Showing all 4 results

MICHTER’S

Michter’s Distillery

Originally known as Shenk’s and later as Bomberger’s, this whiskey company ultimately became known as Michter’s. It was founded by John Shenk in Schaefferstown, Pennsylvania, in 1753. In the mid-1800s, Pennsylvania Dutchman Abraham Bomberger bought the distillery and it was then known for many decades as Bomberger’s. After changing hands many times over the course of Prohibition, eventually Lou Forman created the Michter’s brand name by combining his sons’ names, Michael and Peter. Though sadly, the distillery closed in 1989 due to bankruptcy.

However, Michter’s prevails! Joseph Magliocco and Richard Newman joined forces, both men with a passion for whiskey. After filing for the abandoned Michter’s trademark, they planned to resurrect Michter’s in the heart of the modern American whiskey industry, Kentucky.

Their current historic Fort Nelson site was first built in 1890 and purchased by Michter’s in 2012, after years of restoration the site opened to the public in February 2019. As well as their Fort Nelson site, the company owns Michter’s Shively Distillery in Louisville, as well as its 145-acre farm in Springfield, Kentucky.

MICHTER’S

MICHTER'S

Michter’s reflects a rich heritage dating back to 1753. Located in Pennsylvania, the distillery was renamed Michter’s in 1950. At the time, the entire whiskey industry suffered from a downturn, due in particular to prohibition. In 1989 the owners declared bankruptcy, leaving the name of Michter’s, apparently, lost in history … It was in the 90s, that two businessmen joined forces for the same cause: to pay tribute to what Michter’s was once in producing the best American whiskey. They entrust the production to a formidable duo of Master Distillers and they establish the distillery in the heart of Kentucky, the state of predilection for the production of whiskey. Michter’s does not seek to reduce costs in its manufacture and invests in each stage of production to produce the best American whiskeys: wood dried in the open and not in the kiln, toasted wood before being burned, cask at 51.5 % (instead of 62.5% in the industry), exclusively in very limited Single Barrel or Small Batch.