For roughly 40 years over the turn of the 20th century, Joseph Wolf and his brother, Martin, provided thirsty Stillwater loggers with locally brewed beer. But just as annual production peaked at an approximately Surly-sized 25,000 barrels, Prohibition pulled the plug on the beer-making venture in 1920. A year later Joseph died — family lore blames a broken heart — and Joseph Wolf Brewing Co. soon sputtered out, struggling to convert the operation to soda and bottled water.
Now, 93 years after Wolf's last pint was produced, descendants of the Swiss immigrant are putting the brand back together. Joseph's great-granddaughters Pat Wolf and Kathy Wolf Swanson unveiled Joseph Wolf Brewing 2.0 at a launch party last month, and bombers of their two new brews are slowly trickling into liquor stores and bars.
"Here you had two brothers working the brewery together, and now you have two great-granddaughters who are sisters working the brewery," Pat said.
Sisterly ties aside, the women are breaking boundaries in the brewing world. While the Brewers Association doesn't track gender statistics, the second coming of Wolf Brewery is a rare entirely female-owned operation.
A century ago, brewing was the Wolf family business, but it is new terrain for the fiftysomething siblings. Pat and Kathy each carry entrepreneurial credentials: Among other endeavors, Pat has a commercial real-estate business, and Kathy ran a dating service for 13 years before moving into the tech world. Pat acknowledges that their gender and age make them atypical entrants into the beer biz, but says it wasn't a factor when she began thinking about resurrecting the brewery 15 years ago.
"It's at a time in our lives that feels right," she said. "We're seasoned [businesswomen]."
Partly as a promotional vehicle, last fall the sisters launched BierCycle tours of Stillwater — essentially PedalPub excursions with a history lesson — which stop at the old brewery location, nestled on the bluffs along Main Street.
More than 130 years ago, Joseph and Martin Wolf and their crew used "dynamite, pickaxes and hard labor" to build caves in the river bluffs for cooling and storing beer, Pat said. While today the site is no longer in the family, the two hope to bring their new brewery back to its original home.