Famous Historical Pipe Smokers

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Kspipe

Lurker
Sep 23, 2023
35
63
Kansas
Tatanka Iyotake ('Sitting Bull'). Here's an apocryphal story about his pipe-smoking I gleaned off the web:

"...in 1872, the Lakota warriors attempted to block construction of the railroad near the Yellowstone River. The U.S. Army was there to provide protection for the railroad and a battle ensued. As the battle turned into a standoff, the Oglala Lakota warrior Crazy Horse displayed his bravery by riding in front of the soldiers armed only with a spear. Then Sitting Bull stepped forward. He put his rifle on the ground and walked towards the line of soldiers with his pipe.

The soldiers began firing. With bullets kicking up the dirt around him, Sitting Bull sat down and shouted back to his fellow warriors, "Whoever wishes to smoke with me, come." Only four men, including Sitting Bull's nephew White Bull, sat with him as bullets buzzed past their heads and hit the ground at their feet and legs. The four men anxiously smoked as fast as they could, but noted that Sitting Bull "just sat and looked around and smoked peacefully."

After smoking the pipe, Sitting Bull calmly picked up a stick and cleaned out the pipe bowl before standing up. He then turned, and at a leisurely pace, walked back towards home as the bullets hit the dirt behind him. The Lakota warriors were in awe that not one bullet struck him during the entire episode and he had shown no fear. As White Bull later recalled, this was the "most brave deed possible" and "counted more than counting coup."

(Source: Philbrick, Nathaniel. The Last Stand: Custer, Sitting Bull, and the Battle of the Little Big Horn. New York: Viking, 2010).
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There’s an episode about this very thing. On the get piped podcast. I just listened to it while at work catching up on the older episodes. Worth a try if you like that sort of thing
 
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MisterBadger

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 6, 2024
606
4,454
Ludlow, UK
Boris Karloff (William Henry Pratt) 1887-1969: born in Peckham, south London, of Anglo-Indian descent, emigrated to Canada in 1909 and bummed around doing odd jobs until he discovered a talent for acting - first on the stage, when in 1911 he adopted the stage name Boris Karloff, and later in cinema, where his best-known role is as the monster in the film 'Frankenstein' (1931), by which time he had already acted in no fewer than 81 other films. Thereafter, horror became his principal genre. He returned to England in 1959 and continued his career in cinema until just a few months before his death. Here, he appears to be smoking a Lovat. He had a pet pig called Violet and a tortoise called Lighting Bill, but I haven't been able to find out what tobaccos he smoked.
Karloff.jpg
 

MisterBadger

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 6, 2024
606
4,454
Ludlow, UK
US General George Patton . He was controversial , probably under utilized , but the Germans were terrified of him .
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Yes, indeed. And I also think not a few who served with him where also terrified of old 'Blood And Guts'. One of the real, original tank generals. He was to the US Army what Heinz Guderian was to the Wehrmacht. And isn't that a Lovat he's smoking?
 
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MisterBadger

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 6, 2024
606
4,454
Ludlow, UK
Royal Air Force Chief Air Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder KCB, Deputy Supreme Commander at Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force under General Eisenhower. In this and other photos he can be seen smoking a Liverpool briar. Apparently he liked to smoke a Dunhill (can we see the white spot?) with Lambert & Butler's Rhodian Curly Cut.
Tedder1943.jpg
 
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RPK

Part of the Furniture Now
Dec 30, 2023
549
5,390
Central NJ, USA
Barry Fitzgerald one of the finest character actors ever! And, yes he smoked a pipe in his private life. But, Flynn wasn't an historical personage, simply a movie role.
No offense Warren, but I have been watching The Quiet Man which came out in 1952 when I was 10 years old. In my mind and world it is historical (as some might consider me) and so to me Michaleen Oge Flynn, not Barry Fitzgerald does qualify as a historical figure. puffy
 

MisterBadger

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 6, 2024
606
4,454
Ludlow, UK
And here is the great Karl Gustav Jung (1875-1961), who rescued Psychology from the reductionist dogmata of that sex-obsessed, disturbed old perv, Sigmund Freud. Freud, by the way, also smoked a pipe but preferred cigars, and whenever photographed, he is often shown with a cigar in hand, but never a pipe. That tells you something else about Freud and his many problems.
It seems Jung's favourite pipe tobacco was Grainger, though especially during the years of the two world wars he had enormous difficulties with getting enough supply (I know, he should have cellared). When he c ouldn't get Grainger, Jung mixed his tobacco blending English, Dutch and Swiss brands.He had a large collection of water-cooled Kobler pipes, which I'd never heard of before, but apparently they resemble Falcons. And his tobacco tin was called Habakkuk; he liked giving names to inanimate objects. I bet he gave a name to every one of his pipes, too.
Jung_1.jpg
 

Zamora

Can't Leave
Mar 15, 2023
496
1,319
Olympia, Washington
And here is the great Karl Gustav Jung (1875-1961), who rescued Psychology from the reductionist dogmata of that sex-obsessed, disturbed old perv, Sigmund Freud. Freud, by the way, also smoked a pipe but preferred cigars, and whenever photographed, he is often shown with a cigar in hand, but never a pipe. That tells you something else about Freud and his many problems.
It seems Jung's favourite pipe tobacco was Grainger, though especially during the years of the two world wars he had enormous difficulties with getting enough supply (I know, he should have cellared). When he c ouldn't get Grainger, Jung mixed his tobacco blending English, Dutch and Swiss brands.He had a large collection of water-cooled Kobler pipes, which I'd never heard of before, but apparently they resemble Falcons. And his tobacco tin was called Habakkuk; he liked giving names to inanimate objects. I bet he gave a name to every one of his pipes, too.
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His love of Granger and great efforts in getting it always fascinated me because in America it's a quintessential codger blend. I didn't know when he couldn't get it he'd just mix up whatever he could find, not surprising he'd have a substitute (like how Faulkner smoked PA when he couldn't get Dunhill) but mixing several is rather unusual. Freud also occasionally smoked pipes, at least in his younger years, there's a few pictures of him with one
 
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