Uncle Nearest Whiskey is paying it forward

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https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/01/dining/drinks/uncle-nearest-whiskey-black-owned.html#site-index
A Black Whiskey Entrepreneur Will Help Bankroll Others Like Her
Fawn Weaver, the founder of Uncle Nearest Premium Whiskey, has amassed a $50 million venture capital fund to seed minority-owned spirits businesses.

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“I am looking for the brands that have the ability to be the next Uncle Nearest,” said Fawn Weaver, the whiskey company’s founder and chief executive.Credit...Jason Myers


June 1, 2021
In 2017 Fawn Weaver began bottling Uncle Nearest Premium Whiskey as a passion project to honor Nearest Green, the formerly enslaved distiller who taught Jack Daniel how to make whiskey. Four years later, her bourbon has sold nearly 1.5 million bottles, according to a recent report in The Spirits Business.

Cooking: Feast on recipes, food writing and culinary inspiration from Sam Sifton and NYT Cooking.

Uncle Nearest is now the nation’s fastest-growing whiskey brand, according to the drinks-market analysis firm IWSR. It’s a testament not just to the quality, but also to the power of an inclusive brand with a compelling story.

On Tuesday, Ms. Weaver, the company’s founder and chief executive, went a step further toward diversifying an industry long dominated by white men, as the company announced the creation of a $50 million investment fund aimed at helping minority-owned spirits businesses grow. The announcement was timed to mark the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre, in which a prosperous Black neighborhood in Tulsa, Okla., was destroyed and hundreds of residents were killed by a white mob.

“I am looking for the brands that have the ability to be the next Uncle Nearest,” she said during a recent video conference call with her staff. “What that means to me is, they are not building to flip, they’re not building to sell. They’re building to create generational wealth.”

Ms. Weaver said she expected to close the Uncle Nearest Venture Fund to investors by the end of June, with at least 50 percent of the capital coming from Black investors. Uncle Nearest, which is privately owned, will also invest.

The fund already has two investments in the pipeline. One is a $2 million stake in Jack from Brooklyn, which in 2012 became the first known Black-owned distillery to open in the United States since Prohibition, but ran out of money and closed. The money will go toward a relaunch of Sorel, a sweet, spiced hibiscus liqueur with Caribbean roots developed by the distillery’s founder, Jackie Summers.


A second $2 million investment is for the Equiano Rum Company, a British rum brand named for Olaudah Equiano, a prominent figure in the abolition movement who was born in Africa and enslaved in the Caribbean, and bought his way to freedom in 1766.

The Uncle Nearest Venture Fund will be overseen by a board of seven directors, including Ms. Weaver; Carolyn Feinstein, the former chief marketing officer of Dropbox; and Mark McCallum, the former chief brand officer for Brown-Forman, the company that owns the Jack Daniel Distillery.

Black-owned spirits brands will be the first investment priority, Ms. Weaver said, but the fund will consider any brand founded or led by a woman or a person of color.

“We are constantly pulling as we climb,” she said. “It’s been part of our ethos from Day 1.”

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By Ms. Weaver’s count, she collected 10,000 documents and artifacts related to Daniel and Green, which will be housed at the Nearest Green Distillery.Credit...Nathan Morgan for The New York Times

In 2016, Ms. Weaver, then a Los Angeles-based author and real estate investor, traveled to Lynchburg, Tenn., to research a potential book about Nearest Green, an expert distiller whose real name was Nathan. Mr. Green, while enslaved there, had mentored a young Jack Daniel.

Ms. Weaver’s ambitions quickly grew; she persuaded Brown-Forman to formally acknowledge Mr. Green as the brand’s first master distiller, and the following year she created the whiskey in Nearest’s name.

She said her fruitless search for a Black master distiller led her to fully comprehend the overwhelming whiteness of the world of American spirits. Margie A.S. Lehrman, the chief executive of the American Craft Spirits Association, said that the lack of diversity has long been an issue for the industry, and that only a handful of American distilleries are Black-owned or Black-run.

“It’s not that people of color don’t have an interest. It’s that we find that they have no path of entry into the industry, no connections where others may,” Ms. Lehrman said. “It’s a very, very tough industry to break into, and if you’re a woman or a person of color, it’s even harder.”

In the summer of 2020, Uncle Nearest and Jack Daniel’s announced a joint $5 million initiative intended to bring more Black entrepreneurs into distilling, in part by offering resources and mentorship to one Black-owned spirits company each year. So many Black entrepreneurs reached out for help that Uncle Nearest began its own side project, the Black Business Booster program, to help 16 companies at once.

Ms. Weaver said she quickly realized that no amount of support with branding, strategy and publicity would make a difference if these entrepreneurs continued to be shut out from capital. “Fund-raising is all about relationships,” she said. “If you don’t have those relationships, only a tiny fraction of people pitching investors will see funding.”

Micah McFarlane, the founder of Revel Spirits, the maker of a high-end agave spirit called Avila, has experienced that struggle firsthand. Mr. McFarlane, who is Black, said he has successfully funded his young company by pounding the pavement with persistence and determination — he calls it “working the hamster wheel” — while watching as white founders easily rounded up money from family and friends.

“The reason why there aren’t more Black-owned spirits companies is really simple: It’s the sheer cost of entry in this business,” Mr. McFarlane said. “I would say access to capital, having those connections, is the No. 1 thing holding back Black entrepreneurs.”
 

Flywin Lannister

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Two things:

a) this is dope as fukk!! Mad respect to this lady.
b) this thread, and not stupid threads like “Trick Daddy says Beyonce can’t sing” should go platinum on a supposed ‘BLACK’ website...
 

2Quik4UHoes

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Good look. Heard of liquor brands sponsoring Black professional social events, but never weddings. Smart.

Yeah it is. I already talked to one of the cafe owners here to see if we can get a bottle here for the culture.

Two things:

a) this is dope as fukk!! Mad respect to this lady.
b) this thread, and not stupid threads like “Trick Daddy says Beyonce can’t sing” should go platinum on a supposed ‘BLACK’ website...

The lack of traffic in this forum kinda shows where people really are. People would rather revel in the negativity and complain about their existence being negative.
 

get these nets

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Two things:

a) this is dope as fukk!! Mad respect to this lady.
b) this thread, and not stupid threads like “Trick Daddy says Beyonce can’t sing” should go platinum on a supposed ‘BLACK’ website...
Yeah it is. I already talked to one of the cafe owners here to see if we can get a bottle here for the culture.



The lack of traffic in this forum kinda shows where people really are. People would rather revel in the negativity and complain about their existence being negative.
I like the fact that this forum exists, apart from others, as it's own space with its own rules.

Also like the relative lack of traffic. When masses of people have come in here, they've tried to bring an energy that doesn't belong here.
 

FruitOfTheVale

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I bought a bottle of the small batch 1884 two weeks ago, I sipped it twice since then. Not bad at all :ehh:

This is dope. My wife is a tequila drinker, looks like she'll be getting a bttle of Avila in her stocking this year

:salute: Ms. Weaver

They stock it at Alkali Rye on Grand, both the small batch and the Premium 1850.
 

get these nets

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Nearest & Jack Advancement launches Spirits on the Rise Summit​

March 6, 2023

a historic photo of the Jack Daniel's crew featuring Nearest Green's son, George
This historic photo of a Jack Daniel’s crew pictures Nearest Green’s son, George Green, seated to the left of Jasper Newton Daniel or Jack Daniel, as he’d come to be called. According to local historians, no photos of Nearest still exist. The two companies partnered in 2020 on the Nearest & Jack Advancement Initiative to advance diversity within the American whiskey industry. (Photo Courtesy of the Jack Daniel Distillery)



The Nearest & Jack Advancement Initiative (NJAI) — the first-of-its-kind incubator for diversifying the current and future leaders in the whiskey industry, — recently announced its first-ever Spirits on the Rise Summit. The two day event, taking place on April 17 and 18 aims to combat the imbalance set upon BIPOC businessmen and businesswomen in spirits and will bring together spirits industry entrepreneurs from historically underrepresented communities as they work to advance their businesses.


Throughout the summit, attendees will have unprecedented access to industry experts from NJAI founders Uncle Nearest Premium Whiskey and Jack Daniel’sTennessee Whiskey, as well as leaders from companies like Hyatt Hotels, Breakthru Beverage, ReserveBar, and Republic National Distributing Company to learn more about investment and finance, distribution, route to market, networking, and community. The event will allow the NJAI to expand its impact beyond its existing programs – the Leadership Acceleration Program, the Business Incubation Program, and the Nearest Green School of Distilling – to further assist founders as they enter and progress in the spirits industry.


“When we launched the Nearest & Jack Advancement Initiative in 2020, our goal was to advance diversity within the American whiskey industry and we’re thrilled to see the first group of graduates come through the program,” said Jamie Butler, Jack Daniel’s Global Brand Director. “The Spirits on the Rise Summit expands upon the key tenants of this initiative and gives us the opportunity to increase the amount of BIPOC entrepreneurs we are able to support and educate in a multitude of areas.”


The NJAI is inspired by the historic and storied relationship between two pioneers of Tennessee Whiskey, Nearest Green and Jack Daniel, and sees to it that the future of the spirits industry is diverse and dynamic. Since its founding, the NJAI has presented professional opportunities to BIPOC-owned spirits ventures by committing millions of dollars towards providing access to the education and resources needed to be successful in a predominantly white-owned and led spirits industry.

“Over the past three years, the Nearest & Jack Advancement Initiative has worked on three tenets: helping to support up and coming BIPOC-owned brands, ensuring that we see more visible leaders of colors in every sector of our industry, and ensuring that we have attainable education around distillation and the spirits business,” said Katharine Jerkens, Chief Business Officer of Uncle Nearest Premium Whiskey. “The Spirits on the Rise Summit is an opportunity to bring together entrepreneurs and key leaders in the industry to network and educate so that we can continue our mission of building a more diverse and inclusive industry.”
The impact of the initiative’s work can be seen through the first three graduates of their incubator programming: Du Nord Social Spirits, the inaugural graduate of the Business Incubation Program, along with Tracie Franklin and Byron Copeland, the first two individuals to complete the Leadership Acceleration Program.

“This event is a testament to how far we’ve come in a short amount of time, and I couldn’t be more excited to see the new faces of our industry at the Summit,” said Chris Montana, Founder of Du Nord Social Spirits. “Du Nord’s involvement in the NJAI has allowed us to improve our business model, grow significantly, and compete nationally. I cannot overstate how critical this program has been to us as a business and to me personally.”
 
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