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Dallas Dhu whisky

Dallas Dhu Distillery was the idea of entrepreneur Alexander Edward. In 1898, he built two new distilleries - Benromach and Dallasmore - to respond to demand for malt whisky for blending.

Before Dallasmore went into production in 1899, Edward sold the distillery to Glasgow blending firm Wright & Greig Ltd. It wanted the distillery to ensure a supply of malt for its popular blend, Roderick Dhu. Dallasmore was renamed Dallas Dhu to highlight the link.

Aerial view of the historic Dallas Dhu distillery complex, showing white warehouse buildings, a tall brick chimney, and surrounding farmland beneath dramatic storm clouds.

A chequered history

Dallas Dhu Distillery filled its first barrel on 3 June 1899 and its last on 16 March 1983. In between, it had a chequered existence.

The distillery closed during the First World War but was afterwards sold to J.P. O’Brien & Co. Ltd. When the Glasgow company went bust in 1921, Dallas Dhu was bought by Benmore Distillery.

The new owners invested heavily in the site, but the Great Depression forced closure in the early 1930s. In April 1939, soon after reopening, the distillery was badly damaged by fire.

Production began again in 1947, but finally ended in 1983. The reasons given were an excess of stock, falling demand and an unreliable water supply.

Visitors descend a metal staircase beside large wooden worm tubs.
An aerial view of a large, white distillery on a sunny day.
Visitors stand beside a large copper pot still inside the historic Dallas Dhu distillery, surrounded by traditional distilling equipment, pipework and industrial walkways.
Visitors stand on an elevated platform inside Dallas Dhu distillery.

A local concern

Dallas Dhu typically employed around 15 men, including a manager, brewer, maltman, mashman, stillman, warehouseman and cooper.

Workers were divided into groups, each headed by a lead man. They were expected to turn their hand to anything from unloading barley and shovelling peat to rolling out the barrels.

The exception was the exciseman, who was employed by Customs and Excise but provided with a house and office by the distillery.

Maurice Walsh was Dallas Dhu’s most famous exciseman. The author was best known for The Quiet Man, which was made into a film starring John Wayne and Maureen O’Hara.

Statement of Significance

Read our Statement of Significance for Dallas Dhu for facts, figures and further reading about the building and its history.

Read more
Aerial view of Dallas Dhu distillery set within rolling green countryside, with white industrial buildings, fields, woodland, and distant hills.

Our archives and collections

Get a further glimpse into Dallas Dhu's history by exploring archive images and collections objects on trove.scot, your companion to researching Scotland’s past.

Interior of a traditional malt loft at Dallas Dhu distillery, with stacks of grain sacks arranged beneath exposed timber roof beams and skylights.
Preserved office space at Dallas Dhu distillery featuring a blue wooden desk, matching door and window frame, with historic fixtures.
Rows of whisky casks stacked on wooden racks inside a warehouse, with barrel ends marked “Dallas Dhu”.