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The Glenlivet distillery is a Speyside single malt Scotch whisky distillery near Ballindalloch in Moray, Scotland, that produces single malt Scotch whisky. It is the oldest legal distillery in the Highlands of Scotland.
Upload another image See more images Ballindalloch Castle, Bow Cottage 57°24′51″N 3°21′59″W / 57.414071°N 3.366351°W / 57.414071; -3.366351 (Ballindalloch Castle, Bow Cottage) Category B 8482 Upload Photo Inveravon Parish Church (Church Of Scotland) Burial Ground And Gatepiers 57°25′16″N 3°21′43″W / 57.421178°N 3.362054°W / 57.421178; -3. ...
Glenlivet hosts the Tamnavulin distillery. Further downstream on the west bank of the river is The Glenlivet distillery owned by the Chivas Brothers that sells more than a million cases per annum. [24] Other distilleries in the parish include Glenfarclas, Cragganmore, Tormore, and Ballindalloch, the last of which operates from the castle's ...
Distillery Location Year closed Caledonian: Haymarket: 1988, demolished Cambus: Tullibody: 1993, converted into a whisky warehouse facility and cask filling operation
The Macpherson-Grant family began looking for a use for old farm buildings on the grounds of Speyside's Ballindalloch Castle in late summer 2011, and they decided to build a distillery, but keeping the old buildings preserved as far as possible. [1] Ballindalloch distillery began production in September 2014. [2] [3]
Ballindalloch (Scottish Gaelic: Baile na Dalach) is a small village on the River Spey in Scotland. It is known for its whisky distilleries and for Ballindalloch Castle. [1] [2] Until 1961 there was a station on the Great North of Scotland Railway. In Ballindalloch itself, there are two distilleries, Cragganmore distillery and Ballindalloch ...
The Malt Whisky Trail Map; Tomintoul is located close to Glenlivet The Whisky Castle (2004) Main Street, Tomintoul (2007) The Hotel Square. Queen Victoria's visit in 1860 helped boost tourism which still remains the primary economic activity. Marketing initiatives in the area today include SnowRoads and North East 250 scenic routes. [14]
The distillery is taken over by John's brother George and then by John's son Gordon. [1] In 1923, after Gordon death, his widow Mary Jane takes over and finally sells it to the Cragganmore-Glenlivet Distillery Co., which is owned equally by Peter Mackie from White Horse and Ballindalloch Estate. [3]