July 8, 2024 3:51 am

Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame to Induct Five

The Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame announced a new class of inductees that includes a wide-ranging field of three men and two women. The Hall of Fame was created by the Kentucky Distillers’ Association in 2001. Learn more about the Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame here.

The group of five will be inducted at an invitation-only event on September 10 at The Legacy at Log Still in Nelson County, Ky. Read about our visit to last year’s Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame induction ceremony here.

 

“Our signature bourbon industry would not be what it is today without these distinguished honorees.Each put the industry before self, helping Kentucky cement its place in history as the international and undisputed home of bourbon. And now we are honored to honor them. On behalf of our signature industry, we offer congratulations – and a heartfelt thank you – to these bourbon heroes.”

2024 Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame Inductees

Here are details on this year’s Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame (information provided by the KDA):

  • Elmer Lucille Allen, 93, LouisvilleA pioneering activist, Allen broke barriers in the bourbon industry as the first Black chemist at Brown-Forman – and possibly the entire American whiskey industry. Her work to bring opportunity to all Louisvillians didn’t stop when she left the company. Amongst her many accomplishments, she formed the Chickasaw Little League and led efforts to bring African American art and artists to the mainstream.
 
  • Dee Ford, 59, Louisville. An international beacon of bourbon hospitality. Ford’s vision, experience and leadership have catapulted Angel’s Envy and the Kentucky Bourbon Trail® into an international, bucket-list tourism attraction. Since 2014, she’s served as Chair of the KDA’s Kentucky Bourbon Trail® Committee, earning the respect of her peers and sharing best practices that have leveraged hospitality to elevate Kentucky Bourbon on the global stage.
 
  • Ken Lewis, 71, Cincinnati. A spirits expert and groundbreaking policy leader, Lewis graduated college as a trained English teacher, but left shortly into his young career for the world of spirits retail. He championed efforts for Sunday sales and initiated litigation that allowed retailers to use credit cards for sales, eventually building The Party Source megastore, the first of its kind in the country. Learning the industry from the bottom up, Lewis brought innovation and entrepreneurship as the founder of New Riff Distilling in Northern Kentucky, paving the way for the craft Bourbon boom that now counts dozens of Kentucky distilleries.
  • The late Peter T. Loftin, Miami. A preeminent innovator, entrepreneur and philanthropist, Loftin founded the Bardstown Bourbon Company that transformed the landscape of custom whiskey production in 2014. He was among the first to take advantage of modernized Bourbon tourism laws in Kentucky, creating a world-class restaurant and bar that graciously features every distillery’s brand on the Kentucky Bourbon Trail® tour as well as an enviable vintage spirits lounge. Along with the state-of-the-art distillery, this high-value Napa Valley-style experience greatly raised the bar for bourbon tourism and collaborative distilling. He died peacefully at his home in 2019.
 
  • R.M. Corky Taylor, 75, Henderson, KyA respected businessman throughout the country, Taylor retired from an accomplished career in financial services and focused on a lifelong dream – to resurrect his great-grandfather’s whiskey company. Taylor and his son spent countless hours poring over family history to bring back the Kentucky Peerless Distilling Co., originally owned by Henry Kraver in Henderson. He built back the family legacy in Louisville along historic Whiskey Row, gaining national recognition – and national awards – by patiently waiting for his whiskey to age, living up to the original quality bourbon standards his ancestor first set in 1889. 

"Whisky is liquid sunshine."

George Bernard Shaw

“The light music of whiskey falling into a glass – an agreeable interlude.”

James Joyce

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