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Beer
Wars Grip Blowing Rock
In
the mid-1970's, Blowing Rock was coming into its own as the
entertainment capital of the mountains, fueled by renowned
venues like P.B. Scott's; and by alcohol.
It was also coming to the end of its rope.
Scott's was bringing huge national acts almost weekly, and
entertainment almost nightly to the once-sleepy town, and
with the attention and income came problems, and finally,
public protest.
It all began innocently enough back in 1965, when the North
Carolina General Assembly authorized a beer sales election
for Blowing Rock, an election which saw beer and wine voted
in that August.
That allowed sales in restaurants that had a 'Grade A certificate'.
It was in April, 1977, that an amendment to that passage began
the fight that would ultimately close Scott's, though never
rid the town of alcohol.
That amendment stated that "a restaurant is defined as
having a kitchen and a seating capacity of 36 persons or more,
and must be engaged primarily and substantially in preparing
and selling food."
Noticeable by its absence was a grandfather clause for existing
establishments, giving anti-beer forces a double-barrel to
aim at the bars they were intent on closing.
That same year an attempt to eliminate beer sales in the town
was defeated by a two-to-one margin.
By 1978 the cries of outrage had brought the owners - who
had formed a group called the Blowing Rock Beverage Association
- to voluntarily close an hour earlier; at 12:30 a.m.
They were also considering another voluntary measure; a one-cent
self-imposed tax on each beer sold to fund the hiring of an
additional policeman.
As one member put it; "we want them (the residents of
Blowing Rock) to see that we are civic-minded and concerned."
But the drumbeats continued.
In May, 1979, some owners were served summonses by state ABC
officials and Blowing Rock Police, to answer questions whether
their restaurants met the criteria for serving alcohol; i.e.
could they attribute 51% of their overall sales to food, not
beer and wine.
By April 15 of 1980, a final standoff was reported, as three
establishments in the town were ordered by the ABC board to
send in their permits.
None did, and all remained open to serve both food and beer,
citing an appeal from the owners and the Blowing Rock Town
Council.
With the outcome cloudy, precedent was set, as alcohol in
the county continues to maintain a foothold, but meet stiff
resistance at its spread.
As the headline said in the April 17, 1980 edition of The
Mountain Times; "Beer Still Flowing In Blowing Rock."
Twenty years later both the drinks and the debate flow ever
onward.
Editor's
Note: Special thanks to The Mountain Times' correspondent
Kenneth Ketchie for in depth coverage.
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