It’s in the Water.
Olympia Brewery Against the Machine
I had the pleasure of shooting with several talented photographers at the old Olympia Brewery. The character behind the building and the label continues to live on and on.
Leopold Schmidt, a German immigrant from Montana founded The Capital Brewing Company at Tumwater Falls on the Deschutes River in the town of Tumwater, near the south end of Puget Sound. He built a four-story wooden brewhouse, a five-story cellar building, a one-story ice factory powered by the lower falls, and a bottling and keg plant and in 1896, began brewing and selling Olympia Beer. In 1902, the firm became Olympia Brewing Company and chose the slogan “It’s the Water” to promote its flagship product. Statewide Prohibition, which began in January 1916, four years before National Prohibition, ended beer making operations. After Prohibition ended, a new Olympia Brewery was erected just upstream from the original, and Olympia beer went back on sale in 1934.[1]
References:
1. Brewery Gems, An Illustrated History of the Olympia Brewery Company
















