The Whisky Distilleries of the United Kingdom
The following is from The Whisky Distilleries of the United
Kingdom by Alfred Barnard:
Glenadon
ON our way to Peterhead we stopped at the pretty village of Old Deer to
inspect its little Distillery. The village is pleasantly situated in a plain, on
the south banks of the Deer River. The surrounding country is ornamented with
woods and plantations, and there are heath- covered ridges in all directions. N
ear the village are to be seen the ruins of the Abbey of Deer, built in the
thirteenth century by the good Earl of Buchan, for same monks of the Cistercian
order; from the appearance of the remains it must have been a very extensive
building. There are also, in the vicinity, four Druidical temples, that at
Biffie being the most conspicuous, and an object of great interest to
antiquarians
The Lowlands of Aberdeenshire are good grain-growing districts, hence the
establishment of Distilleries and Breweries in this neighbourhood. The Glenadon
Distillery was built in the year 1845, by Messrs. Milne & Co.,' the farmer
proprietors of the Biffie Brewery close by. It is a nice little compact work,
but too small for us to enter into detail, suffice it to say, that the water
used comes from the Biffie springs, in a glen same 200 feet above the level of
the Distillery, and that home-grown barley only is used. The Whisky is pure
Malt, and the annual output is 12,000 gallons. In addition to the Distillery,
Messrs. Geo. J. Wilson and Co. are now also the owners of the Biffie Brewery.
Glenugie
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