J.W. Lees Brewery
J.W. Lees & Co Ltd is a brewery and pub company in Middleton, Greater Manchester, that has produced real ale since 1828. JW Lees is the oldest operating brewery in Manchester The brewery owns and operates 150 pubs, inns and hotels mainly in North West England and North Wales. It also owns wine distributor Willoughby's.
History
[Image:Jwlees.jpg|left|thumb|John William Lees]The brewery was formed in 1828 when retired cotton manufacturer John Lees purchased land in Middleton, Lancashire and built Greengate Brewery, from which the company still operates. His grandson, John William Lees, took over the company in 1876. The Greengate Brewery was rebuilt in 1876. The business was re-incorporated in 1955 when R.W.T. Lees-Jones bought the share capital of the company back under single ownership.
The company is still family owned and operated. When William, Simon, Christina, Anna and Michael Lees-Jones joined Richard and Christopher at J.W. Lees in the 1990s, they were the sixth generation from the founder to work in the company. In 2023 Louis Lees-Jones joined the company as the first member of the seventh generation of the family to work at J.W. Lees, opening Founder's Hall in February 2024.
In 2003 HRH Charles, Prince of Wales visited to celebrate the brewery's 175th anniversary.
In 2011, J.W. Lees announced a new beer, The Governor, in collaboration with chef Marco Pierre White, and in 2018 The Governor Lager was added to the range. Also in 2018, the company announced a collaboration with physicist Brian Cox, an amber ale entitled Cosmic Brew. In 2018, the brewery converted the old boiler house on site into a microbrewery in order to create more experimental small barrelage productions.
In 2019, J.W. Lees won Best Brewing Pub company at the publican awards.
In 2025, J.W. Lees was granted exclusive brewing rights of Boddingtons Cask. The cask version of Boddingtons was last brewed in 2012 by Hyde's Brewery. The beer closely matches the original version which was brewed by Boddingtons themselves at Strangeways Brewery. Boddingtons closed their brewery in 2005 and was subsequently demolished and replaced by a car park.
Beers
DraughtBottled
| Name | ABV | Notes |
| Moonraker Strong Ale | 6.5% | A reddish brown beer. |
| Manchester Star Ale | 7.3% | A dark, strong ale discovered in a recipe book from 1884. |
| The Governor | 4.1% | Amber/auburn beer co-created by Marco Pierre White. |
| The Governor Lager | 3.9% | Continental style lager co-created by Marco Pierre White. |
| Harvest Ale | 11.5% | A barley wine, released in vintages, that was introduced in 1986. |
In addition, J.W. Lees brews Ansells Mild and Carlsberg Lager.
Boilerhouse Microbrewery
In 2018, the brewery converted their historic boiler house into a microbrewery. Overseen by head brewer Michael Lees-Jones, the boilerhouse allows small batch productions of more unusual and niche beers. Past productions have included a Vanilla White Stout, Chocolate Orange Mild and Strawberry Milkshake IPA.Public Houses
[Image:thejc.jpg|right|thumb|A J.W. Lees pub in Middleton]J.W. Lees has around 150 public houses, inns and hotels, primarily in residential areas in the North West of England and North Wales. All but one of the pubs are freehold. The majority of these are run by tenant landlords, while roughly one third of the houses are managed by the brewery. The core of J.W. Lees' estate is situated in North Manchester and Oldham. This stems from the time of horse drawn dray wagons and how far they might travel in a day. The advent of motor travel allowed the brewery to acquire sites further afield, with the company gradually expanding its pub estate into wider Lancashire, Cheshire, North Wales and Yorkshire. In 2009 J.W. Lees bought ten pubs from Punch Taverns and has continued to steadily grow its estate.