Guinness is one of the most famous names in business history. The surname of brewer Arthur Guinness of 18th-century Dublin springs, most notably, from millions of well-lubricated lips around the ...
On December 31, 1759, Arthur Guinness signed a 9,000-year lease on St James’s Gate for £45 a year – securing the home of Ireland’s iconic stout. One can’t help but admire Arthur’s optimism.
To celebrate the brand's 250th anniversary, Guinness decided to create their own holiday honoring founder Arthur Guinness. Now every Sept. 22 at 17:59 (the year of the company's founding ...
Prior to 1759, when Arthur Guinness set about creating his own stout at a brewery in Dublin, imported English porter was most popular in the city. Stout "dominated" the British beer market until ...
One of the oldest beers on the market, Guinness Extra Stout is based on a beer first brewed in 1821, when Arthur Guinness II set down precise instructions for brewing his Superior Porter.
While some are reassuring Guinness lovers that they’ve still got it on tap. The Prince Arthur in Hackney, east London, said it has the “luck of the toucan on our side” and has “managed to ...
Guinness has brewed beer at its city factory since its founder, Arthur Guinness, took over a derelict building in 1759. Now, the "black stuff" is produced on a huge campus of buildings ...
Guinness is a popular Irish dry stout that originated in 1759 at the brewery of Arthur Guinness in St. James's Gate, Dublin Ireland. When the people of Britain think of Guinness, they imagine a ...
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