Tobacco History:
The Social History of Smoking
by George Latimer Apperson
First published in 1914
"The Social History of Smoking" by George Latimer Apperson, can be purchased at Amazon.com in two different versions. Depending on the quality of the edition, prices range between $35 and $104.
From Chapter 4: But to turn from this worthy Exeter citizen to more famous names: I do not know of any good evidence as to whether or not Cromwell smoked, although he is said to have taken an occasional pipe while considering the offer of the crown, but John Milton certainly did. The account of how the blind poet passed his days, after his retirement from public office, was first told by his contemporary Richardson, and has since been repeated by all his biographers. His placid day ended early. The poet took his frugal supper at eight o'clock, and at nine, having smoked a pipe and drunk a glass of water, he went to bed. Apparently this modest allowance of a daily evening pipe was the extent of Milton's indulgence in tobacco. He knew nothing of what most smokers regard as the best pipe of the day—the after-breakfast pipe.
From Chapter 8: Notwithstanding the unfashionableness of tobacco, there were still some noteworthy smokers to be found among the clergy. Dr. Sumner, head master of Harrow, who died in 1771, was devoted to his pipe. The greatest of clerical "tobacconists" of late eighteenth century and early nineteenth century date was the once famous Dr. Parr. It was from him that Dr. Sumner learned to smoke. When he and Parr got together Sumner was in the habit of refilling his pipe again and again in such a way as to be unobserved, at the same time begging Parr not to depart till he had finished his pipe, in order that he might detain him, we are told, in the evening as long as possible.
www.cigarette2000.com
Black Hawk Full Flavor 100s Box
Black Hawk Full Flavor 100's are now available in a sturdy hard pack box.
Full Flavor 100's Box
Tobacco Domains, the best tobacco shops at the best prices.·:*¨¨*:·.CHEAP CIGARETTES .·:*¨¨*:·.
Tobacco Domains - a list of all the major tobacco shops online - Buy Cheap Cigarettes, Buy Native.
Tobacco Domains
Buy Cheap, Discount Cigarettes - Seneca, Skydancer, Black Hawk
Buy cheap cigarettes online from Cigline discount cigarettes, cheap seneca cigarettes.
Discount Cigarettes
Smokers Index: Native American Cigarette Guide, Cheap Native Smokes
The satisfied expression on a smoker's face when he inhales the smoke is ample proof of his sensuous thrill. The immense power of the yearning for a cigarette, especially after an enforced abstinence, is acknowledged by habitual smokers. One of our respon
Smoker's Index
CHEAP CIGARETTES in Palm Springs
Palm Springs Cigarettes - Get a free lighter with every carton of cigarettes purchased at our brick and mortar store. The best priced tobacco and cigarettes in Palm Springs, Black Hawk Tobacco is your Palm Springs Discount Tobacco Source.
Palm Desert Cigarettes
Cheap Cigarettes Store offers cheap cigarettes online.
Cheap Cigarettes Online. Cheap Native cigarettes.
Cigarettes at a Discount
Tobacco Club USA, CHEAP CIGARETTES, Cigarette Club
Tobacco Club, Join our community of Pro Smoking Tobacco, Cigarette Enthusiasts - visit Black Hawk today.
Tobacco Club
Cigarettes - CHEAP CIGARETTES in Palm Springs
Palm Springs Cigarettes - Get a free lighter with every carton of cigarettes purchased at our brick and mortar store. The best priced tobacco and cigarettes in Palm Springs, Black Hawk Tobacco is your Palm Springs Discount Tobacco Source.
Palm Desert Cigarettes
U L T R A, Ultra Light Cigarettes, CHEAP Ultra Light CIGARETTES
Ultras, Ultra Light Cigarettes - We have all the major Native American Light brands at the lowset prices. Buy 10 or more cartons and get the shipping free.
Ultra Light Cigarettes
CHEAP CIGARETTES - Cigarettes for Less
The Smoker's Manifesto: Demand DISCOUNT Cigarettes, Buy Native American. A manifesto is a public declaration of principles and intentions. Manifestos are often political in nature.
The Smokers Manifesto Live
From Chapter 9: A correspondent of Notes and Queries, in 1908, mentioned that he possessed two of these old penny-in-the-slot tobacco-boxes, and had come across another in a dealer's shop of a somewhat peculiar make, about which he wished to get information. "It is of the ordinary shape," he wrote, "but differs from any I have previously seen in this respect, that it works with a sixpence, and not with a penny or halfpenny. It is engraved with the usual lines, except that the user is asked to put sixpence in the till, and then to shut down the lid under penalty of a fine of a shilling. What could it have been used for that was worth sixpence a time? Other uncommon features are that the money portion is shallow, and that the part for the tobacco extends the whole length of the box. I should say that the box is much smaller than any others I have ever seen." No information as to the use of this curious box was forthcoming from any of the learned and ingenious correspondents of Notes and Queries; and a problem which they cannot solve may not unreasonably be regarded as insoluble.
From Chapter 15: Other significant early tobacconists' signs were "Sir Walter Raleigh," "The Virginian" and "The Tobacco Roll." "Sir Walter," as the reputed introducer of tobacco, was naturally chosen as a sign, and his portrait adorns several shop-bills in the Banks Collection. The American Indians, represented under the figure of "The Virginian," and the negroes were hopelessly confused by the early tobacconists, with results which were sometimes surprising from an ethnological point of view. As the first tobacco imported into this country came from Virginia, a supposed "Virginian" was naturally adopted as a tobacco-seller's sign at an early date. An "Indian" or a "Negro" or a figure which was a combination of both, was commonly represented wearing a kilt or a girdle of tobacco leaves, a feathered head-dress, and smoking a pipe. A tobacco-paper, dating from about the time of Queen Anne, bears rudely engraved the figure of a negro smoking, and holding a roll of tobacco in his hand. Above his head is a crown; behind are two ships in full sail, with the sun just appearing from the right-hand corner above. The foreground shows four little black boys planting and packing tobacco, and below them is the name of the ingenious tradesman—"John Winkley, Tobacconist, near ye Bridge, in the Burrough, Southwark." Sixty years or so ago a wooden figure, representing a negro with a gilt loin-cloth and band with feathered head, and sometimes with a tobacco roll, was still a frequent ornament of tobacconists' shops.