About
Large-capacity Bardstown distillery producing 1792 bourbon range, Very Old Barton, and contract-distilled spirits. One of the oldest distillery sites in Bardstown. Sister distillery to Buffalo Trace under Sazerac ownership.
Production Details
The Barton 1792 Tale
In the rolling hills of Nelson County, where Kentucky's Knob Creek winds through limestone bedrock, the Barton distillery has been transforming grain into whiskey since 1879. Here in Bardstown, the self-proclaimed bourbon capital of the world, this sprawling operation sits on one of the oldest distillery sites in a town that has perfected the art of American whiskey.
The limestone beneath Bardstown tells the story. Ancient seas left behind layers of rock that filter rainwater drop by drop, stripping away iron and adding calcium. The spring water that feeds Barton's mash tuns carries this geological signature—soft, mineral-rich, and essential to bourbon's character. What flows from these limestone springs has been the foundation of Kentucky whiskey for generations.
When Tom Moore first fired the stills here in the nineteenth century, he was part of Kentucky's bourbon boom, when railroad access and abundant corn transformed this region into America's whiskey heartland. The distillery changed hands over the decades, weathered Prohibition's long drought, and emerged in the modern era as a powerhouse of production under Sazerac's stewardship.
Today, Barton operates as a large-capacity facility, its copper stills working around the clock to produce not just the 1792 bourbon range and Very Old Barton, but contract spirits for brands across America. The scale is industrial, but the fundamentals remain unchanged—corn, rye, wheat, and barley mash fermented with limestone water, distilled in copper, and aged in charred oak under Kentucky's swinging seasons.
As sister distillery to Buffalo Trace, Barton represents Sazerac's commitment to Kentucky's bourbon tradition while meeting modern demand. The warehouses stretch across the property like monuments to patience, filled with barrels slowly concentrating flavor through Kentucky's humid summers and cold winters.
In the stillhouse, steam rises from the beer still as another batch begins its transformation. The sweet smell of fermenting grain mingles with the sharp bite of new-make spirit. This is American whiskey at scale, honoring traditions born on the frontier while feeding a world thirsty for bourbon's distinctive character. The limestone keeps flowing, the stills keep running, and Bardstown's legacy continues to fill barrels, one batch at a time.