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Greene King historic beer snapped up by Estrella Damm

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Barcelona-based brewer Damm has agreed to buy all the Old Speckled Hen lines, including its non-alcoholic and golden ale versions.

Old Speckled Hen beer was created by Abingdon-based Morland Brewery which closed in February 2000. The beer is named after an MG car, a 1927 black and gold factory ‘runaround’.

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The brewing site in Ock Street was shut down after the company was acquired by Greene King, which relocated production of famous brands like Old Speckled Hen to Bury St Edmunds. The former brewery site is now occupied by apartments.

The former Morland Brewery in Abingdon (Image: Oxford Mail)

Greene King said it would continue to brew the ale at its Westgate site in Bury St Edmunds during the sale “handover period”, but the process would later move to Damm’s brewery in Bedford, which it opened last year.

Nick Mackenzie, the chief executive of the 227-year-old pub chain, said the company was “delighted to have secured a partner in Estrella Damm who will continue to brew the ales in the UK”.

The companies did not disclose the value of the sale, but said after the deal is complete, Old Speckled Hen beers will still be available in Greene King pubs, as well as major supermarkets in the UK.

Old Speckled Hen was bought by Greene King from the Oxfordshire-based Morland Brewery in 1999.

Morland had first brewed it in 1979 to mark the MG Car Company’s 50th anniversary of its move from Oxford to Abingdon.

A Morland Brewery sign in Abingdon (Image: Andy Ffrench)

The business had asked Morland to brew a commemorative beer for the occasion, naming it “Old Speckled Hen” after their MG Featherlight Saloon, which they referred to as the “owld speckl’d un” because of its mottled appearance.

Its sale to Damm makes it the latest in a line of British beer brands to be bought by a foreign drinks group.

The MG’s connections with the town are celebrated at the Greene King-owned pub The Roaring Raindrop.

The Midget pub off Preston Road in the town was given a six-figure refurbishment from its owners in 2024.

Ian Harriss at The Roaring Raindrop in Abingdon (Image: Andy Ffrench)

Its name – linked with the town’s former MG car factory – was changed to The Roaring Raindrop – an MG car designed to tackle the land speed record in the 1950s.

The new name was agreed as the previous name was considered “offensive”, according to at least one complaint.

In 2015, Camden Town Brewery agreed to a takeover by AB InBev, the Belgian company behind Budweiser, Stella Artois and Beck’s, in a deal worth about £85m.

That year, SAB Miller, the drinks group which brewed Peroni and Miller, also agreed to buy London’s Meantime Brewing Company. AB InBev later bought SAB Miller.

In 2019, the British pub chain Fuller, Smith & Turner accepted a £250m offer for its entire drinks business from the Japanese beer group Asahi, including its flagship London Pride ale.

There are several popular Spanish beers sold in the UK that are brewed within the country, including San Miguel, which is made by AB InBev in Northampton, as well as Cruzcampo, which is brewed by Heineken in Manchester.

Luke White, the managing director of Damm UK, said: “Old Speckled Hen is an iconic British ale brand with a rich heritage and loyal following.

“The brand not only complements the current portfolio range by adding another category to our offering but it also reconnects the Damm Eagle Brewery to its historic British beer and ale production roots.”





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Train evacuated in Oxfordshire due to ’45C’ heatwave

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Chiltern Railways cancelled its 4.37pm service to the West Midlands from Marylebone in Banbury at 5.38pm on bank holiday Monday.

Passengers reported the air conditioning had broken, with the sweltering conditions becoming unbearable inside the carriage.

A Chiltern Railways spokesperson said: “We are sorry that due to a fault with the air conditioning on a train, the 4.37pm service from London Marylebone to Stourbridge Junction on Monday, May 25 was cancelled at Banbury.

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“Customers were able to use their ticket to board the next service to the West Midlands which departed Banbury 50 minutes later.

“We encourage customers who were delayed as a result of the disruption to claim compensation via the Delay Repay scheme.”

The next service to the West Midlands departed Banbury at 6.27pm.

Staff handed out bottles of water to dehydrated passengers on Banbury’s platform.

The Daily Mail reported temperatures got up to 45C on the train.

Oxfordshire was one of nine counties where temperatures rose above 32C on Monday amid an historic bank holiday heatwave.

Records for May temperatures were broken at RAF Benson and RAF Brize Norton, where temperatures reached 33.6C and 32.9C respectively.

Until Monday, the highest May temperature had been 32.8C which was last reached in 1922 and 1944, the Met Office said.





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Severe 50 minute M40 traffic as crash causes emergency barrier repairs

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Emergency barrier repairs on the Oxfordshire M40, after an earlier crash, are causing severe delays on the road.



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Banbury pensioner avoids jail after breaking ex-wife’s jaw

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Kenneth Hancox, of Quarry Road, Hornton, near Banbury, was sentenced on Friday, May 22.

The 67-year-old was charged with one count of section 20 grievous bodily harm, threats with a knife in a private place and threats to kill.

READ MORE: Oxford drug dealer jailed after £11k of cocaine found in car

The court heard the grievous bodily harm offence was committed on September 5, 2017 and resulted in the victim having a broken jaw.

The knife threat was committed on December 6, 2022 and the alleged threat to kill on February 13, 2024.

All the offences were committed at the home address of Hancox in Hornton, near Banbury.

The defendant pleaded guilty just before a trial was due to start earlier this year.

He was sentenced to 27 months imprisonment, suspended for three years.





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