Welcome to The Hook Norton Brewery

Brewery Visitors Centre

The Brewery Visitors centre is now open on Saturdays from 9.30am to 4.30pm. Brewery tours run Monday to Friday and lasts approximately 2 hours. All tours are followed by a sampling of our beer in the visitors centre. For our mature guests only.

Brewery Visitors centre inside view

Tours are available for educational parties and are free of charge. To book a tour or for more information please visit the brewery visitors page HERE.

Princess Anne visits Queens Head pub

Group shot in pub From left: Princess Anne, Hook Norton’s Phil Thomas, and Queens Head licences Clare and Neil Warren.

Princess Anne recently stopped off in Sedgeberrow, Worcestershire to visit people affected by last summer's flooding and offer her support after the village was transformed into a maelstrom of raging water when floods struck last July.


Celebrate a 400th anniversary

Banbury 400 pump clip with glass of beer

Hook Norton brewery have produced a beer to celebrate the 400th anniversary of a town charter being granted to Banbury. The beer can be found at the following pubs. Click Here


Brewery History

The brewery at Hook Norton is rooted in an age when most towns and even large villages boasted their own brewery.

winter landscape image of the brewery dawn

Approach the village of Hook Norton from any direction and the first thing you see is the Church tower. The second is the flag waving proudly over the brewery. The Hook Norton Brewery was started over 150 years ago by farmer and maltster John Harris. Today it is run by his great great grandson James Clarke. John Harris' brewery has now achieved a reputation he could have never imagined and the beer it produces today is enjoyed not only in the UK but in many other countries.

Hook Norton Brewery sits on the North side of the Cotswold Hills, an area of rural lushness so pivotal to the ebb and flow of English history, the locals decided long ago that a good, fresh pint should always be within easy reach. A natural spring provided the ideal site for a brewery, and one thing led to another.

2 english Civil War Silders1849 was a milestone year. The young Queen Victoria ruled - the 35th monarch since William the Conqueror - the country had endured Magna Carta, the Wars of the Roses, The Reformation, Oliver Cromwell’s Parliamentarians, the Restoration of the Monarchy and was well into the Industrial Revolution when John Harris set up his brewery at Hook Norton. After Centuries of tempestuous history the locals were ready for a few beers. After a short while the sales of this fledgling brewery began to improve. And before long, the brewery John Harris started in a local farmhouse became the seed for the Hook Norton Brewery Company Ltd, and things evolved rapidly.

Picture of our steam engineHook Norton Brewery remains one of only 32 independent family-run breweries; and you won’t find a finer example of a Victorian tower brewery anywhere. It's also the only brewery still driven by steam. On the ground floor of the brewery is a fine 25 horsepower steam engine, supplying through a series of belts, cogs and shafts most of the motive power the brewery needs to produce it's beer .

The brewery at Hook Norton is still "a real local brewery" and this is a rarity these days; awesome commercial pressures brought about change at the brewery, but the brewers at Hook Norton became adept at keeping a restless World at arm’s length.

Brewery research shows most of us are more familiar with the drinking process than the skilled preparation that leads up to it. But every pint produced by Hook Norton brewery that you raise to your lips has a story to tell. Beer is very much a natural product; and the brewery puts a lot of effort into the whole brewing process to provide you with a refreshing pint. The traditional methods employed at the brewery make traditional beers, and that's what counts at Hook Norton.

The Shire Horse at Work in the Brewery

The shire horse drawn dray at Hook Norton Brewery ceased deliveries in 1950, but was revitalised in 1985, mainly for public relation purposes. The shire horses now only deliver locally within 5 miles of the brewery, but attend many public functions such as fetes, pub openings and on the odd occasion, weddings. It should be noted that out of all of the breweries that own horse drawn drays, only two still actually deliver their products by dray and shire horse. At present the Brewery has three shire horses (Consul, Major and Nelson), who are looked after by their two draymen Roger Hughes and Philip White.

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Brewery Steam Engine

Steam engine power is perhaps the most remarkable survivor at the brewery. The 25hp steam engine still drives much of the machinery used in the brewery, just as it has done for the past hundred years. Installed in 1899, it is believed to be the last steam engine in the country still in daily use for its original purpose.

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BASC's centenary beer pump clipHook Norton Brewery is producing a special beer to celebrate the BASC centenary. The Brewery will be producing a centenary beer called Double Barrelled. For every equivalent bottle sold, 5p will be donated to BASC.
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Group shot in pub From left: Princess Anne, Hook Norton’s Phil Thomas, and Queens Head licences Clare and Neil Warren. Princess Anne recently stopped off in Sedgeberrow, Worcestershire to visit people affected by last summer's flooding.
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Banbury 400 pump clip with glass of beerHooky’s latest brew Banbury 400 is now on sale. The beer produced to celebrate the 400th anniversary of a town charter being granted to Banbury.
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David Cameron and Managing Director James Clarke pull the first pint of Banbury 400.Conservative Party leader David Cameron visited Hook Norton Brewery to celebrate the 400th Anniversary of Banbury’s Town Charter. While at the brewery he pulled the first pint of Banbury 400.
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Sam Cope, the TrumpetThe Trumpet has been given the four stars for the high standards of hygiene and cleanliness it has in its bar, kitchen and toilets.
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Coach and HorsesOxfordshire brewer Hook Norton is looking for a tenant to run one of Banbury’s best known pubs.
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licensees John and Trisha BellingerHook Norton licensees John and Trisha Bellinger are celebrating their pub being chosen the best in north Oxfordshire. The Bell Inn at Adderbury has been voted by members of CAMRA, the Campaign for Real Ale, as the North Oxfordshire Pub of the Year.
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Events in our pubsRead More News

May guest beers
St Austell Tribute pump clipSt Austell Tribute, at 4.2 per cent ABV, is a pale amber beer, which bursts with orange zest, tropical fruit and grapefruit flavours from the Willamette hops. A well balanced, drinkable beer.

St Austell Tinners pump clipSt Austell Tinners, at 3.7 per cent, has a light refreshing flavour with only a hint of bitterness. It is an ideal partner with good food and works particularly well with spicy dishes.

St Austell Proper Job pump clip St Austell Proper Job, at 4.5 per cent, brewed with Cornish spring water and a blend of malts including Cornish grown Maris Otter barley. It is a powerfully hopped golden bitter beer that explodes with citrus and grapefruit flavours.

pub signs

New Tenancies

The Volunteer Inn

The New Inn

The Albion Tavern

The Fox Hotel

Rose & Crown - Chipping Warden

The Coach and Horses Banbury

CAMRA complimentry club