Prohibition in Bardstown: Bourbon, Bootlegging & Saloons
By Dixie Hibbs and Doris Settles
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About this ebook
Dixie Hibbs
Dixie Hibbs is a Bardstown and bourbon historian. In 2004, she became the first woman inductee for the Bourbon Hall of Fame. Dixie is also responsible for Wickland Mansion's "Half a Pint of Whiskey History with a Shot of Humor" program. She is the former mayor of Bardstown and has been a Nelson County Historian for thirty years. Doris Settles is a freelance writer and former University of Kentucky professor and journalist for Kentucky Standard Newspaper. Her work has been published in Bluegrass, Kentucky Monthly, Kentucky Living, Courier-Journal, Lexington Herald-Ledger and other local and national publications. Doris holds a bachelor's degree in English/journalism and has a master's degree in instructional systems design.
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Prohibition in Bardstown - Dixie Hibbs
generations.
INTRODUCTION
I live in a section of Kentucky where we have an abundance of Pretty Women, Fast Horses and Good Whiskey.
—Fielding Merrifield
Representative to the Kentucky General Assembly from Bardstown in the 1840s, Fielding Merrifield had just submitted his first bill and taken his seat when a prominent Whig leader from the mountains inquired who the gentleman was who had offered the bill. Quick as a flash, the Bardstonian was on his feet and, looking toward his colleagues, said:
Mr. Speaker, it is with pleasure that I arise to enlighten the gentleman from the mountain tops where the invigorating atmosphere lends strength to all so fortunate as to hale from that section of our Commonwealth, where the huckleberry and the wild grape vine are a distinct part of nature’s production and where delightful breezes fan the brow of the weary traveler. But Mr. speaker, I live in a section of Kentucky where we have an abundance of Pretty Women, Fast Horses and Good Whiskey,
where on every side can be observed waving bluegrass and growing crops, and there are no weeds or briars with which to contend and, Mr. Speaker, for the enlightenment of the gentleman from the hill-tops, I subscribe myself as his truly, Fielding Merrifield.
This building replaced a Georgian-style stone courthouse in 1892 and is still in use. The design was the result of an architectural contest, and this Richardsonian-Romanesque creation came out on top. Photo courtesy of Dixie Hibbs collection.
It would be virtually impossible to write any sort of history of Bardstown without writing about distilling. From its very beginnings in 1776, when Daniel Boone’s near relative Wattie Boone and his friend Stephen Ritchie first began manufacturing whiskey for sale near Pottinger’s Creek, to today’s internationally known labels like Jim Beam, Heaven Hill and Maker’s Mark, distilling—both legal and illegal—has been an ongoing and highly profitable business in this area for over 250 years, and that includes during the Prohibition years.
In fact, Thomas Lincoln, who then lived at Hodgenville, some ten miles from Boone’s Distillery, was in tight circumstances and applied in 1814 for work at John Boone’s distillery. Boone gave him a job and found him to be a conscientious and quick employee. Lincoln and his family moved into a house about one mile from the distillery, but this was still too far to go home for lunch. Abraham carried his father’s meals to him. The year before the Lincolns moved to Indiana, Abraham had begun assisting his father in the distillery, and as Wattie said, that boy is bound to make a great man, no matter what trade he follows. And if he goes into the whiskey business, he’ll be the best distiller in the land.
Of course, where Lincoln located in Indiana there were no distilleries, so he was compelled to learn a new business—and so it goes.
Named for Virginia governor Thomas Nelson, the geography of Nelson County has changed dramatically over the centuries. From December 31, 1776, to November 1, 1780, the area known now as the state of Kentucky was called Kentucke County, Virginia. On June 30, 1780, a law creating the three initial Kentucky counties of Jefferson, Fayette and Lincoln was signed by Virginia governor Thomas Jefferson. Nearly two-thirds of Jefferson County—424 square miles of it—was soon to be renamed. On November 27, 1784, Virginia governor Patrick Henry signed the law creating Nelson County out of what had been Jefferson, effective January 1, 1785. On June 1, 1792, Kentucky became the fifteenth state admitted to the United States of America, with a total of nine counties, all of which still exist. Over the years, these initial counties were divided and subdivided, increasing the number of counties but not the size of the state.
Just from the original Nelson County have come, in whole or in part, an amazing total of nineteen additional counties, listed here by date of separation:
Today, Kentucky is fourth in the nation in number of counties, at 120. In fact, there is a story that circulates in Kentucky lore that a brother and sister, celebrating their ninety-sixth and ninety-fourth birthdays, respectively, had lived in six different counties without ever moving from the home where they were born.
According to the earliest records, the first land claims were made in the area that is now Bardstown in 1775–76. In 1776, of course, the United States of America was formed from the British colonies. In June 1788, the Convention of Virginia decided, by a vote of eighty-eight to seventyeight, in favor of adopting the Constitution of the United States—with the Kentucky delegation voting eleven against it and three in its favor. The independent spirit of Kentuckians would rear its head once again in less than twenty years when the territory petitioned the government for statehood, which was granted on June 1, 1792, barely avoiding cession to Spain.
In 1775, William Bard, brother of land developer David Bard and a third brother, Richard, came to Kentucke, then a county in Virginia, to oversee the development of a land grant of one thousand acres issued by the Assembly of Pennsylvania. He came as a locater and would not lay out the town until 1780. In the spring and summer of 1780, at the Falls of the Ohio, William talked thirty-three settlers into coming with him to build the town of Salem. The name didn’t stick, however. In various historical documents, the town is called Salem, New Salem, Beardstown, Baird’s Town, Bard’s Town and, finally, Bardstown. Within the next twenty-five years, the small communities of Boston, Bloomfield, Cox’s Creek, New Haven and New Hope were settled in all parts of the county. Most of them were along the old buffalo trails, the rivers and, later, the railroads.
From these uncertain but resolute beginnings, the state of Kentucky and the fledgling Union would see great benefit. From its inception, Bardstown was a center for education, culture, law and politics—and from the very beginning, it recognized the talent of the county’s whiskey makers. Bardstown whiskey was sought after for its quality.
As the size and number of distilleries grew, so did the reputation of Bardstown becoming an economic center in the state, although almost all of the whiskey produced in the first fifty or so years was consumed locally. But by 1820, small amounts of whiskey were being exported for sale. In addition to the home-based and a few commercial distilleries, Bardstown was thriving with nail and cotton factories, spinning mills and tanneries. By the middle of the nineteenth century, Bardstown had opened its first privately owned bank—Wilson & Muir—which still operates today. According to the bank’s website:
Boone & Brothers Distillery had this photo taken in 1894 for a calendar. Taken in Early Times, Nelson County, Kentucky, this promotional calendar probably hung in many local homes and businesses. Leaning out of the upper right window is Frank Boone. H. Boone, Walter Smith, a son of Frank, Pete Brown, George Robinson, George Eaton, Goo Bradley, Frank Teapot
Smith, Nick Boone, Jack Nelson, Judge Morgan Yewell and Hiner Beam are also pictured. Photo courtesy of Nelson County Historical Association.
The enactment of the National Banking Act of 1863 and the end of the Civil War gave the opportunity for two merchants, Richard D. Shipp and Jeremiah Wilson, to obtain a charter to open the first bank in Nelson County. In February of 1868, ownership interest in the bank was transferred to Bardstown attorney Jasper W. Muir and businessman William Wilson. In 1890 the firm became the Banking House of Wilson & Muir.
The banks of Bardstown were instrumental in financing the rebuilding of the rusty distilleries in 1933. This 1890 photo is of the Wilson & Muir Bank, founded in 1865 and still in the same location 150 years later. Photo courtesy of Nelson County Historical Association.
Farmers Bank was fifteen years old when it bought and remodeled this building in 1923. Farmers Bank helped finance the repair of the distilleries after repeal. Photo courtesy of Nelson County Historical Association.
The emergence of new distilleries and larger production of whiskey, along with supporting industries such as cooperages, sawmills and the like, created a need for more banks in the county. Each small community—New Hope, Bloomfield, Boston and New Haven—had its own banks. Another bank in Bardstown, the Peoples Bank (1897), was organized during this period. In 1907, Early Times Distillery owner John H. Beam became the first president of the Farmer’s Bank & Trust Company. It continues today under the name of Town & Country Bank & Trust.
And of course, money brings political influence. Controversy over the land titles, which was heard at a District Court of Quarter Sessions in Bardstown, drew the best legal talent. Six renowned lawyers formed the Pleiades Club to debate national and local politics. Matters of law, philosophy, religion and ideology were regular servings at these frequently hotly debated sessions, surely fueled by local whiskey. The sale and consumption of alcohol, even in the area where the best stuff is made, has been a topic in Bardstown since these well-known debates.
This 1800 stone courthouse was the site of many trials for illicit distilling in Nelson County for over a century. A brick one replaced it in 1892. This is where Prohibition moonshiners and moonshine runners were tried during the 1920s. Photo courtesy of Nelson County Historical Association.
Shortly before the Civil War, railroads were being laid throughout the fledgling country to open up new markets and provide faster transport of distilled goods. From the earliest years of settlement, goods were shipped on flatboats down the rivers to the Ohio, where they continued on the Mississippi to New Orleans. Shipments upriver were not possible until the invention and wider adoption of the steamboat many decades later. Out of the port of New Orleans, ships heading north along the East Coast to New England carried Kentucky whiskey, rope and tobacco. This took time; time meant aging, and the discovery that aged whiskey had a smoother taste than green whiskey changed the industry. Through the first twenty years, however, Spain was in control of the Mississippi River, forbidding the new country access. This was a huge problem for Kentucky manufacturers, resulting in decades of debate and deceit by both colonists and the Spanish to convince Kentucky to become a Spanish territory. Wouldn’t life in America be different if Kentucky had ultimately gone that direction?
Distilling isn’t unique to Kentucky. Far from it. Many distillers and farmers in established regions like Pennsylvania migrated to the new territory, bringing with them their knowledge, skills and independence. Reducing the bulk of a corn harvest to something useful as currency and a nonperishable product just made sense. In 1811, more than two thousand legal
distillers were listed in Kentucky tax rolls; most of them were farmer/distillers. But those