- Beerhouse Act
The Beerhouse Act 1830 (1830 11 Geo 4. and 1 Will 4. c. 64) was a
United Kingdom law which liberalized regulations on thebrewing and sale ofbeer by individuals in the United Kingdom. It was repealed in 1993.History
The precursor to the Beerhouse Act was the "Licencing Act 1828", which established a "General Annual Licencing Meeting," to be held in every city, town, division, county and riding, for the purposes of granting licenses to
inns , alehouses and victualling houses to sell exciseable liquors to be drunk on the premises. Cite book |last=Crispe Whiteley |first=George |year=1874 |title=The Licensing Acts 1872-74 |publisher=Knight & Company] Unfortunately, the Act proved inadequate to rectify the heavy taxation then prevalent on small pubs and taverns, thus making it hard for them to operate. Cite book |last=Putnam |first=Roger |year=2004 |title=The Beer and Breweries of Britain |publisher=Shire Books |isbn=0747806063]Enacted two years later, the Beerhouse Act enabled anyone to brew and sell beer,
ale orcider , whether from apublic house or their own homes, upon obtaining a moderately priced license of just under ₤2 for beer and ale and ₤1 for cider [http://www.scotlawcom.gov.uk/downloads/rep140.pdf "Statute Law Revision: Fourteenth Report", The Scottish Law Commission (1993)] ] , without recourse to obtaining them from justices of the peace, as was previously required. [ [http://64.233.169.104/search?q=cache:V9iFVh41LZMJ:www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/C03B7200-993B-42B5-8AA6-F5D666D928B9/0/licensed_victuallers.PDF+%22Beerhouse+Act+1830%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us A Brief History of Licensing, City of London website] ] The result was the opening of hundreds of new pubs throughoutEngland , and the reduction of the influence of the largebreweries . [ [http://beer.donavanhall.net/cottagebrewer/?n=1 "British Beer and the British Pub Culture," Joseph Allen McCulloch, 2007] ] According to the Act, Parliament felt that it was... expedient for the better supplying the public with Beer in England, to give greater facilities for the sale thereof, than was then afforded by licences to keepers of Inns, Alehouses, and Victualling Houses.Crispe Whiteley (1874), p. 5.]
It was believed that the passage of the Act during the reign of William IV led to many taverns and pubs being named in honor of that king.Putnam (2004), p.28] Backed by the Duke of Wellington's ministry, purportedly to wean the public from
gin consumption, the Act proved controversial, having both removed the monopoly of local justices to lucratively regulate local trade in spirits and failing to apply to publicans running existing public houses, and was denounced as promoting drunkenness. Putnam (2004), p.27]The results of the free trade bill were dramatic; in the six months following its enaction, nearly 25,000 excise licenses were taken out. Statute Law Revision (1993), p. 158] One factor in the Act was the dismantling provisions for detailed recording of licenses, which were restored by subsequent regulatory legislation: the "Wine and Beerhouse Act 1869" and the "Wine and Beerhouse Act Amendment Act 1870."Crispe Whiteley (1874), p. 3.] The bill itself was often amended, most notably in 1834 and 1840. Cite book |last=Troup |first=C.E. |year=1897 |title=Judicial Statistics, England and Wales |publisher=Great Britain Home Office]
The final remaining provisions of the Act were repealed by Parliament on November 11, 1993, by 1993 c. 50, s. 1(1), Sch. 1 Pt. XIII GroupI. [ [http://www.statutelaw.gov.uk/content.aspx?LegType=All+Legislation&title=Beerhouse+Act&searchEnacted=0&extentMatchOnly=0&confersPower=0&blanketAmendment=0&sortAlpha=0&TYPE=QS&PageNumber=1&NavFrom=0&parentActiveTextDocId=1030361&ActiveTextDocId=1030361&filesize=1105 UK Statute Law Database, Ministry of Justice] ]
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