Teacher's Highland Cream

Teacher's Highland Cream
Type Scotch whisky
Manufacturer Beam Suntory
Country of origin Scotland
Introduced 1884
Proof (US) 80–86
Related products Ardmore

Teacher's Highland Cream is a brand of blended scotch whisky produced in Glasgow, Scotland, by Beam Suntory, the US-headquartered subsidiary of Suntory Holdings of Osaka, Japan. The Teacher's Highland Cream brand was registered in 1884. (The label on the bottles says "est. 1830", reflecting an earlier date when the founding family entered the whisky business, before the brand name was created.) Teacher's uses over 45% single malt, with Ardmore single malt (a heavily peated central Speyside single malt)[1] being the primary Scotch in its blend, along with about 30 other single malt whiskies.[2] Most of the output of the Ardmore distillery is used to produce the Teacher's brand.[1]

Brand history

In 1830, William Teacher took advantage of the new "Excise Act" and began selling whisky. From 1832 he was selling it from his wife's grocery shop in Glasgow. By 1856, with help from his sons, he was granted a licence for consumption and opened his own dram shop. He died in 1876, leaving his two sons William Jr and Adam in charge of the company, known as William Teacher & Sons Ltd. They moved the business to St. Enoch Square, where it remained until 1991. The company opened its Ardmore distillery in 1898,[3][4] ensuring a guaranteed supply of Scotch for its Teacher's Highland Cream blend. The brand entered the US market after the end of Prohibition in the United States; the first shipment of Teacher's was sent on the Cunard steamer Scythia. Teacher & Sons acquired the Glendronach distillery in 1960[4][5] and built a modern blending and bottling plant in Glasgow in 1962.

In 1976, Teacher & Sons was bought by Allied Breweries,[4] which became part of Allied Lyons in 1978 and then Allied Domecq in 1994. The Glendronach distillery was shut down in 1996 and was later sold off to Chivas Brothers after being reopened in 2002.[5] In 2005, Allied Domecq was taken over by Pernod Ricard.[5] Then, eventually the Ardbeg distillery and the Teacher's brand somehow ended up being owned by Beam Suntory sometime in the range of 2014–2016.

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 "Ardmore Distillery Profile". Malt Madness.
  2. Official website
  3. MacLean, Charles (2006). Malt Whisky. London: Octopus Publishing Group Ltd. p. 120. ISBN 1-84533-240-7.
  4. 1 2 3 "Teacher's Profile". ScotchWhisky.com.
  5. 1 2 3 "Our Story". Glendronach distillery website.

Bibliography

  • Arthur, Helen (2005). A Teacher's Tale: 175 Years of Scotch Whisky through the eyes of Wm Teacher & Sons. Great Britain: Allied Domecq Spirits and Wine (UK) Ltd. ISBN 0955152704. 
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