The story of Baptist preacher Elijah Craig is another indicator of the change in viewpoint regarding alcoholic drink. The only distilled beverage native to the United States is bourbon. A Baptist preacher from Kentucky, Elijah Craig (1738–1808), is credited with the invention of bourbon whiskey. He and his brother Lewis and the
"Traveling Church" came from Virginia and arrived in central Kentucky circa 1781.
According to Wikipedia, Elijah Craig "was ordained a Baptist minister in 1771, and was imprisoned briefly in South Carolina, apparently for disturbing the peace with his sermons. He then moved to what was then Bourbon County, Kentucky and settled in the area of Frankfort, Kentucky in 1785. In 1777, he became pastor of Blue Run Church."
The first Baptist college founded west of the Allegheny mountains --
Georgetown College (in Georgetown, Kentucky) -- has a connection back to Baptist preacher and distiller
Elijah Craig. He founded the Rittenhouse Academy in 1798. Silas Noel helped persuade the Kentucky legislature to charter the Kentucky Baptist Education Society in 1829. Citizens of Georgetown offered to raise $20,000 and donate the assets of Rittenhouse Academy for a new college. So Georgetown College's roots were fed from Craig's school.
I ran across the bourbon info in
"The excommunication of wine" in the Searcy, AR
Daily Citizen (Thursday, February 8, 2007 6:38 PM CST) That article carried this interesting statement:
"...Prohibition can be viewed as one of history’s most successful marketing campaigns."
From "
Just when you think you know"