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Our American Stories

Adolph Coors: The German Immigrant Who Brought Us Banquet Beer

Our American Stories

iHeartPodcasts

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.6817 Ratings

🗓️ 26 February 2024

⏱️ 10 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this episode of Our American Stories, Coors Banquet is really good...no, really good, and its story began with a German immigrant living in a Colorado mining town. Pete Coors tells the story.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:14.1

And we return to our American stories.

0:17.5

And up next, a story from Pete Coors on Adolf Coors take it away Pete

0:23.0

Pete well so Adolf was born somewhere in the 1840s in a little place called Barmanon Vuppertal in Germany.

0:40.3

Kind of an interesting story. People say the C-O-O-R-S name is kind of unusual for a German name.

0:49.3

His birth certificate, he was signed in his course K-O-R-S, which is very German,

0:55.0

and his father actually signed K-O-H-R-S.

0:59.0

And by the time his sister was born about eight or ten years later,

1:04.0

there was a Dutch magistrate who brought the double O from their langu and it became C ORS.

1:11.6

His father was a flour miller.

1:15.6

He died when he was 10.

1:18.6

He had been apprenticed three times in order to survive.

1:22.6

Once as a flower miller with his father's trade,

1:25.6

once as a printer book finder and those are three

1:30.1

years indentureships which as I understand in those days that meant you got room and

1:35.0

board and that's about it and then the third one in brewing we don't know the

1:41.4

details of how or why he decided to leave Germany. He was always very

1:45.7

proud of his German heritage. But he stowed away on a ship, landed in Baltimore. Had no

1:51.5

papers, had no money, he had no, was able to work off his passage. As soon as he did, he

1:57.5

started working his way across the country. And I guess it's a typical great American story of coming to a land of opportunity and freedom,

2:07.6

but with no safety nets.

2:09.6

I mean, you came here, you were on your own.

...

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