New Insights Into Wray & Nephew 17

Over on the Facebook Rum History forum, I shared some recent discoveries about perhaps the most sought-after rum in the world: Wray & Nephew 17, made famous for its use in the 1944 Mai Tai.

For all the obsession collectors and tiki historians have over it, we know shockingly little about this rum.

Here’s what we can logically infer:

To be available for Trade Vic in 1944 and aged for 17 years, it would have to been distilled in 1927 or prior. We know it was pot distilled because Jamaican distilleries didn’t use column stills till much later.

That’s about the extent we can safely infer, whereas the list of things we don’t know is much longer, among them:

  • Many people assume it was distilled at Appleton Estate which is now synonymous with J. Wray & Nephew. But Appleton Estate wasn’t J. Wray & Nephew’s only distillery at the time. Far from it.
  • What were the marques used? We don’t know. If we did, we’d have some sense of how “funky” it was.
  • What was it aged in? Likely not ex-bourbon casks. They weren’t nearly so common then. Especially when you consider that 1927 was during American prohibition. So, what was Wray & Nephew rum of that era aged in?

I recently came across a very detailed 1926-written story about the Lindo Bros. who owned J. Wray & Nephew from 1916 till around 1957. It offers tantalizing details about the Lindo’s operations in Jamaica:

From the excerpted text, it’s clear that Bernard Lodge was among their foremost distilleries. The W&N 17 rum could have come partially or fully from Bernard Lodge. Or some other Jamaican distillery. Remember, J. Wray & Nephew built their reputation since 1825 as blenders.

We also learn that J. Wray was aging rums in Jamaica for up to 30 years, so a 17-year expression was no big deal for them. Other sources show that they also shipped 15 and 20 year rums.

The article also has two pictures of the Lindo aging facilities, a goldmine for historians:

Incidentally, a government list of rums sold in Jamaican from that era suggest that the Wray & Nephew 17- and 20-year expressions were export rums, and not among the J. Wray and Nephew rums sold in Jamaica. Interestingly, a circa 1941 Don the Beachcomber rum list includes a J. Wray & Nephew Special Reserve 17-year described as “Bottled Exclusively for Don the Beachcomber.”

Lastly, from the warehouse interior image, the casks look like puncheons, which typically held 108-100 imperial gallons (about 500 liters). It was the most common cask size in the British rum trade for centuries.

Were those casks once used for something else? It’s possible. However, by 1926 rum was a full-fledged industry, and the company employed coopers. It’s unlikely that they were having to use whatever barrels happened to have arrived on ships the way they might have in the 1700s.

There are still plenty of mystery about W&N 17 was made, and perhaps someday Appleton will share their notes on its production. But for now, we can say we know just a bit more about it.

15 thoughts on “New Insights Into Wray & Nephew 17

    1. How exciting to find out that my Lindo ancestors once owned my favorite rum company. Would love to find out where you read the lengthy story about the Lindo brothers

      1. It was in a Jamaican Magazine called Planter’s Punch. It’s available in the Digital Library of the Caribbean archives.

  1. It would be so super cool to see Appleton come out with a ‘new’ W&N 17… do you believe they know enough, have enough information about it to make that attempt?

    1. That’s an excellent question. I know they’re well aware of the demand for something like it, and may already have barrels down in preparation for it. (Entirely conjecture on my part.)

      Even if they don’t know exactly how they made the original, they could still blend to that flavor profile using all 17-year or older rums, and still have a product that folks would snap up.

  2. “I recently came across a very lengthy 1926-written story about the Lindo Bros.”

    Can you post to where you read this story? I’ve become a bit of a rum enthusiast over the last few years and would love to read this full story!

    1. It was a copy of “Planter’s Punch”, a literary style Jamaican magazine. Unfortunately, I can’t recall now where I found it online.

  3. Jeff Berry and Ed Hamilton found a man who had some bottles of W&N 17 year Rum, and the man invited them to taste it. Ed and Jeff said they could blend some Rums to taste exactly like W&N 17.

    Combine: (Equal Parts)
    Rhum Clément VSOP
    And
    Appleton Estate Extra – 12 yr

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