In the early 1980s, James Lester had a hunch that Michigan could be producing better wine. He had read about pioneering New York winemaker Konstantin Frank’s somewhat unexpected success with classic French styles in the Finger Lakes, and despite being told that it was impossible to replicate in the Mitten State, Lester contacted Frank.
“I thought, ‘If he can do it, I can do it too,’” says Lester, “so I called him up. He had a little nursery, and he sent me some vines. That’s how I got started.”
The Seattle native had relocated to Michigan in 1976 to pursue a master’s degree in theology at Andrews University in Berrien Springs after graduating from Walla Walla College, auspiciously situated in Washington State’s budding wine-producing region. During that time, he began to taste and learn about exceptional wine, exchanging letters with winemakers in the early days of their careers in places like Napa Valley and developing an affinity for superlative French wine.
Getting his start
Wyncroft currently grows an assortment of classical varietals—Sauvignon Blanc, Semillon, Merlot and Cabernet Franc, to name a few—in its well-established vineyard in Buchanan and a picturesque estate near Fennville, which was purchased in 2014 after the operation outgrew the winery’s original location in a nondescript strip mall. After losing the last two crops entirely to the harsh cold, the Lesters are anticipating their first harvest at the new estate this autumn—provided that the late-spring weather remained free of frost.
Pullman, MI








