Cochranville’s Succession Fermentory Reopens Philadelphia’s Only Revolutionary-era Drinking Spot

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A Man Full of Trouble sign.
Image via A Man Full of Trouble, Instagram.
Cochranville's Succession Fermentory to reopen A Man Full of Trouble, Philly’s only surviving Revolutionary-era drinking spot.

Dan Wheeler has teamed up with Cochranville-based Succession Fermentory to reopen A Man Full of Trouble, Philadelphia’s only surviving Revolutionary-era drinking spot, writes Mike Newall for The Philadelphia Inquirer

Wheeler bought the building in Society Hill three years ago hoping to restore it to a neighborhood hub. After undergoing two and a half years of renovations, the tavern has reopened its doors for business for the first time in over a century. 

Succession, the tavern’s operator, offers a selection of farmhouse beers and ferments on draft and in cask and bottle along with a curated list of Pennsylvania wines and spirits. 

A Man Full of Trouble originally opened in 1759 as a dive bar during the Revolution. 

Today, the upper floor of the tavern is a museum with relics telling the story of the neighborhood’s Revolutionary past. Another upstairs gallery is reserved for local artists. 

“I didn’t want to have a dusty house museum that nobody ever came to,” said Wheeler. “I wanted to breathe new life into it, and I wanted to set it up as somewhere that told the life of this neighborhood.” 

 Read more about A Man Full of Trouble reopening with help from Succession Fermentory in The Philadelphia Inquirer

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