Company Distillery Brand

Tobermory

Islands Scotland
Owned by: CVH Spirits
Core bottlings
About
Mull's only Scotch whisky distillery produces both peated an unpeated whisky for use in the Black Bottle and Scottish Leader blends, as well as for Ledaig and Tobermory single malts.
History
Mull’s capital may have been built by the Stevensons of Oban [see Oban], but Tobermory’s distillery has had a more chequered career than its mainland relative and with considerably more unusual owners. It was established, as Ledaig, in 1798 by John Sinclair but like many small sites, the business foundered and it seems to have been silent between 1837 until 1878 when, after a succession of owners, it was finally brought within the DCL estate in 1916. It continued to produce until 1930 when it fell silent for over four decades. A belated member of a group of old distilleries which were recommissioned in the post-war whisky boom, it was brought back in 1972 by a somewhat unusual joint venture between a Liverpool shipping company, Sherry producer Pedro Domecq and “Panamanian interests”. This unusual arrangement only lasted for three years, although the new owners renovated the distillery and increased capacity. A short further period of silence ended when a property firm based in Cleckheaton, Yorkshire bought it with the intention of converting some of the buildings to holiday accommodation. Others were used as a facility for storing cheese. It closed again in 1982 for 11 years when its current owner, Burn Stewart (now part of South African giant Distell ), purchased it. In January 2017 Distell announced a major refurbishment plan for the distillery, which would force its closure for two years from 31 March. However, Tobermory's visitor centre would remain open throughout the period.
Timeline
  • 1798 Local kelp merchant John Sinclair founds Ledaig distillery on Mull
  • 1823 The distillery is officially licensed
  • 1837 Ledaig distillery closes for 40 years, not reopening again until 1878
  • 1881 The distillery is licensed to W Campbell & Co
  • 1890 Ledaig passes into the hands of John Hopkins & Co
  • 1916 DCL takes over John Hopkins & Co.
  • 1930 Ledaig distillery falls silent for over four decades
  • 1972 A Liverpool shipping company, Domecq and 'Panamanian interests' form Ledaig Distillery and reopen the site
  • 1975 Ledaig Distillery files for bankruptcy and the site closes again
  • 1979 Kirkleavington Property purchases the distillery and established Tobermory Distillers, reopening the site
  • 1982 The distillery closes once more as its buildings are transformed into holiday lets and cheese storage facilities
  • 1993 Burn Stewart purchases Tobermory and its stock for £800,000
  • 2002 CL Financial buys out Burn Stewart for £50m
  • 2007 Ledaig 10 Year Old is launched
  • 2013 Burn Stewart is sold to South African group Distell
Production facts
Capacity (mlpa)
0.85
Condenser Type
Shell and tube
Fermentation Time
50-100hrs
Filling Strength
63.5%
Grist Weight (t)
5
Heat Source
Steam heaters
Malt Specification
Plain malt (Tobermory) maximum 2ppm, peated malt (Ledaig) minimum 35ppm
Malt Supplier
Various
Mash Tun Material
Cast iron body, copper dome
Mash Tun Type
Traditional
New-make Strength
68%
Single Malt Percentage
15%
Spirit Still Charge (l)
16,000
Spirit Still Shape
Medium with reflux bowls
Spirit Still Size (l)
18,000
Stills
4
Warehousing
Small warehouse on site for special edition and limited bottlings
Wash Still Charge (l)
18,000
Wash Still Shape
Medium with reflux bowls
Wash Still Size (l)
20,000
Washback Charge (l)
22,000
Washback Size (l)
25,000
Washback Type
Wood
Washbacks
4
Water Source
Gearr Abhainn
Yeast Type
Bagged 'M' type strain
Ownership
Current owner
Tobermory Distillers
Parent company
Distell Group
Previous owners (8)
John Sinclair 1798–1837
John Hopkins & Son 1878–1881
W Campbell & Co 1881–1890
John Hopkins & Co 1890–1916
Distillers Company Limited 1916–1972
Domecq 1972–1975
Kirkleavington Property Co 1979–1993
Burn Stewart Distillers 1993–2013
In catalogue All in catalogue