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Whiskey Heritage Center celebrates Pa.'s historical significance in distilling | TribLIVE.com
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Whiskey Heritage Center celebrates Pa.'s historical significance in distilling

Tanya Babbar
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Kristina Serafini | TribLive
Pam Curtin, director of visitor engagement, checks out the Sam Komlenic Gallery, part of the new James B. Beam Pennsylvania Whiskey Heritage Center at West Overton Village.
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Kristina Serafini | TribLive
Whiskey bottles are displayed inside the Sam Komlenic Gallery, part of the new James B. Beam Pennsylvania Whiskey Heritage Center at West Overton Village in East Huntingdon.
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Kristina Serafini | TribLive
Rare whiskey bottles are displayed in the new James B. Beam Pennsylvania Whiskey Heritage Center at West Overton Village in East Huntingdon.
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Kristina Serafini | TribLive
The new center contains a gallery of more than 450 Pennsylvania whiskey artifacts.
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Kristina Serafini | TribLive
Pam Curtin, director of visitor engagement, checks out the Sam Komlenic Gallery, which is part of the new James B. Beam Pennsylvania Whiskey Heritage Center at West Overton Village in East Huntingdon.
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Kristina Serafini | TribLive
The Sam Komlenic Gallery is a part of the new James B. Beam Pennsylvania Whiskey Heritage Center at West Overton Village in East Huntingdon.
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Kristina Serafini | TribLive
Old whiskey crates and bottles are some of the artifacts displayed inside the Sam Komlenic Gallery, part of the new James B. Beam Pennsylvania Whiskey Heritage Center at West Overton Village in East Huntingdon.
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Kristina Serafini | TribLive
The vintage-inspired Overholt Stateroom is part of the new James B. Beam Pennsylvania Whiskey Heritage Centerat West Overton Village in East Huntingdon.
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Kristina Serafini | TribLive
Bottles of whiskey are seen inside the Overholt Stateroom, part of the new James B. Beam Pennsylvania Whiskey Heritage Center at West Overton Village in East Huntingdon.

It’s often steel, coal and glass that come to mind when Pennsylvanians think of the state’s core industries. But, to Aaron Hollis, many forget a historically key player: whiskey.

West Overton Village, a museum and heritage site in East Huntingdon, has opened the James B. Beam Pennsylvania Whiskey Heritage Center, a space dedicated to highlighting the rich origins of whiskey production in Pennsylvania.

“Pennsylvania had a strong, world-renowned rye whiskey heritage,” said Hollis, the co-executive director of West Overton.

The center was established through West Overton’s partnership with Suntory, a company that has produced the West Overton-native Overholt whiskey brand since 1987.

Abraham Overholt, the founder of Overholt whiskey, got his start in West Overton in the early 1800s as part of a generation of distillers that rose after the Whiskey Rebellion and spearheaded Pennsylvania’s rise as a leader in whiskey production. After Prohibition outlawed the industry in the first half of the 20th century, most Pennsylvania distilleries fell off the market.

“Nowadays, that part of our state’s history has just been completely neglected,” Hollis said. “We want to help revive that story.”

Located on the renovated second floor of the museum, the new center contains a gallery of over 450 Pennsylvania whiskey artifacts. There’s a collections storage room filled with other historical items, including pipe organs, medical supplies, farm equipment, folk art, antique coverlets and more.

Hollis said the collection of Pennsylvania whiskey artifacts at the gallery has surprised and delighted visitors.

“They find out that they’re all from Pennsylvania, and it’s immediately, ‘Wow — I had no idea Pennsylvania had this many whiskey distilleries,’ ” he said.

The gallery is the product of whiskey-aficionado and West Overton board member Sam Komlenic, who has been collecting Pennsylvania whiskey bottles and memorabilia for 50 years.

The gallery, in Komlenic’s name, features a centerpiece display of more than 250 Pennsylvania whiskey bottles from iconic state distilleries, such as Overholt, Dillinger and Large.

The gallery will make for the largest public collection of Pennsylvania whiskey and distilling artifacts.

Growing up in Ruffs Dale, where his father worked at a distillery, Komlenic became fascinated with the names of local brands of Pennsylvania distilleries painted across warehouses, leading him to dive into distillery research as an adult.

Three years ago, when Komlenic made his initial artifact donation to West Overton, he had never seen the 240-plus bottles all together in one place. Now, Komlenic hopes the impressive display at the center will put into perspective for Pennsylvanians the prominent historical role the state had in whiskey production.

“People have no idea how huge the industry is here. Pennsylvania was really the epicenter of American whiskey until the latter half of the 1800s,” Komlenic said.

“Now that the craft distilling industry is taking off, people are starting to become interested in locally produced whiskey again. And my hope here is that they are able to look at these new distilleries and see there were generations before that made this famous.”

According to the American Distilling Institute, there were more than 2,200 distilleries across the U.S. in 2022, which is an increase from just a little over 900 in 2016. Pennsylvania ranks fourth nationally in distilling.

With the center’s location at West Overton providing a local connection to Abraham Overholt’s roots, many refer to the area as the “ancestral home of American whiskey production.”

While today the brand is produced in Kentucky, Komlenic said the American distilling attraction provides a rare opportunity to visit the home of the owner.

“You can’t go back to Jack Daniel’s home,” Komlenic said.

Tanya Babbar is a TribLive staff writer. You can reach Tanya at tbabbar@triblive.com.

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