The property on Main Road Stoke in the Nelson suburb of
Stoke started life as the Rochdale Cider factory in the late 1930s. The production facility was located in the rear section of the current building. In the 1930s and 1940s there were around five cider producers in the area, including one just across the road, Robinson’s, but by the 1970s, Rochdale was the only large commercial producer in New Zealand. The current building was erected in the 1950s. The business was purchased in 1980 by former
All Black rugby player and farmer Terry McCashin and his wife Beverley, who continued to make Rochdale Cider but also began brewing
craft beer for the first time in New Zealand, with the help of brewer Jim Pollitt. Mac's beer was launched on 26 September 1981, with then
Prime Minister of New Zealand,
Robert Muldoon, in attendance. The small brewery (sometimes referred to as Mac's brewery) had to compete with the two giants in the market,
Lion Nathan and
Dominion Breweries, and McCashin is today regarded as a pioneer of craft beer. In 2009, McCashin's son Dean McCashin and his wife Emma moved to Nelson, relaunching the brewery under its original name, McCashin's Brewery, producing beer under the newly-created Stoke brand and resuming the production of Rochdale-branded cider. McCashin is the managing director. The company's executive chair is Christopher Swasbrook. ==Description==