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North Port-Brechin 24 Year Old 1981 Gordon & Macphail Connoisseurs Choice (2006) 70cl *RARE CLOSED DISTILLERY*

£499.00
In stock: 1 available
Product Details
Brand: North-Port
Region: Highlands
Age: 24
Country: Scotland

North Port-Brechin 24 Year Old 1981 Gordon & Macphail Connoisseurs Choice (2006) 70cl

A rare bottle of North Port Brechin that is in ghost status.

Also known as Brechin, North Port was a family-owned distillery bought out and closed by DCL.

Before North Port distillery (or Brechin as it was originally known) was built, the residents of the Angus royal burgh were supplied with whisky by smugglers carrying it south from the north Grampians. The Guthrie family took great pride in their distillery – modern machinery was installed to increase production capacity, though the whisky was distilled in ‘old fashioned’ pot stills and condensed in worm tubs using water from the Den Burn, which ran through the site.

Like the illicit whisky smuggling into Brechin, its water and peat also came from the Grampians, while ‘the very best barley’ was sourced from nearby farms.

North Port’s whisky was never officially bottled as a single malt during its lifetime, although Diageo had it bottled for its Rare Malts series in 1995, 1998 and 1999, as well as under the name ‘Brechin’ for its Special Releases in 2005. In his book The Malt Whisky Companion , whisky writer Michael Jackson described North Port’s whisky as ‘dry, fruity, gin-like. Aperitif’.

During the 19th century the principle trade of the town and former royal burgh of Brechin in Angus was textile manufacturing, much of which was exported to France. However Brechin was also home to two breweries and two distilleries – Glencadam, which was built in 1825 by George Cooper, and Brechin distillery, which was founded five years earlier by three of the Guthrie brothers.

David, John and Alexander Guthrie, sons of a local merchant and former provost of the town, established their distillery a half-mile away from the South Esk river under the trading name of Townhead Distillery Co. Three of 13 siblings, the brothers’ venture would not have sat well with their younger brother Dr. Thomas Guthrie, who eventually became renowned as a reverend and staunch supporter of the temperance movement, the roots of which were only very slight at the time.

Still, Brechin distillery prevailed and remained in family ownership for around 100 years. At some point during the 19th century the family changed the distillery’s name to North Port, referencing a nearby gate in the wall that once surrounded the town (Brechin is still a town, despite having a cathedral).

In 1922 the distillery, which could produce 450,000 litres of spirit per year, was bought by Distillers Company Ltd. (DCL) and W.H. Holt & Co. Ltd. It was transferred to DCL’s Scottish Malt Distillers in the same year.

SMD closed North Port in 1928 and aside from a brief airing it remained silent after the Second World War. North Port gained a second wind in the mid-1900s but became one of the nine DCL distilleries to close in 1983 as a response to widespread excess stocks in the market.

The distillery’s buildings were gradually dismantled piece by piece until it was finally demolished in 1994 to make way for a supermarket.

Write Up by MyWhiskyJourneys

"Probably one of the saddest places I visited on my Barnard re-run, noting that, having closed three years previously in 1983, “North Port had been allowed to lapse into a state of total neglect as if to emphasize the end of its days as a producer of spirits. My task, therefore, was no more than to record its existence at the point of time of my tour before it finally sank from trace after more than 160 years of distilling”. And that was that. The buildings were demolished in 1994 to be replaced by a supermarket!

Brechin distillery, as it was originally known, was built in 1820 by David Guthrie. It remained with various of the Guthrie’s and in different forms until 1922 when it was acquired jointly by DCL and W.H. Holt & Co. Ltd. It was transferred that year to DCL’s subsidiary, Scottish Malt Distillers Ltd., who shut it down in 1926 until 1937. It was closed again from 1940 to 1947. At some point prior to the 1922 acquisition the name was changed to North Port. This referred to the northern gate near to where the distillery stood when Brechin was encircled by ancient city walls.

North Port/Brechin was essentially a whisky for blending although a little was sold as a single malt under the name of Glen Dew, exclusively for the Italian market. It was marketed by the DCL subsidiary, Mitchell Brothers Limited, which held the license for North Port. The label for the 5 years old looks intriguingly like the Glen Grant 5 years old single malt, which was a huge seller in Italy! Much later some of the whisky was bottled, both officially in the Rare Malts series and privately by some of the better known independents. "


43% ABV

70cl

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North Port-Brechin 24 Year Old 1981 Gordon & Macphail Connoisseurs Choice (2006) 70cl *RARE CLOSED DISTILLERY*
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