Dear Mark
Thanks for allowing the
SWR to make use of space on your website. We figured that your readers
would be interested in the fast-developing ‘Mutter Bowmore’ saga.
Allow me to give a quick resume of the goings on so far.
Earlier in December the Glasgow auctioneer McTear’s offered a bottle of
‘W&J Mutter’s’ Bowmore single malt, which the house claimed to date from
1850 making it “the oldest bottle known in existence”. This bottling,
not surprisingly attracted considerable interest among collectors and
whisky historians. Among the latter were archivists Iain Russell and
Prof Michael Moss both of whom expressed doubts about the date placed on
the bottle by McTear’s: the bottle appeared to be machine-made (unusual
for one dating from 1850); the glass was clear (once again unusual); the
bottle shape was a-typical of the style of 1850. In addition, the
sophisticated 4-colour label was considered to be more in line with
bottles from the late 19th century; while the trademark declaration was
seen to be unlikely to feature on a whisky bottled prior to the
developments of branded bottled whiskies in the 1870s. Crucially, the
Mutters only trademarked W&J Mutter’s Bowmore Islay Whisky in 1876 and
had claimed (at that time) that it had only used the wording for six
years previously.
The
archivists contacted McTear’s outlining their worries over the dating,
suggesting that the whisky would more likely have been bottled c1890.
however the auctioneer stuck to its guns and the bottle (which by now
had lost its cork) was put up for sale with the disputed date claim
intact. It then sold for more than £25,000.
The story took a
curious turn. Athough the bottle was bought by “a Russian collector”
Morrison Bowmore (MBD) continued to take remarkably close interest in
it, offering to display the bottle in its visitor’s centre. By then Iain
Russell and Prof Moss’s continuing concerns over the dating of the
bottle had been printed in The Ileach, on wine writer Andrew Jefford’s
blog and in the SWR
The next thing which we
heard was that Bowmore (not the mysterious new owner of the bottle) had
sent it to an Oxford University laboratory and paid for the whisky could
undergo carbon dating.
On Dec 4th the results
came back to Gordon Steele of the Scotch Whisky Research Institute who
wrote to MBD: “The sample has been assigned a date of 119 +/- 23BP.This
date is in radiocarbon years before present (1950). Thus, the
radiocarbon results give the date of production (not including
maturation) as between 1808 and 1854... the results
are entirely consistent with the reported age of the whisky and a
bottling date in the 1850s” Game, set and match to McTears and MBD. Or
so Martin Green of McTear’s thought when he wrote triumphantly and
modestly to The Ileach:
"The
carbon dating show that the spirit was produced between 1808 and 1854
thus my description was accurate... As I explained the reason to have
the spirit authenticated was three-fold, to protect potential buyers, to
protect the Bowmore brand name and to protect the Scotch Whisky Industry
in general. Using my own expertise and the expertise of MBD I consulted
with Bowmore every step of the way over the sale of this rarest bottle
of single malt to have appeared at auction to date...”
The saga however was
set to take another twist.
Many
of the historians, archivists and hacks involved seemed to recall that
radio-carbon dating was rarely that precise. It could tell if a whisky
was made post 1950, but being able to narrow down a specific bottling
date? Prof. Michael Moss, Iain Russell and the SWR
dug a little deeper and asked scientists (in Oxford and Glasgow) about
radio-carbon dating and the analysis of the data as given by the SWRI.
Prof Moss received the
following response from Prof. Paul Bishop of Glasgow University’s Dept.
of Geographical and Earth Sciences, who wrote:
"The interpretation
offered in the SWRI letter is inadequate on at least two grounds..” Prof
Bishop then goes on to outline that radiocarbon years do not correspond
to calendar years, adding: “In this case, the calendar age is
essentially AD1638 to 1938... This imprecision is well known to users of
radiocarbon dating. ... In short, it is incorrect to derive a calendar
age from a radio-carbon age by simply subtracting the radiocarbon age
from 1950 and adding the ‘plus’ and ‘minus’ either side of that.”
So, rather than the
bottling date being a 50 years window it could have been bottled at any
time over a 300 year period!
The
ball is now firmly back in McTear’s (and MBD’s) court. As far as the SWR
is concerned the evidence still points to the bottle dating from the
late 19th century. An old bottle and a desireable enough artefact for a
collector, but the oldest bottle ever presented at auction? We think
not.