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Mount Vernon's First Rum Run

Long before George Washington started distilling whiskey, rum was the preferred alcoholic beverage in the American colonies. The colonists produced rum from molasses made in the Caribbean, and Washington purchased it by the hogshead (a cask of more than 100 gallons).

Molasses fermenting in a wooden barrel.
Molasses fermenting in a wooden barrel.
In early February, Mount Vernon’s historic trades staff distilled rum at George Washington’s Distillery for the first time in its ten year history. Their historic recipe used period-appropriate rum yeast and molasses made in Barbados, which were distilled using 18th-century methods.

The rum goes through an additional filtration after it is distilled.
The rum goes through an additional filtration after it is distilled.
The historic trades staff distilled the rum in conjunction with the publication of the George Washington's Barbados Diary. This diary documented Washington's voyage to the island with his half-brother Lawrence in the fall and winter of 1751-1752. 

Follow their journey on Washington's World Interactive Map

 

 

As part of the Washington Papers Project, the diary was transcribed, annotated, and indexed—a project supported by the Life Guard Society for Historic Mount Vernon.

The team distilled a small number of 70-proof gallons of white, or unaged, rum. Some of the spirits will be aged for 18 months to produce dark rum.