TRAVELLING in an open carriage is exceedingly pleasant. There is
more freedom about it than the railway, for you are your own master,
free to hurry or dawdle as you please. Sometimes you may want to
reach your destination quickly. At others you may wish to enjoy
the country; to pause here and there, and watch the far-seeing
panorama. Yesterday at Aberfeldy, and ta-dar at Pitlochry,
Ballinluig and Ballechin, moving through such enchanting scenery,
we have felt that our locomotion could not be too slow, and at several nooks and
places on the hill-sides we would fain have pitched our tent, and dwelt there a
while to enjoy the rich treasures of beauty spread out before us. We are passing
through a district rich in traditional and legendary lore, and abounding in scenes
of enthralling interest. As we drive through the parish of Logierait, our worthy
coachman, who knows the object of our visit, reminds us that we are in the heart
of a district famous from a most remote period for the distillation of whisky.
The burns, or small streams, which rise in the peat mosses and bag of Ballechin
moor, under the shade of the Fergan range of hills, fall into the Tay, and are
associated at every secluded bend and shady corner with the smuggling bothy,
where illicit distillation was carried on extensively in olden times. Among the
Strath Tay smugglers there were men of remarkable muscular power and shrewd
audacity. A surviving remnant of the brotherhood, residing near Ballechin,
still tel Is of a halloween night same forty years ago, when the famous Stewart
arrived at a place near Perth with a boatload of potheen. He had gent up to the
town for assistance to remove the Whisky, when "lo and behold!" instead of
his friends, the revenue officers appeared on the scene. Stewart immediately
rowed out mid-stream, but the officers seeing an idle boat followed him. A
chase commenced, and the smuggler seeing that he was closely pressed, and th at
capture seemed inevitable, proceeded to use strategy that he might escape o~t
of their clutches. Pretending to surrender, he invited the gaugers into his
boat to take possession, and seized one of their oars to assist them in stepping
on board. In a twinkle he had thrown the Dar on the top of bis potheen barrels,
and quickly rowed down the stream, leaving the poor discomfited gaugers with
but one Dar "to paddle their own canoe" as best they could. He was soon lost
to sight, and landed bis cargo safely in one of bis hiding-places on the riveT sIde.
The career of this noted smuggler is a record of unbroken triumph; bis last
distillation was gold in Leith, and was conveyed thither in a canopied cart,
containing a caretaker muffied up as a patient (with an infectious disease), who
managed thus to escape the prying curiosity of the exciseman, and succeeded in
disposing of the Whisky at a high price.
Not far distant from Ballechin is Logierait, a place historically famous as
being the old capital of the ancient Earldom of Athole. Here also Robert 111.
of Scotland had a castle, which he made bis residence in bis hunting expeditions
among the surrounding mountains. I t was from a prison in this village in the
year 1717 that the famous Rob Roy escaped. The Ballechin Estate, which we
are now approaching, bas from time immemorial been in possession of the
Stuarts, who have the honour of being descended from royalty. It was Patrick
Stuart, of" Ballechin," who commanded the Atholemen at Killiecrankie, in 1689,
and the Royalist General Mackay crossed cc Ballechin" Moor in bis tIight from
that fatal field. Ballechin is generally supposed to have been the death scene of
Sir James the Rose, celebrated in the old song which bears bis name:
" O hae ye seen. Sir James the Rose,
The young heir o' Buleichan."
The Ballechin Distillery was founded in the year 1810, by a company of
farmers who resided in the immediate neighbourhood, and grew all the barley
used in the works. In the year 1875 it came into the hands of the present
proprietors, Messrs. Robertson and Sans, who succeeded the late Mr. Robert
Kennedy, the only survivor of the original company. The Distillery, which is a
quaint, old-fashioned place, covers I! acres. It is built on the slope of a hill, in
the farm of the letter L, and is situated on the high road, three miles from the
railway station. The water co mes from a weird place called "Collin's Hollow,"
or, as it is termed in the native Gaelic, "Ghhaichdehalan," and is of excellent
quality. As evidence of its purity, we may mention that it bas been used for a
period of thirty years in the same steam boiler without showing the least sign of
encrustation. The front of the Distillery faces the Grandtully Moors (said to he
the finest grouse moors in Scotland) and Strathtay, and the view therefrom of the
surrounding country is picturesque in the extreme, the outlying mountains being
softened by the nearer hills, which are clothed with the richest verdure. Like the
monks of aId, the Highland distillers have located themselves "where every
prospect pleases." But to return to the object of our mission. We commenced
our investigations of the spiritual life as carried on at Ballechin by Messrs.
Robertson and Song, under the pastoral care of Mr. James Reid, the Brewer,
whose practical experience and lucid explanations "did us much good." We
first ascended the slopes of the hill, so as to begin at the Granaries, which are
placed at the top of the works. I t is in these buildings that the barley commences
Its progress towards a new life, and how that life is developed, afterwards crushed
out, and eventually re-appears as Whisky, bas already been shown in these
pages.
As we entered the Barley Barn, we noticed on our right a roadway up the
side of the hill to the barn doors, and were informed that the barley is carted by
this approach and laid direct on to the floor. The building is 70 feet long and 50
wide, and holds 300 quarters of grain. Underneath is the Malting Floor, of
same dimensions, having at one end a large stone steep, and at the other a kiln.
The barley is dropped into the steep through sluices in the floor, and after being
soaked therein for 48 hours, the wetted barley is spread out to grow on the
concreted floor of the malting. As soon as the acrospire, or sprouts, are
sufficiently advanced the malt is wheeled on to the Kiln, an apartment 20 feet
square, with an open roof, and floored with wire netting. It is heated principally
with peat, and is capable of drying 20 quarters at a time. Continuing our
journey down hill, we come to the Malt Deposit, a room somewhat larger than
the Kiln, which contains a Hopper, through which the dried malt is dropped
into the Mill below. The building appropriated to the Mill is very antiquated,
and contains a pair of Malt Rollers. From this apartment the material begins to
ascend, and the grist, or pulverized malt, is gent by elevators to the Hopper in the
Grist Loft, which is above the Mash Tun. At a somewhat lower level are two
heaters for hot water. Our guide next conducted us to the Mash House, which
is on the ground level, and opens into the four t yard. It is a large place, and
contains several vessels, notably the Mash Tun, a circular iron vessel, I I feet in
diameter, and 4 feet deep. The mixing machine in this tun is the invention of
Mr. A. Robertson, one of the partners, and consists of a double set of teeth racks,
irregularly placed, but fitting into each other, one stationary, and the other
revolving, which thoroughly mixes and breaks up the malt in the tun. At one
side, just above the top of the Mash Tun, a trap-door has been let into the wall,
and through this opening the grains are thrown direct into the farmers' carts.
Below the level of the floor is sunk the Underback, an iron vessel 6 feet square
and 4 feet deep, which receives the liquor from the Mash Tun. the worts are
pumped from this vessel to the Coolers in the roof, which are of the oldest
fashioned pattern we have seen. These Coolers are 24 feet square, having in the
centre an enclosed cylinder for accumulating the air and driving it over the
surface of the worts, which was also invented by Mr. A. Robertson. Mr. Reid now
led the war to the Tun Room, which adjoins the Mash House, and contains five
Washbacks, each holding 1,800 gallons. after fermentation has taken place, the
wash is gent by a single-action pump up to the Wash Charger, which is erected on
a gallery over the Still House, and contains 1,800 gallons, and the wash descends
therefrom by gravitation into the Wash Still. We now retraced our steps to the
Brewing House, at the end of which are placed twO antiquated Pot Stills, a Wash
Still, holding 753 gallons, and a Low Wines and Feints Still, holding 660 gallons
The Worm Tub is the most ancient we have seen,a regular smuggler?s worm,laid
in a vessel red from the overflow of the ,hum. The spirit from the Wash Still,
after running through this apparatus, goes into the Low Wines and Feints Receiver
which is a timber vessel, and holds 827 gallons, from whence it is pumped up
into the Low Wines and Feints Charger. From this Charger the spirit runs by
gravitation into the Low Wines and Feints Still, again through the Worm Tub into
the Spirit Receiver, which contains 816 gallons, and finally into a vat holding 750
gallons, placed in the Spirit Store, where it is casked, weighed, branded, and
rolled into the bonded warehouses.
There are three of these warehouses, all new buildings (one being of
corrugated iron), containing 40,000 gallons of Whisky, of various ages, and
adjoining there is a cooperage, smithy, and carpenter's shop. In the Engine
house there is a capital little horizontal engine, of 8-horse power, for driving. the
various machinery. The pump over the spent Wash Tank in the yard is a curious
machine, with a revolving fly-wheel, and was erected before the present pro-
prietors were born. All the peat used at the Ballechin Distillery is brought from
Invemess-shire and the Orkneys, the peat mosses on the estate being al most
inaccessible.
The Whisky is pure Malt, and the annual output is 18,000 gallons.
There are two excise officers, the chief being Mr. Fraser.
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