The Cooperstown area had a
significant impact on American Brewing. It started with the
introduction of hop farming which flourished here until the end of
the 19th century. Back then, Otsego and the surrounding counties
produced most of the hops grown in the United States.
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Traveling through the
upper Susquehanna Valley towards Cooperstown in July 1898, a
visitor would have enjoyed the view of hop farms with those
beautiful hop vines reaching toward the midsummer sky.
Grandfather Eckler ws a hop farmer and he used to say, "The
hop was King in those days!" His hop farm was in Westville, NY
only three miles up the Cherry Valley from where our Brewery
is now located. When it came time for the hops to be
harvested, Grandma Eckler would "put up" a dozen people from
"the City' and they would pick the hops for their room and
board and a "vacation" in the country. My mother, Cynthia
Eckler Hall, said she always loved it when the hop pickers
came to the farm. Everyone had a lot of fun during the
harvest. When the blight devastated his crop in the early
1900's, grandfather turned to dairy farming.
| Settled by Englishmen in the early 1800's, Cooperstown
once had two English-style breweries in town. Following that
tradition, the Cooperstown Brewing Company was founded in 1994. We
brew premium ales, porters, and stouts using the finest two-row
English barley malts, West Coast hops and the English Ringwood
Yeast.
Grandpa would be pleased if he could see the Brewery. We have
hops growing here that survived the devastating blight to New York
hop farming and those hops grown here are used to finish our Back
Yard India Pale Ale.
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