You are successfully subscribed.
You are successfully subscribed.
whisky-online

Linlithgow 1975-2001 - 26 Year Old - Signatory Vintage - Single Cask 96/3/36


Highest Price: 2023 £500.00

Total Lots Sold:
1
View Lots

Do you have this bottle for sale?

SELL IT TODAY

HAMMER PRICE OVER TIME

This graph displays data solely from Whisky-Online Auctions past sales history. Please note the filling level of the liquid and the condition of an item can affect the price negatively, so please check individual Lot sales below if there's a sudden dip in the graph.

HAVE ONE FOR SALE?

Submit your details along with an image and a description of your bottle. We'll then be in touch with the best way to proceed.

WHY SELL WITH WHISKY-ONLINE AUCTIONS?

0% Sellers Commission

Free Collections Available

Over 30 Years In The Whisky Industry

Over 1,700 Five Star Trustpilot Reviews

We Sell The Rarest Whiskies Ever Bottled

Global Buying Audience Including Far East Buyers

Bespoke Auction Platform

Thousands Of Active Bidders

Large Database Of Newsletter Subscribers

Over 36k Social Media Followers

Linlithgow 1975-2001 - 26 Year Old - Signatory Vintage - Single Cask 96/3/36
Linlithgow 1975-2001 - 26 Year Old - Signatory Vintage - Single Cask 96/3/36
LOT ID: 1022-858

Winning Bid
£500.00

End Date: 04 Jan 2023

Linlithgow 1975-2001 - 26 Year Old - Signatory Vintage - Single Cask 96/3/36

Linlithgow 1975 - 2001. 26 year old. Bottled by Signatory Vintage. Cask number 96/3/36. One of 354 bottles. 70cl. 51.5%.

With the revival of Rosebank distillery, Linlithgow - better known as St. Magdalene - has assumed the unwanted mantle of being the greatest lost Lowland distillery. Linlithgow closed in 1983 but thankfully a lot of casks were saved and subsequently bottled by the likes of Gordon & MacPhail and Signatory. This 26-year-old Linlithgow 1975 was bottled by the latter in 2001 at its natural strength of 51.5% and is shows a fascinatingly fruity side to the distillery's character, tempered by a wonderful minerally edge.

Distillery:  St. Magdalene / Linlithgow

Distillery Status:  Closed

Bottler: Signatory Vintage

Region: Lowland

Distilled Year: 1975

Bottling Year: 2001

Age: 26

Bottles Produced: 354

Limited Edition: yes

Cask Number: 96/3/36

Category: Single Malt

Country: Scotland

Bottle Size: 70cl / 700ml

ABV: 51.5%

St. Magdalene distillery (sometimes known as Linlithgow) is one of the greatest and most sorely missed of the lost Lowland distilleries. The distillery’s 1983 closure attracted little outcry but a handful of extraordinary Rare Malts bottlings in the late 1990s brought home the scale of the loss. Thankfully, a great many casks of St. Magdalene/Linlithgow have appeared from independent bottlers, with high strength versions by Cadenhead’s, SMWS, Douglas Laing and Gordon & MacPhail all performing well at auction.

St. Magdalene’s spirit, although sometimes showing a typical Lowland grassiness, was also frequently considerably more robust and austere than one would expect, with the pre-1975 vintages in particular displaying a minerally, oily waxiness more akin to the old Highland style malts than the soft Lowland archetype, while post-1975 vintages sometimes tend more towards elegance and fruitiness. A marvellous distillery that malt fans must try while bottlings still exist.

Signatory Vintage Whisky Company was founded by Andrew Symington in 1988 after a spell as assistant manager at the Prestonfield House Hotel, where he had the opportunity to buy a cask of Glenlivet 1968. A robust and canny businessman, Symington had soon acquired some outstanding parcels of casks from great distilleries, and quickly established a reputation among single malt fans for good value, high quality single casks, the majority of which were released at full strength.

Throughout the 1990s and beyond, Signatory released outstanding whisky from Ardbeg, Glenfarclas, Springbank and many more, with frequently remarkable examples of lost or obscure distilleries. Soon established as one of the leading new wave independent bottlers, Symington was also an early exponent of bottling whiskies without colouring or chill filtration, a policy that has also served Signatory well at their Edradour distillery, which was purchased in 2002.