Frank Jones Brew Yard

110 Brewery Lane, Portsmouth, NH 03801
Frank Jones Brew Yard Frank Jones Brew Yard is one of the popular Apartment & Condo Building located in 110 Brewery Lane ,Portsmouth listed under Apartment & Condo Building in Portsmouth ,

Contact Details & Working Hours

More about Frank Jones Brew Yard

Mixed use community of commercial and residential leasing.

Size & Price Range for 68 Units of Frank Jones Residences

Studio | 475 – 744 SqFt | $1,095 - $1, 775 per month
1 Bedroom | 527 – 1,196 SqFt | $1,195 - $2,850 per month
2 Bedroom | 867 – 1,196 SqFt | $2,050 - $2,795 per month


Check out the gallery for a rendering of what the finished building will look like, and for “before” pictures taken by Jon Washburn of Forgotten Beauty Photography.

THE HISTORY (shared from NHmagazine.com)
"You've probably never heard of Frank Jones, but he was brewing beer in Portsmouth (and making piles of money at it) way before it was the cool thing to do. Way, way, way before, that is.

For Jones, beer was the path to success and the American Dream in the late 1800s. Jones, the fifth of seven children, moved out of his family's home in Barrington at the age of 16 in 1848. Settling in Portsmouth with just about nothing to his name, Jones apprenticed at his brother's stove store - by 1854 he took it over entirely. The stove store was just the first acquisition in what would become an incredibly long list of businesses and occupations that included a shoe store, a button factory, wool factory, publishing company, director of various banks, mills and even a steamship company. But it was the Frank Jones Brewing Company that made all his later pursuits possible.

in 1858 Jones partnered with the man who originally started the brewery - John Swindell. Within a few months Jones bought him out, eventually owning all of the property, the business and even Swindell's ale recipe. He renamed it the Frank Jones Brewing Company and quickly set out to modernize and grow the brewery.
The Frank Jones Brewing Company may be long gone, but you can still get a taste of his famous ale at the Frank Jones Restaurant and Pub in his hometown of Barrington.

The Frank Jones Brewing Company was, in its time, almost unparalleled. By 1882, it was the largest ale producer in the country, brewing 150,000 barrels of ale by that year. The brand's popularity continued to climb and soon Frank Jones Brewing Company employed over 500 workers and saw its annual production skyrocket and peak at 250,000 barrels. The demand for the famous ale became so great that the company opened a Boston satellite location in 1886.
Still thirsty?
Check out the rest of the Beer Lovers' Guide to NH!

The guide features regional breakdowns, a map of breweries, a specialty beer store listing, restaurants, bars and pubs with great beer lists and much more.

As his brewing business expanded, so did Jones's status in New Hampshire. The don of the New Hampshire beer industry first dabbled in politics as a two-term Mayor of Portsmouth in 1867. Then in 1875, his influence among the beer-crazed public earned him a two-year seat in Congress. His political stint ended with a lost campaign for governor, but that didn't stop the mogul from monopolizing prestigious assets from racehorses to railroads, insurance companies to lavish hotels. In true Frank Jones fashion, no asset was too excessive. At the time of his death in 1902, he was buried beneath the largest tombstone in Portsmouth." www.nhmagazine.com/October-2013/The-History-of-Frank-Jones/

Map of Frank Jones Brew Yard