In 1854, brewer Samuel Liebmann immigrated from
Germany to
America, partly to escape government oppression. He sent his oldest son
Joseph ahead to find a suitable place for a brewery. When Samuel, his wife, and the other five children arrived in Philadelphia on November 7, 1854, Joseph met them on the wharf and escorted them to
Brooklyn. Within a week, Samuel leased a small brewery on Meserole Street where he started brewing beer with his three sons. A year later the company bought a 6.4-acre site at the corner of Forrest Street and Bremen Street, in the
Bushwick section of Brooklyn, and built a new plant there. Samuel retired in 1868, and in 1870 the name of the company was changed to S. Liebmann’s Sons Brewery. The Rheingold brand name was first used in 1883. There are several family-lore explanations of its origin. The first is simply that "Rheingold" was an allusion to the great
Rhein River in Germany (also spelled "Rhine"). A third version holds that a special beer was brewed for a dinner held to honor the head of the
Metropolitan Opera after the season finale performance of
Das Rheingold, and the beer was named "Rheingold". It was a hit, so the brewery introduced it as a permanent product. The brewery's production increased from 1,200 barrels in its first year, to 39,000 barrels in 1877, 165,000 barrels in 1894, 200,000 barrels per year in the early 1900s and in 1914. It expanded to adjacent properties, absorbed the nearby John Schoenwald Brewery in 1878, and Claus-Lipsius Brewery in 1902, and in 1907 it was the largest and most complete brewing facility in the eastern United States, occupying 18-acres and four city blocks. The plant pioneered new refrigeration methods and was the first plant to have its own laboratory. During
Prohibition, from 1920 through 1933, the brewery survived by selling "near beer", lemonade, and "Teutonic", a concentrated liquid extract of malt and hops for nutrition and good health. During the three decades following Prohibition, Rheingold was promoted as the "Dry Beer", and the annual Miss Rheingold contest, launched in 1940, became the centerpiece of its marketing campaign. Between 1947 and 1954, the company acquired four new plants: In 1947, Eichler Brewery in the
Bronx; in 1950, Trommer's Brewery in
Orange, New Jersey; and in 1954, the
San Francisco and
Los Angeles plants of Acme Brewing Company. With five plants, Rheingold had more production facilities than any other brewing company in the country except
Falstaff Brewing Corporation, which had six. Its expansion into
California was unsuccessful; the San Francisco plant was closed in 1955, and the Los Angeles facility was sold to
Hamm's Brewery in 1957. Rheingold became the leading beer in New York state and prospered until the early 1960s when profits were squeezed by rising labor and other costs, and fierce price competition from brands whose broader national footprints gave them competitive advantages. Beer sales peaked in the following year, 1965, at , but declined thereafter. In 1966 Rheingold Breweries introduced Gablinger's Beer, one of the first reduced calorie beers, which was brewed using a process originated by chemist Dr. Hersch Gablinger of Basel, Switzerland. The beer was also marketed as Gablinger's Extra Light Beer. It failed in the marketplace, but the formula was tweaked by
Joseph Owades, PhD, a biochemist working for Rheingold, and made available to
Meister Brau Inc. in 1967, which made minor adjustments to Owades' formula and marketed it as Meister Brau Lite. Despite widespread popularity of Meister Brau and Meister Brau Lite, the brewery carried unmanageable debt and in 1972 sold both brands to
Miller Brewing Company, which relaunched Lite as "Lite Beer from Miller", and later
Miller Lite. In 1967, Rheingold Breweries acquired Dawson Brewing Company in
New Bedford, Massachusetts. In February 1973,
PepsiCo, Inc. bought a controlling interest in Rheingold Breweries, paying $57 million for 83% of the Rheingold/Pepsi Bottling operation. Industry observers said that PepsiCo was more interested in the company's soft drinks bottlers in California,
Florida,
Mexico, and
Puerto Rico than in the beer business. Sales in 1973 fell below .
William Black, the founder of the
Chock full o'Nuts coffee company stepped in and negotiated a deal with the union, giving their members ownership of 10% of Rheingold Brewery in exchange for wage concessions. He then purchased the brewery on March 8, 1974, for $1 plus assumption of the brewery's $10 million in debt. The Brooklyn plant was unprofitable for another two years and its doors were closed for good in mid-January 1976. Rheingold production was continued in the brewery’s Orange, New Jersey plant. Schmidt changed the callout on the Rheingold label from "Extra Dry" to "Premium", and changed the brewery of record on the label to "Rheingold Brewery". Christian Schmidt's brands were sold to
G. Heileman Brewing Company in April 1987, and then to
Stroh Brewery Company in July 1996. Heileman Brewing continued to manufacture Rheingold Beer in its
La Crosse, Wisconsin, plant, at least into the 1990s. No written record of this can be found, but vintage Rheingold Premium cans are occasionally seen on
eBay that show "G. Heileman Brewing Co., LA CROSSE, WISCONSIN", on the side panel and with 1990s-style stay-tabs. In 1996, Mike Mitaro, a veteran beer industry executive, licensed the rights to the Rheingold brand from Stroh, started Rheingold Brewing Company, Inc., and relaunched Rheingold Beer in 1998. The new Rheingold executive team included Walter "Terry" Liebmann, a fifth-generation American member of the family of brewers who had worked at Rheingold Breweries in the 1960s. The product was produced under contract by
F.X. Matt Brewing Company in
Utica, New York, and, starting in 2004, at Greenpoint Beer Works in
Clinton Hill, Brooklyn. In February 1999, Stroh sold the Rheingold brand to
Pabst Brewing Company. In 2005,
Drinks Americas of
Wilton, Connecticut, purchased Rheingold Brewing Company, Inc. The product was modified and F.X. Matt Brewing Company continued to produce it under contract. As of 2010, Drinks America was selling Rheingold Beer in the
New York Metropolitan Area,
Connecticut,
New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, and
Maryland. By 2011, it had expanded to
Cincinnati, Ohio,
Georgia, and
Florida. Drinks America stopped selling Rheingold in 2013 and it was unavailable until mid-2023 when Brewing Brands, LLC sold some. The Rheingold Brewery building in Brooklyn was torn down in 1981. In 2018, after many years of disrepair and vacancy, a 500-unit apartment building was built on the site. The apartment complex, at 10 Monteith Street, Brooklyn, is called, “The Rheingold” or “Rheingold - Bushwick”. ==Additional products and brands==