Early on a wartime winter’s morning in 1941, the 8,000-ton cargo ship SS Politician ran aground in the beautiful but
treacherous seas of Scotland's Outer Hebrides. Among its cargo were 260,000 bottles of whisky destined for the
American market – a godsend to the local Eriskay islanders whose home-grown supply had dried up due to wartime
rationing.
News quickly spread and boats came from as far as Lewis, and before local excise officer Charles McColl could
intervene, more than 24,000 bottles had been 'rescued'. Villages were raided as bottles of whisky were hidden in the
most ingenious ways – or simply drunk to get rid of the evidence. Meanwhile, official salvage operations foundered, and
in order to pre-vent what the islanders themselves regarded as legitimate salvage, the hull of the Politician was
dynamited.
The story is well known through Compton Mackenzie’s bestselling book Whisky Galore and the famous 1949
Ealing comedy of the same name. |