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Des de Moor

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Big Penny

Big Penny, London E17

This page covers the beer firm that originated in a revival of the historic Truman brand in the 21st century.

For more about the historic Truman’s brewery, see Truman’s Brewery (Watney Mann Truman).

For more about the current cuckoo-brewed Truman beers, see Truman (Old Truman Brewery).

Previously Truman’s Beer.

Beer firm, suspended brewery
Original site: 2 Stour Road E3 2NT (Tower Hamlets)
Second site: The Brew Shed, 14A Queens Yard E9 5EN (Tower Hamlets)
Taproom, possible future site: 1 Priestley Way E17 6AL (Waltham Forest)
bigpenny.co.uk
First sold beer: July 2013 (as Truman’s Beer at original site)
Brewing suspended: May 2022

As explained elsewhere, Truman’s, based at the Black Eagle brewery in until its closure in 1989, is one of the most important names in London brewing history. That history fascinated James Morgan and Michael-George Hemus, who worked as young professionals around the site in the early 2000s, and in an inspired moment they decided to revive the brand. The trademark had been inherited by Heineken, who were eventually persuaded first to license it then to sell it.

James Morgan at the launch of the new Truman’s first physical site in Wick, 2013.

In June 2010, a new beer, Truman’s Runner, based on the spirit but not the letter of the old, appeared in London pubs. At first this was cuckoo brewed outside London, initially at Nethergate in Clare, Suffolk and from October 2011 at Everards in Leicester, but always with the intention of bringing brewing back to the capital.

The historic site sadly proved impractical and unaffordable, but in July 2013 Truman’s began brewing at Fish Island in Wick using a new 33 hl brewhouse and the original Truman yeast strain, a sample of which had been deposited at the National Collection of Yeast Cultures in 1958. The original head brewer was German-born Ben Ott, formerly at and later a co-founder at 40FT. In 2015, the brewery, known as the Eyrie, expanded to a neighbouring unit previously occupied by Beavertown, with increased fermentation capacity and a new kegging line.

With production reaching 17,000 hl per year by 2019, no space for further expansion and the site under threat of redevelopment, the brewery secured much bigger premises in the growing brewing centre of Blackhorse Lane in western Walthamstow. The original intention was to install an 80 hl German-style brewhouse, a 10 hl pilot kit and a large and comfortable taproom with performance space, aiming for an annual output to 150,000 hl.

These plans were seriously disrupted by the Covid-19 lockdown in 2020, and the brewery found itself unable to install equipment at the new site before it was forced out of its Fish Island home, which was subsequently demolished. Coincidentally, Crate brewery, not far away in Queens Yard, got into difficulties at the same time, and Truman’s took over its production brewhouse from July 2020. Though the 16 hl kit here had substantially less capacity than Truman’s previous equipment, this interim arrangement provided a way out of difficult circumstances.

Truman’s still had the lease on the Blackhorse Lane site and, following the easing of the first lockdown, opened it in July 2020 as a bar and events space known as Truman’s Social Club, taking advantage of the vast size to create a purpose-designed socially distanced venue. The intention remained to relocate brewing here eventually. During this period James moved on and Michael-George, who had stepped back from the business, returned to run it.

Unfortunately this didn’t resolve the difficulties as the Queens Yard site had to close in May 2022 due to redevelopment, but still with no capacity to relocate production to Blackhorse Lane. The company shifted to contract brewing, I believe at Redchurch in Essex (formerly in London).

To raise further funds, the company sold the Truman brand in September 2022 and rebranded to Big Penny, acknowledging a former copper mill close to the Blackhorse site which supplied materials for penny coins. The Truman brand now belongs to the owners of the Old Truman Brewery in Brick Lane, who commission beers under that name from Brockley Brewery.

The main venue is now known as the Big Penny Social, and the intention remains to brew there at some point in the future.

The company also owns a End pub, the Newman Arms in Fitzrovia, taken over in 2018 though up for sale in 2022, and an airside bar at London City Airport, originally known as Brews but since rebranded to Big Penny Brews.

Beers were in cask, tank, keg and can. was the mainstay in the early years, and despite the difficulties of Covid, Truman’s continued with the format, though at reduced volumes, droppng it with the shift to contract brewing. Previously, Truman’s also brewed for others, notably assisting in the return of London Fields beers to London.

Updated 21 October 2024.

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