Gilbeys of Oxford Street, London. of Pantheon, Oxford Street, London, W.
Wine and Spirit Merchants and Distillers. Producers of Gilbey's Gin.
1856 Walter Gilbey and Alfred Gilbey returned to London after the Crimean war and on the advice of their eldest brother, Henry Parry Gilbey, a wholesale wine-merchant, started in the retail wine and spirit trade, importing South African wines.
1857 Backed by capital obtained through Henry Gilbey, they opened a small retail business in a basement in Oxford Street, London.
The Cape wines proved popular, and within three years the brothers had 20,000 customers on their books. Agents were appointed throughout the UK to sell their wines to grocers shops.
1864 The Gilbey business increased so rapidly that, in 1864, Henry Gilbey abandoned his own undertaking to join his brothers.
1867 The three brothers secured the old Pantheon theatre and concert hall in Oxford Street for their headquarters.
1875 The firm purchased a large claret-producing estate in Medoc, on the banks of the Gironde.
1887 The company purchased the Glen Spey Distillery at Rothes from James Stuart and Co for £11,500, a price well below the cost of the recently constructed distillery.[1]
1893 The business was converted, for family reasons, into a private limited liability company, of which Walter Gilbey, who in the same year was created a baronet, was chairman.
1895 The company began to distill gin and Gilbey's Gin became a well-known brand.
1895 The company bought the Glenisla Distillery at Keith.[2] The name was swiftly changed to Strathmill Distillery.
1904 The company bought the Knockando Distillery, its third malt whisky distillery. It was a new construction which had been built as the whisky boom came to a close and was available at a knockdown price.[3]
1912 An advertising campaign for Gilbey's Invalid Port made it a household name.
Walter Henry, Walter Gilbey's son, became chairman of W. and A. Gilbey.
1914 Directors: Lord Blyth, Sir Charles Gold, A. Gilbey, W. Crosbie Gilbey, N. Gilbey, H. W. Gilbey, A. G. Gold, A. N. Gilbey, G. Grinling, H. W. Blyth, and A. W. Blyth. Secretary: A. J. Burke. Capital: £1,440,000 in 72,000 ordinary and 72,000 preference shares, all of £10 each. The whole of the capital was allotted to the Directors, then partners. Specialities: Wines and Spirits (wholesale). The firm ranks as the largest of its kind in the kingdom. There are over 4,000 agents throughout the country. Connection: United Kingdom, Foreign and Colonial. Royal Warrant Holders to His late Majesty King Edward VII., H.M. King George V., the late King of the Belgians.
1962 The company merged with United Wine Traders and became International Distillers and Vintners.
1972 Brewers Watney Mann took over the business, and was absorbed by Grand Metropolitan the same year.
2008 The brands are now owned by Diageo, formed by the merger of Guinness and Grand Metropolitan.