![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiqOBRT9p3qz5sbnYGEV-wIYOX1kRspTwkqGekzkPDtNiy-37ntKDwmoJPBnpNp_0qWpKrA_CLgEE1PfgLi91dWVVqoCyY9kXcmxbVELxuQvWUo0qob_r3v2WycZhWqEWF67YmNdSRNot0C/s1600/1.+Gorman+pix.jpg-+R.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhMm8caCekFOHXQ4m8iKFbEEW905IMHKRHt5F8o-3jIug14z6WIntJzOx6UEfE7gCSz3zlZSiGZtUdMB6j6ApmtcOVFLpEhZ2GtNNRr9VZ7IcD3L39l99WTU97vmKkggSPH1Qo9f6y6Hqdt/s320/2.+FRont+page+cat..jpg-+L.jpg)
Page 5: Gorman’s Private Stock….This Whiskey is put up on my own formula, and is considered by judges and experts to be the best blended whiskey on the market today.
Page 6: “The World Cannot Beat It….Gorman’s Pure Rye is a brand made from the very best Maryland and Pennsylvania Ryes distilled, always mellow and nice. The doctors’ best tonic; good for the sick and doesn’t hurt the well.”
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhoEOcbAY8lcN4DNvpJO56zgn-jPvIdGExJkOkhxChLaIV-fRHPWMVUVl28p4wpTThYxPIQS3aGyXjPJJfi8vNTtzuS_Xmqky6n-_kh4irIG64jzVIu-MH0ltLGTsmYmfG9x2vJuSgVw2C-/s320/3.+Page+9.jpg-+R.jpg)
Page 9: Shown here is an illustrated ad that indicates Gorman’s Private Stock High-Ball Whiskey “makes old men young again.” Wink, wink.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhZbyAZE3F2MKw9U6yH-MvtaR1VzYzoakDPzNDPbtvvWpsEGJSx4iJJDh_y-jfIkCRzohQR3Q5nsF133kiOWBGUBCWJnbToJpMSc5OeMB5ELq_KO2AVlhkRxDIGwViRl35g58W80Xs2IhxF/s320/4.+Gorman+corn+whiskey.jpg-+L.jpg)
James Gorman’s “no holds barred” attitude was typical of his life. He was born in Lynchburg, Virginia, in August 1866, the son of Margaret (Moriarity) and Richard Gorman, both immigrants from Ireland. His father was a worker on the railroad. The Ancestry record of his siblings indicates two half-brothers born in Ireland, two sisters and a brother who died in infancy, a brother and sister who lived to maturity, and a half-brother who may have been the product of his mother’s remarriage. Gorman appears to received the standard schooling of that time in Virginia, elementary and some secondary.
Lynchburg city directories first record Gorman’s career path in 1885, when at the age of 19, he was employed as a clerk at Adams Bros. & Paynes, a local company that sold “coal, wood, lumber, lime, cement, baled forage, carriages, wagons & etc.” About 1890 he moved on and up to the position of the bookkeeper for Bell, Barker & Jennings, a Lynchburg hardware wholesaler. By 1897 he had struck out on his own as the proprietor of a Martha Washington Candy Works, a national franchise confectionary, a shop likely run out of his home at 1103 12th Street.
In October 1887 Gorman married Elizabeth J. “Lizzie” Magri, the daughter of Frank Magri, a Lynchburg grocer who had emigrated from Italy and Mary Jane (McCarron) Magri, an Irish immigrant. James and Lizzie both were 21 years old. The couple would have ten children over the next eighteen years, two of whom died infancy. Shown below is a family photo from about 1912. Many of these youngsters would grow up to distinguished careers.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiAu0w8Nv3MiBNPBRR2IsyeGfKcKWnumWuJliMQYdFWOC9a-IBrkTCMf_swFhXSQ6ISrZe7Kyp1T7b_v01gCyGiJURhue5eRaE5vuvp3VTQF_bYa6rEc6H6ufvBaNLA8Y5i0sD20cL5KJ0K/s200/8.+2020+Gorman+Rye+LBurg+Glass+4.png-+L.png)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjAK8Ls18ghF6XSVBHS9reJx76BpNo8_cCnsIUIWW2EN443BBT7GGPD-NS8alESSfxGb5RDOLOkfaDg1dZEuCc7OIp_uAJtAuawKFWujwu6WCHkg8kouyb-p4h22Bw-rYAzA_E8R3ID_xS-/s200/6.+Old+Charter+SGjpg-+R.jpg)
More important, he was marketing his own whiskey. The 1908 directory listed him as a “rectifier,” that is, someone who was receiving barrels of raw whiskey from distillers in Maryland, Kentucky, Pennsylvania and perhaps elsewhere, mixing them to achieve color, taste and smoothness and then decanting the blends into labeled bottles for sale. This process required real skill to accomplish successfully and it appears James had mastered it. Thus were the origins of “Gorman’s Pure Rye,” “Gorman’s Private Stock,” “Gorman’s Piney River Corn Whiskey,” and “Piedmont Corn Whiskey.” The Lynchburg liquor dealer might have been responsible for other brands but since he apparently never trademarked any of his whiskeys, it is impossible to identify them. Those would have been sold at retail in glass bottles of varying sizes with flasks as the most popular.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhS0D2zMb9Aut-rRgcbOR1tXTfblfHotdnPJMzVVdDMemVXY3gLPeMXjqIwPtPpYDFI37o8Qu6BexTZkvBA0QT4XnEBiHnSczNlhxTPoayUv5UMwIhfkwQ-5gaI50SpbTKzkAotPeOAu8dj/s200/9c.++John+Finn+Gorman+Rye+1.jpg-+R.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhbtXiv0hcN2kUz_Xa3PVgxLVvALYm_W9wU4u9Uqw7VBHvKcj_CAoqWenESoR5BiL7o6-AZIIAqYwTSeg_2hIsy6OmD5KuhyphenhyphenrJqQlxAGTRy2TRRYzXTFqGq6siPzD8vYnF2Da-s6OLnaEns/s200/9b.+Guggin+SG.jpg-+AC.jpg)
Events seemed to be going Gorman’s way until 1909. After the Civil War Virginia had allowed independent municipalities to enact “local option” dry laws. Votes on whether or not to allow the sale of alcohol in Lynchburg were put to citizens in referendums in 1886, 1890, and 1898. Championed by saloonkeepers like Gorman, each time the “wets” won. In 1909, however, Lynchburg’s prohibitionists were successful in passing an ordinance prohibiting the sale of liquor within the city limits. Gorman was forced to shut down his bar and liquor sales.
Continuing at his 63 Ninth Street address, Gorman advertised his establishment as selling soft drinks and cigars. In truth, however, he had another ploy in mind for continuing to serve his local clientele. He established a branch of James Gorman Company 165 miles west of Lynchburg in Staunton, Virginia, probably employing no more than one or two people. He would take orders for liquor at his soft drink emporium, transmit them to Staunton where they would be filled and the booze sent by railway express direct to the buyer.
When local authorities caught wind of this scheme, they were quick to arrest Gorman, charging him with violation of the liquor laws. On August 6, 1909, he was tried in Lynchburg’s police court. Attorneys for the local Anti-Saloon League pressed the judge for jail time but Gorman was given only a $50 fine. His lawyers announced the whiskey man would appeal his conviction to the state Corporation Court.
That was a wise move. The Virginia Corporation Commission had wet sympathies. Earlier, when four far western Virginia towns officially banned alcohol sales, levied stiff fines on violators, and by threats of arrest intimidated the Southern Express Co. from delivering mail order alcohol, the Commission declared the ordinances void, ruled that whiskey merchants could sell liquor up to five gallons at a time to those customers, and required the express company to deliver it. My assumption is that the Commission was similarly favorable to Gorman’s appeal.
Meanwhile for a time Gorman moved his liquor operation to Roanoke, Viriginia, a town that had remained aggressively “wet” while localities all around the state were voting dry. A glass jug with that designation and the address 16 East Salem avenue is shown here. The Roanoke directory listing for 1910 indicates that Gorman not only had opened a saloon and was selling whiskey from that location, he was living in Roanoke at 3 Norfolk Avenue SE. Breaking into a new territory, he was aggressively advertising locally. Among his ads he was touting his Piedmont Corn Whiskey as having “cured more Consumptives than all Doctors.” Adversity had not dulled his blarney approach.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiq2YwBV8SNroUgo2sDwtcfRySTEwkqvG6H64b9VH8HgQnTVXwBd0MGxzzV086X2wAmg7G3w7ILUZipaCv-D0I9G3GpzKnEJ7mNSIB3gy7PqL1wZMu6W7EyJmpBkSVcwx1vE5-tMwaO2_Hq/s1600/9f.+100+9th.-l.jpg-+L.jpg)
Southern fields were ripe and ready for harvest, Gorman knew. In Lynchburg he was well positioned carry on his trade. From its Union Station the city was served by a number of rail lines extending into the South, the principal ones being Norfolk & Western and Great Southern. For the next five years, James Gorman Company knew an era of prosperity. That ended In 1916 when Virginia voters approved a statewide referendum banning making or selling alcoholic beverages. Moreover, the U.S. Congress, feeling prohibitionist pressure, had passed the Webb-Kenyon Act banning mail order liquor sales into dry areas. Gorman was forced to shut down his saloon a second time and abandon his mail order trade. He was only 50 years old.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiCwEgchxp_YGRvGUe0UkWMk0LHamnLBXOqS1SYVrBWE0AqQ-azAP-DJw_DW-wal_MmVKKiHK53Jd_LRATWkT_u6hgaWGttxto5_Yv12pP0UmZxjOsf_aeLDLqcnlY027p1ycDhJhUA3Bdy/s320/1915+est+Gorman-Magrt+HIGH+RES.jpg)
Gorman’s responsibilities must have required frequent 165 mile trips between Lynchburg and the mining sites. Even though the journey could be made by automobile, the roads into West Virginia were mud or gravel and not easily traversed. Rugged travel and other strains might have weakened Gorman’s health. On February 17, 1924, without warning he was stricken with a massive heart attack and died, only 57 years old. Two days later the Lynchburg whiskey man was buried in Holy Cross Cemetery while his widow and family, including two minor children, grieved at his gravesite.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjKO0YFJhwvBz6J8nIPSaPsd3YH6a1Ve4KvwmsRKN0xRy4qotzHqNXIgLCsrbohOezmafHe7S4-wwyal9MGsbAux_SrOQzqyJKmOS7uY0sD_c1-F3yyipuWd2PWeLod8-EswbDZ-MckIBL7/s320/9i.+Gorman+Mon..jpg-+L.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiERj5WDooUzb0o_3Zs75aM0Y0EFK_hlSKZd3McSBTjKyDG03RNW-Ga5cmQwCCt6lo9bD40FHsorHVJmEnZ7D1O2HINu8NRjfflou_7cF4kMC7ZATlkxvoR3WNnOVkNw6KehkVVxDJUKAw6/s320/9j.+Gorman+stone.jpg-+C.jpg)
Note: This post on James Gorman of Lynchburg, Virginia, would not have occurred except for a contact from his great-grandson, Dr. James “Jim” Gorman, of Wellesley, Mass. After seeing my post on the Gorman shot glass from the Guggenheim Bros. (Sept. 7, 2016), he was in touch with me about his whiskey man ancestor and provided some biographical information. I was immediately interested. Dr. Gorman subsequently sent me further material and many of the photos used throughout the vignette. His help was essential and most appreciated. He currently is assembling information on the ancestors and descendants of James Gorman and Elizabeth Magri. If you can provide, or would like to obtain, information on them, he can be reached at jgorman999@gmail.com." The photo of James and Lizzie Gorman on their porch is through the courtesy of the Lynchburg Museum System.
Thanks for the post! He is my great grandfather!
ReplyDeleteWRGII: A very interesting ancestor to say the least. You must be a close cousin of Jim Gorman who helped me on this post
ReplyDelete