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Elijah Craig

 

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Elijah Craig



 
 
Rev. Elijah Craig (1738/1743 – May 18, 1808) was a pioneering Baptist
Baptist

A Baptist is a member of a Christian denomination characterized by the rejection of infant baptism in favor of believer's baptism by Baptism#Immersion....
 preacher, educator and Christian capitalist entrepreneur in the state of Kentucky
Kentucky

The Commonwealth of Kentucky is a U.S. state located in the East Central United States of America. Kentucky is normally included in the group of Southern United States , but it is uncommonly included, geographically and culturally, in the Midwestern United States....
. He has been credited with the invention
Invention

An invention is the creation of a new configuration, composition of matter, device, or process. Some inventions are based on pre-existing models or ideas....
 of bourbon whiskey
Bourbon whiskey

Bourbon is an United States whiskey, a type of distilled beverage, made primarily from maize and named for Bourbon County, Kentucky. It has been produced since the 18th century....
, although this claim was later disputed by some historians.

Rev. Craig was born in Orange County, Virginia
Orange County, Virginia

Orange County is a county located in the Commonwealth of Virginia. As of the United States Census, 2000, the population was 25,881. Its county seat is Orange, Virginia....
 in 1738 or 1743, the 5th child of Polly Hawkins (descendant of John Hawkins
John Hawkins

File:John Hawkins.JPGAdmiral Sir John Hawkins was an England shipbuilder, naval administrator and commander, merchant, navigator, and slave trader....
) and Taliaferro or Toliver Craig, Sr.
Toliver Craig, Sr.

Toliver Craig, Sr., first called Taliaferro Craig, was an 18th-century American frontiersman and militia officer. An early settler and landowner in Kentucky, he was one of the more prominent defenders of Bryan's Station when it was attacked by the British and Shawnee on August 15, 1782....
 (descendant of Scottish Dominican friar John Craig, condemned to the stake for reading Calvin ca.






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Rev. Elijah Craig (1738/1743 – May 18, 1808) was a pioneering Baptist
Baptist

A Baptist is a member of a Christian denomination characterized by the rejection of infant baptism in favor of believer's baptism by Baptism#Immersion....
 preacher, educator and Christian capitalist entrepreneur in the state of Kentucky
Kentucky

The Commonwealth of Kentucky is a U.S. state located in the East Central United States of America. Kentucky is normally included in the group of Southern United States , but it is uncommonly included, geographically and culturally, in the Midwestern United States....
. He has been credited with the invention
Invention

An invention is the creation of a new configuration, composition of matter, device, or process. Some inventions are based on pre-existing models or ideas....
 of bourbon whiskey
Bourbon whiskey

Bourbon is an United States whiskey, a type of distilled beverage, made primarily from maize and named for Bourbon County, Kentucky. It has been produced since the 18th century....
, although this claim was later disputed by some historians.

Rev. Craig was born in Orange County, Virginia
Orange County, Virginia

Orange County is a county located in the Commonwealth of Virginia. As of the United States Census, 2000, the population was 25,881. Its county seat is Orange, Virginia....
 in 1738 or 1743, the 5th child of Polly Hawkins (descendant of John Hawkins
John Hawkins

File:John Hawkins.JPGAdmiral Sir John Hawkins was an England shipbuilder, naval administrator and commander, merchant, navigator, and slave trader....
) and Taliaferro or Toliver Craig, Sr.
Toliver Craig, Sr.

Toliver Craig, Sr., first called Taliaferro Craig, was an 18th-century American frontiersman and militia officer. An early settler and landowner in Kentucky, he was one of the more prominent defenders of Bryan's Station when it was attacked by the British and Shawnee on August 15, 1782....
 (descendant of Scottish Dominican friar John Craig, condemned to the stake for reading Calvin ca. 1600 but escaped). He was converted by David Thomas and ordained a Baptist preacher in 1771. Like other independent Baptists, Craig was jailed at least once (in Fredericksburg
Fredericksburg, Virginia

Fredericksburg is an independent city in the Commonwealth of Virginia located 50 miles south of Washington, D.C., and 58 miles north of Richmond, Virginia....
 for preaching without a license, or episcopal ordination from the Anglican establishment. He was imprisoned briefly in South Carolina
South Carolina

South Carolina is a U.S. state in the Southern United States of the United States. It borders Georgia to the south and North Carolina to the north....
, apparently for disturbing the peace with his sermons. He worked with James Madison
James Madison

James Madison was an American politician and political philosopher who served as the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States , and one of the Founding Fathers of the United States....
 on guarantees for freedom of religion in the state constitution after the Revolutionary War. In 1777, he became establishing pastor
Pastor

The term pastor usually refers to an ordained person within a Christian church. In some countries the term is more usually used in traditional Protestant churches but is also used in reference to priests and bishops within the Anglican, Roman Catholic and Orthodox Christianity churches....
 of the Blue Run Church (halfway between Barboursville
Barboursville

Barboursville is the name of several places in the United States of America:* Barboursville, Virginia* Barboursville, West Virginia* Barboursville the Virginia home of James Barbour...
 and Liberty Mills).

Still seeking freedom, in 1781 Rev. Elijah Craig and his brothers Rev. Lewis and Rev. Joseph, and their extended families, led the famous exodus of the "Traveling Church" of 600, walking over the wintry mountains into pioneer Kentucky District. Rev. Elijah purchased in Scott County, in 1782 planning and laying out the nearby town of Lebanon, incorporated in 1784. (In 1790 it was renamed George Town in honor of Gen. Washington).[John E. Kleber, ed., The Kentucky Encyclopedia (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1992), xxii, 47, 371-72, 374, 591, 897-98] Craig preached at several churches and became pastor of the Great Crossing Church, still active in the Georgetown area. (He was buried next to his mother in the cemetery, now under a parking lot).

Rev. Elijah Craig established the first classical school in Kentucky; his advertisement in The Kentucky Gazette reads: “Education. Notice is hereby given that on Monday, 28th of January next, a school will be opened by Messrs. Jones and Worley, at the Royal Spring in Lebanon Town, Fayette County
Fayette County

Fayette County is the name of eleven counties in the United States:*Fayette County, Alabama*Fayette County, Georgia*Fayette County, Illinois...
, where a commodious house, sufficient to contain fifty or sixty scholars, will be prepared. They will teach the Latin and Greek languages, together with such branches of the sciences as are usually taught in public seminaries, at twenty five shillings a quarter for each scholar. One half to be paid in cash, the other half in produce at cash prices. There will be a vacation of a month in the spring, and another in the fall, at the close of each of which it is expected that such payments as are due in cash will be made. For diet, washing and house room for a year, each scholar pays L3 in cash, or 500 weight of pork on entrance, and L3 cash on the beginning of the third quarter. It is desired that, as many as can, would furnish themselves with beds; such as cannot may be provided for here, to the number of eight or ten boys, at 35s a year for each bed. ELIJAH CRAIG. LEBANON, December 27, 1787.”(Henry Perrin, History of Bourbon, Scott, Harrison and Nicholas Counties Kentucky). The school was later linked to the Rittenhouse Academy, also founded and led by Rev. Craig in 1798. Its successor was Georgetown College
Georgetown College

Georgetown College is a small, private liberal arts college located in Georgetown, Kentucky, United States. Chartered as a college in 1829, Georgetown College was the first Baptist college west of the Allegheny Mountains....
, the first Baptist college founded west of the Allegheny Mountains and still thriving today.

Rev. Craig was also a productive business
Business

A business is a legally recognized organization designed to provide good s and/or Service to consumers. Businesses are predominant in capitalism economies, most being privately owned and formed to earn profit that will increase the wealth of its owners....
man and a local magnate
Business magnate

A business magnate, sometimes referred to as a mogul, tycoon, baron, or industrialist, is a partially informal term used to refer to a person who has reached a prominent place in a particular industry and whose wealth has been derived primarily therefrom....
, providing many jobs and further socio-economic development. He built Kentucky's first fulling mill (for cloth manufacturing), its first paper mill
Paper mill

A paper mill is a factory devoted to making paper from Wood_pulp and other ingredients using a Fourdrinier Machine or similar apparatus. It is a common misconception that paper mills are sources of odors....
, its first ropewalk (for manufacturing rope from hemp), the first saw and grist mill at Georgetown, and founded a distillery
Distillation

Distillation is a method of separation process mixtures based on differences in their Volatility in a boiling liquid mixture. Distillation is a unit operation, or a physical separation process, and not a chemical reaction....
 in approximately 1789. It was this last enterprise that likely led to his subsequent reputation as the "creator" of Bourbon. Rev. Craig is said to have been the first to age the distillation in charred oak casks, "a process that gives the bourbon its reddish color and unique taste."[Kleber, ed., The Kentucky Encyclopedia (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1992), 103]

Regarding the name of "bourbon" given to the end product, Rev. Craig's distillery was not in what later became Bourbon County, from which some say the name derives, but the name may also derive from the fact that both the later Bourbon County and Craig's still were within the originally much larger Fayette County. It was named in honour of the noted Revolutionary War Gen. Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de LaFayette of the French nobility and its royal House of Bourbon, from which Bourbon County gets its name. As regional historian Charles Kendrick Cowdery has observed, "By the time Bourbon County was formed in 1785, there were dozens if not hundreds of small farmer-distillers making whiskey throughout the region...Ultimately, most of the corn-based whiskey made west of the Alleghenies was called 'bourbon,' to distinguish it from the rye-based whiskies that predominated in the East." .

Rev. Craig continued to prosper, coming to own more than and operating a retail store in Frankfort. He died in Georgetown
Georgetown, Kentucky

Georgetown is a city in Scott County, Kentucky, Kentucky, United States. The population was 18,080 at the 2000 United States Census. It is the county seat of Scott County, Kentucky....
 in 1808. The Kentucky Gazette eulogized: “His preaching was of the most solemn style; his appearance as of a man who had just come from the dead; of a delicate habit, a thin visage, large eyes and mouth; the sweet melody of his voice, both in preaching and singing, bore all down before it.” Some Baptist sources say he sold out to the world, but “He possessed a mind extremely active and, as his whole property was expended in attempts to carry his plans to execution, he consequently died poor. If virtue consists in being useful to our fellow citizens, perhaps there were few more virtuous men than Mr. Craig.” In addition to Craig's role as community patriarch, his church and educational work continue their contributions. Yet his perhaps most widely known legacy comes via Heaven Hill
Heaven Hill

Heaven Hill Distilleries, Inc. is a leading distillery based in the self-proclaimed "Bourbon Capital of the World", Bardstown, Kentucky. It is the seventh-largest alcoholic beverage supplier in the United States, the second-largest holder of bourbon whiskey in the world, and the only remaining family-owned distillery in Kentucky....
 distilleries, who now produce a bourbon named after Rev. Craig. It is considered to be one of the firm's premium products.