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Whisky from 1900s could fetch £3,000 at auction

Two bottles of “extremely rare” whisky from The Welsh Whisky Distillery Company, which operated between 1889 and the early 20th century, could fetch up to £3,000 each at auction.

The bottles are being auctioned online by Peter Francis Auctioneers

The Welsh Whisky Distillery Company bottles are being auctioned online by Peter Francis Auctioneers in Carmarthen.

The current vendor’s father, who was a partner in a wine merchants in Fishguard, saw an advert detailing the bottles and purchased them for £5 each in the 1960s.

The bottles were previously owned by a gentleman whose family acquired them from the distillery when it closed in 1914. They retailed in the late 19th century at 3/6.

Auctioneer, Charles Hampshire, said: “There is an example of these bottles at St Fagans Museum and one at Penderyn Distillery. They are extremely rare and I wouldn’t be surprised if I never saw another one.

“We have estimated the bottles and paperwork at £1500-2000 each. What they will end up making is difficult to predict although I would hope somewhere between £2000-£3000.”

The Welsh Whisky Distillery Company was founded in Frongoch, Bala, Gwynedd. After the company’s liquidation in 1910, the site became a World War One prison camp, and then an internment camp after the Easter Rising in the Republic of Ireland.

Hampshire added: “Very serious whisky collectors would be interested in these due to the rarity and value, but also they have such a strong Welsh interest that you may even see someone willing to invest in part of what is Welsh history.”

The sale finishes on December 5.

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