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ROSEBANK DISTILLERY Signatory Vintage 1989 11yo 43% abv

£380.00

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This bottle is being sold on behalf of a private client. As it is older, the packaging and closure may have deteriorated, so care should be taken with transportation, storage and opening of this bottle. The bottle is sold as seen and described, we do not accept liability for the state of the packaging or closure. Additional photos are available on request. No Vat.
ROSEBANK DISTILLERY Signatory Vintage 1989 The Rosebank Distillery is in Camelon on the Forth and Clyde Canal which is between Scotland's two major cities, Edinburgh and Glasgow. Beautiful roses grew on the banks of the canals, and the distillery found itself being named after this. In 2017 Ian MacLeod Distillers purchased the site & the trademarks so they could reopen one of the most loved distilleries in Scotland. This Signatory release of Rosebank was distilled on the 12th of April 1989 and bottled 11 years later at 43% ABV. Only 392 bottles were released.

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Overview
Additional Info

ROSEBANK DISTILLERY Signatory Vintage 1989

Much of Rosebank’s history – and fate – has been dictated by the canal upon whose banks it sits. It made sense to build a distillery beside the Forth & Clyde, the waterway which linked Scotland’s east and west coasts, and therefore its two main cities, Glasgow and Edinburgh. It made less sense to have a distillery there when the canal was closed and choked by detritus. It makes sense to have a distillery open again now that the canal has been reopened and tourists are coming to Falkirk to look at the Wheel which lifts boats between the Union and the Forth & Clyde – but is it too late?

There are records of a family called Stark distilling on the wider site as early as 1798. In 1817, a distillery named Rosebank was operational for two years, while in 1827, the Stark family re-emerged to operate the Camelon distillery which sat on the opposite bank of the canal.

In 1840, what had been Camelon’s maltings were converted by James Rankine into the new Rosebank. Under the Rankine family’s control, Rosebank prospered. In 1861, the Camelon distillery buildings were demolished and a new maltings supplying Rosebank was built, with the malt being barrowed over the canal to the distillery on a bridge.

In 1914, Rosebank became one of the founding members of the Lowland conglomerate Scottish Malt Distillers [SMD] in 1914 which was folded into DCL in 1925.

It ran continuously, bar a brief wartime hiatus, until 1993 when it closed. The reason was not to do with quality – the malt was highly regarded – but the unwillingness of its then owner (at the time UDV) to pay an estimated £2m cost of upgrading its effluent treatment plant. Problems over road access were another contributory factor.

Rosebank could conceivably have been saved had it been chosen as the Lowland member of UDV’s [later Diageo’s] Classic Malts Selection which launched in 1988. After all, an 8-year-old had been part of DCL’s ‘Ascot Malt Cellar’ six years previously when the firm attempted, somewhat lackadaisically, to enter the malt market.

Legend has it that the decision to choose Glenkinchie was because Rosebank was next to a then closed, stagnant, canal and therefore not as much of a tourist destination.

The distillery site was sold in 2002 to British Waterways.

However in October 2017 whisky blender and bottler revealed plans to purchase the site from British Waterways, and reopen the distillery. The company also separately acquired the Rosebank trademark from Diageo.

Rosebank distillery is expected to be operational again by 2019 at the earliest.

Additional information

Weight 3 kg
Dimensions 14 × 40 × 14 cm

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