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Eastern Highland
Ardmore
Built in 1898 by William Teacher's son Adam close to the village of Kennethmont in Aberdeenshire, Ardmore is a key ingredient of Teacher's Highland Cream. It is one of the larger and most modern distilleries with an annual output of three million litres.
Glen Garioch Distillery
Pronounced Glen-Geery, the distillery is located at Old Meldrum in Aberdeenshire surrounded by rich grain growing farmland.
Established in 1797, the buildings resemble a village school.
The distillery is silent at the moment.
Glenury Royal Distillery
Sitting on the East Coast near Stonehaven, south of Aberdeen. Founded in 1825 by Captain Robert Barclay, who was the local M.P., and had Palace connections. These connections persuaded King William IV to allow him to call his whisky Royal..
The distillery was rebuilt in 1966, but is now mothballed.
Hillside (Glenesk) Distillery
Founded in 1898 by the unforgettably named Septimus Parsonage, this now silent distillery was originally renowned for its unusually large stills. It is now called Glenesk. It produced its finest malt as Hillside from 1965 to 1980. Standing at the mouth of the South Esk River at Montrose the distillery has had a chequered history, starting life as a flax mill, converted to a grain distillery and reconverted to a malt distillery, only to be mothballed in 1985.
Old Fettercairn Distillery
Fettercairn is a village about 5 miles west of Laurencekirk. An old corn mill was converted to a distillery in 1824 and rebuilt following a fire in 1887. It was out of commission from 1926 to 1939, when it was in danger of being dismantled..
The distillery uses unusual reflux condensers instead of the more usual 'swan' necks on the stills.
Main Shop
:
Hops and Scotch
:
Scotch Whisky
:
Highland Malts
:
Eastern Highland
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