fbpx
Wikipedia

Bacardi

Bacardi Limited (/bəˈkɑːrdi/ bə-KAR-dee, Spanish: [bakaɾˈði], Catalan: [bəkəɾˈði]) is the largest privately held, family-owned spirits company in the world.[1] Originally known for its Bacardí brand of white rum, it now has a portfolio of more than 200 brands and labels.[2] Founded in Cuba in 1862 by Facundo Bacardí Massó, Bacardi Limited has been family-owned for seven generations, and employs more than 8,000 people with sales in approximately 170 countries. Bacardi Limited is the group of companies as a whole and includes Bacardi International Limited.[3]

Bacardi Limited
Company typePrivate
IndustryDrink industry
Founded4 February 1862
Santiago de Cuba
FounderFacundo Bacardí Massó
HeadquartersHamilton, Bermuda
Key people
Facundo L. Bacardi (Chairman)
Mahesh Madhavan (CEO)
ProductsBacardí rum, Grey Goose vodka, Patrón Tequila, Dewar's Blended Scotch whisky, Bombay Sapphire gin, Martini & Rossi vermouth and sparkling wines, Eristoff vodka, Cazadores blue agave tequila, Angel's Envy Bourbon and more
Websitebacardilimited.com
The original Bacardi distillery in Santiago de Cuba
Bacardi rum
The Bacardi Building in Havana was constructed by the company in 1930 but abandoned when the company fled Cuba following the Cuban Revolution in 1959.
Bacardi logo

Bacardi Limited is headquartered in Hamilton, Bermuda, and has a board of directors led by the original founder's great-great grandson, Facundo L. Bacardí, the chairman of the board.[4]

History edit

Early history edit

Facundo Bacardí Massó, a Spanish wine merchant, was born in Sitges, Catalonia, Spain, on October 16, 1814, and immigrated to Santiago, Cuba, in 1830. At the time, rum was cheaply made and not considered a refined drink, and rarely sold in upmarket taverns or purchased by the growing emerging middle class on the island.[5] Facundo began attempting to "tame" rum by isolating a proprietary strain of yeast harvested from local sugar cane still used in Bacardí production today. This yeast gives Bacardí rum its flavour profile. After experimenting with several techniques for close to ten years, Facundo pioneered charcoal rum filtration, which removed impurities from his rum. Facundo then created two separate distillates that he could blend together, balancing a variety of flavors: Aguardiente (a robust, flavorful distillate) and Redestillado (a refined, delicate distillate). Once Facundo achieved the perfect balance of flavors by marrying the two distillates together, he purposefully aged the rum in white oak barrels to develop subtle flavors and characteristics while mellowing out those that were unwanted. The final product was the first clear, light-bodied and mixable "white" rum in the world.[6]

Moving from the experimental stage to a more commercial endeavour as local sales began to grow, Facundo and his brother José purchased a Santiago de Cuba distillery on October 16, 1862, which housed a still made of copper and cast iron. In the rafters of this building lived fruit bats – the inspiration for the Bacardi bat logo.[7] It was the idea of Doña Amalia, Facundo's wife, to adopt the bat to the rum bottle when she recognized its symbolism of family unity, good health, and good fortune to her husband's homeland of Spain. This logo was pragmatic considering the high illiteracy rate in the 19th century, enabling customers to easily identify the product.[8]

The 1880s and 1890s were turbulent times for Cuba and the company. Emilio Bacardí, Don Facundo's eldest son, known for his forward thinking in both his professional and personal life and a passionate advocate for Cuban Independence was imprisoned twice for having fought in the rebel army against Spain in the Cuban War of Independence.[9][page needed]

Emilio's brothers, Facundo and José, and their brother-in-law Enrique 'Henri' Schueg, remained in Cuba with the difficult task of sustaining the company during a period of war. With Don Facundo's passing in 1886, Doña Amalia sought refuge by exile in Kingston, Jamaica. At the end of the Cuban War of Independence during the US occupation of Cuba, "The Original Cuba Libre" and the Daiquiri cocktails were both created, with the then Cuban based Bacardí rum.[10] In 1899, Emilio Bacardí became the first democratically elected mayor of Santiago, appointed US General Leonard Wood.

During his time in public office, Emilio established schools and hospitals, completed municipal projects such as the famous Padre Pico Street and the Bacardi Dam, financed the creation of parks, and decorated the city of Santiago with monuments and sculptures.[9][page needed] In 1912, Emilio and his wife travelled to Egypt, where he purchased a mummy (still on display) for the future Emilio Bacardi Moreau Municipal Museum in Santiago de Cuba.[11][page needed] In Santiago, his brother Facundo M. Bacardí continued to manage the company along with Schueg, who began the company's international expansion by opening bottling plants in Barcelona (1910) and New York City (1916).[7] The New York plant was soon shut down due to Prohibition, yet during this time Cuba became a hotspot for US tourists, kicking off a period of rapid growth for the Bacardi company and the onset of cocktail culture in America.[12]

In 1922 the family completed the expansion and renovation of the original distillery in Santiago, increasing the sites rum production capacity. In 1930 Schueg oversaw the construction and opening of Edificio Bacardí in Havana, regarded as one of the finest Art Deco buildings in Latin America, as the third generation of the Bacardí family entered the business. In 1927, Bacardi ventured outside the realm of spirits for the first time, with the introduction of an authentic Cuban Malt beer: Hatuey beer.

Bacardi's success in transitioning into an international brand and company was due mostly to Schueg, who branded Cuba as "The home of rum", and Bacardí as "The king of rums and the rum of Kings". Expansion began overseas, first to Mexico in 1931 where it had architects Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe and Felix Candela design office buildings and a bottling plant in Mexico City during the 1950s. The building complex was added to the tentative list of UNESCO's World Heritage Site list on 20 November 2001.[13] In 1936, Bacardi began producing rum on U.S. territory in Puerto Rico after Prohibition which enabled the company to sell rum tariff-free in the United States.[14] The company later expanded to the United States in 1944 with the opening of Bacardi Imports, Inc. in Manhattan, New York City.[15]

During World War II, the company was led by Schueg's son-in-law, José "Pepin" Bosch. Pepin founded Bacardi Imports in New York City, and became Cuba's Minister of the Treasury in 1949.

Cuban Revolution edit

During the Cuban Revolution in 1959, the Bacardí family (and hence the company) supported and aided the rebels.[16] However, after the triumph of the revolutionaries, and turn to communism, the family maintained a fierce opposition to Fidel Castro's policies in Cuba in the 1960s. In his book, Bacardi and the Long Fight for Cuba, Tom Gjelten describes how the Bacardí family and the company left Cuba in exile after the Cuban government confiscated the company's Cuban assets without compensation on 14 October 1960, particularly nationalizing and banning all private property on the island as well as all bank accounts.[17] However, due to concerns over the previous Cuban leader, Fulgencio Batista, the company had started foreign branches a few years before the revolution; the company moved the ownership of its trademarks, assets and proprietary formulas out of the country to the Bahamas prior to the revolution and already produced Bacardí rum at other distillery sites in Puerto Rico and Mexico. This helped the company survive after the Cuban government confiscated all Bacardí assets in the country without any compensation.[18]

In 1965, over 100 years after the company was established in Cuba, Bacardi established new roots and found a new home with global headquarters in Hamilton, Bermuda. In February 2019, Bacardi's CEO, Mahesh Madhavan, stated that Bacardí's global headquarters would remain in Bermuda for the next "500 years" and that "Bermuda is our home now."[19]

 
Bacardi Building, Bermuda. Location of Bacardi's world headquarters

In 1999, Otto Reich, a lobbyist in Washington on behalf of Bacardí, drafted section 211 of the Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency Appropriations Act, FY1999, a bill that became known as the Bacardi Act. Section 211 denied trademark protection to products of Cuban businesses expropriated after the Cuban revolution, a provision sought by Bacardí. The act was aimed primarily at the Havana Club brand in the United States. The brand was created by the José Arechabala S.A. and nationalised without compensation in the Cuban revolution, the Arechabala family left Cuba and stopped producing rum. They therefore allowed the US trademark registration for "Havana Club" to lapse in 1973. Taking advantage of the lapse, the Cuban government registered the mark in the United States in 1976.[20][21] This new law was drafted to invalidate the trademark registration. Section 211 has been challenged unsuccessfully by the Cuban government and the European Union in US courts. It was ruled illegal by the WTO in 2001 and 2002.[22] The US Congress has yet to re-examine the matter. The brand was assigned by the Cuban government to Pernod Ricard in 1993.

Bacardi rekindled the story of the Arechabala family and Havana Club in the United States when it launched the AMPARO Experience in 2018, an immersive play experience based in Miami, the city with the highest population of Cuban exiles. AMPARO “is the story of the family’s entire history being erased and their heritage ‘stolen’” according to playwright Vanessa Garcia.[23]

Bacardi in the United States edit

 
The "Cathedral of Rum" at the Bacardi distillery in Cataño, Puerto Rico, near San Juan
 
Bacardi's former U.S. headquarters in Miami. In 2006, the company moved to Coral Gables, Florida.

In 1964, Bacardi opened new US offices in Miami, Florida. Exiled Cuban architect Enrique Gutierrez created a building that was hurricane-proof, using a system of steel cables and pulleys which allow the building to move slightly in the event of a strong shock. The steel cables are anchored into the bedrock and extend through marble-covered shafts up to the top floor, where they are led over large pulleys. Outside, on both sides of the eight-story building, more than 28,000 tiles painted and fired by Brazilian artist Francisco Brennand, depicting abstract blue flowers, were placed on the walls according to the artist's exact specifications.

In 1973, the company commissioned the square building in the plaza. Architect Ignacio Carrera-Justiz used cantilevered construction, a style invented by Frank Lloyd Wright. Wright observed how well trees with taproots withstood hurricane-force winds. The building, raised 47 feet off the ground around a central core, features four massive walls, made of sections of inch-thick hammered glass mural tapestries, designed and manufactured in France. The striking design of the annex, affectionately known as the 'Jewel Box' building,[24] came from a painting by German artist Johannes M. Dietz.

In 2006, Bacardi USA leased a 15-story headquarters complex in Coral Gables, Florida. Bacardi had employees in seven buildings across Miami-Dade County at the time.[25]

Bacardi vacated its former headquarters buildings on Biscayne Boulevard in Midtown Miami. The building currently serves as the headquarters of the National YoungArts Foundation. Miami citizens began a campaign to label the buildings as "historic". The Bacardi Buildings Complex has been a locally protected historic resource since Oct. 6, 2009, when it was designated by unanimous decision by the Historic and Environmental Preservation Board.[26]

In 2007 Chad Oppenheim, the head of Oppenheim Architecture + Design, described the Bacardi buildings as "elegant, with a Modernist [look combined with] a local flavour".[27] In April 2009, University of Miami professor of architecture Allan Schulman said "Miami's brand is its identity as a tropical city. The Bacardi buildings are exactly the sort that resonate with our consciousness of what Miami is about."[28]

The American headquarters is in Coral Gables, Florida.[29]

Bacardi and Cuba today edit

 
Bacardi Bat in the Bacardi Building in Cataño, Puerto Rico

Bacardi drinks are not easily found in Cuba today. The main brand of rum in Cuba is Havana Club, produced by a company that was confiscated and nationalized by the government following the revolution. Bacardi later bought the brand from the original owners, the Arechabala family. The Cuban government, in partnership with the French company Pernod Ricard, sells its Havana Club products internationally, except in the United States and its territories. Bacardi created the Real Havana Club rum based on the original recipe from the Arechabala family, manufactures it in Puerto Rico, and sells it in the United States. Bacardi continues to fight in the courts, attempting to legalize their own Havana Club trademark outside the United States.[30]

Acquisitions edit

 
Bacardi Superior

Bacardi Limited has made numerous acquisitions to diversify away from the eponymous Bacardí rum brand.

In 1993, Bacardi merged with Martini & Rossi, the Italian producer of Martini vermouth and sparkling wines, creating the Bacardi-Martini group. Other associated brands include the Real Havana Club, Drambuie Scotch whisky liqueur, DiSaronno Amaretto, Eristoff vodka, Cazadores Tequila, B&B and Bénédictine liqueurs.

In 1998, Bacardi company acquired John Dewar & Sons, Ltd and Bombay Sapphire from Diageo for $2 billion.[31]

In 2004 purchased Grey Goose, a French-made vodka, from Sidney Frank for $2 billion.[32]

In 2006 Bacardi purchased New Zealand vodka brand 42 Below.[33]

In 2018, Bacardi purchased tequila manufacturer Patrón Spirits Company for $5.1 billion.[34]

In 2023, Bacardi acquired the renowned super-premium mezcal brand, Ilegal Mezcal.[35]

In December 2023, Bacardi has taken majority control of Irish whiskey producer Teeling.[36]

Brands edit

Bacardi beverage brands include:[37]

Beer: Hatuey

Cachaça: Leblon

Cognac: Baron Otard, D'ussé

Gin: Bombay Sapphire, Bosford Rose, Oxley

Liqueur: Bénédictine, Cedlila, Get, Martini Spirito, Patrón Citrónge, St-Germain

Mezcal: Ilegal

Rum: Bacardí, Banks, Castillo, Facundo, Havana Club (USA only), Pyrat, Santa Teresa, Single Cane Estate

Sparkling wine: Martini Alta Langa, Martini Asti, Martini Grandi Augur, Martini Magici Istanti, Martini Prosecco, Martini Riserva di Montellera. Martini Rosé

Tequila: Camino Real, Cazadores, Corzo, Patrón

Vermouth: Martini, Noilly Prat

Vodka: Eristoff, Grey Goose, Russian Prince, Ultimat Vodka, 42 Below

American whiskey: Angel's Envy, Stillhouse

Irish whiskey: Teeling

Scotch whisky:

Single malt Scotch whisky: Aberfeldy, Aultmore, Craigellachie, Deveron, Royal Brackla

Blended Scotch whisky: Dewar's, William Lawson's

Main brand edit

 
Bacardi Mojito
 
Bacardi Breezers, Orange, Pineapple and Blueberry
  • Bacardi Superior
  • Bacardi 8
  • Bacardi Gran Reserva
  • Bacardi Dark Rum
  • Bacardi White Rum
  • Bacardi Spiced Rum
  • Bacardi Gold Rum
  • Bacardi 151
  • Bacardi Gold
  • Bacardi Mojito
  • Bacardi Breezers
  • Bacardi Apple
  • Bacardi Lemon
  • Bacardi Carta Blanca

Awards edit

Bacardí rums have been entered for a number of international spirit ratings awards. Several Bacardí spirits have performed notably well.[38][39][40][41] In 2020, Bacardí Superior, Bacardí Gold, Bacardí Black, Bacardí Añejo Cuatro were each awarded a gold medal by the International Quality Institute Monde Selection. In addition, both Bacardí Reserva Ocho and Bacardí Gran Reserva Diez were awarded the top honor of Grand Gold quality award.[42]

Hemingway connection edit

Ernest Hemingway lived in Cuba from 1939 until shortly after the Cuban Revolution. He lived at Finca Vigía, in the small town of San Francisco de Paula, located very close to Bacardi's Modelo Brewery for Hatuey Beer in Cotorro, Havana.

In 1954, Compañía Ron Bacardi S.A. threw Hemingway a party when he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature – soon after the publication of his novel The Old Man and the Sea (1952) – in which he honored the company by mentioning its Hatuey beer. Hemingway also mentioned Bacardí and Hatuey in his novels To Have and Have Not (1937) and For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940). Guillermo Cabrera Infante wrote an account of the festivities for the periodical Ciclón, titled "El Viejo y la Marca" ("The Old Man and the Brand", a play on "El Viejo y el Mar", the book's Spanish title). In his account he described how "on one side there was a wooden stage with two streamers – Hatuey beer and Bacardi rum – on each end and a Cuban flag in the middle. Next to the stage was a bar, at which people crowded, ordering daiquiris and beer, all free."[43] A sign at the event read "Bacardi rum welcomes the author of The Old Man and the Sea".

In his article "The Old Man and the Daiquiri", Wayne Curtis writes about how Hemingway's "home bar also held a bottle of Bacardí rum". Hemingway wrote in Islands in the Stream, "...this frozen daiquirí, so well beaten as it is, looks like the sea where the wave falls away from the bow of a ship when she is doing thirty knots."[44]

Controversies edit

Controversy over sponsoring Russia's war edit

In March 2022, after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Bacardi announced that it would halt all exports to Russia and freeze investment and advertising programs.[45][46] Instead of keeping this promise, the company increased its exports to Russia[citation needed] and tripled its profits.[45][47] As of summer 2023, Bacardi went on increasing its business in Russia and looking for new employees for its Russian branch.[47] When Bacardi's broken promise gained international media attention, the pledge disappeared from their company website.[45][48] On August 10, 2023, Ukrainian authorities added Bacardi to their list of International Sponsors of War.[49][50]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Top 8 family-owned spirits companies". The Spirit Business. September 2016. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  2. ^ Sorkin, Andrew Ross (21 June 2004). "Bacardi to Buy Grey Goose, Stirring More Talk of I.P.O.". The New York Times.
  3. ^ "Bacardi Limited". Retrieved 23 April 2012.
  4. ^ "Facundo L. Bacardi has been Chairman of the Board of Bacardi Limited since 2005 and a director since 1993. He is the great-great grandson of Company founder Don Facundo Bacardí Massó and a fifth-generation family member". Bacardi Limited. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  5. ^ "More Than a Rum 'War'". Bacardi: The Hidden War. Pluto Press. 2015. pp. 81–90. doi:10.2307/j.ctt18mvnpg.17. ISBN 978-1-78371-894-8.
  6. ^ "FRP tanks still going strong after 23 years". Reinforced Plastics. 50 (10): 4. November 2006. doi:10.1016/s0034-3617(06)71130-4. ISSN 0034-3617.
  7. ^ a b "Bacardi Heritage and History Time Line". Bacardi Limited. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  8. ^ "Bacardi and the bat: All Bacardi rum supplied to U.S. bottled in Jacksonville". Jax Daily Record. 3 January 2012.
  9. ^ a b Gjelten, Tom (2008). Bacardi and the Long Fight for Cuba. New York: Viking. ISBN 9780670019786.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 January 2009. Retrieved 21 October 2008.
  11. ^ Coulombe, Charles A. Rum. Citadel Press.
  12. ^ Duggleby, R. G.; Kaplan, H. (18 November 1975). "A competitive labeling method for the determination of the chemical properties of solitary functional groups in proteins". Biochemistry. 14 (23): 5168–5175. doi:10.1021/bi00694a023. ISSN 0006-2960. PMID 42.
  13. ^ "Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe and Felix Candela's Industrial Buildings". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 18 April 2010.
  14. ^ Robinson, Linda (24 August 2008). "Rum and Revolution". The Washington Post. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  15. ^ "Bacardi Limited: Our Heritage – Prohibition and Innovation". Bacardi. Retrieved 10 May 2011.
  16. ^ Guy, Jack (9 October 2017). "Cuba and Bacardi: A Complicated History". Culture Trip. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  17. ^ Gjelten, Tom (4 September 2008). Bacardi and the Long Fight for Cuba: The Biography of a Cause. Penguin Books.
  18. ^ Ospina, Hernando Calvo (2002). Bacardi: The Hidden War. Pluto Press. ISBN 978-0745318738.
  19. ^ "Bacardi wants to be in Bermuda for centuries". Royal Gazette. 12 February 2019. Retrieved 13 February 2019.
  20. ^ Whitefield, Mimi (20 July 2012). "Havana Club rum dispute isn't over yet". Miami Herald. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  21. ^ Bardach, Ann Louise (2002). Cuba Confidential. Penguin Books. p. 131.
  22. ^ "Dispute Settlement Body adopts reports on the "Havana Club" case". WTO News. 1 February 2002. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  23. ^ McPhie, P. (2 December 1975). "The origin of the alkaline inactivation of pepsinogen". Biochemistry. 14 (24): 5253–5256. doi:10.1021/bi00695a003. ISSN 0006-2960. PMID 44.
  24. ^ Peterson, D. L.; Gleisner, J. M.; Blakley, R. L. (2 December 1975). "Bovine liver dihydrofolate reductase: purification and properties of the enzyme". Biochemistry. 14 (24): 5261–5267. doi:10.1021/bi00695a005. ISSN 0006-2960. PMID 45.
  25. ^ "Bacardi U.S.A. to take over BK's planned Coral Gables headquarters". South Florida Business Journal. 8 May 2007. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  26. ^ Baccanari, D.; Phillips, A.; Smith, S.; Sinski, D.; Burchall, J. (2 December 1975). "Purification and properties of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase". Biochemistry. 14 (24): 5267–5273. doi:10.1021/bi00695a006. ISSN 0006-2960. PMID 46.
  27. ^ Rousseau, Bryant. "In Conversation: Chad Oppenheim". Businessweek. 27 June 2007. . Retrieved on 3 October 2009.
  28. ^ "Miami weighs preserving iconic Bacardi buildings". Associated Press at New York Daily News. Tuesday 7 April 2009. Retrieved 3 October 2009.
  29. ^ "Bacardi USA Announces New Headquarters in South Florida". Retrieved 18 October 2010.
  30. ^ "Bacardi wins round in Havana Club fight". Caribbean Business . 9 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 30 May 2011.
  31. ^ "INTERNATIONAL BRIEFS; Diageo Sells Dewar's And Bombay to Bacardi". The New York Times. Associated Press. 31 March 1998. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 3 October 2019.
  32. ^ MarketWatch, C. B. S. "Bacardi acquires Grey Goose". MarketWatch. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  33. ^ db_staff (27 September 2006). "Bacardi snaps up 42 Below". The Drinks Business. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  34. ^ "Bacardi to buy high-end tequila maker Patron in $5.1 billion deal". Reuters. 23 January 2018. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
  35. ^ "Bacardi Acquires ILEGAL Mezcal – a Leading Artisanal Mezcal Brand in the U.S." www.businesswire.com. 11 September 2023. Retrieved 11 September 2023.
  36. ^ Carruthers, Nicola (15 December 2023). "Bacardi ups stake in Teeling". The Spirits Business. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  37. ^ Limited, Bacardi. "Bacardi Brand Portfolio - Bacardi Brands". Bacardi Limited. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  38. ^ "The International High Quality Trophy - 2010, Spirits & Liqueurs Selection". Monde Selection. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 October 2012. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  40. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 October 2012. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 May 2013. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  42. ^ Hodgson, E. K.; Fridovich, I. (2 December 1975). "The interaction of bovine erythrocyte superoxide dismutase with hydrogen peroxide: inactivation of the enzyme". Biochemistry. 14 (24): 5294–5299. doi:10.1021/bi00695a010. ISSN 0006-2960. PMID 49.
  43. ^ Cabrera Infante, Guillermo (1956). "El viejo y la marca". Ciclón.
  44. ^ Curtis, Wayne (October 2005). "The Old Man and the Daiquiri". The Atlantic.
  45. ^ a b c Bacardi breaks its promise to end trade with Russia, sees profits triple, The Bell
  46. ^ . Bacardi Limited. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022.
  47. ^ a b Bacardi goes big in Russia, The Royal Gazette
  48. ^ "Bacardi Response & Support for Ukraine". Bacardi Limited. from the original on 8 July 2023.
  49. ^ Ukraine Adds Bacardi To 'International Sponsor Of War' List, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
  50. ^ "Украинские власти внесли компанию Bacardi в список «спонсоров войны»". Meduza (in Russian).

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Map of Distillery in Puerto Rico from Google Maps

bacardi, limited, ɑːr, spanish, bakaɾˈði, catalan, bəkəɾˈði, largest, privately, held, family, owned, spirits, company, world, originally, known, bacardí, brand, white, portfolio, more, than, brands, labels, founded, cuba, 1862, facundo, bacardí, massó, limite. Bacardi Limited b e ˈ k ɑːr d i be KAR dee Spanish bakaɾˈdi Catalan bekeɾˈdi is the largest privately held family owned spirits company in the world 1 Originally known for its Bacardi brand of white rum it now has a portfolio of more than 200 brands and labels 2 Founded in Cuba in 1862 by Facundo Bacardi Masso Bacardi Limited has been family owned for seven generations and employs more than 8 000 people with sales in approximately 170 countries Bacardi Limited is the group of companies as a whole and includes Bacardi International Limited 3 Bacardi LimitedCompany typePrivateIndustryDrink industryFounded4 February 1862Santiago de CubaFounderFacundo Bacardi MassoHeadquartersHamilton BermudaKey peopleFacundo L Bacardi Chairman Mahesh Madhavan CEO ProductsBacardi rum Grey Goose vodka Patron Tequila Dewar s Blended Scotch whisky Bombay Sapphire gin Martini amp Rossi vermouth and sparkling wines Eristoff vodka Cazadores blue agave tequila Angel s Envy Bourbon and moreWebsitebacardilimited comThe original Bacardi distillery in Santiago de CubaBacardi rumThe Bacardi Building in Havana was constructed by the company in 1930 but abandoned when the company fled Cuba following the Cuban Revolution in 1959 Bacardi logoBacardi Limited is headquartered in Hamilton Bermuda and has a board of directors led by the original founder s great great grandson Facundo L Bacardi the chairman of the board 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Cuban Revolution 1 3 Bacardi in the United States 1 4 Bacardi and Cuba today 1 5 Acquisitions 2 Brands 3 Main brand 4 Awards 5 Hemingway connection 6 Controversies 6 1 Controversy over sponsoring Russia s war 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory editEarly history edit Facundo Bacardi Masso a Spanish wine merchant was born in Sitges Catalonia Spain on October 16 1814 and immigrated to Santiago Cuba in 1830 At the time rum was cheaply made and not considered a refined drink and rarely sold in upmarket taverns or purchased by the growing emerging middle class on the island 5 Facundo began attempting to tame rum by isolating a proprietary strain of yeast harvested from local sugar cane still used in Bacardi production today This yeast gives Bacardi rum its flavour profile After experimenting with several techniques for close to ten years Facundo pioneered charcoal rum filtration which removed impurities from his rum Facundo then created two separate distillates that he could blend together balancing a variety of flavors Aguardiente a robust flavorful distillate and Redestillado a refined delicate distillate Once Facundo achieved the perfect balance of flavors by marrying the two distillates together he purposefully aged the rum in white oak barrels to develop subtle flavors and characteristics while mellowing out those that were unwanted The final product was the first clear light bodied and mixable white rum in the world 6 Moving from the experimental stage to a more commercial endeavour as local sales began to grow Facundo and his brother Jose purchased a Santiago de Cuba distillery on October 16 1862 which housed a still made of copper and cast iron In the rafters of this building lived fruit bats the inspiration for the Bacardi bat logo 7 It was the idea of Dona Amalia Facundo s wife to adopt the bat to the rum bottle when she recognized its symbolism of family unity good health and good fortune to her husband s homeland of Spain This logo was pragmatic considering the high illiteracy rate in the 19th century enabling customers to easily identify the product 8 The 1880s and 1890s were turbulent times for Cuba and the company Emilio Bacardi Don Facundo s eldest son known for his forward thinking in both his professional and personal life and a passionate advocate for Cuban Independence was imprisoned twice for having fought in the rebel army against Spain in the Cuban War of Independence 9 page needed Emilio s brothers Facundo and Jose and their brother in law Enrique Henri Schueg remained in Cuba with the difficult task of sustaining the company during a period of war With Don Facundo s passing in 1886 Dona Amalia sought refuge by exile in Kingston Jamaica At the end of the Cuban War of Independence during the US occupation of Cuba The Original Cuba Libre and the Daiquiri cocktails were both created with the then Cuban based Bacardi rum 10 In 1899 Emilio Bacardi became the first democratically elected mayor of Santiago appointed US General Leonard Wood During his time in public office Emilio established schools and hospitals completed municipal projects such as the famous Padre Pico Street and the Bacardi Dam financed the creation of parks and decorated the city of Santiago with monuments and sculptures 9 page needed In 1912 Emilio and his wife travelled to Egypt where he purchased a mummy still on display for the future Emilio Bacardi Moreau Municipal Museum in Santiago de Cuba 11 page needed In Santiago his brother Facundo M Bacardi continued to manage the company along with Schueg who began the company s international expansion by opening bottling plants in Barcelona 1910 and New York City 1916 7 The New York plant was soon shut down due to Prohibition yet during this time Cuba became a hotspot for US tourists kicking off a period of rapid growth for the Bacardi company and the onset of cocktail culture in America 12 In 1922 the family completed the expansion and renovation of the original distillery in Santiago increasing the sites rum production capacity In 1930 Schueg oversaw the construction and opening of Edificio Bacardi in Havana regarded as one of the finest Art Deco buildings in Latin America as the third generation of the Bacardi family entered the business In 1927 Bacardi ventured outside the realm of spirits for the first time with the introduction of an authentic Cuban Malt beer Hatuey beer Bacardi s success in transitioning into an international brand and company was due mostly to Schueg who branded Cuba as The home of rum and Bacardi as The king of rums and the rum of Kings Expansion began overseas first to Mexico in 1931 where it had architects Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe and Felix Candela design office buildings and a bottling plant in Mexico City during the 1950s The building complex was added to the tentative list of UNESCO s World Heritage Site list on 20 November 2001 13 In 1936 Bacardi began producing rum on U S territory in Puerto Rico after Prohibition which enabled the company to sell rum tariff free in the United States 14 The company later expanded to the United States in 1944 with the opening of Bacardi Imports Inc in Manhattan New York City 15 During World War II the company was led by Schueg s son in law Jose Pepin Bosch Pepin founded Bacardi Imports in New York City and became Cuba s Minister of the Treasury in 1949 Cuban Revolution edit During the Cuban Revolution in 1959 the Bacardi family and hence the company supported and aided the rebels 16 However after the triumph of the revolutionaries and turn to communism the family maintained a fierce opposition to Fidel Castro s policies in Cuba in the 1960s In his book Bacardi and the Long Fight for Cuba Tom Gjelten describes how the Bacardi family and the company left Cuba in exile after the Cuban government confiscated the company s Cuban assets without compensation on 14 October 1960 particularly nationalizing and banning all private property on the island as well as all bank accounts 17 However due to concerns over the previous Cuban leader Fulgencio Batista the company had started foreign branches a few years before the revolution the company moved the ownership of its trademarks assets and proprietary formulas out of the country to the Bahamas prior to the revolution and already produced Bacardi rum at other distillery sites in Puerto Rico and Mexico This helped the company survive after the Cuban government confiscated all Bacardi assets in the country without any compensation 18 In 1965 over 100 years after the company was established in Cuba Bacardi established new roots and found a new home with global headquarters in Hamilton Bermuda In February 2019 Bacardi s CEO Mahesh Madhavan stated that Bacardi s global headquarters would remain in Bermuda for the next 500 years and that Bermuda is our home now 19 nbsp Bacardi Building Bermuda Location of Bacardi s world headquartersIn 1999 Otto Reich a lobbyist in Washington on behalf of Bacardi drafted section 211 of the Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency Appropriations Act FY1999 a bill that became known as the Bacardi Act Section 211 denied trademark protection to products of Cuban businesses expropriated after the Cuban revolution a provision sought by Bacardi The act was aimed primarily at the Havana Club brand in the United States The brand was created by the Jose Arechabala S A and nationalised without compensation in the Cuban revolution the Arechabala family left Cuba and stopped producing rum They therefore allowed the US trademark registration for Havana Club to lapse in 1973 Taking advantage of the lapse the Cuban government registered the mark in the United States in 1976 20 21 This new law was drafted to invalidate the trademark registration Section 211 has been challenged unsuccessfully by the Cuban government and the European Union in US courts It was ruled illegal by the WTO in 2001 and 2002 22 The US Congress has yet to re examine the matter The brand was assigned by the Cuban government to Pernod Ricard in 1993 Bacardi rekindled the story of the Arechabala family and Havana Club in the United States when it launched the AMPARO Experience in 2018 an immersive play experience based in Miami the city with the highest population of Cuban exiles AMPARO is the story of the family s entire history being erased and their heritage stolen according to playwright Vanessa Garcia 23 Bacardi in the United States edit Main article Bacardi Building Miami nbsp The Cathedral of Rum at the Bacardi distillery in Catano Puerto Rico near San Juan nbsp Bacardi s former U S headquarters in Miami In 2006 the company moved to Coral Gables Florida In 1964 Bacardi opened new US offices in Miami Florida Exiled Cuban architect Enrique Gutierrez created a building that was hurricane proof using a system of steel cables and pulleys which allow the building to move slightly in the event of a strong shock The steel cables are anchored into the bedrock and extend through marble covered shafts up to the top floor where they are led over large pulleys Outside on both sides of the eight story building more than 28 000 tiles painted and fired by Brazilian artist Francisco Brennand depicting abstract blue flowers were placed on the walls according to the artist s exact specifications In 1973 the company commissioned the square building in the plaza Architect Ignacio Carrera Justiz used cantilevered construction a style invented by Frank Lloyd Wright Wright observed how well trees with taproots withstood hurricane force winds The building raised 47 feet off the ground around a central core features four massive walls made of sections of inch thick hammered glass mural tapestries designed and manufactured in France The striking design of the annex affectionately known as the Jewel Box building 24 came from a painting by German artist Johannes M Dietz In 2006 Bacardi USA leased a 15 story headquarters complex in Coral Gables Florida Bacardi had employees in seven buildings across Miami Dade County at the time 25 Bacardi vacated its former headquarters buildings on Biscayne Boulevard in Midtown Miami The building currently serves as the headquarters of the National YoungArts Foundation Miami citizens began a campaign to label the buildings as historic The Bacardi Buildings Complex has been a locally protected historic resource since Oct 6 2009 when it was designated by unanimous decision by the Historic and Environmental Preservation Board 26 In 2007 Chad Oppenheim the head of Oppenheim Architecture Design described the Bacardi buildings as elegant with a Modernist look combined with a local flavour 27 In April 2009 University of Miami professor of architecture Allan Schulman said Miami s brand is its identity as a tropical city The Bacardi buildings are exactly the sort that resonate with our consciousness of what Miami is about 28 The American headquarters is in Coral Gables Florida 29 Bacardi and Cuba today edit nbsp Bacardi Bat in the Bacardi Building in Catano Puerto RicoBacardi drinks are not easily found in Cuba today The main brand of rum in Cuba is Havana Club produced by a company that was confiscated and nationalized by the government following the revolution Bacardi later bought the brand from the original owners the Arechabala family The Cuban government in partnership with the French company Pernod Ricard sells its Havana Club products internationally except in the United States and its territories Bacardi created the Real Havana Club rum based on the original recipe from the Arechabala family manufactures it in Puerto Rico and sells it in the United States Bacardi continues to fight in the courts attempting to legalize their own Havana Club trademark outside the United States 30 Acquisitions edit nbsp Bacardi SuperiorBacardi Limited has made numerous acquisitions to diversify away from the eponymous Bacardi rum brand In 1993 Bacardi merged with Martini amp Rossi the Italian producer of Martini vermouth and sparkling wines creating the Bacardi Martini group Other associated brands include the Real Havana Club Drambuie Scotch whisky liqueur DiSaronno Amaretto Eristoff vodka Cazadores Tequila B amp B and Benedictine liqueurs In 1998 Bacardi company acquired John Dewar amp Sons Ltd and Bombay Sapphire from Diageo for 2 billion 31 In 2004 purchased Grey Goose a French made vodka from Sidney Frank for 2 billion 32 In 2006 Bacardi purchased New Zealand vodka brand 42 Below 33 In 2018 Bacardi purchased tequila manufacturer Patron Spirits Company for 5 1 billion 34 In 2023 Bacardi acquired the renowned super premium mezcal brand Ilegal Mezcal 35 In December 2023 Bacardi has taken majority control of Irish whiskey producer Teeling 36 Brands editBacardi beverage brands include 37 Beer HatueyCachaca LeblonCognac Baron Otard D usseGin Bombay Sapphire Bosford Rose OxleyLiqueur Benedictine Cedlila Get Martini Spirito Patron Citronge St GermainMezcal IlegalRum Bacardi Banks Castillo Facundo Havana Club USA only Pyrat Santa Teresa Single Cane EstateSparkling wine Martini Alta Langa Martini Asti Martini Grandi Augur Martini Magici Istanti Martini Prosecco Martini Riserva di Montellera Martini RoseTequila Camino Real Cazadores Corzo PatronVermouth Martini Noilly PratVodka Eristoff Grey Goose Russian Prince Ultimat Vodka 42 BelowAmerican whiskey Angel s Envy StillhouseIrish whiskey TeelingScotch whisky Single malt Scotch whisky Aberfeldy Aultmore Craigellachie Deveron Royal BracklaBlended Scotch whisky Dewar s William Lawson sMain brand edit nbsp Bacardi Mojito nbsp Bacardi Breezers Orange Pineapple and BlueberryBacardi Superior Bacardi 8 Bacardi Gran Reserva Bacardi Dark Rum Bacardi White Rum Bacardi Spiced Rum Bacardi Gold Rum Bacardi 151 Bacardi Gold Bacardi Mojito Bacardi Breezers Bacardi Apple Bacardi Lemon Bacardi Carta BlancaAwards editBacardi rums have been entered for a number of international spirit ratings awards Several Bacardi spirits have performed notably well 38 39 40 41 In 2020 Bacardi Superior Bacardi Gold Bacardi Black Bacardi Anejo Cuatro were each awarded a gold medal by the International Quality Institute Monde Selection In addition both Bacardi Reserva Ocho and Bacardi Gran Reserva Diez were awarded the top honor of Grand Gold quality award 42 Hemingway connection editErnest Hemingway lived in Cuba from 1939 until shortly after the Cuban Revolution He lived at Finca Vigia in the small town of San Francisco de Paula located very close to Bacardi s Modelo Brewery for Hatuey Beer in Cotorro Havana In 1954 Compania Ron Bacardi S A threw Hemingway a party when he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature soon after the publication of his novel The Old Man and the Sea 1952 in which he honored the company by mentioning its Hatuey beer Hemingway also mentioned Bacardi and Hatuey in his novels To Have and Have Not 1937 and For Whom the Bell Tolls 1940 Guillermo Cabrera Infante wrote an account of the festivities for the periodical Ciclon titled El Viejo y la Marca The Old Man and the Brand a play on El Viejo y el Mar the book s Spanish title In his account he described how on one side there was a wooden stage with two streamers Hatuey beer and Bacardi rum on each end and a Cuban flag in the middle Next to the stage was a bar at which people crowded ordering daiquiris and beer all free 43 A sign at the event read Bacardi rum welcomes the author of The Old Man and the Sea In his article The Old Man and the Daiquiri Wayne Curtis writes about how Hemingway s home bar also held a bottle of Bacardi rum Hemingway wrote in Islands in the Stream this frozen daiquiri so well beaten as it is looks like the sea where the wave falls away from the bow of a ship when she is doing thirty knots 44 Controversies editControversy over sponsoring Russia s war edit This section s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message In March 2022 after Russia s invasion of Ukraine Bacardi announced that it would halt all exports to Russia and freeze investment and advertising programs 45 46 Instead of keeping this promise the company increased its exports to Russia citation needed and tripled its profits 45 47 As of summer 2023 Bacardi went on increasing its business in Russia and looking for new employees for its Russian branch 47 When Bacardi s broken promise gained international media attention the pledge disappeared from their company website 45 48 On August 10 2023 Ukrainian authorities added Bacardi to their list of International Sponsors of War 49 50 See also editLubee Bat Conservancy an organization in Gainesville Florida founded by Facundo s great grandson LuisReferences edit Top 8 family owned spirits companies The Spirit Business September 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2020 Sorkin Andrew Ross 21 June 2004 Bacardi to Buy Grey Goose Stirring More Talk of I P O The New York Times Bacardi Limited Retrieved 23 April 2012 Facundo L Bacardi has been Chairman of the Board of Bacardi Limited since 2005 and a director since 1993 He is the great great grandson of Company founder Don Facundo Bacardi Masso and a fifth generation family member Bacardi Limited Retrieved 16 June 2020 More Than a Rum War Bacardi The Hidden War Pluto Press 2015 pp 81 90 doi 10 2307 j ctt18mvnpg 17 ISBN 978 1 78371 894 8 FRP tanks still going strong after 23 years Reinforced Plastics 50 10 4 November 2006 doi 10 1016 s0034 3617 06 71130 4 ISSN 0034 3617 a b Bacardi Heritage and History Time Line Bacardi Limited Retrieved 31 December 2022 Bacardi and the bat All Bacardi rum supplied to U S bottled in Jacksonville Jax Daily Record 3 January 2012 a b Gjelten Tom 2008 Bacardi and the Long Fight for Cuba New York Viking ISBN 9780670019786 Daiquiri Archived from the original on 6 January 2009 Retrieved 21 October 2008 Coulombe Charles A Rum Citadel Press Duggleby R G Kaplan H 18 November 1975 A competitive labeling method for the determination of the chemical properties of solitary functional groups in proteins Biochemistry 14 23 5168 5175 doi 10 1021 bi00694a023 ISSN 0006 2960 PMID 42 Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe and Felix Candela s Industrial Buildings UNESCO World Heritage Centre Retrieved 18 April 2010 Robinson Linda 24 August 2008 Rum and Revolution The Washington Post Retrieved 31 December 2022 Bacardi Limited Our Heritage Prohibition and Innovation Bacardi Retrieved 10 May 2011 Guy Jack 9 October 2017 Cuba and Bacardi A Complicated History Culture Trip Retrieved 28 December 2020 Gjelten Tom 4 September 2008 Bacardi and the Long Fight for Cuba The Biography of a Cause Penguin Books Ospina Hernando Calvo 2002 Bacardi The Hidden War Pluto Press ISBN 978 0745318738 Bacardi wants to be in Bermuda for centuries Royal Gazette 12 February 2019 Retrieved 13 February 2019 Whitefield Mimi 20 July 2012 Havana Club rum dispute isn t over yet Miami Herald Retrieved 11 January 2015 Bardach Ann Louise 2002 Cuba Confidential Penguin Books p 131 Dispute Settlement Body adopts reports on the Havana Club case WTO News 1 February 2002 Retrieved 9 October 2016 McPhie P 2 December 1975 The origin of the alkaline inactivation of pepsinogen Biochemistry 14 24 5253 5256 doi 10 1021 bi00695a003 ISSN 0006 2960 PMID 44 Peterson D L Gleisner J M Blakley R L 2 December 1975 Bovine liver dihydrofolate reductase purification and properties of the enzyme Biochemistry 14 24 5261 5267 doi 10 1021 bi00695a005 ISSN 0006 2960 PMID 45 Bacardi U S A to take over BK s planned Coral Gables headquarters South Florida Business Journal 8 May 2007 Retrieved 31 December 2022 Baccanari D Phillips A Smith S Sinski D Burchall J 2 December 1975 Purification and properties of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase Biochemistry 14 24 5267 5273 doi 10 1021 bi00695a006 ISSN 0006 2960 PMID 46 Rousseau Bryant In Conversation Chad Oppenheim Businessweek 27 June 2007 2 Retrieved on 3 October 2009 Miami weighs preserving iconic Bacardi buildings Associated Press at New York Daily News Tuesday 7 April 2009 Retrieved 3 October 2009 Bacardi USA Announces New Headquarters in South Florida Retrieved 18 October 2010 Bacardi wins round in Havana Club fight Caribbean Business Archived 9 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 30 May 2011 INTERNATIONAL BRIEFS Diageo Sells Dewar s And Bombay to Bacardi The New York Times Associated Press 31 March 1998 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 3 October 2019 MarketWatch C B S Bacardi acquires Grey Goose MarketWatch Retrieved 24 September 2020 db staff 27 September 2006 Bacardi snaps up 42 Below The Drinks Business Retrieved 4 November 2023 Bacardi to buy high end tequila maker Patron in 5 1 billion deal Reuters 23 January 2018 Retrieved 23 January 2018 Bacardi Acquires ILEGAL Mezcal a Leading Artisanal Mezcal Brand in the U S www businesswire com 11 September 2023 Retrieved 11 September 2023 Carruthers Nicola 15 December 2023 Bacardi ups stake in Teeling The Spirits Business Retrieved 16 December 2023 Limited Bacardi Bacardi Brand Portfolio Bacardi Brands Bacardi Limited Retrieved 4 November 2023 The International High Quality Trophy 2010 Spirits amp Liqueurs Selection Monde Selection Retrieved 23 April 2012 Proof66 Summary Page for Bacardi Reserva Limitada Archived from the original on 4 October 2012 Retrieved 20 October 2012 Proof66 Summary Page for Bacardi 1873 Ron Solera Archived from the original on 1 October 2012 Retrieved 20 October 2012 Proof66 Summary Page for Bacardi Ron Reserva 8 Year Archived from the original on 9 May 2013 Retrieved 20 October 2012 Hodgson E K Fridovich I 2 December 1975 The interaction of bovine erythrocyte superoxide dismutase with hydrogen peroxide inactivation of the enzyme Biochemistry 14 24 5294 5299 doi 10 1021 bi00695a010 ISSN 0006 2960 PMID 49 Cabrera Infante Guillermo 1956 El viejo y la marca Ciclon Curtis Wayne October 2005 The Old Man and the Daiquiri The Atlantic a b c Bacardi breaks its promise to end trade with Russia sees profits triple The Bell Bacardi Response amp Support for Ukraine Bacardi Limited Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 a b Bacardi goes big in Russia The Royal Gazette Bacardi Response amp Support for Ukraine Bacardi Limited Archived from the original on 8 July 2023 Ukraine Adds Bacardi To International Sponsor Of War List Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Ukrainskie vlasti vnesli kompaniyu Bacardi v spisok sponsorov vojny Meduza in Russian External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bacardi Rum Official website Map of Distillery in Puerto Rico from Google MapsPortals nbsp Companies nbsp Drink nbsp Cuba Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bacardi amp oldid 1202921087, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.