Monday’s ad is also for Ballantine Ale, this one from 1948. There’s a nice illustration of a bottle of Ballantine Ale and two beer glasses in the foreground. The background shows a well-dressed couple out to dinner, with the waiter presenting a bottle of beer like wine, which is both weird and awesome at the same time. It may be “an Old American Custom,” but somehow I don’t see them looking for the Borromean rings on that white tablecloth.
Beer In Ads #670: Step Back A Hundred Years And More
Friday’s ad is for Ballantine Ale, from 1947. It’s from their late-40s diorama series, this one showing the most likely apocryphal origin of the Ballantine logo, told in a poem:
Step back a hundred years and more,
And take your place inside yon door.That’s Peter Ballantine at the table,
A brewer from Scotland, skilled and able.He’s testing his ale — and now you’ll see
How the 3-ring trade mark came to be.One healthy drink, “Aye lads,” says he,
“This ale o’ mine ha ‘PUR-R-RITY!”A second drink of his fine old brew,
“Ah,” he declares, “It ha’ BODY, too!”A third drink now, see him slowly savor,
“An’ sur-r-rely,” he says,
“It ha’ FLAVOR-R-R!”The spying 3 rings on the table dark,
“Lads,” cries Peter,
“I ha’ my mar-r-rk.”
That would have been 1840. Ah, to be a fly on the wall.
Beer In Ads #581: Ballantine & Croquet
Beer In Ads #570: Three Things Wherever You Go …
Friday’s ad is another older Ballantine Ale ad, with an illustration by J.W. Wilkinson. He was active beginning in 19-teens, and most prolific in the 30s and 40s so that’s my guess for when the ad originally ran. The man in the white suit looks a little Will Roger-esque, but of course could just be anyone from that time period.
Beer In Ads #568: Ballantine Ale Begins Where Other Brews Leave Off …
Wednesday’s ad is for Ballantine Ale from, I’m guessing, the later 40s or early 50s. Showing a couple dressed up in their finest haute couture, the woman in a stunning blue cocktail dress and the gentleman in a tuxedo with tails. They’re toasting something pretty important by the looks of it, the confetti at their feet suggesting possibly New Year’s Eve. But it’s not champagne in their glasses, but Ballantine Ale. Because, according to the tagline; “Ballantine Ale begins where other brews leave off … in flavor … in satisfaction!” I also love the throwaway line toward the bottom. “The LIGHT ale that’s strong on flavor.”
Beer In Ads #515: Curl Your Hand Around A Frosty Glass Of Pleasure
Friday’s ad is for Ballantine Ale, from 1956. Showing an ambiguous pair of dudes eyeing one another, with frosty glasses of pleasure curled around each hand, who are saying — in unison, perhaps? — “That’s Ale, Brother!” And then there’s this great copy below. “No other ale … no beer … has such refreshing flavor yet is so light and non-filling.”
Beer In Ads #469: How American It Is … To Want Something Better
Thursday’s ad is a 1942 ad for Ballantine. Given that it’s the middle of World War 2, showing off new American technologies such as this beautiful new train engine — my son Porter would be salivating over it — makes sense, especially with that forward looking tagline: “How American it is … to want something better.”
Beer In Ads #466: That’s Ale Brother Pumpkin
Beer In Ads #459: Ballantine Bowling
Thursday’s ad is for Ballantine Ale and is — I’m guessing here — from the late 1940s-50s given that that was the time when bowling was king. The ad shows a cutaway of a bowling alley, with the bar at the right, and seemingly every person there having either a ball or a beer in their hand. You have to love a sport where drinking is not only allowed, but encouraged. And how about that lovely poem?
A cheery chatter at the Alleys tonight;
The pins are flying left and right.
The “Beer frame” next … everyone agrees,
Ballantine, waiter, over here, please!
We’ve learned long since this beer will hold
Its flavor even when when ice cold!
A-a-h! that deep-brewed flavor chill can’t kill—
Another round? Of course we will!
Beer In Ads #454: The Light Ale Millions Prefer
Thursday’s ad is from 1954, and is for Ballantine Ale. Three men, dressed in colors that would seem more at home in the 1970s than the 50s, share a beer on a veranda with a coastal view. Apparently one of them says to the other. “Is this something special?” To which the reply is. “It certainly is … that’s Ballantine Ale … the light ale millions prefer.”