Dark Fired-The Black Patch Tobacco Wars

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BayouGhost

Starting to Get Obsessed
Apr 10, 2024
190
2,065
Louisiana
The Remarkable Story of the Black Patch Tobacco Wars (6 Photos) - https://archiveproject.com/the-black-patch-wars-kentucky-tennesee-dark-tobacco-1904-1910

An interesting article on the "Night Riders" and the "Dark Fired Kentucky Wars". I recently listened to a podcast on this subject and never knew this history before. The host doesn't really mention pipe tobacco at all except once and is a bit apologist about the sins of tobacco relating to his own use of snuff and mentions the health ills of smoking, but if you can get over yourself and plow through that 10 seconds or so and listen on, there are parts of an interview with the last surviving night rider at age 97 that are quite interesting. Part 2 has not been released yet, but I look forward to it.

 

georged

Lifer
Mar 7, 2013
6,186
17,153
... and is a bit apologist about the sins of tobacco relating to his own use of snuff and mentions the health ills of smoking, but if you can get over yourself and plow through that 10 seconds or so and listen on...

OR you can shake your head in disgust at the submissive, virtue-signaling weakness on display by an organism that was once referred to as "a man", and not contribute to its revenue stream as a categorical thing.

Just sayin'
 

Briar Lee

Lifer
Sep 4, 2021
5,208
15,003
Humansville Missouri
As my hair turns from gray to silver I’m ever more appreciate of my seventh grade teacher Miss Charlotte who taught all of us about the Black Patch Wars and many other like lessons about our history.

There are dozens of accounts of the Black Patch Wars.

Here’s a good one.



Missouri’s own night riders were the Bald Knobbers, still celebrated today at Branson.



My own mother, born in 1926, would read some horrible story of child abuse in the paper and exclaim, when those old Night Riders still rode there wasn’t nearly as much of that.:)

There’s a big spring on our farm where my father and other old timers much older than he was (born 1919) would regale me with stories about cutting switches and kerosene torches and muffled hooves, and they showed no shame about it.

History is what it is.

When those who have something feel threatened by others, they often go night riding to try and keep it.


In the Black Patch Wars the threat was Duke’s trust buying practices.

In the Ozarks, it was newcomers who drank whiskey right out of the bottle in front of everybody and worked their women and children like field hands, and would whistle at school teachers, and other such crimes against the peace and order of the community.:)
 
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Feb 26, 2021
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The Remarkable Story of the Black Patch Tobacco Wars (6 Photos) - https://archiveproject.com/the-black-patch-wars-kentucky-tennesee-dark-tobacco-1904-1910

An interesting article on the "Night Riders" and the "Dark Fired Kentucky Wars". I recently listened to a podcast on this subject and never knew this history before. The host doesn't really mention pipe tobacco at all except once and is a bit apologist about the sins of tobacco relating to his own use of snuff and mentions the health ills of smoking, but if you can get over yourself and plow through that 10 seconds or so and listen on, there are parts of an interview with the last surviving night rider at age 97 that are quite interesting. Part 2 has not been released yet, but I look forward to it.

This is awesome! I'd never even heard of it. I fancy myself quite the amateur historian, Tennessee history in particular, but I'm nowhere near as fancy as I thought I was! Gonna study up on this one!

I've lived in East and Middle TN, but never in the West, and the northwest part of the state in particular is probably least known to the rest of the state.