I recently got round to reading the book: "The Much-Lamented Death of Madam Geneva - The Eighteenth-century Gin Craze"
I found this passage interesting:
In 1790, Thomas Pennant made a tour of London, publishing a book to describe what he saw. One day he took a boat across the river to Lambeth, and there he halted in amazement. he found himself looking at "the vast distilleries, till of late the property of Sir Joseph Mawbey".
There weren't just stills and vats on the site. For years, distillers had been profiting from sidelines as well. Pennant commented that "there are seldom less than two thousand hogs grunting at this place, which are kept entirely on the grains". Distillers hogs victualled the navy which was spreading British empire overseas.
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