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A
Distillation of the History of Uisge Beatha
Perhaps whisky was not the power behind the raising of Stonehenge.
But
throughout it's turbulent past, whisky has sparked legal controversy
and inflamed passions. The ease with which we buy a bottle of
15-year Glenmorangie today belies the centuries-old scientific,
legal, financial, and often bloody struggles around the ability
to produce and sell "uisge beatha." Presented here is a brief
look, a distillation if you will, of the major events surrounding
this "water of life."
Whisky:
The Early Years
The first record of a distilled beverage is not, alas, from our
beloved land of Alba but from India. As early as 800 B.C., a rather
fiery liquor called "arrack" was distilled from whatever was at
hand such as molasses, aniseed, dates, coconut palm sap, grapes,
and perhaps grains. According to André Simon, author of A Dictionary
of Wine, Spirits and Liquors, "some Arrack is much worse than
others, [but] there is no Arrack pleasing to a cultivated palate."
Aristotle wrote of distilling in his Meteorology - but in what
capacity we can only wonder. In the first millennium, or Y0K as
today's jargon would have it, Briton St. Patrick was sent to Wicklow,
Ireland, to spread Christianity. He was also reputed to have introduced
the art of distillation - whether to drum up business or to offer
for communion, scholars do not say. However, St. Patrick's introduction
of whisky to the Irish seems cause enough for canonization.
Little is recorded about distilled spirits for a thousand year
period, from Celtic bard Taliesin's "Song to Ale" circa 560 AD
until 1494. It was then that the Exchequer Rolls of Scotland first
mentioned "aqua vitae," Latin for "water of life." Several mentions
of whisky occur in the first half of the 16th century until the
first law regarding aqua vitae was passed in 1548.
This launched a legal battle over whisky that lasted for over
two hundred years.
Whisky:
Ferment to Foment
Barley was primarily grown as winter feed for cattle, a staple
of the Scottish farm life. Surplus grain was naturally distilled
into liquid protection against the long winters. Therefore, the
first Act of the English Parliament affected most farmers while
seeming innocuous enough. It simply ensured that seventeen days
were allowed for steeping and drying barley in order to make malt.
This was just the first volley between the government and the
naturally independent Scottish farmer. In 1555, the Scots Parliament
generally restricted the use of barley for whisky during poor
harvests. The penny dropped in 1579 when the Scots Parliament
actually restricted distillation of whisky - and exempted the
very aristocracy that passed the Act.
The Crowns of Scotland and England united in 1603 when Scotland's
James VI ascended the throne of England, becoming James the First
to the English. Yet the Scots still had their own Parliament and
laws.
Following the English Civil War in 1643, the puritanical government
had a dim view of spirits and levied whisky mercilessly. As a
response in 1644, the Scots Parliament levied a excise duty (or
tax) on ale in order to finance the Royalist Army. Cromwell finally
relented and reduced the tax on spirits in 1655.
Drams
and Drums
The "Glorious Revolution" deposed Roman Catholic James VII (or
James II to the English) in favor of his Protestant daughter Mary
and her husband William of Orange. This eliminated the influence
of the Scots in the English Court - and began the Jacobite cause
that sparked four uprisings (in 1689, 1715, 1719, and 1745) and
the infamous "massacre of Glencoe." In 1707, the heavily-bribed
Scots Parliament eliminated Scottish self-governance by voting
for the "Act of Union" which combined the Scots and English Parliaments.
The most egregious result happened after the second rising with
the passing of the 1716 Disarming Act, which was strengthened
in 1725.
Before the Act of Union, the clannish Scots had few taxes since
they did not have a large central government. Now, they were part
of a huge colonial and military power that required taxes. For
the next thirty years, violence erupted over attempts of the English
Parliament to control and tax whisky.
The 1725 Malt Tax sparked riots throughout the country. The 1736
Gin Act, which instituted licensing whisky-sellers, indirectly
sparked the "Porteous Riots" in Edinburgh. Captain Porteous of
the Edinburgh guard fired on a mob he feared would rescue whisky
smugglers. The 1743 "Act about the Gin Act," strengthened the
original Act -- preceded the fourth Jacobite rising by two years.
Whisky
Under Siege & Over Taxed
After the final Jacobite uprising in 1745 and defeat at Culloden
in 1746, the Act was broadened to forbid using blunt-edged eating
knives, wearing of the tartan, and playing the bagpipes. While
trying to control the spirit of the Highlanders, the English Parliament
also attempted to control the spirits of the Highlands.
Over the wearying years after 1746, the lives of the Scots changed
greatly. Clan chieftains without glory of battle at home found
new honor and privilege in the British Colonial Army. The potato
replaced barley as a basic food staple. The agricultural way of
life gave way to the increasing power of the merchant class.
Whisky distilling became a business rather than an agricultural
sideline. While the English government increased taxes, whisky
merchants attempted to wrest control of whisky production and
distribution from the farmers and lairds.
In the hundred years from the 1750 Final Gin Act to the 1846 Repeal
of the Corn Laws, the whisky wars pitted commerce against government.
The soldiers in these single malt skirmishes were the whisky-distillers
and the excisemen, who enforced whisky taxes and seized illegal
stills. Even Scotland's greatest bard, Robert Burns, was a malt
marine. He became an exciseman in 1788 to enrich his meager poetry
income and, no doubt, to stay flush for larking about with the
lassies.
New
World, Old War
As Burns observed, "freedom and whisky gang the gither." This
was no less true in the New World as in the Old. Scots brought
to America their love of both independence and strong drink. The
Whisky Rebellion in Pennsylvania was a good example.
In a typical piece of federal deal-making, the new U.S. government
agreed in 1790 to assume all the debts incurred by the states
after the Revolutionary War. In return, the states agreed that
the nation's capital city would be moved south from Philadelphia
to what is now Washington DC. In order to raise the funds for
these debts, in 1791 the federal government imposed an excise
tax on whisky - which affected the "frontier" farmers far more
than the Washington elite who preferred wine and port. The revolt
against the tax started in western Pennsylvania and spread to
Hagerstown, MD, and various parts of Virginia. The rebellion was
crushed by President Washington who himself led an army of some
13,000 men into Pennsylvania.
Courting
the Malt Merchants
Back in Scotland, a host of new commercial distilleries were founded
as family and "illegal" distilleries went dry. In this new phase
of whisky history, the notable events became distillery foundings,
partnerships and lawsuits - rather than uprisings, rebellions,
and wars. Legal courts, rather than royal, held sway.
For example, in 1880 Colonel John Gordon Smith went to court on
the use of the name Glenlivet. The court held that he was the
only one entitled to use the label 'The Glenlivet', all others
had to use a prefix. In 1906, the Islington Borough Council brought
up the famous 'What is Whisky?' case. Basically, this was a question
of using malt versus using grain in the production of whisky.
The magistrate's court decided in favor of malt. However, a 1908
Royal Commission on Whisky decided that a blend of grain and malt
also may be considered to be Scotch whisky.
Another black period in the history of whisky (and all spirits)
was the U.S. Prohibition from 1920 to 1933. While Prohibition
put a damper on (legal) whisky, it seems to have helped make the
fortune of Joseph P. Kennedy. A legit liquor distributor before
1920, sources attribute a good chunk of his change to being a
bootlegger in partnership with organized crime during the Prohibition
era.
Another major shift in the 20th century was the growing importance
of advertising. In the U.S., the liquor trade association voted
for a voluntary ban on radio in 1936 and then television in 1948.
Seagram's broke that practice in 1996 when it aired its TV commercial
for Crown Royal. Nowadays, many whisky distillers and distributors
use the web on the Internet to connect with lovers of single malt
whisky.
Onward
Uisge Beatha
In spite of bans on liquor advertising, the whisky business thrives
today. Scotland's overseas sales from the whisky industry totaled
£2.28 billion 1996. Across the U.S., single malt societies are
helping more American learn about and appreciate fine Scots whisky.
They, along with An Comunn Uisge Beatha, will ensure a living
history of the "water of life!"
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Primary
Sources:
Scotland
Online
WhiskyWeb
Special
thanks to Nicholas MacRitchie Freer for additional historical
notes.
Whisky
Timeline
-
1494
First recorded documentation referring to 'aqua vitae'
in the Exchequer Rolls of Scotland.
-
1505
Guild of Surgeon Barbers in Edinburgh are created and
given the monopoly to manufacture aqua vitae.
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1507
to 1512 Royal household accounts in Edinburgh document
numerous occasions of supply of spirits.
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1527
"Vertuose Boke of Dstyllacyon" by Hieronymous Braunschweig
published in English, translated by L. Andrew. First book
on the subject, treated aqua vitae as a medicine
-
1548
An act is passed in England to ensure that 17 days
is allowed for the steeping and drying of barley when making
malt.
-
1555
Scots Parliament passes act restricting the use of
grain for brewing and distilling during poor harvests.
-
1579
An Act of the Scots Parliament restricts the use of
malt for distilling in anticipation of a poor harvest. The
aristocracy is exempted.
-
1603
Union of Crowns of England and Scotland.
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1608
First license to distill whisky given to the Bushmills
distillery, Co., Antrim, Ireland.
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1641
An Act of the Scots Parliament bans the import of spirits
on the basis that they could be "more conveniently made within
the kingdom to the benefit of the natives".
-
1644
The Scots Parliament levies the first excise duty on
ale to fund the Royalist army. A rate of 2s 8d Scots per Scots
pint was charged.
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1655
Cromwell reduces the excise duty on spirits in
Scotland. 2d per Scots quart is now levied.
-
1673
Petition to prohibit import of brandy presented to
English Parliament
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1688
The Glorious Revolution begins.
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1689
An Act referred for first time to single and double
proof spirits. The first attempt to charge duty according
to strength.
-
1689
First Jacobite Uprising to re-install James VII (James
II of England) on the combined throne of Scotland & England
-
1692
The Massacre of Glencoe.
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1707
Union of Parliaments of England and Scotland.
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1713
Attempt to introduce Malt Tax in Scotland, but withdrawn
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1714
Death of Queen Anne
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1715
Second Jacobite Uprising: James VIII proclaimed King
of Scots. Rob Roy MacGregor joins Jacobites at battle of Sheriffmuir
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1716
Disarming Act is passed.
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1719
Two Spanish frigates spur the Third Jacobite Uprising
at Kintail
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1725
Walpole proposes Malt Tax in Scotland, which doubles
taxes. Malt riots take place throughout the country.
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1725
Disarming Act is strengthened.
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1736
The Gin Act is passed, which institutes the licensing
of retailers of spirits.
-
1743
An Act about the Gin Act amends the license fees payable
by retailers to make the Act more effective.
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1745
Fourth and final Jacobite Uprising which ended in defeat
for Bonnie Prince Charlie (son of James VIII) on April 16,
1746 on Culloden Moor.
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1750
Final Gin Act reduced consumption of gin in the south:
from 8 million gallons in 1750 to 2 million in 1758.
-
1756
to 1760 All distilling in Great Britain banned
due to a bad harvest in 1756. Private stills are exempted.
-
1759
Excise duty on malt is increased.
-
1777
400 illegal stills operating in Edinburgh, eight legal
distilleries.
-
1781
Private distilling for self-consumption made illegal.
-
1782
1,940 illicit stills seized. Half of these in the Highlands.
-
1784
The Wash Act is passed to encourage illicit distillers
to go legal.
-
1786
881,969 gallons of whisky exported to England, almost
all to be turned into gin.
-
1786
The Scotch Distillery Act passed which introduced licensing
system and raised duty in Scotland to English level.
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1788
Lowland License Act passed.
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1788
Robert Burns joins the Excise Service
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1791
US government passes Excise Act.
-
1793
Tax on whisky tripled to £9
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1794
Whiskey Rebellion in W. Pennsylvania.
-
1795
Tax doubled to £18
-
1797
Tax tripled to £54
-
1797
Excise officers arrive in Islay, where the laird had
held the right to collect excise duty. 859 illegal stills
seized in Scotland.
-
1802
All distilling is banned.
-
1804
1,222 illicit stills seized by the Excise in the first
half of the year.
-
1809
Distilling from grain banned until 1811.
-
1814
The Excise Act passed.
-
1816
36 licensed distilleries in Scotland
-
1822
4,867 prosecutions for illicit distilling.
-
1823
An Excise Act is passed which finally creates level
playing field for all distillers.
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1835
230 distilleries operating in Scotland.
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1846
The Repeal of the Corn Laws was to affect grain distilling
favorably
History
of Whisky Distilleries
-
1746
Dolls distillery established at Glenochil.
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1751
Gilcomston distillery founded, Aberdeen.
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1763
Gilcomston distiLlery, Aberdeen, fails.
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1779
Bowmore distillery, Islay established.
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1782
James Haig establishes Canonmills distillery, Edinburgh.
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1784
Duncan Campbell of Ardmore distilling at Lagavulin,
Islay.
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1786
Milltown distillery (later to become Strathisla) is
established.
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1790
Balblair distillery near Tain commences
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1798
Duncan MacDougall distilling at Ardbeg, Islay.
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1815
Ardbeg distillery, Islay, formally established.
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1816
Laphroaig distillery, Islay, established.
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1817
Teaninich distillery, Ross-shire, founded.
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1818
Bladnoch distillery, Wigtownshire, established.
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1819
Clyneleish distillery near Brora built
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1823
Springbank distiilery, Campbeltown established.
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1824
Glenlivet distillery goes legal,followed by many others
such as Cardhu.
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1830
Talisker distillery, Skye, established.
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1862
The Glen Scotia distillery founded in Campbeltown by
Stewart Galbrath.
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1833
Glengoyne distillery, north of Milngavie, established.
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1836
Glenfarclas Glenlivet distillery founded
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1840
The Glen Grant distillery was founded at Rothes; The
Glenkinchie distillery in East Lothian founded
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1842
Glenmorangie distillery at Tain founded
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1848
Queen Victoria and family visited John Begg's distillery
at Lochnagar - the whisky becomes the "Royal Lochnagar"
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1875
Auchentoshan, Jura and Littlemill distilleries rebuilt.
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1881
Bruichladdich distillery, Islay is constructed from
concrete.
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1887
Glenfiddich distillery, Dufftown, established.
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1891
Balvenie distillery founded by William Grant of Glenfiddich
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1910
Glen Moray and Dalmore distilleries founded shut down.
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1958
Seager Evans built a new distillery at Tormore on the
Spey, north of Grantown
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1960
Ledaig distillery in Tobermory and Jura distillery
open.
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