A Sioux Falls beer maker has partnered with Siouxland Heritage Museums to memorialize the 100-year anniversary of Prohibition and the culmination of the decades-long push for voting rights for women.

Tea-Totaled, the newest brew from Fernson Brewing Co., will be on tap from 5 to 7 p.m. Nov. 7 at the Old Court House Museum in downtown Sioux Falls for the opening of the museum’s new exhibit cataloging the history of the women’s suffrage movement and the failed attempt by feds to ban alcohol.

“They kind of wanted to do something about alcohol and about women, and it all kind of worked out perfectly,” Fernson Brewer Nicki Werner said.

Fittingly, Tea-Totaled represents a collaborative effort by women from the Sioux Falls beer scene. Werner made the batch with help from other beer makers, including representatives from Lupulin Brewing Company and Covert Artisan Ales, she said.

More: Fernson set to open Monday in downtown Sioux Falls. Check out the new space

Their brew session earlier this month represents the first effort by the Sioux Falls chapter of the Pink Boots Society, a nonprofit association that provides education and services to women brewers across the globe.

The museum hopes to show the correlation between women’s suffrage and Prohibition, which began in 1920, just before women finally gained the right to vote, said Molly Engquist, curator of exhibits for the museum.

Museum leadership was looking to mark the occasion and Werner came up with the idea of making it a Pink Boots brew, Engquist said.

“It just sounds like a great organization to support the brewing industry in general while focusing on women,” she said.

Any remaining beer from last month's batch of Tea-Totaled will be on tap at Fernson's new downtown brew pub, Werner said.

Werner used a special hop blend from Pink Boots’ annual celebration of International Women’s Day to make the beer.

Tea-Totaled will be a saison, a fruity and spice pale ale, made with lemon and earl gray tea, Werner said.

“I’m really excited about the museum because I think beer has a super rich interesting context and history that’s super connected to social and economic movements in the country,” Werner said. “A lot of times we don’t get to think about that.”