As many as a hundred malt whisky distilleries have
been born in the green glens of Speyside, many of them, like
Glen Elgin, in the boom years just before 1900.
But even as the new chimney stacks rose, trouble was brewing
in the whisky industry. Glen Elgin’s designer, the renowned
Elgin architect Charles Doig, made an apocalyptic prediction,
that this would be the last distillery built on Speyside for
fifty years. Even this turned out to be conservative; it was
actually 60 years before Tormore became the next.
At
least, in Glen Elgin, the last was saved for best. And, in
fact, little has changed in a hundred years.
In
the circumstances, that itself is a miracle. Work on the buildings
began shortly before the 1898-99 collapse of Leith whisky
blender, Pattisons, famously drove a buoyant market for malt
whisky into recession. Local legend has it that many of the
workers went unpaid and that the steeplejacks only got their
money when they threatened to demolish the chimney stack.
Glen Elgin’s next act was to impoverish its creators,
who were forced to sell it for perhaps a quarter of its cost
within a year of its eventually beginning production in May
1900.
Speyside’s
newest distillery changed hands once more in 1902 and again
in 1906, when it at last began a stable period of almost 25
years in the hands of Glasgow blender John J. Blanche. In
the 1930s, it became part of Scottish Malt Distillers, for
whom it was an important component of the well-known White
Horse blend.
Innovations
were rare during Glen Elgin’s first half century though
one is of interest – the site had partly been chosen
for its ability to make use of abundant water supplies from
the Glen Burn to drive a turbine that provided most of the
power needed to run the machinery. As a result, electricity
from the national supply was not needed until 1950. The early
1960s brought much needed investment and four new stills were
finally added to the original two. Glen Elgin™ became
available as a single malt and exports of a 12 year-old expression,
mainly to Italy and Japan, began in 1977.
Site Operations Manager: Colin Greig
Contact Us
Glen Elgin Distillery
Longmorn Elgin Moray
IV30 3SL Scotland
Tel: +44 (0) 1343 862 100
The Glen Elgin Whisky Distillery is not open to the public.