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Meet The Woman Behind New Distillery Honouring Black Slave Who Taught Jack Daniel How To Make Whiskey
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John Neal, All-Black Towns, Black Towns, Oklahoma Black Towns, Historic Black Towns, Gary Lee, M. David Goodwin, James Goodwin, Ross Johnson, Sam Levrault, Kimberly Marsh, African American News, Black News, African American Newspaper, Black Owned Newspaper, The Oklahoma Eagle, The Eagle, Black Wall Street, Tulsa Race Massacre, 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre

Meet The Woman Behind New Distillery Honouring Black Slave Who Taught Jack Daniel How To Make Whiskey

www.face2faceafrica.com

By THEODORA AIDOO

 

 

The contributions of black people to America’s history across various fields have, over the years, been largely forgotten and this is also evident in the spirits industry.

The story of how Jack Daniel began his distillery through the help of an enslaved African-American, Nearest Green, recently came to light. Jack Daniel was apprenticed in his youth to a Tennessee-based Lutheran preacher, grocer, and distiller named Dan Call.

Green was a master distiller who was also owned by Call. Green would go on to teach Jack Daniel everything he knew about the art of distillation and the operation of a whiskey still.

Green’s story is now gaining more traction as one woman, Fawn Weaver, is all set to open a new whiskey distillery this month in honour of Green’s legacy.

According to an article on Essence, this 270-acre distillery is the first in U.S. history to honour an African-American whiskey maker, and one of the few distilleries in the country owned and operated by a Black, female lead.

A popular American whiskey was lost to the legacy of a white man, and that’s something Weaver, who is also an author, is reclaiming. 

The entrepreneur, investor and author of “The Happy Wive’s Club” went from reading a story in The New York Times to becoming the first female coloured person to run a major whiskey brand.

Uncle Nearest co-founder and CEO Weaver met with Nathan ‘Nearest’ Green’s descendants, who gave her the permission to put his name on a bottle and start the Uncle Nearest whiskey company.

It is her way of honouring the man known as the Godfather of Tennesee whiskey and leading a movement to ensure that his whiskey legacy lives on for generations.

“Every time you take that sip, you should be telling the story of Nearest. That’s how we make sure that his legacy is not only cemented but it continues beyond us to the next generation,” she said to Robert Miller.

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“Uncle Nearest,” a special whiskey distillery in American history, will open its doors to the public in Tennessee on September 14, 2019, in Shelbyville.

Uncle Nearest is currently the fastest-growing independent American whiskey brand, available in all 50 states in just two years.

The brand is also in 148 countries and a lot of the proceeds go into a foundation with the mission to make sure that every descendant gets a college education.

From New York Times bestselling author to whiskey connoisseur, for Weaver, this project ends when she is satisfied that Nearest Green is known anywhere around the world she visits.

“As I began working on this, I realized the significance of the story of Nearest Green. I didn’t really truly understand the significance until I began digging in. He wasn’t just the first African American distiller on record in the United States. He to this day remains the only one of any major brands — period,” she was quoted by Essence.

“And we’re not just talking about whiskey, we’re talking about of any spirit. When I learned that there was no African American ever that had been commemorated on the bottle that was crazy to me, because we were apart of this industry from the very beginning.”

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