Adelphi distillery was a Scotch whisky distillery, which was founded in 1826 in Glasgow and closed in 1907. The name was revived in 1993, for an independent bottler of Scotch whisky.[1][2]

Adelphi distillery
Region: Lowland
LocationGlasgow, Scotland
Founded1826
StatusClosed/demolished
Capacity2,350,000 L
Demolished1970

Adelphi distillery

edit

The Adelphi Distillery was founded in 1826 by brothers Charles and David Gray. It was sited just south of the Victoria Bridge, at the edge of the Gorbals area of Glasgow. The distillery was operated by the Gray family until 1880, when it was acquired by Messrs A. Walker and Co, a company who already owned large distilleries in Limerick and Liverpool. The Walkers invested in the distillery and added a Coffey still with which to distil grain spirit. By 1886, there were four pot stills and the Coffey still in full production. The distillery had an output of 516,000 imperial gallons (2,350,000 L) of pure alcohol per year. The Adelphi distillery was purchased by Distillers Company (DCL) in 1902, and by 1907 distilling had been stopped completely. The buildings of the distillery were demolished between 1968 and 1970, and the chimney was dismantled in 1971.[3]

Independent bottler

edit

The great-grandson of one of the distillery's founders, Jamie Walker, established the modern day Adelphi independent bottler in 1993, selling the company to Keith Falconer and Donald Houston in 2004.[4] Whiskies are selected by a nosing team chaired by whisky critic Charles MacLean.

Ardnamurhcan Distillery

edit

Ardnamurchan distillery is a Scotch whisky distillery owned by Adelphi on the Ardnamurchan peninsula of Lochaber in the Highlands, Scotland.[5][6]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Whiskies of Scotland Adelphi Distiller
  2. ^ Whisky Mag Directory Archived September 29, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Townsend, Brian (1993) The Lost Distilleries of Scotland
  4. ^ Adelphi Distillery Ltd about us page (http://www.adelphidistillery.com/about Archived 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine)
  5. ^ Maclean, Charles (2016). Whiskypedia. A Gazetteer of Scotch Whisky. Edinburgh: Birlinn. pp. 73–74. ISBN 978-1-78027-401-0.
  6. ^ "Ardnamurchan Distillery". Whisky Magazine. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
edit

55°51′09″N 4°15′07″W / 55.852597°N 4.251844°W / 55.852597; -4.251844