/ Stars that died in 2023: Jess Stonestreet Jackson, Jr, American wine entrepreneur, founder of Kendall-Jackson, died from cancer he was 81

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Jess Stonestreet Jackson, Jr, American wine entrepreneur, founder of Kendall-Jackson, died from cancer he was 81


Jess Stonestreet Jackson, Jr.  was an American wine entrepreneur and self-made businessman died from cancer he was 81. He started the Kendall-Jackson wine business with the family's 1974 purchase of an 80-acre (32 ha) pear and walnut orchard in Lakeport, California that was converted to a vineyard. The first release of Vintner's Reserve Chardonnay in 1982 closed the gap between the super premium and cheap wine market. Today, Vintner's Reserve Chardonnay is one of the most popular wines on the market.[1] His style as a vintner was focused upon single-vineyard, mountain grown wines.

(February 18, 1930 – April 21, 2011)

Early Life and Education

Jess Jackson grew up during the Great Depression and was raised in San Francisco, California. His father, a teacher, was out of work three times while he was growing up, and there were times when the family had to survive only on rice. To help support his family, Jackson started working at an early age. From the age of five, when he got his first job as a paper boy, he worked a variety of careers, including candy maker, a soda jerk, a temp at the post office, a hops picker, a longshoreman, a teamster, a lifeguard, an ambulance driver, and a policeman, among other things, all before graduating from the University of California Berkeley law school. [2]
Jackson graduated from San Francisco's Abraham Lincoln High School. He earned a law degree from Boalt Hall Law School at the University of California, Berkeley. While studying law he simultaneously held down jobs as a policeman and an ambulance driver to put himself through school. Upon his graduation from Boalt in 1951, Jackson started practicing real estate law.

Business interests

In the late 1950’s, Jess Jackson started a law firm that went on to argue cases in front of the Supreme Court. He also pursued other business interests, including being one of the four founding members in the 1970’s of Decimus, a company which leased IBM mainframe computers to corporations.
In 1974 Jackson purchased an 80-acre pear-and-walnut orchard in Lakeport. He converted it to growing premium Chardonnay and other varietals after realizing that there was increasing demand for high-quality grapes in the area. He sold the property’s grapes to local wineries until 1981, when a down market led to a surplus of grapes on the market. Faced with the prospect of selling his grapes for a price that wouldn’t cover the costs of growing them, he decided to make his own wine. Instead of following the market by producing low-quality, inexpensive wines, Jackson studied the market and realized that there was a shortage of high-quality wines at affordable prices. He decided to produce wines that would fill that gap, and, two years later, he released the first Kendall-Jackson Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay. That year it became the first wine to ever win a Platinum Award from the American Wine Competition.
Among the wineries in his Jackson Family Wines portfolio, as of 2009, are Kendall-Jackson, Murphy-Goode,[3] Robert Pecota Winery,[4] Byron Estates, Edmeades, Matanzas Creek, La Crema, Stonestreet, Arrowood, Lajota, Cardinale, Atalon, Lokoya, Carmel Road, Cambria, Hartford Family Wines, Vérité, Archipel, Chateau Potelle, and Freemark Abbey. As of early 2009 it was ranked as the ninth largest winery holding company in the United States.[5]
In 2005 Jackson was listed by Forbes Magazine as the 366th wealthiest person in the world (tied with many others), with 1.8 billion dollars in assets. The 2010 list by Forbes Magazine placed Jackson as the 536th richest person in the world with 1.9 billion dollars in assets. [6]

Vintner's Hall of Fame

Every year the Culinary Institute of America sponsors the induction of wine industry leaders into the Vintner’s Hall of Fame. Nominees are selected by a nominating committee, which creates the list of nominees that is later voted on by group of wine writers, critics, historians, and past inductees. The nominees with the most votes are then inducted into the Vintner’s Hall of Fame.
Jess Jackson was inducted into the Vintner’s Hall of Fame in 2009 for his outstanding contributions to the wine industry. He was among several other industry luminaries being inducted that year, including winemaker Warren Winiarski, whose Stag's Leap Cabernet Sauvignon won first place against Chateau Mouton-Rothschild and Chateau Haut-Brion in the 1976 Judgment of Paris and forever changed the way California wines were viewed worldwide, and the legendary Beringer Brothers, whose award-winning wines helped to establish Napa Valley's reputation as a top grape-growing region.[7]

Vintner's Reserve Chardonnay

Kendall-Jackson Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay debuted in 1982 with a 16,000 case production.[8] In 1983, Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay won first ever Platinum Award from the American Wine Competition.[9] Not coincidentally, American’s taste for the Chardonnay picked up at the same time.[10] The wine is characterized as an oaky chardonnay with a slightly more residual sugar.
Kendall-Jackson Vintner’s Reserve help Chardonnay become the most popular grape varietal[11] amongst American wine drinkers. Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay is the most popular selling wine made from that varietal,[12] [13] which makes it the most popular wine in America.[14]
Ray Isle of Food and Wine Magazine ranked Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay as one of his "50 Wines You Can Always Trust" in April 2007.[15]
Kendall-Jackson Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay is also a staple in the household of Barack Obama.[16][17]

Thoroughbred horse racing

Jess Jackson won the horseraceinsider.com award Sportsman of the Year 2008 Insider Award: "To owner Jess Jackson for believing in the greatness of his beloved Curlin then went above and beyond the call to prove it."[18]
In 2007 Jackson bought a controlling interest in Curlin, who won the Preakness Stakes and the Breeders' Cup Classic in that same year.[19] In 2008 the horse went on to win the $6 million purse at the Dubai World Cup.[20]
Fresh on the heals of Curlin's success, Jackson, On May 6, 2009, along with Harold T. McCormick, Stonestreet Stables, announced the purchase of Rachel Alexandra, winner of the Kentucky Oaks by more than 20 lengths and undefeated in 2009. On May 16, 2009, she would go on to place first in the 2009 Preakness Stakes. Rachel Alexandra would go on to win 2009 American Horse of the Year. She was bred to Curlin upon her retirement.

 

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