Whisky Magazine – August 2019

(Frankie) #1

Insight


6 Whisky Magazine | Issue 161


Digging up secret history


Archaeologists are hoping to shed light on farmstead distilling


Scenes from Blackmiddens, a ruined steading in the Cabrach on the border between Moray and Aberdeenshire


Researchers are hoping to dig up evidence of
Scotland’s whisky-making past with an archae-
ological excavation at one of the earliest legal
whisky distilleries in Scotland.
Š‡†‹‰‹•–Š‘—‰Š––‘„‡–Š‡β‹”•–‡š…ƒ˜ƒ–‹‘
of a traditional small-scale farm distillery,
and it’s underway at Blackmiddens, a ruined
steading in the Cabrach on the border between
Moray and Aberdeenshire. This was one of the
β‹”•–ˆƒ”•–‘„‡‰”ƒ–‡†ƒŽ‹…‡…‡–‘’”‘†—…‡
whisky following the Excise Act of 1823 which
effectively formalised the small-scale distilling
of whisky (previously an illicit black market
activity), leading to the global success story we
know today.
The archaeological dig is being led by the
Cabrach Trust, established to preserve the
history of an area notorious for illegal whisky


distillation and smuggling.
The excavation is especially exciting for 66
years old Joan Harvey whose great, great uncle,
James Sharp, was the tenant farmer at Black-
middens and the ringleader of a gang of whisky
smugglers based there.
She said: “I was always told that my great,
great uncle was the head of the gang at the time.
We were the ‘freebooters’ who took the whisky
to Aberdeen to sell in the pubs. Stories about
their adventures were passed down my family.
“Apparently my great, great grandfather had
a white stallion and when the excisemen were
billeted locally he would ride his white horse,
alerting everyone that the excisemen were in
the area so that the whisky smugglers could go
to ground.
“I was also told that, one time, the excisemen

were trying to catch the smugglers and had set
up barricades all around Aberdeen. My great,
great uncle hired a horse-drawn hearse and
Ž‘ƒ†‡†–Š‡…‘ˆβ‹™‹–Š™Š‹•›ǤŠ‡Š‡”‡ƒ…Š‡†
the excisemen, they all took off their hats as a
mark of respect for the dead, and the whisky
went through!”
Chief executive of the Cabrach Trust, Anna
Brennand, said: “The farm would have had a
small 40 gallon (180 litre) still compared to
whisky stills today which hold many thousands
of litres. However, despite the fact that farms
Ž‹‡–Š‹•™‡”‡ˆƒ‘—•ˆ‘”–Š‡‹”⋐‡“—ƒŽ‹–›•’‹”‹–ǡ
whisky production at Blackmiddens stopped
just eight years after it began and the farm
fell into ruin. We hope to uncover some of the
secrets of early whisky making in the Highlands
with this exciting dig.”
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