Type | Bourbon whiskey |
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Manufacturer | The Sazerac Company |
Country of origin | Kentucky, United States |
Alcohol by volume | 40.00% |
Proof (US) | 80 |
Related products | Buffalo Trace |
Old Taylor Bourbon is a brand of straight bourbon whiskey produced in Frankfort, Kentucky by the Sazerac Company. It was named in honor of the historic distiller Col. Edmund Haynes Taylor, Jr.
Col. E. H. Taylor is a premium version available in small batch, single barrel, and barrel proof versions, and as a bottled in bond rye whiskey.
Old Taylor Bourbon was named in honor of Colonel Edmund Haynes Taylor, Jr. who was born in Columbia, Kentucky in 1832. Taylor started and owned seven different distilleries throughout his career, the most successful being the O.F.C. and Carlisle distilleries, the forerunners of today's Buffalo Trace Distillery.
Taylor was a grand nephew of General Zachary Taylor, whose aide is quoted as alerting the enemy during the Mexican-American War, "General Taylor Never Surrenders," a declaration which was stamped into whiskey flasks, resulting in a positive effect for General Taylor's successful campaign to become the 12th President of the United States. Colonel Taylor is said to have fought in favor of the Bottled-in-Bond Act, a law that required sellers to state what was in their bottles. Taylor was a contemporary of and acquaintance with Dr. James C. Crow, Oscar Pepper, Judge William B. McBrayer, John H. McBrayer and W.F. Bond, and apparently was an adept businessman and public relations professional when it came to packaging and promoting his bourbon.
Unlike most distilleries of the time that looked like little more than a sawmill sitting in a thicket, Taylor's distillery on Glenn's Creek, near Frankfort, was designed to resemble a medieval castle with the landscaped grounds of an estate. The distillery attracted tourists and pinickers who were given complementary "tenth pint" bottles of Old Taylor.