During the late 18th century, members of the Böhm family, who eventually changed the spelling of their surname to "Beam", emigrated from
Germany and settled in
Kentucky. Johannes "Jacob" Beam (1760–1834) was a farmer who began producing whiskey in the style that became
bourbon. Jacob Beam sold his first barrels of corn whiskey around 1795, James Beauregard Beam (1864–1947) managed the family business from 1892 until 1944, The Beam company was purchased by
American Brands in 1968. Booker Noe (Frederick Booker Noe II, 1929–2004), grandson of Jim Beam, was the Master Distiller at the Jim Beam Distillery for more than 40 years, working closely with Master Distiller Jerry Dalton. In 1988 Booker introduced his namesake bourbon,
Booker's, the company's first uncut,
straight-from-the-barrel bourbon. In 1987, Jim Beam purchased National Distillers, acquiring brands including
Old Crow, Bourbon de Luxe,
Old Taylor,
Old Grand-Dad, and Sunny Brook. Old Taylor was subsequently sold to the
Sazerac Company. Jim Beam was part of the
holding company formerly known as
Fortune Brands that was dismantled in 2011. Other parts of the remaining company were spun off as an
IPO on the
NYSE on the same day, as
Fortune Brands Home & Security, and the liquor division of the holding company was renamed Beam, Inc. on October 4, 2011. In 2014 Beam Inc. was purchased by
Suntory Holdings Ltd., a Japanese food and beverage group. The combined company was known as Beam Suntory until May 2024, when it was re-branded as Suntory Global Spirits. On August 4, 2003, a fire destroyed a Jim Beam aging warehouse in Bardstown, Kentucky. It held 15,000 barrels () of bourbon. Flames rose more than 100 feet from the structure. Burning bourbon spilled from the warehouse into a nearby creek. An estimated 19,000 fish died of the bourbon in the creek and a river. On July 3, 2019, another warehouse caught fire with the loss of around 45,000 barrels () of bourbon. The fire led to the spillage of bourbon into the
Kentucky River and Glenns Creek. Learning from the 2003 fire it was decided not to use water, letting it burn itself out to reduce runoff into the ecosystem. The
Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet (KEEC) released a statement via their official
Facebook page stating the alcohol plume had reached between
Owenton and
Carrollton. The KEEC along with local and federal agencies used
aeration to increase the oxygen levels in the water to prevent additional fish kill. Fred Noe (Frederick Booker Noe III, 1957–) became the seventh generation Beam family distiller in 2007 and regularly travels for promotional purposes. In 2017, White Coffee Corp partnered with Jim Beam and a line of bourbon flavored coffees was created. Jim Beam announced in December 2025 that they would be shutting down production for a year at the main Clermont distillery, starting January 1, 2026. Due to a downturn in whiskey consumption and export sales, production will cease but the visitor center will remain open. Industry group
Distilled Spirits Council of the United States said that U.S. spirits exports to Canada plummeted 85 percent, falling below $10 million in the second quarter of 2025, which CEO Chris Swonger blamed on "persistent trade tensions." ==Distilleries==