The Peebles family fashioned a Cincinnati business that not only advertised itself as the “largest distributor of pure food products in the Ohio Valley” but boasted of being “largest handlers of pure, ripe, old, mellow whiskies in the United States.” True claims or not, the Joseph R. Peebles Sons Company epitomized how liquor sales meant profits and success for a pre-Prohibition “fancy” grocery.
The Peebles claimed 1840 as the origins of their grocery. Actually the store had been founded, as one author put it: “Way back in the early days of Cincinnati, when forest trees and open country abounded.” A trio of enterprising youths opened a grocery store downtown selling tea, coffee and sugar. Within a year they sold out to William Sharp Peebles, who had migrated to southern Ohio from Chambersburg, Pennsylvania. In 1840 William hired a younger brother to help him — Joseph Rusk Peebles who had been laboring for little money in a Cincinnati furniture factory.


In 1864, at only age 46, the health of Joseph R. began to falter and two sons, Joseph S. and Edwin C. Peebles, increasingly assumed management responsibilities. When their father died two years later, the brothers carried on for three years while the estate was being adjudicated and then purchased the goodwill and stock, renaming the business the Joseph R. Peebles Sons Company. In 1872, Joseph S. bought out his brother and became the sole proprietor.
The company also claimed to be authorized bottlers for “Mellwood" and “Normandy” whiskeys. These were two premium brands from the Louisville-based Mellwood Distilling Company, owned by George Swearingen. [See my post on this organization posted October 8, 2015.] The illustration of Peebles’ wholesale operation below prominently features Mellwood Bourbon. The organization also was distributing Hiram Walker & Sons well-regarded “Canadian Club.”



Under the leadership of Joseph S., the business continued to grow. It was the first mercantile house in Cincinnati to have a Bell telephone and among the first to introduce typewriters and other machines into the front office. Joseph himself moved among the elite of the city, even befriending Grover Cleveland on the former President’s visits to Lake Erie on fishing trips. As Joseph S. aged, however, his health declined and he died at the age of 71 in March 1916. He was buried in Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati, in a plot not far from his father. Their headstones are shown below.
The business carried on under the Peebles name until 1931 when the economic pressures of the National Depression are said to have forced the closing of the Government Square headquarters and two branches, including Peebles’ Corners. Said one observer: “The ‘fancy groceries’ that Peebles was noted for became luxuries that few could afford….”
Just as important, I would contend, was the advent of National Prohibition that cut off all of Peebles’ highly profitable trade in alcohol. Whiskey and wine had been the company’s life blood; termination after 91 years in business may have been inevitable after their sale was banned in 1921.
Notes: The information for this post was gathered from a number of sources, of which two were primary: 1) The publication “The Industries of Cincinnati: Manufacturing, Establishments and Business Houses,” The Metropolitan Publishing Co., 1886. No author(s) given. 2) An informative website called Cincinnati Views authored by Don Prout from which I have used illustrations of the Peebles stores, inside and out.
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