For some 3,500 Americans, a discarded beer can may prove a thing of beauty and a toy forever. They are members of the Beer Can Collectors of America, who respond to the sight of a 1969 Olde Frothingslosh container as ecstatically as a philatelist who discovers an 1856 one-cent British Guiana stamp tucked in the family Bible.
Though beer cans were only introduced in 1935the first was a green-and-white container made by the American Can Co. for the now defunct Gottfried Krueger Brewing Co. of Newarkexperts estimate that as many as 12,000 domestic beer labels have been turned out since then. They include such obsolete brands as Cloud Nine, Simon Pure, Nu Deal, Wooden Shoe, Tube City and King Snedley's.
One prized artifact was made by Manhattan Premium Beer, Al Capone's old brewery, and depicts the New York skyline against a metallic orange sky. Other esoterica range from the cone-topped Kopper Kettle (vintage 1936-40) to a sexy, green-eyed Playmate can that was withdrawn after Hugh Hefner threatened legal action and the james Bond 007 Special Blend that was marketed for only six months by Baltimore's National Brewing Co.
One can fan, an Illinois truck driver named Jerry Menozzi, has 1,400 beer cans in his basement, including a Monarch that his great-grandmother kept for decades in a drawer with her lace underwear. Morrie McPherson, of Sycamore, Ill., lucked into one of the biggest beer-can bonanzas in B.C.C.A. history: 60 cases of 25-year-old Goetz Country Club cone-top cansall unopenedthat had been lying in the musty basement of an old bar. Robert Myers of Oakland, Calif, traveled all the way across the continent to Owl's Head, N.Y., after hearing of a lode in the attic of an abandoned railroad station; sure enough, he uncovered thousands of different pre-World War II makes and became overnight the J. Paul Getty of candom.
Beer Canvention. The B.C.C.A., founded only four years ago by seven beer buffs in St. Louis, numbers among members of its 14 chapters 40 accountants, 51 schoolteachers, 14 college professors, ten doctors, 57 engineers, 13 lawyers, six cartographers, 15 journalistsand only seven bartenders. Several ministers are also can cultists, including a Connecticut pastor who starts letters to fellow collectors "Dearly Beerloved." The association distributes a bimonthly newsletter, holds a sudsy annual "can-vention" that was attended this fall by more than 600 enthusiasts, and each year bestows on some beer-busty lass the dubious title of Miss Beer Can. Members range in rank from "brewery worker," with up to 249 cans, to "grand brewmaster" (1,000 or more).
