I've gotten into bourbon over last 3 years and I love everything about it. History, taste, everything. I believe it to be the perfect spirit after 46 years of trying various alcoholic beverages.
Elijah Craig is my 5th great grandfather. It's always been said in my family (as of course it would) that he was the first to make bourbon in KY. I'm just proud (through no effort on my part) that he belongs on a short list of the first group. The colonial and post revolutionary period of my home state is something I am extremely interested in.
While we understand our current state of affairs life moments have things that our part of life itself, and it’s woven in many ways to our heritage as Americans in Ways not so commonly understood. Cheers Mate~ I’ve always like D, I wanted to put. Towing on the Accent but I’m 💯 AMERICAN 🇺🇸 MADE & PROUD to be an American.
I’ve read that they took flatboats with whiskey to New Orleans but since they couldn’t bring the boats back upstream they sold them and bought horses to ride back to Kentucky.There were Indians (some hostile) so they wanted FAST horses and since they had plenty of money after selling their bourbon & flatboats , they paid top dollar for the fastest horses. They rode these horses back to Kentucky ,bred them, and that’s how the horse industry began .
Per another of these “Witnessing History” videos covering Daniel Boone, Boone himself called for the development of “fine horse flesh” as a cornerstone of industry within Kentucky in an early caucus of leaders
Well that’s a good story but Thoroughbred horses have an Arabian bloodline via English aristocratic breeding stock. They weren’t just sitting around in New Orleans waiting for some cracker to buy
Only partially responsible. My ancestors were thoroughbred horse breeders going back to when they lived in England. They were an offshoot of the english royal family. During the revolutionary war they were some of the senior cavalry officers for the continental army. After the war they settled in Kentucky and founded some of the original horse breeding farms. Aristedes, the first winner of the derby was sired by their stud, whom sired 19 other winning racehorses at Bosque Bonita (modern day lanes end). The Kentucky Horse park is also is their former family estate. So they benefited from both the influx of horses from whiskey, as well as some of the thoroughbred horse lineage (and knowledge) the English royal family had been cultivating for centuries. During the Civil war almost all of them became cavalry generals, some for the confederacy, others for the Union, like General John Buford.
My ancestor John Ritchie is considered the patriarch of bourbon by some . He distilled bourbon at his property in Nelson Co , Ky in 1775 . It is recorded that he and a man that last name of Gilkey made a barge and floated down to New Orleans full of bourbon , animal skins and other produce to sell . On the way back home they were attacked by Indians and they took turns firing and running and that part of the river is known as Ritchie’s Run . I happen to live less than 2 miles from his farm , with his two room cabin built in 1780 , the first home built outside of Benjamin Linn’s fort still standing . Up until 20-25 years ago the Ritchie family still occupied the home . It is my great wish to purchase the home and restore it and put it on the Bourbon Trail .
I watch this video. Like to watch at least once a week. My friend Scott Ebner brings me Long John Silvers when he gets off work. He works there! I've got crunchy basket yummins, shrimp, the fish planks, hush puppies and the chicken planks! Going to eat Long John Silvers all day and night! You should come over here and you can have Long John Silvers too! I also get pizza and sometimes Sonic. Sadie brings that, but not everyday like Scott brings the food. Mostly get Dominos. Just love the Sonic too. I get Frito chili pie, ham boogers sometimes, corn dog, breaded jalapenos, tator tots and the foot long chili dogs. Mostly eat them in my bed or Stans bed. Either that or the bathroom. When i get the food, Scott and Stan ride the motorbike up and down the hallway as i watch from my bed. Ya! Life sure is good in Orlo Vista where the compound is!
Yes Bourbon started in Kentucky and most of it is still made there. But by act of The United States Congress in 1964. Stating Bourbon as America's native spirit and that Bourbon can be made in any U.S. State as long as the rules of Bourbon are followed. In recent years Bourbon has been distilled in several other states .
This Documentary was Absolutely Enthralling. What a well crafted piece of history put on film. I which there was some talk of how it's Illegal to call Whiskey "Bourbon". Unless it's made in America just as "Champaign" is to France or its called Sparkling wine. The end showing a wide variety of Bourbons. Was awesome but did not have all of the companies represented. The whole thing was Intoxicating ! Well done Well done indeed Sir. Good Vibes 👣
Ya! Thats right what you said.you should watch stuff on Albert Fish. Sometimes the guys, along the with Onslo, my handler, take me on w ride around town. I can't fit in the car door, so they strap me to the trunk door w the ratcheting straps. Just love riding around at night, feeling the wind on my naked body as the guys shoot and throw fireworks out the windows at the other cars.
I am working at becoming a bourbon connoisseur… my ex told me there’s no so thing as a black woman bourbon connoisseur. I said “watch me.” 😅🤭 Thank you for sharing this history!
I agree. I am from the Philippines where most people know only Johnny Walker or Jack Daniels. For me, it's bourbon over scotch and (so sorry) tennessee whiskey.
Whiskey by the small is whiskey by the glass. You had to be licensed to operate a bar. James Garrard was a legitimate distiller, but not a licensed bar owner. I hope that helps.
@@gregdake7788 Thanks for watching and commenting! Indeed, the limestone and other minerals in the water here in Kentucky lend bourbon its unique qualities!
@@cosmictywlite Valid point!! I just had my first Jim Beam Red Stag bottle yesterday with a Coke on ice... It was definitely different tasting..What's is going on there? Any insight is appreciated...Thx
good video and Bourbon always been my drink . and truth be aint too hard too make your own but too make a great Bourbon does take some practice . and i wonder if they malted there corn or used malted barley and or malted rye . cause im sure they did not have powered Amylase which converts starches to sugars and any grain malted has natural Amylase in it and my favorite mix for Bourbon is 70 percent corn with 10 percent oats and 10 percent malted barley and 10 percent malted rye and i do want to try one just malted corn . and will add buy puting alcohol in barrels and shipping by boat helps bring out the flavor faster and better because those spirits are rocking back and forth in those barrels and thats also what gives the color aging in barrels all alcohol going come out clear when first distilled . and i wonder what type of yeast they used back then
Try Heaven Hill or Wild Turkey or anything made by them. Also try some of the smaller batch Bourbons made by Jim Beam like Knob Creek, Baker’s and Booker’s.
Time for WHEF to produce a new film on Bourbon! Baker Bird has a great and distinguished history which we would love to feature, as one of Kentucky's oldest distilleries. Augusta has a great Civil War history, too. Thanks for commenting!
@green rushrelief I spent most of my childhood in the wonderful land of Kentucky. No matter where I've gone since then my heart has always been in Kentucky.
@green rushrelief Well it's better to have people who make documentaries like this than to not even care about the history at all, thereby helping promote ignorance and apathy about our country's history. What do you prefer? The same applies to anywhere else in this country, or world.
All due respect....Bourbon is Bourbon....Scotch is Scotch....The Indy 500 is The Indy 500...The Scotland Formula 1 is The Scotland Formula 1.....What..?
Good stuff! As a bourbon Drinker I really enjoyed this video.
Thanks for watching and commenting!
This was an excellent documentary. I'd like to say "well done" from 15 years in the future.
What a great piece of American history I loved every minute of it. Thank you from Aussie
Thanks for watching and commenting! Always glad to hear from our Australian fans.
Outstanding documentary thank you
Thanks for listening
ive just discovered bourbon recently and simply love it.
What a great documentary! Great job!
Thanks, you might enjoy the Daniel Boone film as well! Have a great day!
My wife was born in Hustonville in Lincoln Co. this post takes me back to my years spent in Kentucky. Thank you
You are welcome
I've gotten into bourbon over last 3 years and I love everything about it. History, taste, everything. I believe it to be the perfect spirit after 46 years of trying various alcoholic beverages.
You sound like a Kentuckian
Thank you. Beautifully done
Our pleasure! Thanks for watching.
Excellent documentary...thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it
Elijah Craig is my 5th great grandfather. It's always been said in my family (as of course it would) that he was the first to make bourbon in KY. I'm just proud (through no effort on my part) that he belongs on a short list of the first group. The colonial and post revolutionary period of my home state is something I am extremely interested in.
Thanks for watching and commenting!! Fascinating family history. You are rightfully proud of Kentucky and your family's history.
That’s pretty cool dude
amazing video now i learn something new about Kentucky
Thanks for watching!
Zeer interessant om te weten. Groetjes uit Nederland
Wow really cool information. Thanks!👍🏼
Thanks for watching and commenting!
To those who made this documentary: Well done good sirs! May God bless all of you and your families!
Thanks for watching and commenting!
While we understand our current state of affairs life moments have things that our part of life itself, and it’s woven in many ways to our heritage as Americans in Ways not so commonly understood. Cheers Mate~ I’ve always like D, I wanted to put. Towing on the Accent but I’m 💯 AMERICAN 🇺🇸 MADE & PROUD to be an American.
OMG it’s like a toy shop...#LAB444 Loves your toys
No
It is amazing how one spirit shaped the foundation of the United States. Thankfully it has found a new following.
Thanks for watching and commenting!
Bourbon and horses.gotta love being born in Kentucky yeeeehaaaw y’all
Ha ha yessss!! Thanks for watching and commenting!
Thank you... wonderful n.v narrative
Thank you too!
Dear lord I do love me some whisky/whiskey!!!!!❤❤❤
Sipping some ridgemont reserve 1792 while watching this awesome documentary
Glad you are enjoying it! We raise a glass of Woodford to you!
I'm having some Buffalo Trace as I watch.
I’ve read that they took flatboats with whiskey to New Orleans but since they couldn’t bring the boats back upstream they sold them and bought horses to ride back to Kentucky.There were Indians (some hostile) so they wanted FAST horses and since they had plenty of money after selling their bourbon & flatboats , they paid top dollar for the fastest horses. They rode these horses back to Kentucky ,bred them, and that’s how the horse industry began .
Exactly! For more information on this topic, watch "Bourbon and Kentucky: A History Distilled," also on the WHEF channel.
Per another of these “Witnessing History” videos covering Daniel Boone, Boone himself called for the development of “fine horse flesh” as a cornerstone of industry within Kentucky in an early caucus of leaders
Well that’s a good story but Thoroughbred horses have an Arabian bloodline via English aristocratic breeding stock. They weren’t just sitting around in New Orleans waiting for some cracker to buy
Please!
Only partially responsible.
My ancestors were thoroughbred horse breeders going back to when they lived in England. They were an offshoot of the english royal family. During the revolutionary war they were some of the senior cavalry officers for the continental army. After the war they settled in Kentucky and founded some of the original horse breeding farms. Aristedes, the first winner of the derby was sired by their stud, whom sired 19 other winning racehorses at Bosque Bonita (modern day lanes end). The Kentucky Horse park is also is their former family estate.
So they benefited from both the influx of horses from whiskey, as well as some of the thoroughbred horse lineage (and knowledge) the English royal family had been cultivating for centuries.
During the Civil war almost all of them became cavalry generals, some for the confederacy, others for the Union, like General John Buford.
My ancestor John Ritchie is considered the patriarch of bourbon by some . He distilled bourbon at his property in Nelson Co , Ky in 1775 . It is recorded that he and a man that last name of Gilkey made a barge and floated down to New Orleans full of bourbon , animal skins and other produce to sell . On the way back home they were attacked by Indians and they took turns firing and running and that part of the river is known as Ritchie’s Run . I happen to live less than 2 miles from his farm , with his two room cabin built in 1780 , the first home built outside of Benjamin Linn’s fort still standing . Up until 20-25 years ago the Ritchie family still occupied the home . It is my great wish to purchase the home and restore it and put it on the Bourbon Trail .
Thanks for watching and commenting! Fascinating story. Hope you get to restore the Ritchie home.
Elijah Craig is one of my ancestors. He is a 5th G Grandfather.... I've always been fascinated with early KY history.
Thanks for watching and commenting! We here at WHEF are fascinated with early Kentucky history, too!
@@witnessinghistoryeducation5885 you have a great channel. I'm looking forward to watching lots more.
@@meilnartin9109 We think you’ll enjoy our films on Daniel Boone and the frontier story of Abraham Lincoln’s family in Kentucky.
@@meilnartin9109 there’s another guy on here saying that he’s a 5th generation grandson of Elijah Craig as well. Are you related?
I watch this video. Like to watch at least once a week. My friend Scott Ebner brings me Long John Silvers when he gets off work. He works there! I've got crunchy basket yummins, shrimp, the fish planks, hush puppies and the chicken planks! Going to eat Long John Silvers all day and night! You should come over here and you can have Long John Silvers too! I also get pizza and sometimes Sonic. Sadie brings that, but not everyday like Scott brings the food. Mostly get Dominos. Just love the Sonic too. I get Frito chili pie, ham boogers sometimes, corn dog, breaded jalapenos, tator tots and the foot long chili dogs. Mostly eat them in my bed or Stans bed. Either that or the bathroom. When i get the food, Scott and Stan ride the motorbike up and down the hallway as i watch from my bed. Ya! Life sure is good in Orlo Vista where the compound is!
Yes Bourbon started in Kentucky and most of it is still made there. But by act of The United States Congress in 1964. Stating Bourbon as America's native spirit and that Bourbon can be made in any U.S. State as long as the rules of Bourbon are followed. In recent years Bourbon has been distilled in several other states .
This Documentary was Absolutely Enthralling. What a well crafted piece of history put on film. I which there was some talk of how it's Illegal to call Whiskey "Bourbon". Unless it's made in America just as "Champaign" is to France or its called Sparkling wine. The end showing a wide variety of Bourbons. Was awesome but did not have all of the companies represented. The whole thing was Intoxicating ! Well done Well done indeed Sir. Good Vibes 👣
Thanks for watching and commenting! Glad you enjoyed it!
Ya! Thats right what you said.you should watch stuff on Albert Fish. Sometimes the guys, along the with Onslo, my handler, take me on w ride around town. I can't fit in the car door, so they strap me to the trunk door w the ratcheting straps. Just love riding around at night, feeling the wind on my naked body as the guys shoot and throw fireworks out the windows at the other cars.
I am working at becoming a bourbon connoisseur… my ex told me there’s no so thing as a black woman bourbon connoisseur. I said “watch me.” 😅🤭
Thank you for sharing this history!
I really thing bourbon is the smoothest and tastiest spirit
Thanks for watching. Bourbon is now known worldwide as a fine spirit. Kentucky has a lot to be proud of!
I agree. I am from the Philippines where most people know only Johnny Walker or Jack Daniels. For me, it's bourbon over scotch and (so sorry) tennessee whiskey.
What does "whiskey by the smalls" mean? Thanks!
Whiskey by the small is whiskey by the glass. You had to be licensed to operate a bar. James Garrard was a legitimate distiller, but not a licensed bar owner. I hope that helps.
Whiskey by the glass-- only licensed bar owners could sell whiskey by the glass.
So this is why people say its not bourbon of its not from Kentucky!
That's exactly right! Now you know. Thanks for watching and commenting!
I get in this argument every Thanksgiving...it's the
Water folks...
@@gregdake7788 Thanks for watching and commenting! Indeed, the limestone and other minerals in the water here in Kentucky lend bourbon its unique qualities!
@@gregdake7788 Sorry to disagree !its the Corn mate ? that`s why it is so sweet !not like Scotch Whisky from Scotland !
@@cosmictywlite Valid point!! I just had my first Jim Beam Red Stag bottle yesterday with a Coke on ice... It was definitely different tasting..What's is going on there? Any insight is appreciated...Thx
good video and Bourbon always been my drink . and truth be aint too hard too make your own but too make a great Bourbon does take some practice . and i wonder if they malted there corn or used malted barley and or malted rye . cause im sure they did not have powered Amylase which converts starches to sugars and any grain malted has natural Amylase in it and my favorite mix for Bourbon is 70 percent corn with 10 percent oats and 10 percent malted barley and 10 percent malted rye and i do want to try one just malted corn . and will add buy puting alcohol in barrels and shipping by boat helps bring out the flavor faster and better because those spirits are rocking back and forth in those barrels and thats also what gives the color aging in barrels all alcohol going come out clear when first distilled . and i wonder what type of yeast they used back then
Thanks for watching and commenting!
Btw Thank you for uploading
I love the flavor of Jim beam bourbon 😋
Thanks for watching and commenting!
Try Heaven Hill or Wild Turkey or anything made by them. Also try some of the smaller batch Bourbons made by Jim Beam like Knob Creek, Baker’s and Booker’s.
Jim Beam is one of my favorite bourbons
Excellent! Thanks for watching!
Is this doc worth it?
vinci vedi vici lex talionas tis
i am proud to say that WILLIAM CALK is my distant ancestor ....i am a CALK
Thanks for watching! It's good to know your family history, and the Calks are a great family.
Love my Kentucky Blood Line
Woodford Reserve makes an excellent bourbon
WHEF staff certainly consider it among the very best bourbons!
No mention of Baker Bird Distillery near present day Augusta Ky? Disappointing.
Great history lesson other than that omission.
Time for WHEF to produce a new film on Bourbon! Baker Bird has a great and distinguished history which we would love to feature, as one of Kentucky's oldest distilleries. Augusta has a great Civil War history, too. Thanks for commenting!
Not one mention of Bardstown?🙄
@green rushrelief I spent most of my childhood in the wonderful land of Kentucky. No matter where I've gone since then my heart has always been in Kentucky.
@green rushrelief Well it's better to have people who make documentaries like this than to not even care about the history at all, thereby helping promote ignorance and apathy about our country's history. What do you prefer? The same applies to anywhere else in this country, or world.
I used to love blended scotch..Then a double Manhattan changed all that... So smooth...mmmmm...
Flat boats not making it back to Kentucky is like U Hauls not making it back to California.😄
LOL thanks for watching and commenting!
My favorite spirt. Don’t drink anything else really
We hear you! Have a glass this weekend!
Wild Turkey 101. Best way to wake up in jail and have no clue how you got there
That's a very solid bourbon right there. 👍
Bourbon 🥃 for beginners?
As you say! Thanks for watching and commenting!
Bourbon in the future it might compete with Scotch.
All due respect....Bourbon is Bourbon....Scotch is Scotch....The Indy 500 is The Indy 500...The Scotland Formula 1 is The Scotland Formula 1.....What..?
Scotch
Doesn't have to be distilled in Kentucky!
Should be