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This article is from the Encyclopedia of North Carolina edited by William S. Powell. Copyright © 2006 by the University of North Carolina Press. Used by permission of the publisher. For personal use and not for further distribution. Please submit permission requests for other use directly to the publisher.

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Cheerwine

by Eileen McGrath, 2006; Revised December 2021.Cheerwine bottle

In 1913 L. D. Peeler and several other investors in Salisbury purchased stock in the Kentucky-based Mint-Cola Bottling Company, and Peeler started the local bottling franchise of the company. When the parent company went bankrupt in 1917, the Salisbury investors purchased their local branch and renamed it the Carolina Beverage Corporation. In the same year, in response to a sugar shortage during World War I, Peeler sought ways to make a cola drink with less sugar. After experimenting with different formulas, he added wild cherry flavoring to a cola to create Cheerwine. The name comes from the drink’s cherry flavor and burgundy wine color. The exact formula for Cheerwine has never been revealed, and the company that produces it is still owned and operated by Peeler descendants. The popularity of the new drink was so great that the bottling company changed its name in 1924 to the Piedmont Cheerwine Bottling Company. For many years the drink was available only in western North Carolina, where it is still enormously popular, but in 1981 the company began to expand beyond its traditional market into neighboring states. In January 2003 Cheerwine became available in Europe for the first time through a licensing agreement with a local bottling company in Norway.

In May 2017, Cheerwine celebrated its centennial anniversary.  The company held a Centennial Celebration in its hometown of Salisbury. The company claims to be the oldest softdrink company continuously operated by the same family.  Charles Clifford ("Cliff") Ritche, great-grandson of the founder L.D. Peeler, has been the company's CEO since 1992.

References:

"History of Cheerwine." Cheerwine.com. Online at https://cheerwine.com/about/. Accessed December 2, 2021. 

Image credit:

"Cheerwine1." 2011. Photo by Flickr user: TheFoodJunk. Online at https://www.flickr.com/photos/foodjunk/6104591975. Accessed 11/2011.

"Cheerwine," Our State, August 2013. https://digital.ncdcr.gov/Documents/Detail/our-state/1096358?item=1096915

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