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The annual raffle includes three prizes – 12 bottles worth $22,000 – for three winners. Tickets are $100 for a chance to win ...
More than 300 runners and walkers took part in an abbreviated Great Buffalo Chase 2.5K Friday at Buffalo Trace Distillery.
Buffalo Trace’s suggested retail price — and what you’ll pay at the distillery if you happen to find it on shelves — is $46.99 for a 375-milliliter bottle. Read the original article on ...
The Buffalo Trace Distillery in Frankfort, Ky., is completing a 10-year, $1.2 billion expansion that has increased capacity from 200,000 barrels a year to more than 500,000. ...
Buffalo Trace Distillery is owned by Sazerac and its popular bourbons include the Buffalo Trace, Eagle Rare and W.L. Weller brands. Make it easy to keep up-to-date with more stories like this.
Nearly a month after historic flooding upended operations at Buffalo Trace Distillery in Frankfort, the iconic bourbon producer is making headway toward a full recovery.The flooding, which brought ...
Frankfort, Kentucky — For more than two centuries, the Buffalo Trace Distillery in Frankfurt, Kentucky, has bottled up scores of spirits on its 400-acre campus. But America's oldest-running ...
An extensive clean-up and recovery effort is ongoing at the Buffalo Trace Distillery in Frankfort, Kentucky.The Buffalo Trace Distillery has operated for more than 200 years and is one of the ...
Signs of normalcy are returning to Kentucky’s Buffalo Trace Distillery as an extensive flooding clean-up process continues.Located in Frankfort, the Buffalo Trace Distillery has operated for ...
The historic Buffalo Trace Distillery has temporarily closed after deadly flooding ravaging Kentucky swept into its facilities, forcing the popular bourbon company to turn away the public and staff.
The Buffalo Trace Distillery is located along the banks of the Kentucky River in Frankfort. On Monday, the river crested at 48.2 feet, the second highest in Frankfort’s history.
The historic Buffalo Trace Distillery has temporarily closed after deadly flooding ravaging Kentucky swept into its facilities, forcing the popular bourbon company to turn away the public and staff.