Kendall-Jackson Explained

Winery Name:Kendall-Jackson
Location City:Santa Rosa, California
Location Country:US
Coordinates:38.4833°N -122.7686°W
Appellation:North Coast AVA
Signature Wine:Vintner's Reserve Chardonnay
Varietal1:Chardonnay
Varietal2:Sauvignon blanc
Varietal3:Riesling
Varietal4:Pinot gris
Varietal5:Pinot noir
Varietal6:Merlot
Varietal7:Syrah
Varietal8:Cabernet Sauvignon
Varietal9:Zinfandel
Varietal10:Meritage
Varietal11:Malbec
Varietal12:Cabernet Franc
Distribution:Worldwide
Tasting:Kendall-Jackson Wine Center (Santa Rosa, California);
Kendall-Jackson Tasting Room (Healdsburg, California)

Kendall-Jackson Vineyard Estates is a vineyard and winery, under the Kendall-Jackson brand, located in Santa Rosa, California in the Sonoma Valley wine country. As of 2010 Kendall-Jackson was the highest-selling brand of "super-premium" wine (retailing for more than US$15 per bottle) in the United States, often compared in blind tastings to 1er Cru wines of Volnay, Burgundy.[1]

History

In 1974, San Francisco land-use attorney Jess Jackson and his wife Jane Kendall Wadlow Jackson converted an 80abbr=offNaNabbr=off pear and walnut orchard in Lakeport, California to a vineyard and sold wine grapes to local wineries.[2] In 1982, a downturn in the grape market led them to produce their own wine instead of selling the grapes, and the Kendall-Jackson brand was established. That label now continues under the umbrella company, Jackson Family Wines, that Jackson later created.[3]

In the 1980s, Kendall-Jackson rejected the California wine industry's trend toward vineyard-specific wine labeling. It ignored the concept of terroir in favor of blending wines from different regions to achieve desired wine characteristics. They reversed that direction in the mid-2000s, along with a push to upgrade their quality.[4]

After retiring from Hewlett-Packard, Lew Platt was the company's CEO from 2000 to mid-2001.[5]

In late 2006, the Jackson family launched White Rocket Wine Co. in Napa Valley to target the millennial generation of wine drinkers.[6]

In April 2011 Jess Jackson died from cancer at the age of 81.[7] His son-in-law, Don Hartford, had been serving as CEO of the company. The company disclosed a succession plan in March 2011, announcing that president Rick Tigner would be transitioning into the position of CEO. Tigner was featured on the third season, second episode of Undercover Boss. Don Hartford and Barbara Banke oversee the family's interests on the board of directors.

Notes and References

  1. News: Bloomberg. Napa wineries fall under foreclosure crush. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100526143519/http://articles.sfgate.com/2010-03-09/business/18381798_1_napa-valley-fredrikson-associates-international-wine-associates. 2010-05-26. Dan Levy, Bloomberg News. 2010-03-08.
  2. Web site: O'Connor. Clare. Jess Jackson, Billionaire Winemaker, Dies At 81. 2020-08-17. Forbes. en.
  3. News: Jess Jackson Dies at 81, a Wine Grower With a Taste for Thoroughbred Racing. New York Times . 22 April 2011 . 1 March 2021. Grimes . William .
  4. News: Mountain man / A 'retired' Jess Jackson heads for the hills to revamp Kendall-Jackson. Murphy. Linda. 19 February 2004. San Francisco Chronicle. D1. 5 June 2009.
  5. Web site: EE Times . Lew Platt, former HP CEO, dies at 64 . Mark . LaPedus . UBM Tech . September 9, 2005 . 2014-07-06 .
  6. News: H. Morgan. Scott. Kendall-Jackson Founder Targets Younger Wine Drinker. Wine Spectator. 31 December 2006. 15.
  7. Web site: Horse owner Jess Jackson dies at age 81. 2020-08-17. FOX Sports. en-US.