ARTHUR GUINNESS (1725-1803)
BREWER
Arthur
Guinness was born in Celbridge, Co Kildare, in 1725. His father was
land steward to the archbishop of Cashel, Dr Arthur Price, and brewed beer for
workers on the estate. When Price died in 1752, he left £100 each to the two
Guinnesses, which mayhave encouraged the young man to lease a brewery in Leixlip,
Co Kildare, in 1756. Three years later, he left this brewery in charge of a
younger brother, and took over one at St James' Gate in Dublin.
He began by brewing beer or
ale, and within eight years was master of the Dublin Corporation of Brewers. In
1761 he married Olivia Whitmore, a relative of Henry Grattan, and ten of their
twenty-one children lived to establish a dynasty which has spread into many
activities and countries. The family's long association with St Patrick's
Cathedral began with a gift of 250 guineas for the chapel schools, and Dublin
enjoyed other benefactions.
There was, however, one dispute with Dublin
Corporation, whose investigators concluded that Guinness was drawing more free
water than his lease permitted. In 1775, the brewer seized a pickaxe to defend
his supplies from the sheriff, and eventually reached a peaceful solution after
protracted litigation. Duties on beer proved another problem, and in 1795
Guinness enlisted Grattan's oratory to persuade the government to remove the
burden.
In 1778, Guinness began to brew porter - the darker beer containing
roasted barley and first drunk by London porters - and exploited Ireland's new
canals to extend his market. In 1799, he brewed ale for the last time. Sales of
porter increased threefold during the Napoleonic Wars, and in time St James's
Gate became the largest porter and stout brewery in the world, its 'extra stout
porter' becoming known simply as stout.
Guinness gradually handed over
control to three sons, and spent his last years at Beaumont, his country home in
Drumcondra, now a Dublin suburb. He died on 23 January 1803.