John Philip (J.P.) Wiser was born in 1825 in
New York, to Isaac J. Wiser and Mary Egert. In 1857, Wiser began running the Charles Payne Distillery and Farm in
Prescott, Ontario, which was owned by his uncle, Charles Egert, and his uncle's business partner, Amos Averell. Five years after starting as manager of the distillery, Wiser bought out Egert and Averell to become its sole owner. At the time, the distillery produced 116,500 gallons of whisky a year. Wiser introduced his first bottles of whisky at the
Chicago World's Fair of 1893. By the time of the
U.S. Civil War, J.P. Wiser's Red Letter Rye was sold in Canada, and J.P. Wiser's Canadian Whisky became available for export. Wiser's son, Harlow, operated the distillery to an output of 500,000 gallons a year until he died at the age of 36 from a heart attack in 1895. By the early 1900s, J.P. Wiser was exporting whisky around the world, and his distillery in Prescott became the third largest in Canada behind Hiram Walker's in Windsor and Gooderham & Worts' in Toronto. When Wiser died in 1911, Albert Whitney, a treasurer who had worked at the distillery for more than 50 years, took over ownership of the company. The company struggled after the death of J.P Wiser, and at the end of World War I, J.P. Wiser's was sold and merged with Corby, J.M. Douglas and Company Limited and Robert MacNish and Co. Limited of Scotland. In 1935, the company merged with Hiram Walker. == Recent history ==