2011 In November 2011, the launch of Chattanooga Whiskey Company was announced along with a plan to release a first whiskey by early 2012. Co-founders Tim Piersant and Joe Ledbetter expressed interest in the process for changing the county's distilling laws. Both have the same
mash bill of 75% corn, 21% rye, and 4% malted barley, but the Reserve is 90 proof compared to 113.6 proof for the Cask. In May 2013, House Bill 102 – nicknamed the "whiskey bill" and sponsored by Joe Carr, R-Lascassas and Bill Ketron, R-Murfreesboro – was signed by
Governor Bill Haslam, allowing Chattanooga Whiskey to begin the process of building the first legal distillery in Hamilton County in a century. The plan to build at the previously announced location fell through, and in October 2013, the company announced plans for a different distillery location on the corner of 4th and Broad Streets in downtown Chattanooga. The 60,000-square-foot property known as the John Ross Building was estimated to be a $6 million investment. Construction delays were announced in March 2014, and the location was abandoned in September 2014 due to structural and logistical issues.
2014 In April 2014, the parent company of Chattanooga Whiskey – Tennessee Stillhouse – launched Freedom Moonshine. This brand is no longer produced. In July, co-founder Joe Ledbetter announced he was resigning from the company, citing personal and professional reasons. In September, after deciding not to renovate the John Ross Building for the distillery, the company announced a plan to open a 100-gallon micro-distillery across from the historic
Chattanooga Choo Choo. The site included
research and development operations for the brand and served as a tour and tasting location for the public.
2015 Work on the 2,500-square-foot micro-distillery began at the end of 2014 and concluded in March 2015. The grand opening for the location – originally called Tennessee Stillhouse Micro Distillery – took place on March 24, 2015, with the initiation of both tours and distilling operations. The distillery was named one of
Southern Living's "50 Best Places in the South" in its first year. In March 2017, this location was renamed Chattanooga Whiskey Experimental Distillery. In August 2015, Tennessee Stillhouse launched Dr. Thacher's Cocktail Syrups, a joint venture between Tennessee Stillhouse and Pure Sodaworks to produce a series of non-alcoholic, pre-mixed syrups for making common whiskey cocktails. In November, the company released its first whiskey called Chattanooga Whiskey 100, a white Tennessee malted bourbon. The 100 in the name refers to the century that passed before it became legal again to distill whiskey in Chattanooga. Additionally, the whiskey is 100 proof, and only 100 cases were produced. The company had more than 50 experimental whiskeys aging by the end of 2015. At the American Distilling Institute Spirit Competition, the 1816 Cask won Gold for straight bourbon. At the
International Whisky Competition, the 1816 Cask won Gold for "Best Bourbon Whiskey", and the 1816 Reserve won Gold for "Best Small Batch Bourbon". In July, the company announced plans to open a larger, 46,000-square-foot production facility on the corner of Riverfront Parkway and Martin Luther King Boulevard in the historic former Newton Chevrolet car dealership. The company held a launch party for the public at the facility in December, but there are no plans to offer tours or public access at this location at this time. Tours are conducted at the original micro-distillery location on the south side. This style has now become a focus for the brand, as many of its experimental whiskeys have used "high malt" phrasing. In October, the 1816 line was extended to include the Native Series, the result of a collaborative partnership between Chattanooga Whiskey and six local breweries – Terminal Brewhouse, Hutton & Smith Brewing Company,
Moccasin Bend Brewing Company, OddStory Brewing Company, Big River Brewing Works, and Chattanooga Brewing Company – and one Nashville brewery,
Yazoo Brewing Company. The Native Series whiskeys are finished in casks previously used to age different style beers from each brewery. The distillery plans to produce new batches of the Native Series every year. In November, the company released Batch 002 and Batch 003 in the Experimental Series. Batch 002 is a smoked high malt, while Batch 003 is a native barrel whiskey because of its aging in smoked beer barrels previously used to age the Native Series. For 2017, Chattanooga Whiskey production demand was about 10,000 cases for products that are available in Tennessee,
South Carolina, and
Georgia. Actual production before opening the new riverfront location was only about 2,500 cases a year out of the microdistillery, leading the distillery to source bourbon from an Indiana distillery to meet the 10,000-case volume in the past. The new location will increase distillery production to 14 barrels per day versus one barrel per week at the micro-distillery location. All three whiskeys were bottled at 102 proof. The next experimental release – available on a very limited basis with only about 60 cases of each whiskey produced – took place in May. Batch 007 is a Tennessee
rye malt, and Batch 008 is a Tennessee
single malt. At the 2018 San Francisco World Spirits Competition, the company won five medals for its whiskeys and two for its packaging.
2021 Bottled in Bond Vintage Series debuts - a single season vintage release, crafted from multiple Tennessee High Maltmash bills.
2022 Founder's 10th Anniversary Blend is released - a blend of 3 straight whiskeys finished in 3 separate solera barrels - each one symbolic of the past, present & future.
2023 Chattanooga Whiskey wins “Icons of Whisky - Craft Producer of the Year” (both America & Global) at Whisky Magazine's 2023 World Whiskies Awards. == Distillery locations ==