Juneteenth marks the day in 1865 when enslaved people in Texas learned they were free, two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation. It is a day worth sitting with. A prompt to look at what was built in this country, and who built it without credit.
The fragrance, spirits, and tobacco industries all carry that history. Some of it is documented. Most of it is not.
The Man Who Taught Jack Daniel
The most documented case is also the most telling. Nathan 'Nearest' Green was an enslaved man working on a farm in Lynchburg, Tennessee in the mid-1800s. A young Jack Daniel was sent to that farm as a chore boy and became Green's apprentice. Green taught him the Lincoln County Process, charcoal mellowing through sugar maple charcoal, the technique that defines Tennessee whiskey and separates it from bourbon to this day.
After emancipation, Jack Daniel appointed Green as his distillery's first master distiller, widely credited as the first Black master distiller on record in the United States. For over a century, that fact was buried. Daniel's name became one of the most recognized spirits brands in the world. Green's name appeared nowhere.
In 2016, the New York Times published a story about the distillery's 'hidden ingredient.' The following year, author and entrepreneur Fawn Weaver began a 12-month research project involving over 20 historians, archivists, and genealogists. By 2019 she had raised $40 million to launch Uncle Nearest Premium Whiskey and open the Nearest Green Distillery in Shelbyville, Tennessee. Victoria Eady Butler, Green's fifth-generation descendant, serves as the brand's master blender.
Uncle Nearest has since become one of the fastest-growing independent premium whiskey brands in American history. Green's story did not change what Jack Daniel's is. But it changed what the record says about who built it.
The Uncle Nearest lineup. Photo courtesy of Uncle Nearest Premium Whiskey.
Black Wall Street and the Spirits Trade
The Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma was one of the most prosperous Black communities in American history. By 1921 it was home to more than 10,000 residents and roughly 600 Black-owned businesses, hotels, theaters, doctors' offices, and two newspapers, all within a few square blocks known nationally as Black Wall Street.
On May 31 and June 1, 1921, a white mob, some of them deputized by the city itself, burned Greenwood to the ground. Over about eighteen hours, more than 1,000 homes and businesses were destroyed across 35 city blocks. The official death toll at the time was 36. Historians now believe the real number was as high as 300. No one was ever convicted. Insurance claims were denied because the destruction was officially classified as a riot, not an attack.
North Greenwood Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma, before 1921. Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.
Greenwood Avenue. McGowan Variety Store, the Okla Eagle, and Dreamland Theatre visible along the strip. Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.
The same district after the June 1, 1921 massacre. Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.
Carrying the Name Forward
Black Wall Street was burned once. It was not forgotten. Greenwood Whiskey exists because of that memory, founded by Che Bailey, Sheldon Johns Hairrs, and James Roach Gordon specifically to carry the name and the entrepreneurial spirit of Greenwood into a bottle.
Greenwood 1906 Straight Bourbon Whiskey. Photo courtesy of Greenwood Whiskey.
Tulsa is not the only place where that same drive shows up in a bottle. Brough Brothers Distillery in Louisville, Kentucky holds the distinction of being the first Black-owned distillery in the state, which is the heart of bourbon country. Founded by brothers Victor, Chris, and Bryson Yarbrough, the distillery produces bourbon and has received recognition including a Silver medal at the USA Spirits Ratings. Opening a distillery in Kentucky as a Black-owned operation is not a small thing. The history of that industry and that state makes it significant.
Brough Brothers Distillery, full lineup. Photo courtesy of Brough Brothers Distillery.
Delta Dirt Distillery in Helena, Arkansas is a family operation four generations deep. The Williams family farmed sweet potatoes in the Arkansas Delta for decades before transitioning to distilling sweet potato-based spirits, including their Arkansas Brown whiskeys. The brand was featured on NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt. They are not making whiskey the way everyone else makes whiskey. They are making it from what their land grows.
Delta Dirt Distillery, Deep Roots Arkansas Brown. Photo courtesy of Delta Dirt Distillery.
Building Their Own Path
The fragrance industry has a representation problem that it has been slow to acknowledge. According to career-data firm Zippia, 68.6% of perfumers in the US are white, compared with 7.9% who are Black. The major houses in Paris, New York, and London have historically trained and promoted through networks that rarely included Black perfumers. The education pipeline, centered on French perfumery schools, has been financially and geographically out of reach for most.
A small number of founders have built their own paths anyway.
Chris Collins spent years as a model for Ralph Lauren before turning to fragrance. He launched World of Chris Collins in 2018, a luxury line built around personal narrative and cultural memory. His fragrances draw on cities, moments, and a sense of elegance rooted in his own experience rather than the European luxury codes most houses default to. Collins maintains close relationships with his retail partners and has positioned the brand squarely in the niche prestige category.
World of Chris Collins, African Rooibos. Photo courtesy of World of Chris Collins.
Brianna Arps founded Moodeaux and became the first Black-owned perfume brand at Credo, one of the most significant clean beauty retailers in the US. She also launched Black in Fragrance, a movement aimed at creating pathways for underrepresented perfumers into the industry. She won the 2025 Essence Best in Beauty award.
Moodeaux. Photo courtesy of Moodeaux.
Kimberly Walker spent ten years as a luxury fragrance sales manager at department stores without once encountering a brand led by a Black female perfumer. That absence is what motivated her to teach herself fragrance chemistry and launch Kimberly New York. Her first fragrance, Artsy, remains her best seller.
Kimberly New York, Artsy. Photo courtesy of Kimberly New York.
Quentin Hernandez founded Qhue New York in 2018 after a decade working in fashion. He is self-taught. The brand produces parfums, candles, and diffusers housed in sleek cement vessels, built around a minimalist aesthetic that competes directly with the European niche brands that dominate the market. Qhue is now carried at Nordstrom. The fragrances are European-crafted compositions blended with natural essential oils, a level of production quality that most independent brands at this stage do not reach.
Qhue New York, Nu de Té. Photo courtesy of Qhue New York.
Harlem Perfume Co., founded by Teri Johnson, is rooted in the Harlem Renaissance. Each fragrance is named after and inspired by a cultural icon from that era: Billie Holiday, Josephine Baker, Duke Ellington, Langston Hughes. The brand entered Sephora's Accelerate program in 2024, bringing it into one of the most influential retail pipelines in the US beauty industry. Johnson is also behind Harlem Candle Company, which built its following before the perfume line launched. The storytelling is inseparable from the product.
Harlem Perfume Co., Golden Muse. Photo courtesy of Harlem Perfume Co.
La Boticá was founded by Dawn Marie West, an Afro-Dominican creative director from Queens. Launched in 2018, the brand produces candles and perfumes that draw on her Caribbean heritage and visual arts background. The packaging is gallery-worthy. The sourcing is small-batch and sustainable. The brand donates a portion of revenue to Dominican youth education programs. West is building something with a cultural argument embedded in it.
La Boticá. Photo courtesy of La Boticá.
The Tobacco Connection
Tobacco has a longer and more direct relationship with slavery than almost any other commodity in American history. By the mid-17th century, tobacco rolls were established as one of the primary currencies used to purchase enslaved people on the African coast. Portuguese, Dutch, English, and French traders loaded tobacco before sailing to West Africa specifically to exchange it for human beings. The plant and the trade were financially inseparable from the start.
Tobacco country, rural Virginia. Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress.
Enslaved people in Virginia and the Carolinas then cultivated the very crop that had been used to enslave them. The knowledge of how to grow, hang, cure, and grade tobacco was not incidental to those colonial economies. It was the foundation of them.
"An Overseer Doing His Duty, Near Fredericksburg, Virginia," watercolor by Benjamin Henry Latrobe, ca. 1798. Maryland Center for History and Culture.
Emancipation did not end the tobacco industry's hold on Black labor. It changed the mechanism. Sharecropping, Jim Crow, chain gangs, and mass incarceration kept Black Americans working tobacco fields for generations after 1865. The industry built its current scale on that continuity.
Grading and stripping tobacco in a pack house, North Carolina, circa 1939. Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress.
When the industry stopped needing Black labor to grow the crop, it turned to Black communities as consumers. The targeting was deliberate and documented. Menthol cigarettes were marketed heavily in Black neighborhoods beginning in the mid-20th century. According to the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, fewer than 10% of Black smokers in the US used menthol cigarettes in the 1950s. Today that figure stands at 85% among Black smokers. In Black neighborhoods, tobacco marketing occurs at a rate ten times higher than in other communities. The industry understood what it was doing and did it anyway.
Brazil, the world's largest tobacco exporter, saw one of its largest exporters accused of using slave labor including children on contracted farms as recently as 2021. Child labor in tobacco harvesting remains a global problem. Harvesting tobacco leaves exposes workers to nicotine absorption through the skin, a condition called Green Tobacco Sickness, which is particularly dangerous for children.
Contemporary Black-owned cigar and tobacco brands remain rare, but they exist. Tres Lindas Cubanas, launched by Miami twins Yvette and Yvonne Rodriguez, is the first Black women-owned American cigar brand, its three blends named for the diversity of Cuban women rather than for a market gap. The historical contribution to the craft is inseparable from American tobacco's identity. That contribution has never been adequately credited.
Where Things Stand
The stories above are not feel-good exceptions. They are evidence of a pattern: significant contributions made, credit withheld, and a slow, incomplete process of acknowledgment underway.
What has changed is that some of these builders now have their names on the bottle. That matters. Nearest Green's name is on a bottle sold in every major retailer in the country. Fawn Weaver made that happen. The Williams family made a distillery from their farm. Brianna Arps made a movement from a brand.
The Uncle Nearest story took a hard turn in 2025. The company defaulted on more than $100 million in loans, and a federal court placed it into receivership that August, stripping Fawn and Keith Weaver of operational control. Court filings later put the debt at close to $200 million. It is a tragic ending to the era that built the brand. Whatever comes next will not be run by the people who wrote its founding chapter.
There may still be a good ending in this. As of this writing, an investment firm with Black ownership and leadership has signed a letter of intent to acquire most of the company's assets, with stated plans to preserve the brand and Nearest Green's legacy along with it. Nothing is final yet.
Buying a bottle of Uncle Nearest today doesn't reach the Weavers or the Green family directly, not while the company sits in receivership and the sale is still just a letter of intent. If the acquisition closes the way it's currently proposed, that changes. Until then, the more useful thing this Juneteenth is knowing the names: Nathan Green, Fawn Weaver, the Rodriguez twins, the Williams family, Brianna Arps. Credit that was never automatic still has to be given on purpose.