Tintara

Tintara is an Australian winery located in McLaren Vale, South Australia within the McLaren Vale wine region. The winery was established in 1861 and incorporated in the 1862 as the Tintara Vineyard Company by Alexander Kelly, a medical physician and winemaker who wrote the early Australian winemaking and viticultural text Winegrowing in Australia and The Vine in Australia. Several prominent figures in the early history of South Australia and McLaren Vale were initial investors in the winery including the founder of the University of Adelaide, Walter Watson Hughes, landowner Samuel Davenport and politician Thomas Elder.[1] Today the winery holds the distinction of producing the oldest surviving bottle of Australian wine—an 1867 Tintara Vineyard claret. The Tintara wine earned the distinction when the previous record holder, an 1864 bottle of Pewsey Vale Cabernet Sauvignon, was accidentally broken by an office cleaner at Christie's auction house.[2][3][4]

  1. ^ J. Beeston "Concise History of Australian Wine" p. 74 Third Edition Allen & Unwin 2001 ISBN 1-86508-547-2
  2. ^ G. Harding "A Wine Miscellany" p. 28, Clarkson Potter Publishing, New York 2005 ISBN 0-307-34635-8
  3. ^ AAP "Australia's oldest bottle of wine returns[dead link]" Associated Australian Press, 24 February 2003
  4. ^ J. Halliday "The History of Shiraz in Australia Archived 11 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine" The World of Fine WineIssue #20 p. 91 2008