There's something uniquely compelling about holding a bottle that predates most of the craft gin movement by half a century. Schenley London Dry Gin, bottled in the 1960s, is a relic from an era when London Dry meant something unambiguous — juniper-forward, bone-dry, and built for purpose. Schenley was once a significant name in American spirits, a corporate heavyweight that understood volume and consistency. This bottle is a time capsule from that world.
A London Dry From Another Era
At 47.4% ABV, this sits at a muscular strength that was more common in mid-century spirits than it is today. That's nearly navy strength territory, and it tells you something about the expectations of the era — gin was a cocktail ingredient first, and it needed backbone. The London Dry designation here isn't a marketing flourish; it's a commitment to a dry, juniper-led profile with no added sweetness. Whatever botanical bill Schenley employed — and the specifics remain unconfirmed — the style would have demanded clarity and punch over complexity.
What makes this bottle interesting from an industry perspective is what it represents: the pre-craft baseline. Before botanical transparency became a selling point, before pink gin and flavoured expressions reshaped the category, this was simply what gin was. A workhorse spirit with real conviction at proof. At £175, you're paying for provenance and scarcity rather than liquid alone, which is entirely fair for a bottle of this vintage. It scores a deserved 7.9 — a solid, historically significant London Dry that earns its place in any serious collection.
Best served: In a classic Martini, stirred and very cold. A gin at this strength and from this tradition was born for vermouth, not tonic. Let it do what it was designed to do.