2004 - The Mortlach 32yo 1971/2004 (50.1%, OB) is released.
The Mortlach distillery was the first distillery in Dufftown, pre-dating the next one (Glenfiddich) by over four decades. Mortlach was founded in 1823 by James Findlater, who was joined by Alexander Gordon and James Macintosh the next year. They acquired partial ownership.
Mortlach has one larch washbacks for every one of its six stills and a semi-lauter mash tun that was added in 1996. More than two decades earlier (in 1964) there was a refurbishment that was so considerable that it pretty much meant a that the whole distillery was rebuilt, at least on the inside. The exterior was the only part of Mortlach that remained largely intact at the time; although the pagoda roofs would have a strictly decorative function in the future.
Mortlach"s floor maltings remained operational until 1968. Larch worm-tubs on a platform outside the still house are still used to condense the spirit. New Lauter mashtuns were installed in 1996. The Mortlach distillery grounds feature five traditional "dunnage" warehouses that provide storage capacity for 21,000 casks.
In 1853 or 1854 part of Mortlach was taken over by George Cowie Senior, a railway company surveyor and (later) the mayor of Dufftown. When John Alexander Gordon passed away in 1867 he became the sole owner of the Mortlach. His son George Cowie Junior started work at the distillery in 1895, two years before the number of stills was expanded from three to six in 1897. This was an unusually large number of pot stills in those days - the expansion of the production capacity was probably inspired by the massive "whisky boom" of the time, which effectively meant that all the produced whisky could be sold.
When the extra stills were installed in 1897 the owners also added a railway siding that linked Mortlach with the Dufftown train station. One year later electric lights were added, as well as a hydraulic lift system in the warehouses that was used for lifting casks and other loads to the upper floors. This were the last modernisations of the distillery until 1923 when Alexander Cowie decided to sell Mortlach to John Walker & Sons - the company that became part of Distillers Company Limited (DCL; predecessors of Diageo) two years later in 1925. The configuration of the six stills at Mortlach is unusual - and probably unique in Scotland. The "partial triple distillation" that is used at the Mortlach distillery is a variation of the technique that is in use at Springbank and Benrinnes.
The initial owners didn"t manage to keep the distillery running for more than a decade; Mortlach was sold on to John Robertson in 1831 for the ridiculous amount of 270 GBP. This marked the start of a number of purchases by different (part) owners, including A. & T. Gregory, John Alexander Gordon and brothers James and John Grant. Mortlach was inactive for a few years (at least as far as the production of malt whisky is concerned) - the buildings were used as a brewery and as a church,
Just like the founder of Glenlivet (also constructed in 1823), the founders of Mortlach hoped to benefit from the new Excise Act. If they benefited at all it was only for a few years; Mortlach was sold on to new owners for a number of times and some of the buyers didn"t even intend to actually produce any whisky. For example, when John & James Grant of Glen Grant bought the distillert they removed the distilling equipment and left it silent - probably as a way to reduce competition. After Mortlach had been used as a brewery for a few years in was converted back into a distillery in 1852, using brand new equipment to produce a whisky with the name "The Real John Gordon" - a reference to the owner at the time.
In the New Millenium
2002 - For a long time the closest thing to an official bottling of Mortlach were the licensed bottlings by Gordon & Macphail. However, the Mortlach 19yo "Manager"s Dram" (55.8%, OB, Refill cask, 2002) marked a new beginning.
2009 - The Mortlach 1997/2009 "Managers" Choice" (57.1%, OB, C#6802, 240 Bts.) appears.