Tony Corcoran
Encyclopedia
Tony Corcoran spent thirty-eight years working in Guinness and has recently written The Goodness of Guinness, a book which examines the brewery's operation and the working lives of the thousands of Dublin people who depended on Guinness for their livelihood.
and is the first illustrated social history of St James's Gate Brewery. It includes in-depth discussions of the major contribution made by the Guinness company to the welfare of its staff and the wider community. The introduction is written by Finbarr Flood, a former director of Guinness and author of In Full Flood.
Life and career
Tony Corcoran's grandparents joined Guinness in 1891, and his father started working for the company in 1924. Tony himself spent thirty-eight years in Guinness, working in the highly specialised brewing area. He later took on a growing responsibility for staff training, becoming brewing training manager. On retiring from the company in 1996, he set out to mine the company's extensive archive in order to chart the history of the James's Gate Brewery and, in particular, Guinness's progressive approach to staff welfare.Works
The Goodness of Guinness: The Brewery, Its People and the City of Dublin was published in 2005 by Liberties PressLiberties Press
Liberties Press is one of Ireland's leading publishers of non-fiction titles of Irish and international interest. Since its inception in 2003 it has published on a wide range of subjects; from titles of literary interest such as John Montague's A Ball of Fire to Con Houlihan's collection of...
and is the first illustrated social history of St James's Gate Brewery. It includes in-depth discussions of the major contribution made by the Guinness company to the welfare of its staff and the wider community. The introduction is written by Finbarr Flood, a former director of Guinness and author of In Full Flood.
External links
- http://www.libertiespress.com/cartage.html?main_page=product_book_info&cPath=2&products_id=14&zenid=7j5qflq6r0fm3buarm16rjbni4&cartage_alias=cartage The author's page at libertiespress.com