An American Legacy Rooted in History: The Story of Norton Grape

cloeta grapes

Wine in America did not begin with imitation. It began with curiosity. Long before Cabernet and Chardonnay became familiar words on American wine lists, growers were already asking a more fundamental question: what grows well here? In many places east of the Rocky Mountains, the answer was not a European import at all—but a grape […]

Built for the Table, Not Just the Vineyard

Throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, Norton earned a reputation not only for how it grew, but for how it tasted. Growers valued its strength in the vineyard, but winemakers appreciated something else: balance. Norton wines were known for their structure, yet they rarely felt heavy. They carried enough acidity to remain lively at […]

A Native Path to American Wine

In the early years of American viticulture, success was uncertain. Many growers believed that great wine could only come from European grapes, but those vines often struggled outside their native climates. Disease, humidity, and winter freezes made consistency difficult. Norton offered a different path. Instead of forcing European varieties into unfamiliar conditions, growers began working […]

The Grape That Outlasted the Storms

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Wine history is often shaped by crises, and the United States faced two of the most dramatic: phylloxera and Prohibition. Phylloxera, a tiny root-eating pest, devastated vineyards across Europe in the late 1800s. Many European vines were highly vulnerable, and entire regions were wiped out. But native American grape species had evolved alongside the pest […]

Before the Classics, There Was Norton

cloeta grapes

Today, Cabernet Sauvignon and Chardonnay dominate American wine lists. But long before those names became familiar, growers were working with grapes that could actually survive in local conditions. In the 1800s, European varieties often failed east of the Rockies. Summers were humid, winters were harsh, and diseases spread easily. Many early vineyards were lost before […]

A Grape That Learned the Land

American wine did not grow from imitation alone. In many regions, it grew from observation. Early growers discovered that some European grapes struggled with humidity, pests, and harsh winters. Instead of forcing the land to adapt, they began searching for varieties that already belonged to the climate. That search led many to Norton. Unlike imported […]

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