- Reviving a classic Irish whiskey distillery with Tullamore D. E. W.
In 1994, Irish Distillers sold the brand to the C C Group before it was acquired by the owners of Glenfiddich et al, William Grant Sons, for €300 million in 2010 At which point, Tullamore D E W was still without its own distillery, with every expression released under the brand’s name being sourced from Bushmills and Midleton Distillery
- Tullamore Dew - Wikipedia
In 1966, John Powers Son merged with two other Irish distilleries to form Irish Distillers In the 1970s, Irish Distillers closed their existing distilleries and consolidated production at a new distillery built in Midleton, County Cork
- Tullamore Dew’s New Distillery – The Whiskey Reviewer
When William Grant Sons, makers of Grant’s and The Balvenie, bought Tullamore Dew away from Irish Distillers in 2010, it was with the intent of bringing production of the classic brand back to its home in Tullamore, County Offlay, but that decision brought major hurdles to overcome with it
- Our Story History - Irish Whiskey - Tullamore DEW
At Tullamore D E W we have a long history with many stories to tell because our distillery was first established in 1829 Our whiskey is the result of a family that showed incredible vision and commitment to develop their passion for whiskey
- Tullamore (Old) | Whiskipedia
Since 2010 Tullamore DEW has been part of William Grant Sons Irish Brands Ltd The inauguration of the new production facility near Tullamore, which cost 35 million euros to build, took place in September 2014 by the Irish Minister of Agriculture, Simon Coveney
- William Grant Sons And Tullamore D. E. W. Celebrate A Decade Of Success . . .
The distillery closed in Tullamore in 1954 due to global Irish whiskey sales declining- it was sixty years before Tullamore D E W finally came back to Tullamore town when William Grant Sons invested over €100 million in the new distillery
- Tullamore D. E. W. - Irish Whiskey | Wine-Searcher
The brand continued under the Irish Distillers umbrella before eventually becoming part of the William Grant distilling empire, best known for its Glenfiddich and Hendrick's Gin brands, in 2010 The whiskey returned to its hometown in 2014 with the opening of a new distillery
- Tullamore Dew Explained
In 1954, the original distillery closed down, and with stocks of whiskey running low, the brand was sold to John Powers Son, another Irish distiller in the 1960s, with production transferred to the Midleton Distillery, County Cork in the 1970s following a merger of three major Irish distillers
|