William McKersie and Co: Difference between revisions
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1830 The Albyn Distillery was said to have been established by William McKersie, formerly a partner in the Lochside Distillery. 1830 is the date recorded by Alfred Barnard in 1886, However, Albyn is missing from the list of distillers in Pigot and Co's 1837 directory. The business was carried on by the founder's two sons John and William as William McKersie and Co. At the time of Barnard's visit annual production was 85,000 gallons. | 1830 The Albyn Distillery was said to have been established by William McKersie, formerly a partner in the Lochside Distillery. 1830 is the date recorded by Alfred Barnard in 1886, However, Albyn is missing from the list of distillers in Pigot and Co's 1837 directory. The business was carried on by the founder's two sons John and William as William McKersie and Co. At the time of Barnard's visit annual production was 85,000 gallons. | ||
1920 | 1920 William McKersie and Company Limited was registered as a private company, with capital of £15,000.<ref>The Scotsman 22 May 1920</ref> This was just as Campbeltown was entering a disastrous slump in the whisky business and most of the distilleries closed over the next few years. The company apparently went into liquidation in 1927 and the buildings were sold the following year. | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== |
Latest revision as of 08:24, 15 April 2024
Malt whisky distillers, Albyn Distillery, Campbeltown
1830 The Albyn Distillery was said to have been established by William McKersie, formerly a partner in the Lochside Distillery. 1830 is the date recorded by Alfred Barnard in 1886, However, Albyn is missing from the list of distillers in Pigot and Co's 1837 directory. The business was carried on by the founder's two sons John and William as William McKersie and Co. At the time of Barnard's visit annual production was 85,000 gallons.
1920 William McKersie and Company Limited was registered as a private company, with capital of £15,000.[1] This was just as Campbeltown was entering a disastrous slump in the whisky business and most of the distilleries closed over the next few years. The company apparently went into liquidation in 1927 and the buildings were sold the following year.
See Also
Sources of Information
- ↑ The Scotsman 22 May 1920
- Slater's (late Pigot and Co's) Royal National Commercial Directory and Topography of Scotland 1861
- National Records of Scotland BT2/11245
- Alfred Barnard "The Whisky Distilleries of the United Kingdom" (1887)
- Brian Townsend "Scotch Missed: The Original Guide to the Lost Distilleries of Scotland" (Fourth Edition 2015)
- David Stirk, The Distilleries of Campbeltown: The Rise and Fall of the Whisky Capital of the World (2019)