Atherton Whiskey was a pre-prohibition brand of Kentucky Straight Bourbon whiskey first produced by J M Atherton & Co, a chemical and distilling business.[1]
First bottled and marketed in 1867,[2] it was once part of the largest whiskey making operation in Kentucky.[3][4]
The J. M. Atherton Company (1867–1899)
The J M Atherton Company was established in an area now known as Athertonville, Kentucky in 1867[5] by John McDougal Atherton, who had entered into this profession as a young man[6] with Marshall Key, his stepfather as a large investor.[7] Company headed paper from 1872 refers to J.M. Atherton & Co and immediately underneath in larger font "Distiller's of pure copper whisky". Once the company reached 200 employees, it became the largest employer in LaRue County. Shipments would leave by rail from the New Haven Depot across the river in Nelson County, via a rail extension from the distilleries in LaRue County. Other business enterprises to support the distiller followed, such as a store and the Atherton Hotel in the 1890s.[8]
Already with a courthouse and a new school,[9]
The Whiskey Trust and the Julius Kessler (1899–1920)
The Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse Company, a manifestation of the "Whiskey Trust", was set up initially to consolidate and bring regulation to the US whiskey industry. However very quickly it started taking control of many bourbon distilleries with Coon Hollow Whiskey (1881).
The Whiskey Trust assumed ownership in 1889. In November they sold 85,000 barrels for $1,000,000.[35]
General management of all operations was soon after handled by Julius Kessler, who was based in Chicago.[36] In 1909, he announced his retirement from the whiskey business,[37] although that appears not to have occurred, resulting in greater independence from the Whiskey Trust. He went on to register brand "Atherton" as a US patent in 1911.
His operations, including his own brand Kessler Whiskey, were forced to close with the enactment of Prohibition in 1920.
The Prohibition era (1920–1933)
Most of the former Atherton distilleries did not survive prohibition. With the onset of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, the Whiskey Trust would eventually become part of American Medicinal Spirits Company in 1927. During prohibition they produced "medicinal whiskey" under the Atherton brand in one pint bottles for sick, blind, and non-mobile patients. They evolved into the National Distillers Group. None of the original Atherton brand names were used after this period ended.
Cummings Distillery Corporation of Athertonville (1933–1946)
The "mothballed" Atherton distillery, complete with plant and equipment was acquired and rebuilt by Arthur J. Cummings Jr. and a partner in 1933. It was renamed the Cummins-Collins distillery.[38] Production resumed on August 13, 1935, after being shut down for seventeen years. On September 26, 1935, it was reported that orders were so great, they doubled the mashing.[39] By the time of commencing production it was renamed the Cummings Distillery Corporation of Athertonville. Their brands included "A.J. Cummins Kentucky Straight Bourbon" and "Singing Sam Whiskey". However, the site fell into disrepair with Cummings closing down the plant shortly before it was acquired by the Seagram Company in 1946.
Seagrams Athertonville distillery (1946–1972)
The Athertonville distillery supported Seagram's extensive portfolio of blended whiskeys.[40] The core of the facility was destroyed by a fire on February 19, 1972, and put over 50 employees out of work. This story was covered in depth in the Kentucky Standard on February 24, 1972. A fire had broken out in the still house about 3:40 a.m. Fire crew fought the blaze for four hours, containing the fire within the brick walls. The power house, fermenting room and evaporator escaped damage and did not spread to the three warehouses where the whiskey was stored.[41] All distillery operations ceased on the old Atherton site after this date. Since 1990, warehouses at the former distillery site have been used by an independent company specializing in the manufacture of whiskey barrels.[42]
See also
- List of historic whisky distilleries
- Bourbon whiskey
- American whiskey
- Bottled in bond
Further reading
References
- Louisville of Today. A souvenir book of the city of Louisville, Kentucky created for distribution during the G.A.R. (Grand Army of the Republic) encampment. Includes descriptions and portraits of government officials and business owners, illustrations and photographs of buildings, businesses and residences in the city and advertisements. 1895^
- Kroll, Harry Harrison. Bluegrass, Belles, and Bourbon: A Pictorial History of Whisky in Kentucky 1967^
- The Encyclopedia of Louisville (includes entry for J. M. Atherton and P. L. Atherton)