The Last Whiskey Runner

Posted by The Popular News Today on Sunday, August 5, 2012

By Whiskey Tom


Born in 1946, Marvin "Popcorn" Sutton was living in one of the few but self-proclaimed "moonshine capitals of the world," Cocke County, Tenn. He grew up around stills set-up in the woods where he cut an enormous stock of hardwood used to fire the boiler, mostly during the night so they weren't as readily spotted, working by moonlight and the glow of the fire.

Born in 1946, Marvin "Popcorn" Sutton lived in one of the few but self-proclaimed "moonshine capitals of the world," Cocke County, Tenn. He spent his youth around stills set-up in the woods where he chopped a huge stock of hardwood used to heat the boiler, mostly through the night so they weren't as readily seen, working by moonlight and the light from the fire.

Paying a supplementary tax on what they deemed a "farm product" was unconscionable to the Scots-Irish descendants of the settlers of this land. These folks would be described as libertarian rather than conservative nowadays, since they are extremely guarded about rights and would like to see as little of government as possible. They despised law breaking intensely, and moonshining is illegal, but they had to provide for families in a rural agricultural area were jobs are hard to come by at best and nonexistent at worst. In the Great Depression a great many survived by illegal whiskey production; during Prohibition they truly flourished and expanded businesses, buying cars and building even better barns and stills.

So, the era in which Sutton found himself in the last 20 years was a period when other drugs made their way into manufacture, bringing greater numbers of law enforcement with worsening tempers (the state is fourth in crystal meth manufacturing in the country). Still, he in no way changed his methods of distilling the corn. He kept the copper-tubed still fired with hardwood and drove his old Ford Fairlane named "the three-jug" because he shelled out three jugs of booze for it.

He grew to be quite a celebrity as the supposed "last moonshiner" and wrote a book about his exploits. He visited restaurants and bars around Cocke County and western North Carolina. He starred in documentaries regarding the fascinating business he was immersed in.

Sutton had several run-ins with the police, and in the 1970's was arrested for white whiskey production for the first time. He had a few more problems with the law (not all of them about alcohol) but in 2007, he sold 50 gallons to an undercover officer and was found guilty the next year. The agents found three 1,000 gallon stills on his premises, along with guns and ammo, and 800 gallons of white lightning.

His demeanor sank. During the trial, his chats with friends about whiskey, rare to begin with, turned nonexistent. One of the last pictures taken by a friend outside the courthouse at the time shows him sitting sad-eyed, holding up a middle finger. Even worse, a plea deal included forfeiting the stills, whiskey and guns, and the majority of his other property to decrease the sentence from fifteen years to 1.5 years.

Sutton got that eighteen month sentence in January, 2009, but those who knew him said he was devastated. After many years of telling them that his last run of whiskey would certainly be his last, people believed it on this occasion. His wife of just a couple years found him in late January, dead by his very own hand, in his old Ford. The Wall Street Journal posted an article about Marvin's arrest and can be seen online: Popcorn Sutton, Legendary Moonshiner, Headed to the Pokey.




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