This is a question that was very much discussed with my good friend, Al Young, when he was still with us. He would often call me and ask this question and we had several interesting telephone calls as a result.
The first thing I considered is when the trademark was registered. According to Mida’s Criteria Register of Trademark from 1899, the trademark has been in use since 1869. The brand uses the date of 1886. It is this difference that makes me believe my theory is correct. The official story is that Four Roses comes from an event where Paul Jones proposed to a young lady and she was to show her acceptance by wearing four roses to a dance. Interesting bit of folk lore, but Paul Jones died a bachelor. It sheds doubt upon the story. I believe that the whiskey was Paul Jones’ first brand when he was a rectifier in Atlanta, Georgia. He was the main distributor of the whiskey from the Rose Distillery in that city. The name comes from the fact that the Bourbon was a marriage of four different whiskeys from the Rose Distillery. The trademark discrepancy comes from the fact that when prohibition hit Georgia in 1886, the Rose Distillery closed and Paul Jones moved to Louisville, Ky., but not before purchasing the trademark from the Rose Distillery. The brand is much older than 1886, but that was the year that Paul Jones acquired the trademark.


This theory makes more sense than the proposal theory. The Rose Distillery could have created the brand and Paul Jones was their major distributor of the brand. This is an era before there were any regulations defining whiskey, let alone Bourbon, and the four whiskeys could have been corn whiskey or rye whiskey in the marriage of whiskeys. Corn whiskey was very popular in the south and could have been a major whiskey produced by the Rose Distillery. Paul Jones, as a rectifier without owning a distillery, could have been purchasing barrels of the four whiskeys and blending them himself or he could have been getting the whiskey blended by the distillery. In any case, he had a close relationship with the distillery. This was a common practice in the 19th century. Rectifiers often formed close relationships with the distillery or distilleries, where they purchased their whiskeys.
This is my theory of where Four Roses became Four Roses. Al and I discussed this several times and I believe he wanted to agree with me, but could not turn his back on a century old story of the origins of the name. What do you think?


Photos Courtesy of Rosemary Miller













October 10, 2025 at 9:10 am
I saw a magazine ad from 1936, celebrating the brand’s 50th anniversary, whose wording left me with the impression that it had indeed started as several whiskeys mixed together.
At that time, indeed from the time Prohibition was repealed, Four Roses was advertised as “a blend of straight whiskies”, which could be comprised of rye (Frankfort Distillers had facilities in Maryland as well as Louisville, where they had purchased the old A. Ph. Stitzel plant after Stitzel-Weller opened in Shively), corn, bourbon, or whatever needed to be used.
Frankfort also advertised Paul Jones, Mattingly & Moore, and Old Oscar Pepper as blends of straight whiskies, in fine print at the bottom of Four Roses ads. Apparently that was their niche.
October 10, 2025 at 11:49 am
It is far more romantic to believe in the marriage proposal. Therefore, I’ll stick to that. May Al rest in peace.
October 10, 2025 at 12:31 pm
Another “unsubstantiated” theory is the family origin theory.
The name “Four Roses” represents the four Roses involved in the family business—Rufus, his son Randolph, his brother Origen, and Origen’s son.
Rufus was definitely a distiller. He founded R.M. Rose Distillery in Georgia.
His son Randolph was also a distiller. He operated R.M. Rose in Chattanooga after Georgia went dry.
Rufus’ brother Origen was connected to the distillery as a shareholder.
The “theory” hits a snag when you get to Origen’s son, Origen Jr.
There’s nothing linking him to the distillery.
Your “theory” is far more probable than the Paul Jones corsage story which was introduced as a marketing angle in the 40s and 50s when the brand was owned by Seagram’s.
October 10, 2025 at 5:58 pm
Excellent story.
October 10, 2025 at 6:21 pm
Thank you