Blair Athol
Highland
Scotland
Owned by:
Diageo
Core bottlings
About
A member of the ‘nutty-spicy’ camp which defined the old Bell’s distilleries, Blair Athol takes the first part of the descriptor to its boldest expression.
History
The central Perthshire town of Pitlochry sits on the banks of the River Tay and has had a distillery since 1798, making its plant one of the oldest legal whisky-making sites in Scotland. The original distillery was named Aldour after the burn which supplied it with process water, but changed its name to Blair Athol [after a village seven miles to the north] in 1825. This could conceivably have been to sweeten the Duke of Athol who owned the land
It became part of the Peter Mackenzie blending house in 1886, but like many distilleries suffered during the economic troubles of the 1930s and fell silent between 1932 and 1949. In the interim period however Mackenzie (and its estate, which also included Dufftown distillery) had been bought by Perth-based blender, Arthur Bell & Sons .
By the 1970s, Bell’s was being built into the UK’s top-selling blended Scotch and, as a result, Blair Athol was doubled in capacity. Guinness (which bought Bell’s in 1985, and after further mergers evolved into Diageo ) opened a visitor’s centre in 1987.
In an attempt to tap into the then infant single malt market, Bell’s bottled it as an eight-year-old in the 1980s, but in the Diageo era it has only appeared as a member of the Flora & Fauna range (at 12 years of age), matured in first-fill ex-Sherry casks.
Timeline
- 1798 Aldour distillery founded by John Stewart and Robert Robertson in Pitlochry
- 1825 The distillery name is changed to Blair Athol after a nearby village
- 1826 The Duke of Atholl leases the distillery to Alexander Connacher & Co
- 1860 Ownership is passed onto Elizabeth Connacher
- 1886 Blair Athol is purchased by Peter Mackenzie, future founder of Dufftown
- 1932 Blair Athol falls silent
- 1933 Peter Mackenzie & Co, along with Blair Athol, is purchased by Arthur Bell & Sons
- 1949 Production restarts at the distillery once again
- 1973 Production capacity is expanded from two stills to four
- 1985 Guinness buys Arthur Bell & Sons
- 1987 Blair Athol’s visitors’ centre built
Production facts
- Condenser Type
- Shell and tube
- Fermentation Time
- Maximum 50hrs
- Filling Strength
- 63.5%
- Grist Weight (t)
- 8.2
- Heat Source
- Steam
- Malt Specification
- Unpeated
- Malt Supplier
- Mostly in-house
- Mash Tun Type
- Lauter
- New-make Strength
- 67%
- Spirit Still Charge (l)
- 11,500
- Spirit Still Shape
- Plain
- Stills
- 4
- Wash Still Charge (l)
- 14,000
- Wash Still Shape
- Plain
- Washback Type
- 4 wood, 2 steel
- Washbacks
- 6
- Water Source
- Kinnaird Burn
- Wort Clarity
- Cloudy
- Yeast Type
- Creamed
Ownership
Current owner
Diageo
Previous owners (9)
John Stewart and Robert Robertson
1798–1825
James Robertson
1825–1826
Alexander Connacher & Co
1827–1829
Peter Fraser & Co
1829–1842
Alexander Connacher & Co
1852–1860
Elizabeth Connacher
1860–1882
Peter Mackenzie
1882–1886
Peter Mackenzie & Co
1886–1933
Arthur Bell & Sons
1933–1997
In catalogue All in catalogue
Blair Athol 12 YO Flora & Fauna
Mossburn 12 YO Vintage Cask Blair Athol 2009
Douglas Laing & Co. 5 YO Blair Athol (D.2014, B.2020) Douglas Laing’s Provenance
The Single Cask Ltd. 7 YO Blair Athol (D.2013, B. 2021) Oloroso Octave Finish, The Single Cask
The Single Cask 7 YO Blair Athol
The Single Cask Ltd. 8 YO Blair Athol (D.2011, B. 2020) The Single Cask
Langside Distillers 8 YO Blair Athol (D.2011, B.2020) Hepburn's Choice
Mmd Blair Athol 8 YO