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18,214
Albert Bacon Blanton (1881 - 1959)

After purchasing the O. F. C. Distillery in 1879 George T. Stagg continued to operate “Old Fire and Copper” & in 1904 the name was changed to the "George T. Stagg Distillery”. Albert Bacon Blanton had started to work there in 1897 at the age of 16 as an office boy. After his hard work led to added responsibility & several promotions, “Colonel” Blanton’s distillery education led to him being promoted to President of the company in 1921. He immediately began to look for solutions to an industry in decline since WWI, & entering the second yr of Prohibition. Blanton managed to secure from the US gov’t one of only six special licenses/permits to produce “medicinal whiskey” during the yrs of Prohibition. The Great Depression, a devastating flood in 1937, & WWII were yet to come.

When the US entered WWII in 1941 the gov’t made several requests that all distilleries cease production of whiskey in order to supply pure alcohol to the U. S. Army. Blanton is credited with executing a successful plan of expanding & diversifying the distillery to meet the needs of the Army for pure alcohol while still maintaining the production of bourbon. It was during this time of expansion the distillery grew from a mere 14 buildings to a 114-building giant compound.

Albert Blanton retired in 1943. The Sazerac family purchased the George T. Stagg Distillery in 1992, & renamed it the “Buffalo Trace Distillery” in 1999.

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GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,793
Location
New Forest
hat walk.jpg

https://www.londonhatweek.com/
London Hat Week has been running since 2014. Annoyingly, it always clashed with one of the festivals that we go to. London Hat Week is an event that we are keen to attend, so, we decided to give it a go this year only to find that the organisers were overwhelmed by the popularity of the event and in 2023 they took a hiatus. We shall have to see if they return in 2024. I do hope so.
 
Messages
18,214
“We make fine Bourbon at a profit if we can, at a loss if we must, but always, Fine Bourbon“ – Julian “Pappy” Van Winkle Sr. (1874 – 1965)

Julian “Pappy” Van Winkle Sr at the Stitzel-Weller Distillery (1935).

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Julian Van Winkle Jr., Julian Van Winkle III, Julian P. “Pappy” Van Winkle Sr. at Stitzel-Weller Distillery (1958).

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Messages
18,214
In 1887 Jacob Rieger started J. Rieger & Co, a whiskey distillery in Kansas City, MO & quickly became the largest mail order whiskey distillery in the US. By 1915 Rieger had opened the Rieger Hotel with a bar serving beer & his Rye whiskey. Once hyped as being the largest mail-order whiskey house in the United States, all was lost during the dry days of Prohibition.

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Thirsty days hath September,
April, June and November;
All the rest are thirsty, too;
And what’s a thirsty (wo)man to do?
Drink J. Rieger’s Whiskey! Salut!
 

Mighty44

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,008
1925 Phillips Petroleum Stockholders meeting & oilfield tour.

L to R:

J.W. Noyes
Ed Landreth
Harold Barker
L. E. Phillips
T. B. Yarbrough
August Heckscher
E. E. Du Pont
Frank Phillips
Amon Carter
J. H. Nail
Gen. Samuel McRoberts
B. S. Walker

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BBQ after the oilfield tour.

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Dabney Coleman third from left? Love how they’re making those homburgs look like lived/in everyday hats at the bbq.
 

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