About
Claims the oldest continuously licensed pot still distillery in Ireland (1757). Closed in 1954, reopened as a museum, then returned to production in 2007 under Cooley ownership. Now a working distillery again under Beam Suntory, producing Kilbeggan single pot still and malt whiskeys. The restored 19th-century waterwheel-driven pot still is a heritage treasure.
Production Details
The Kilbeggan Tale
The River Brosna has carved its way through County Westmeath for millennia, but it was in 1757 that the Codd family recognized something precious in its waters. They established what would become known as Brusna Distillery in the market town of Kilbeggan, claiming a license that makes it Ireland's oldest continuously permitted distillery—a testament to the ancient art of uisce beatha that had flowed through Irish hands for centuries.
The distillery found its true character under John Locke in 1843, when the operation expanded and the Locke name became synonymous with Kilbeggan whiskey. The Brosna powered a magnificent waterwheel that drove the machinery, its steady rhythm marking time through decades of production. Cast iron mash tuns and Oregon pine washbacks became the vessels where local barley met river water, beginning the patient transformation that Irish distillers had perfected through generations.
But Ireland's whiskey industry would face its darkest hour. Economic pressures, trade wars, and changing tastes conspired against the old ways. In 1953, after nearly two centuries of operation, the stills at Kilbeggan fell silent. The waterwheel stopped turning. The Brosna flowed on, indifferent to the loss.
For fifty-four years, Kilbeggan existed only in memory and museum displays, its 19th-century pot still standing as a monument to what had been. Then, in 2007, something remarkable happened. Under Cooley's stewardship, the heritage pot still was restored to working condition. The waterwheel began turning again. The Brosna's waters once more served their ancient purpose.
Today, under Beam Suntory's care, Kilbeggan represents more than survival—it embodies Ireland's whiskey renaissance. Two pot stills now operate where silence once reigned, producing single pot still and malt whiskeys that honor both tradition and innovation. The restored waterwheel still turns, a living link between past and future.
Standing in the stillhouse, you can feel the weight of centuries—the hands that built these walls, the families who worked here, the quiet determination that refused to let this place fade into history. The Brosna flows past, carrying with it the promise of whiskeys yet to be born.