About
Founded in 2011 by Bill McHenry, Australia's southernmost distillery, located on a 100-acre property 10 minutes past historic Port Arthur. Bill brought a background in chemistry, agricultural science, and pharmaceutical company leadership. Three Tasmanian-built copper pot stills: 3,000L, 1,500L, and a 500L jacketed still (Knapp-Lewer design) for even heating. First single malt released 2016. The climate near Port Arthur closely mirrors Scottish conditions with high humidity and cool temperatures, causing whisky to lose more alcohol during maturation than other Tasmanian whiskies, producing delicate complex spirits.
Production Details
The McHenry Distillery Tale
Ten minutes past the haunted sandstone walls of Port Arthur, where Australia's convict past still whispers through the ruins, Bill McHenry found his sanctuary. The hundred-acre property that would become Australia's southernmost distillery sits where the Tasman Peninsula meets the Southern Ocean, buffeted by winds that have traveled unbroken across thousands of miles of water.
McHenry came to this remote corner of Tasmania in 2011 with the methodical mind of a chemist and the vision of someone who understood that great whisky begins with great water. Five natural springs bubble up from his land, filtered through ancient Tasmanian rock, carrying the purity that only an island at the edge of the world can offer.
The three copper pot stills that arrived from Tasmanian craftsmen tell the story of deliberate choices. The largest at 3,000 liters, then 1,500 liters, and finally the 500-liter jacketed still built to Knapp-Lewer design—each vessel sized not for efficiency but for character. The jacketed design ensures even heating, a pharmaceutical precision applied to an ancient craft.
Here, where the climate mirrors Scotland's but with a Southern Hemisphere twist, something remarkable happens in the warehouses. The high humidity and cool temperatures create conditions that strip alcohol faster than water from the aging spirit, the opposite of what occurs in most Australian distilleries. Each barrel breathes differently, losing strength but gaining delicacy, as if the proximity to the Southern Ocean teaches the whisky patience.
When McHenry released his first single malt in 2016, five years after those first copper stills began their work, it carried something unmistakably Tasmanian—the influence of winds that have crossed the Roaring Forties, water that has never known pollution, and the vision of a man who understood that Australia's whisky story was just beginning.
The stills continue their patient work, transforming Tasmanian grain into something that speaks of this particular place, where convict history meets craft innovation, where the Southern Ocean shapes every drop.