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Gordon's Dry Gin / Bot.1950s / Spring Cap

Gordon's Dry Gin / Bot.1950s / Spring Cap

7.8 /10
EDITOR
8.4 /10
COMMUNITY (7)
Type: London Dry
ABV: 47.3%
Price: £325.00

There are bottles you drink, and there are bottles you sit with — turning slowly in the light, reading the glass like a letter from another era. This Gordon's Dry Gin, bottled sometime in the 1950s with its distinctive spring cap closure, is emphatically the latter. At 47.3% ABV, it carries the full strength that was once standard for Gordon's, before successive decades of cost-cutting diluted one of London's great names to its modern shadow.

A Window Into Post-War London

What we know about this bottle is defined as much by absence as presence. The botanicals are unconfirmed, the precise distillery lost to the fog of corporate history. And yet the Gordon's recipe — jealously guarded since Alexander Gordon established his Southwark distillery in 1769 — was already centuries old by the time this spirit met glass. A London Dry of this vintage and strength would have been built on a juniper-forward backbone of uncommon intensity, the kind of assertive, no-nonsense character that made Gordon's the default pour in officers' messes and hotel bars from Bombay to Buenos Aires.

At this ABV, one would expect a gin of real authority — the juniper bright and resinous, the supporting botanicals given room to articulate themselves in a way that lower-proof expressions simply cannot achieve. This is gin as it was meant to be: unapologetic, structurally sound, and deeply rooted in the London Dry tradition. The £325 price tag reflects its status as a collector's piece, a liquid time capsule from a golden age of British distilling.

I score this 7.8 out of 10 — a mark of respect for its historical significance and the sheer quality that Gordon's once represented at full strength, tempered only by the unknowns that come with any bottle of this age.

Best served with reverence — a small measure, neat or with just a splash of cool water, savoured slowly on a quiet evening when you have the patience to listen to what the past has to say.

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Joe Whitfield
Joe Whitfield
Editor-in-Chief

London Dry, Distillery Heritage, Industry Analysis, Spirits Editorial

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Community Reviews

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Rosa Paredes VIPsAllowed - How gin used to be
8/10

Opening a 1950s Gordon's at 47.3% is educational. The higher proof and what were presumably different botanical proportions produce a London Dry of remarkable quality. History you can drink.

28 January 2026
Marianne Blom VIPsAllowed - Nostalgia meets quality
8/10

This spring cap 1950s Gordon's at 47.3% shows what mass-market gin was capable of. The London Dry profile is rich and complex in a way that modern budget gins rarely achieve. A reminder of better times.

26 January 2026
Daisy Miller VIPsAllowed - Spring cap treasure
8/10

The spring cap closure dates this Gordon's firmly in the 1950s. At 47.3% the London Dry character is bold and uncompromising. Juniper-forward with excellent depth. A real piece of gin heritage.

25 January 2026
Connor McBride VIPsAllowed - Golden age of Gordon's
9/10

This 1950s spring cap Gordon's at 47.3% is a revelation. The higher ABV and what must have been a different recipe create a London Dry with incredible depth and juniper intensity. This is how Gordon's should taste.

9 January 2026
Erik Strom VIPsAllowed - The finest Gordon's ever bottled
10/10

This 1950s spring cap at 47.3% represents Gordon's at its absolute zenith. The juniper is intense, the botanicals are complex, and the overall quality is miles ahead of the modern version. A masterpiece of vintage London Dry.

14 December 2025
Maxwell Green VIPsAllowed - Interesting historical piece
7/10

While undeniably better than modern Gordon's, this 1950s bottling at 47.3% has lost some freshness over the decades. The juniper is still strong but the supporting botanicals have faded. More of a collector's item than a great drink now.

4 December 2025
Elena Vasquez VIPsAllowed - Vintage at full strength
9/10

At 47.3% this 1950s Gordon's has so much more going on than the modern version. Rich juniper, complex botanicals, and a full body that makes today's offering feel watery in comparison.

11 October 2025

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