About
One of America's oldest continuously operating distilleries, producing an extraordinary range including Eagle Rare, Blanton's, Pappy Van Winkle, Weller, E.H. Taylor, and Stagg. National Historic Landmark. Massive expansion completed 2020s.
Production Details
The Buffalo Trace Tale
The Kentucky River bends lazily through Franklin County, its limestone-filtered waters carrying the whispers of America's oldest bourbon story. Here, where the river curves, Buffalo Trace Distillery has stood sentinel since 1773—two and a half centuries of copper and corn, fire and patience.
Hancock Lee struck his first fire in 1775, as revolution stirred the colonies. The limestone beneath his feet would prove more enduring than empires. That same stone filters groundwater today, stripping harsh minerals while leaving the sweetness bourbon craves. The Kentucky River still flows past the warehouses, though now it shares water duties with deep wells that tap the same ancient aquifer.
The distillery passed through hands like a treasured heirloom. Daniel Swigert built the modern bones in 1857. Colonel E.H. Taylor Jr. arrived in 1870, bringing his obsession with quality that still echoes in the fermentation rooms. George T. Stagg claimed it in 1886, lending his name until 1999, when Buffalo Trace—honoring the great herds that once crossed the Kentucky River here—reclaimed the title.
Through Prohibition's darkness, Buffalo Trace was among four distilleries permitted to produce medicinal whiskey, keeping the flame alive when others died. In 1984, they bottled history again, releasing Blanton's as the world's first single barrel bourbon—each bottle a singular expression of warehouse and time.
The sour mash process defines the rhythm here. Sweet mash meets yesterday's spent grain in massive fermenters, a five-to-seven-day conversation between wild Kentucky air and carefully chosen yeasts from Midwest suppliers. Column stills rise like industrial cathedrals, their continuous distillation a modern efficiency married to ancient purpose.
Walk the grounds today and witness ambition made manifest. The Sazerac Company's $1.2 billion expansion, completed in 2025, stretched production to 550,000 barrels annually. Nine million barrels have rolled from these floors into Kentucky's patient warehouses. Eagle Rare, Pappy Van Winkle, Weller, E.H. Taylor—legends born from the same mash bills, differentiated by barrel, proof, and time's mysterious alchemy.
The National Historic Landmark designation in 2001 recognized what locals always knew: this bend in the Kentucky River holds America's bourbon soul. As new rickhouses rise and copper gleams under Kentucky sun, Buffalo Trace continues writing the next chapter of American whiskey, one barrel at a time.