Malt Mill Whisky
Malt Mill is one of Scotch whisky's great lost distilleries: a small and now legendary Islay operation built by Sir Peter Mackie within the Lagavulin site in 1908. Created after Mackie lost the rights to sell Laphroaig, it was designed to produce a similarly peated style of whisky, with its own stills and a strongly individual place in the history of Islay whisky.
Although short-lived by Scotch standards, Malt Mill has gained an outsized reputation. Production continued until the early 1960s, and the distillery's spirit was used mainly in blends such as White Horse and Mackie's Ancient Scotch rather than being established as a regular single malt in its own right. That scarcity, combined with the distillery's unusual backstory, has made Malt Mill a cult name among enthusiasts and collectors.
Today, Malt Mill is remembered less as a brand with a living range than as a vanished chapter of Islay whisky history. The name carries a particular fascination because it sits at the intersection of rivalry, innovation and scarcity: a lost distillery whose surviving traces still hold an almost mythical status in Scotch whisky.