About our Club &
Hobby
This is the place to learn about the brewery collectible hobby,
how it started, why we do it and how you can too.
Learn a bit of beer can history while you're at it. |
Beer Can History
The "official" birthday
of the beer can is January 24, 1935. That's the day
cans of Krueger's Finest Beer and Krueger's Cream
Ale first went on sale in Richmond, VA.
But the beer can really made its debut some 14
months earlier - just before the repeal of
Prohibition. American Can Company had engineered a
workable beer can.
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Left: The first Krueger
can as shown in The Brewer's News. This can
surfaced briefly in 1985, but its
whereabouts remain unknown. Right: A digital
recreation of the same can. Note the
different typeface in the word "Special".
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All that was needed was a brewer willing to take the
pioneering plunge. The Gottfried Krueger Brewing
Company of Newark, NJ signed on the dotted line in
November 1933.
By the end of that month, American had installed a
temporary canning line and delivered 2,000 Krueger's
Special Beer cans, which were promptly filled with
3.2% Krueger beer - the highest alcohol content
allowed at the time. Krueger's Special Beer thus
became the world's first beer can.
The 2,000 cans of beer were given to faithful
Krueger drinkers; 91% gave it thumbs up, and 85%
said it tasted more like draft than bottled beer.
Reassured by this successful test, Krueger gave
canning the green light, and history was made.
A photo of two Krueger Special cans appeared in the
December 28, 1933 issue of Brewer's News, but no
current example has been positively verified to
exist.
The can has seen several stages of evolution since
that time. The major distinct types are outlined
below. Note that there are several different types
within each major category (low profile, high
profile, j-spout, crowntainer and quart cone tops
for instance).
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Flat tops required an
opener or "church key" to open them. Older
flat tops are usually found with a single,
large opener hole.
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Flat Top Style
The name is self-explanatory. This steel can
style, first marketed by the Gottfried Krueger
Brewing Company in January 1935, and nationally by
Pabst in June of the same year, was in use up until
about 1970. It's hard to imagine, in this day of
paper-thin aluminum containers, that the first
flat-top cans weighed in at nearly four ounces. No
wonder that the device designed to open them, the
indispensable tool we call the churchkey, was
originally 5 1/2" long, 3/4" wide and 1/8" thick!
Cone Top Style
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Left to right: Low
profile, j-spout, crowntainer and high
profile cone top styles.
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Cone-top cans, so named because of their funnel-like
tops, entered the picture in September 1935, when
the G. Heilemann Brewing Company of La Crosse, WI
first marketed them. Schlitz was the first national
brewer to follow suit. This was a style that
appealed to smaller brewers because cone-top cans
could be filled on existing bottling lines. By 1960,
though, the big nationals had driven many of those
smaller brewers out of business and the cone-top era
came to an end.
There are four basic types of cone-top cans. Low
Profile, High Profile and J-spout cans are all
three-piece cans. The difference is mostly in the
height of the cone or spout. The fourth type, the
Crowntainer, has a one-piece body attached to a
concave bottom.
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Some of the earliest pull
tabs, know as "zip tops" literally had a
tab, rather than a ring, and displayed
instructions on how to open them.
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Pull Tab or Tab Top Style
The change that revolutionized the beer can came
in March 1963 when the Pittsburgh Brewing Company
introduced its flagship Iron City Beer in
self-opening cans. You put your finger into the ring
and yanked and bingo, the can was open! Schlitz took
what it called the "Pop Top" national, and by 1965,
some 75% of all cans produced had an easy-open
device. Pull tabs were around for a little over 10
years, when they began to be replaced by the stay
tab.
Stay Tab Style
Pull tabs were a beer drinker's dream and an
environmental disaster. Pets and wildlife died from
ingesting them - as did more than a few people who
dropped them into a can of beer and then
accidentally choked on them. They wound up on
beaches, where children cut their feet on them. They
littered roadsides and damaged garbage disposals.
Stay tabs were the answer. Introduced in 1975 by the
Falls City Brewing Company of Louisville, KY, they
stayed connected to the can. Today, virtually all
carbonated beverages are marketed in cans with stay
tabs.
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