Today’s guest blogger on “What Do You Know?”, Ethan Smith, explores What Killed Michter’s?
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Was it because people, by 1990, no longer associated Pennsylvania with whiskey distilling? Maybe it was because whiskey consumption nationwide was declining? Or could it have been simply history closing the books on the last operating distillery in Penn’s woods? If you’re at all familiar with the distillery, you know well that the last days of Michter’s were not good ones. See Sam Komlenic’s post about his trip in 1989 and how empty the warehouses were. But what actually led to Michter’s shutting down on Valentine’s Day 20 years ago?
Doing a search for Michter’s online yields all sorts of results- most are inaccurate. I’ve found closure dates ranging from 1980 to 1992. And no one seems to fully understand why it closed. They only speculate. I set out several months ago to try and find out what made Michter’s tick and what made it finally wind to a stop (Being unemployed gave me PLENTY of time to do research!). I soon found myself involved with the distillery site itself helping the owner clean up and make the place look somewhat presentable. In our time working together at the abandoned place, Dwight began telling me what he knew and names he had heard. His stories about what happened to the distillery after its closure were fascinating and I quickly found myself scouring the internet for more information. I soon stumbled on a Straightbourbon post by Chuck Cowdery where he had interviewed Michter’s Master Distiller Dick Stoll. Within a few days, I had contact information and was on my way to meeting THE man who could answer a few questions I had. The first time I talked with Mr. Stoll we talked for a few hours. It was fantastic. We discussed everything from the process they used to make the whiskey, to the tourist business (His wife Elaine was a tour guide there), to what products they made, and of course, what killed Michter’s.
Louis Forman created the Michter’s brand back in the 1950’s by merging his two son’s names- Michael and Peter. Dick and Elaine Stoll wrote this to me about early distillery ownership:
“Lou [Forman] never owned the distillery. In the early 1970s Samuel Glass and Associates bought the distillery from Kirk Foulk. Sam Glass was the brother-in-law of Lou so Sam made him president. Lou was the brains behind the Michter’s name and brand. The plant was contracted by Hiram Walker to make cordials, who brought in new equipment, but the plant did not expand to the level expected. Hiram Walker ended the relationship and took back the equipment.
“Around 1975(?) Sam Glass sold the operation to a group of Lebanon businessmen including Stanley Katz, Phil Davis, Dale Yocum, and Abe Grosky (uncle of George Shattls). Lou was named president, but Charles “Chuck” Romito, a lawyer from the law firm of Katz and Davis was put in charge. Under this group there was a new paint job and landscaping. Business started to boom with the help of Dale Yocum’s sons, Dave and Marty. Lou was an important part of establishing the distillery on the National Register of Historic Places. Dave and Marty established the Collectors Society and the tourist business. The gift store items and decanters started with them, along with lots of press, including The Philadelphia Inquirer Magazine. Lots of bus tours ended up at Michter’s on their way from the tourist areas of Lancaster to Hershey.
“Eventually the Lebanon group sold the distillery to Theodore Veru [Around 1979] despite an offer from Austin-Nichols. Veru’s higher offer won out. Although the distillery made whiskey bottled as Wild Turkey in the 50s-60s for Austin-Nichols, they were not making it for them when they made the offer.” Since whiskey drinking was declining, Austin-Nichols was looking to diversify their portfolio in hopes to make up profit where they were startin
g to lose it. Austin-Nichols was primarily interested in the deep wells on the property. So what did they want with these wells? Water of course. Lots of it. Pure, fresh, 54-degree limestone water. And what were they looking to do with all of it? Bottle it and sell it. Bottled water was just starting to get popular in the early 80’s and Austin-Nichols wanted a piece of the market. But since Veru’s bid was higher, we never got to enjoy bottles of pure limestone water from Michter’s.
Under the Yocum’s management, the distillery became a National Historic Landmark and a wonderful tourist destination. Then of course were the famous Michter’s decanters! Soon there were Michter’s T-shirts, balloons, aprons, ornaments, a Collectors Society, donkey rides for the kids, and many other retail items. But under that glamour and merchandise, there was trouble brewing. After the distillery had been sold to Veru, sales started to slump. Quickly. America lost its love affair with whiskey and the big glut was coming.
Veru had purchased a ceramic manufacturing plant in Ohio to design and manufacture the Michter’s decanters and named it GVI China but it too started to consume more money than it made. Dick said by around 1981, leaking barrels in the warehouses were no longer repaired and were just left to leak dry. The main distilling equipment was also no longer used on a continuous basis.
Then came the bankruptcy. Veru left the scene and the bank (Commonwealth bank, which later became Mellon Bank) took over. Well, sort of. Commonwealth Bank, according the Stoll’s “…Could not run it because they were loaning money to businesses that promoted alcohol, so they hired a holding company not to run the business, but to put a name on the “Business”.” According to Dick, most of these people really had no clue what they were doing and only tried to line their own pockets with the distillery’s meager profits. Finally a man by the name of Frank Pitassi came in and started running Michter’s. By that time, the main distilling equipment was not being used, but the mini pot still was still in use. Pitassi got a few contracts and they even exported some whiskey to Japan and Korea, but it wasn’t enough to keep the place afloat. And of course there was still the bank- who was holding all the debt AND all the bonds on the whiskey aging in the warehouses. Dick said supposedly the bank had asked Pitassi to buy the bonds from them since he was, after all, getting the profits off the distillery. Pitassi refused and on February, 14th 1990, the bank got tired of not being paid and Pitassi made a phone call to shut Michter’s down until they were paid.
The bank payment never happened. Pitassi and all other interested parties vanished. Dick said a few people had come to look at the distillery in the following years, but soon the government got tired of waiting for their tax money and cleaned the place out. The bank sold the whiskey. All the aging whiskey on site was rumored to be sent to Continental in Philadelphia and re-distilled into pure Ethanol.
So all that said, what led to the rapid decrease in sales of whiskey? First and foremost was, as I had mentioned before, America had fallen out of love with whiskey. Distillers no longer needed the little brown distillery in Schaefferstown to pick up the slack for them, so all the contracts evaporated, which really killed profit. Secondly, years of a lack of vision by management started catching up to the distillery. Veru lived very much for the “here and now” according to Dick, as did the people that followed him. The on-the-road sales team disappeared and suppliers started forgetting about Michter’s. Lastly, the market niche that Michter’s was aiming for was already very full. Jack Daniel’s, Maker’s Mark, and Wild Turkey were all priced lower than or in line with Michter’s and they had much larger names and distribution. And the whole decanter fad was starting to die off in the 80’s, too.
So there you have it. The last days of Pennsylvania’s last distiller, the oldest distillery in the United States, were sad, lonely times. But, if you ask Dick, and his wife Elaine, if they didn’t like working there, they will tell you they enjoyed it all. What hurt them was knowing the end of Michter’s was coming and there was little they could do about it. And don’t think Michter’s ever sacrificed the quality of their products through all of it. Dick said that every last drop that made it into their decanters and bottles was “good stuff.” And now we’re left to speculate about the future of the distillery. There has been interest in recent months from some parties about purchasing the distillery and restarting it- and with the popularity of small “craft” distilleries today, it could be an incredible distillery again. Oh, and it seems Americans have fallen back in love with whiskey again. So even though I couldn’t have my Michter’s open house back in February, it doesn’t mean we can’t still all raise a glass and salute the little distillery on Snitzel Creek.
If you want to learn more about Michter’s and its history and/or its future, feel free to contact me at ethangsmith@dejazzd.com




Good lesson… how can you have a small fortune owning a distillery?
Start with a large fortune.. it will get small quick!
Hope someone can someday buy it. The real crime here is taking the old stock and re distilling it into ethanol.
Forgot to mention:
Ethan – great article!
Excellent account of the details, Ethan. I have seen this information nowhere else, and you’re right…what is out there runs the gamut from semi-believeable to ludicrous. Sad, yes. It’s sad to see that once-vibrant plant sitting there, still waiting. But it’s also good to know that there are those of us who still hold the Michter’s banner high.
I’m glad that the Hirsch whiskey has been so well received. It vindicates the work that Dick and others did so well there, so many years ago. Thanks!
Ethan, excellent article, thanks, and to John for arranging its appearance.
I think to this day, many are unclear what Michter’s produced since its start-up in the 1950′s. Can you shed light on this?
Michael Jackson wrote in the 1987 World Guide to Whisky that the main product was a proprietary straight whiskey, neither bourbon nor rye, containing 50% rye, 37% corn, the rest barley malt. It would have been aged in new charred wood, and I think I’ve read that 6 years was the norm. This was Michter’s Original Sour Mash.
Also, some bourbon (i.e., at least 51% corn) was made at times, which found its way – the famous 1974 batch – into the A.H. Hirsch 16 and 20 year old merchant bottlings.
Michter’s also made some straight rye at times for various well-known brand names of rye, i.e., under contract. I would think this was similar to Original Sour Mash, but with more rye.
They also made what Michael Jackson called a Colonial quarter whiskey, which was a white dog I think sold at 80 proof (not a true quarter proof, as Michael noted, since modern regulations do not permit the use of the term whiskey for anything below 80 proof).
Does this accord with your understanding? What other whiskey products did they make? Was there any long-aged product, say 20 years old or anything of that type?
Thanks for any postscript on this matters.
Gary
Fascinating! I love history and the history of distilleries. Sad to see Michter’s just be mismanaged into closure. Thank you Ethan for a great read. I enjoyed it.
Great article Ethan. We have a bottle of the rye here at the distillery that Dick gave us when visting last year. It was 20 years old when it was bottled. It is amazing. Dick said they made quite a bit of rye. A lot of it went to austin nichols. I remember him saying something about some of the whiskey for the original sour mash being aged in used barrels. He said they made raisin brandy also. Said the distillery is in such bad shape. It would cost a fortune to open it back up.
Great article. I was just wondering if the original recipes for the various whiskeys still exist. If so, who owns them?
Great article – anyone know who/where the current “Michter’s US*1″ whiskeys come from?
Hi there,
first thank you Ethan for the informations on Michter’s.
As to the question of where todays Michter whiskies come from…
Part of the Answer is Kentucky Bourbon Distillers, Even Kulsveen and his children.
They registered the trademark Michter’s some time ago. “In July, 2002, he registered “Michter’s American Whiskey Co.” as one of the many assumed names of his “Kentucky Bourbon Distillers, Ltd.”
http://www.bourbonenthusiast.com/forum/DBvd.php?id=18&task=displaybottler gives a list of the other trademarks and labels connected to Kentucky Bourbon distillers.
They operate the Willett distillery in Bardstown which they have rebuild in parts but not all whiskies KBD offers are or were made there.
Greetings
kallaskander
Be careful: that list looks out of date and shows both bottles no longer produced and brands which are now made by/owned by other distilleries.
Note the above link doesn’t actually take you to a list of the bottlers. You need to click on the button to the right, underneath the search field. Or you can try the link below:
http://www.bourbonenthusiast.com/forum/DBvd.php?task=displaybottlerslist
I am curious: was the infamous Hirsch 1974 whiskey simply distilled by Michter’s and then barreled and aged elsewhere by Hirsch? This story would make it impossible for the whiskey to have been aged by Michter’s very long, if at all, before all its troubles began.
First off, thank you all for your comments. This made the research all worthwhile to me!
Now, to answer a few questions-
Michter’s made many different products over the years- rye, bourbon, vodka, brandy, blended whiskey, and the famous “pot still whiskey”- which was in fact barreled at times in re-used cooperage. The Quarter Whiskey did exist (I have a full pint glass flask!). It was white dog produced off of the barrel-a-day small pot stills in the still house. It is 80 proof.
The Hirsch was distilled in the spring of ’74 and put in the warehouses at Michter’s until 1988 when it was removed by Adolph Hirsch. I have a copy of the slip with 1988 as the date. The Hirsch was never bottled at Michter’s. It was all done elsewhere.
As for original recipes, I don’t know if the current Michter’s US 1 uses Michter’s mashbills or not. The American Whiskey is neither a bourbon or rye and is aged in “bourbon-soaked” barrels- which would fit the original Michter’s Pot Still Whiskey’s description. But a side-by-side taste test reveals an awful lot of differences!
Again, thanks for all the comments and thanks to John for running the article!
Ethan, we should be the ones doing the thanking. We appreciate your efforts. As a guy who was born and raised in Lebanon County, not far from Michter’s, I am especially appreciative. Thank you for submitting this guest post.
This is great information. I’m even more saddened now by the loss of this distillery. Thanks so much to Ethan for the work that went into this.
Thanks, Ethan. Just an awesome article!
Another brand distilled here were the renowned Sam Thompson, the “odd man out” of the last two Pennsylvania-distilled ryes (beside Old Overholt, though Sam was superior according to anyone who had the luxury of tasting both back in the day, including myself) which was a 65% rye, 23% corn, 12% barely malt rye, as opposed to Michter’s own recipe of 51% rye (not sure of the other proportions here).
Michter’s also made Wild Turkey rye for a few years, along with having shipped bulk whiskey by the tanker truck for bottling elsewhere, which may have included the last vestiges of PA-distilled Old Overholt., which was bottled in Cincinnati at the time.
Also, the recipe for Michter’s is, I believe, misquoted in Gary Gillman’s (@3) comment. The proportions were 50% corn and 37% rye, not the other way ’round. I’m pretty sure there was never any extra-aged product sold under the Michter’s label, though they did sell a 101 proof version near the end. As Ethan says, it was sell it as fast as it could be produced, for the most part, much like the present-day craft distillers referenced on Monday
Interesting about Original Sour Mash (aka pot still whiskey) being stored, or some of it, in re-used barrels. I’ve tasted some over the years and it always seemed to have the characteristics of new charred barrel aging. Perhaps the reused barrel component was kept minimal. Anyway it was a great whiskey, closer to straight rye than bourbon, or a kind of combination of both, clean and rich-tasting.
The mention of a 20 year old straight rye is fascinating. Perhaps I can persuade Tom to lend a taste if I can get down to his distillery before long.
Thanks all for the extra info.
Gary
Gery,
I was at the Jug House in 1989 when I was told of the 20 year old rye that had been sent to Asia. The leftovers had been sold there prior to my visit and were no longer available. I still long to try that stuff…damn McKanzies! Kidding, Tom!
Sam, make the trek up here and we will break the bottle out. We keep it well hidden so it will not to temp us to drink it all up. I will send you back with some Mckenzie rye too.
Great article. Shows your affection for the subject matter and a lot of work to dispel the myths and fairy tales about a truly lost gem in American distilling.
Sam and Tom:
Thanks again for your comments and I’ve bought your rye, Tom, in Syracuse, and enjoyed it. Great Manhattans amongst other uses!
Sam, I think you’re right, it was 50% corn, 37% rye (Original Sour Mash), I was quoting from memory but I think you have it right.
Sam, if you ever do make it up to Tom’s, let me know, I may just drive down to meet you both there. You can reach me on the BE and SB boards. Best to all and thanks John, again, for the chance to have these exchanges.
Gary
Gary, if you get back this way, let me know. I will show you around. Glad you liked the rye.
Thanks Tom, we were staying with friends on the Skaneateles end of the Region and I wasn’t able to suggest a visit but I’d like to see your operation indeed, and if Sam K was there even better. Heck maybe Sam, Lew and John would come up together! I can bring some interesting new Canadian products to sample, e.g., the new Proof, and also Wiser’s Legacy, both excellent. The Legacy clearly has a big element of batch-distilled rye whisky in it, with a big clear spearmint-like note. The Proof is lighter, not a single or straight-type whiskey but still flavourful and interesting, different than any other Canadian whisky I know. Not sure who makes it.
Gary
This is a well-done piece. Thanks very much! There’s a post to be made by someone about the differences between, say, Kilchoman and Wasmund’s, and how that knowledge could be used for someone with too-deep pockets and access to the old Michter’s stuff.
I once bought two bottles of the infamous Hirsch 17 in Chicago from one of the best salesmen around, and drank the one with many friends. Now figuring out the occasion for the second bottle is a wee bit difficult…
I am a great-great-great-great-great grandson of Abraham S. Bomberger, if you could give me any info on him and the family I would very much appreciate it. I have permission to tour the distillery now that it has been sold before it is torn down. Agian any information would be great, as I am having a hard time finding information. Thank you. John Bomberger
Any information on Bomberger Distillery memorablia would help. I own 2 Bomberger Rye Whisky shot glasses.
John, I’ll have to see what I can dig up. There is very little remaining of the history of the distillery from that era. In 1997, when Gene Wilson owned the distillery, I was told most of the historical documents were burned in a trash fire. Also, as the site was vandalized from 1990-1997, a lot of items were stolen. I’m curious about you having permission to tour the site. From what I had heard, the Barrys want to keep everyone out. If we you want to arrange a meeting a go though with me if you can get their permission, contact me privately at bluecapriethan@gmail.com .