Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The original Nelson's Green Brier Distillery was located on Rocky Fork Creek in Greenbrier, Robertson County, Tennessee.It operated from 1867 until it was shut down in 1909 when Tennessee enacted state-level Prohibition of alcoholic beverages.
Nelson's Green Brier Distillery's increased production capacity was due, at least in part, to the H.H. Kirk patent for improved distillation that Charles Nelson bought in 1868. Although Nelson did not own the distillery outright until 1867, his whiskey was trademarked in 1860, making it one of the oldest trademarked liquors in the United States.
Nelson's Green Brier Distillery: Nelson's Green Brier Distillery: July 24, 2008 : Main St. west of Greenbrier Cemetery Rd. Greenbrier: 11: George O'Bryan House: George O'Bryan House: February 23, 1989 : 117 O'Bryan Ave
Nelson's Green Brier Distillery uses the Lincoln County Process to make its wheated First 108 Tennessee whiskey and its white whiskey. [12] Collier and McKeel, made in Nashville, uses a method that pumps the whiskey slowly through 10–13 feet (3–4 m) feet of sugar maple charcoal (instead of using gravity) made from trees cut by local sawmills.
Weather. 24/7 Help. ... Nelson’s Green Brier Distillery, 1414 Clinton St., Nashville, greenbrierdistillery.com. ... Are we seeing fewer white Christmases due to climate change? Weather.
Weather. 24/7 Help. ... Nelson's Green Brier Distillery in Nashville, Tennessee. Starlight Distillery in Borden, Indiana. ... Tornado touches down in Scotts Valley near Santa Cruz, flipping cars ...
Nelson's Green Brier for example was once under the charge of Louisa Nelson, wife of Charles Nelson, who founded the Nelson Distillery in the early 1870s. Louisa Nelson ran things from 1891 until ...
However, in 1871, the boundaries of the county changed, placing the Jack Daniel's distillery and the surrounding area in the newly created Moore County. Ironically, the only whiskey currently produced within the current boundaries of Lincoln County is Prichard's, which is the only Tennessee whiskey that does not use the Lincoln County Process.