Kennetpans Distillery

The small hamlet of Kennetpans on the northern edge of the river Forth was host to a considerable enterprise which expanded during the industrial revolution. It was Andrew Stein (1672 – 1743) that first established a commercial whisky distillery at Kennetpans, around 1720.

The site had good river links to Edinburgh and had room for a pier to be built. The surrounding land was also worked by the Steins, and so they had easy access to the crops they required and they could use the waste from the process to feed livestock.

Kennetpans Feus

Kennetpans Feus Map 1840

By 1733 Kennetpans Distillery had become the biggest single distillery in Scotland, producing whisky on a grand scale. By this time it was being run by Andrew's Son, John Stein (1697 – 1773). It was said that the tax paid on the produce was greater than all of Scotland's land tax*.

Kennetpans OS map

Kennetpans OS map, 1860

From this distillery, and others they would own, the Steins founded the export market for Scotch whisky. This wealth led to the building of possibly the first railway line in Scotland and one of the first canals, both of these connecting Kennetpans Distillery and Pier to the Stein's distillery at Kilbagie, just over a mile to the north-east. The Stein family, have been described as being "at the forefront of the Industrial Revolution in Scotland." Certainly their business dealings are reasonably well documented.

The distillery was continuously improved, and the ruined buildings that still remain date from the 1770s. A newly developed condensing rotative steam engine, invented by James Watt, and produced by Boulton and Watt, was installed here in 1786, the first in Scotland.

Boulton and Watt EngineSketch showing a steam engine designed by Boulton & Watt, England, 1784.

John had twelve children, some of whom continued with the family’s distilling traditions. James founded a large distillery at Kilbagie, just over a mile from his father’s Kennetpans Distillery, Robert founded the Kincaple Distillery at St Andrews, Andrew purchased the Hattonburn Distillery at Milnathort. John’s son, John Jr. (1745 – 1825), eventually took over at Kennetpans. He also set his sights on the Irish market, founding the Bow Street Distillery, Dublin in 1780 and in the same year, he purchased another Dublin distillery, Marrowbone Lane. Both would become vast manufacturing concerns. 

Kennetpans closed in 1825, and was later used as a store. Certainly the other nearby distilleries belonging to the Steins had better road links. By the early 1900s the buildings were roofless. Despite long abandonment the complex gives a remarkably complete picture of the scale, layout and construction of a major 18th century industrial enterprise.

Kennetpans - Canmore

Kennetpans  - Canmore.org.uk

The site was designated as a scheduled monument in 1991. Work continues to try to salvage the remaining buildings for the future. For more information on this, and much more, visit Kennetpans.info

References:

Wikipedia

Kennetpans.info

Historic Environment Scotland (HES)

Canmore.org.uk

* Statistical Accounts of Scotland - Clackmannan Parish

Asme.org (Watt engine)

maps.nls.uk