 9C4WR924+96
Entry Name: Heritage Brewery
Listing Date: 25 June 1986
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1374336
English Heritage Legacy ID: 273058
ID on this website: 101374336
Location: Burton upon Trent, East Staffordshire, DE14
County: Staffordshire
District: East Staffordshire
Civil Parish: Anglesey
Built-Up Area: Burton upon Trent
Traditional County: Staffordshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Staffordshire
Church of England Parish: Burton-on-Trent All Saints
Church of England Diocese: Lichfield
Tagged with: Architectural structure
1.
5369
SK 22 SW
SP/752
ANGLESEY ROAD
(East Side)
Heritage Brewery
II
GV
2.
Brewery. Late C19. Red brick with some stone dressings; tile roof. North-west
elevation: tower to left of centre; copper house to left; fermenting house and
cask floor to right. Brewhouse tower: 4 + 1 storeys; 4 bays defined by pilasters
with round-headed arches. First floor hoist in second bay from left. Segmental
-headed casements on lower floors; louvered openings (2 to right blocked) under
the round-headed arches on third floor. Moulded dentilled eaves course. Hipped
roof rises to tank loft with glazing bar casements and pyramidal roof.
Copper house: Originally one tall storey. 3 bays defined by pilasters with
stone imposts and round arches, altered and partly blocked. Moulded dentilled
eaves marks former roof line; added storey above. Octagonal brick chimney with
stepped cap. Fermenting house: Long range extending to right. 7 sets of square
headed first-floor casements comprising a small rectangular window flanked by
taller lights. 2 sets at right end partly blocked. On ground floor, paired
segmental headed casements flank door to left. Altered fenestration to right
with door to loading platform and former cask-washing area. C20 extension to
rear of fermenting house and C20 boiler house attached to copper house are not
of special architectural interest. Former hop store attached to rear of tower
by a bridge now used as compressor house on ground floor. Interior: Cold liquor
tank in loft; hot liquor tanks and grist hoppers on third floor feed the mash
tubs on the second floor. Mash Tun No 1 was built by Briggs of Burton, 1952;
No. 2 by R Morton & Co. Ltd ., 1936. Malt house and grinding rooms on first
floor; malt mill on ground floor. Copper house contains 3 coppers by Worssam &
Son, London; fermenting equipment mainly by R Morton. Former cask store in
cellar has brick vaults on cast iron columns. This was Everard's Brewery prior
to its assimilation into the Brewing Museum. It is a complete example of a
small late C19 town brewery retaining its traditional internal planning, fixtures
and fittings.
J. Cooksey: Brewery Buildings in Burton on Trent, p. 31-2, London: Victorian
Society, 1984.
Listing NGR: SK2406622663
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