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Pappy's Homemade Rootbeer

Ain't Nothin' Lak it!
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Where it All Began

 In Scotsman in a Kilt playing bagpipes1635, the families of James and Charles Taylour arrived in London, England from the lowlands of Scotland, where their family had lived for many generations. As their name indicates, their occupations were that of clothing tailors. After several successful years in London, the brothers raised enough money to book steerage to the 'New World".

So in 1638, the brothers and their families arrived in New England. The early emigrants sought out land that resembled where they came from. The brothers made their way to Virginia where they settled in what is now the green Spring Valley. They built their farms along the fertile banks of the South Branch River on land owned, at the time, by Lord Fairfax of England. James settled on one side of the river, Charles on the other. Their farms connected with that of Thomas Creasap at what is today known as Old Town, Maryland.

Civil War ImageThe Civil War succeeded where drought, crop failure, harsh winters, disease and Indian attacks could not, in splitting the Taylor families apart. The family of James Taylor supported the Confederacy while the family of Charles Taylor sided with the North. Both lost family members in the war. As the story goes, shortly after the war ended, a gang of Confederate renegades attacked the farm of James Taylor. The gunfire caught the ears of their "kin" on the other side of the river, who grabbed their rifles and shotguns, climbed into their flat bottom boats and rowed across the river to the aid of their brothers. Together they chased off the attacking renegades! This episode began a long standing tradition of rowing to the brother's farmhouse each New Year's Day laden down with delicious home cooked food and drink to bring in the new year.

Cathedral Falls, West VirginiaThe Taylors, out of necessity, became totally self-sufficient, raising everything they needed to survive. They had their own orchards, sugar maple trees, bee hives, vineyards and gardens. The "Wild Wonderful" region provided abundant wild game. They made their own beer, wine, brandies and fruit drinks. Their homes smelled of the sweet sourdough aroma of started homemade yeast for breads, baking and brews.

It was from this tradition that "PaPPY's Homemade Rootbeer" has grown.

 


 

"PaPPY's Homemade Rootbeer" ......"Ain't Nothin' Lak It"

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