This is an  introduction to my new blog, called "Those Pre-Pro Whiskey Men!"  It is a  spin-off from my earlier and current blog called "Bottles, Booze and  Back Stories" with a web address of bottlesboozeandbackstories(at)blogspot.com.   That earlier blog is devoted to a wide range of subjects, loosely  arranged around bottle and ceramics collecting,  whiskey and other  alcoholic beverages, and esoteric bits of history.  It has attracted a  modest audience of collectors, genealogists,  friends, relatives and  idle curiosity seekers.
This blog is aimed at an even more  esoteric audience:  Persons interested in the American whiskey industry  before the advent of National Prohibition in 1920.  That date marks a  distinct watershed in the making and marketing of whiskey.   After  Repeal things would never be the same.  The "Dry" 14 years had meant the  demise of literally thousands of distilleries, liquor distributors,  saloons and brand names from all across the Nation.   In their place  after 1934 emerged a few large organizations and a diminished number of  brands.
Nevertheless, making and selling whiskey from the  founding of the U.S. was a major industry.  George Washington, we know,  was an important early distiller.    The men who over time built and  maintained this industry often had interesting and notable careers.   In  addition to their histories are the artifacts they have left behind in  many forms,  items that often are avidly collected today.
In  recent years a very small group of individuals has attempted to gather  historical material on as many of these whiskey men and their products  as possible.  I am fortunate to have been acquainted with several of  them.   One pioneer was Robert E. Snyder of Amarillo,  Texas, who died this year.  His work in researching whiskey brands and companies began when  he was writing three books featuring whiskey miniature bottles.  In 1980  Bob also published a book on whiskey ads and other ephemera called  "Whiskey Paper."  More recently he sold a binder reference that  lists hundreds of pre-Prohibition whiskey brands, the outfits that  produced them, and their location.   His contribution was enormous.
Bob's work in turn was an  inspiration and major source for Dr. Barbara Edmonson, a college  professor from Chico, California.  Through her collection of old whiskey  shot glasses she became interested in research on their origins.  She  amassed a collection of old directory pages for distilleries and liquor  distributors from virtually every major city in the United States.  From  those and other materials she wrote two books, "Historic Shot Glasses:   The Pre-Prohibition Era," (1985, reprinted 1992) and "Old Advertising  Spirits Glasses (1998).
Occasioned by my collection of ceramic  whiskey jugs, as I began to write extensively on this era, I was in  touch with Dr. Edmonson, now deceased, and purchased from her the  directory pages.  Those played an important part in some 200 articles,  many of which have been compiled into two volumes: "The American Whiskey  Jug" (2002) and "Mostly Whiskey" (2009). Most of the jug collection  subsequently was sold at auction; I currently collect whiskey-related  paperweights.
With the dawn of the Internet age another major  researcher has emerged.  He is Robin Preston of Altanta, Georgia, a shot  glass collector.   Drawing on the work of Snyder, Edmonson, myself, and  others -- as well as his own investigations -- Robin has created the www.pre-pro.com website that makes  much of this accumulated research readily available online.  With a  strong mixture of factual material and images he has taken the data  resources to an entirely new level of richness.
Why then a felt  need for a new blog on this topic?  Two reasons.  First, Robin's site is  limited by space in providing narrative accounts of the organizations  that he documents.  Second, over the years I have accumulated a great  deal of information on pre-Prohibition whiskey men (few women were ever  involved in the trade), information that lends itself to the kind of  short illustrated article that a blog makes possible.
In the  posts to follow I will relate the stories of many enterprising Americans  and their enterprises, illustrating them with appropriate photos and  images.  My plan is to put up a new post every two weeks or so.  If you  have just found the site,  I hope you will be encouraged to come back  from time to time.
Jack Sullivan 4/6/2011
 
Just discovered your Blog. Very informative. I also found your other blog which has incredible information too. Are many of the pictures you have of items in your personal collection or just found on the internet?
ReplyDeleteAvid Collector: Glad you like my blogs. I have suspended the "Memories" blog for the time being in favor of "Whiskey Men. As for the items shown, some few were from my collections but all jugs and bottles except my whiskey paperweights were sold at auction or given away to museums a long time ago.
ReplyDelete