About
Family-owned distillery in Drogheda on the banks of the River Boyne, named after the Celtic goddess Boann. Founded by Pat and Marie Cooney. Produces whiskey, poitin, and gin. Uses both pot stills and a column still. Visitor centre in the historic Boyne Valley region near Newgrange.
Production Details
The Boann Tale
Where the River Boyne curves toward the Irish Sea, carrying stories older than memory, Pat and Marie Cooney chose their ground in 2019. Drogheda had seen Vikings and Normans, witnessed the rise and fall of kingdoms, but had never heard the gentle bubble of pot stills transforming barley into uisce beatha.
The Cooneys named their distillery for Boann, the Celtic goddess whose defiance created the very river that flows past their doors. Legend tells how she walked forbidden around the Well of Segais, causing its waters to rise and chase her to the sea, forming the Boyne in her flight. Now those same waters, drawn from valley springs, flow through copper and steam in service of a newer alchemy.
In the shadow of Newgrange, where Stone Age builders aligned chambers to catch the winter solstice light five thousand years ago, the Boann stills represent Ireland's whiskey renaissance made manifest. This is family-owned distilling in its purest form—no corporate boardrooms, just the Cooneys' vision taking shape in copper and flame.
Their stillhouse holds both pot stills and a column still, a deliberate choice that speaks to Irish whiskey's expanding vocabulary. Where once the island's distilleries numbered in hundreds before the twentieth century's devastation, each new operation now carries the weight of revival. The Cooneys craft not just whiskey but poitín too, that clear spirit that survived in hidden corners when legal distilling nearly vanished from Ireland entirely.
The Boyne Valley springs that feed their production connect each bottle to limestone and time, to the geology that shapes flavor and the history that shapes purpose. Visitors come to taste and learn, but they leave understanding something deeper—how a river goddess's rebellion became a family's calling, how ancient ground nurtures modern dreams.
The stills at Boann are young, but they stand where mythology meets craft, where the oldest whiskey-making traditions in the world find new expression. In Drogheda, beside the goddess's river, the Cooneys write tomorrow's chapter in Ireland's liquid literature.