Pipe collector and author, Rick Newcombe sent this over via email hoping that the community here might be of assistance.
The original Tinder Box in Santa Monica closed down in May and I bought two old tins from the store that had been sitting empty on a top shelf for years. It looks like they hold two pounds of pipe tobacco each. An employee in the store named Tudor said they were made in England in the 1920s — he thought — but I’d like to find out for sure who made them and when. Tudor said he found that information on the internet, but I have not been able to find anything and I have lost touch with Tudor.
I have asked Frank Burla, Ben Rapaport, Tony Hyman, Eugene Umberger, Sykes Wilford and Ken Barnes, but none of them know the answers to my questions. So I am wondering if a reader of pipesmagazine.com might know — or if someone can find this online and post a link.
The top photo is labeled “Sweet Returns,” and the other is called “Honey Dew.” There is an Indian painted on the sides of each of these tins (bottom picture). They are lined with pottery or ceramic and are surprisingly heavy. They weigh three pounds each.
Any help your readers can give me would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
Rick
The original Tinder Box in Santa Monica closed down in May and I bought two old tins from the store that had been sitting empty on a top shelf for years. It looks like they hold two pounds of pipe tobacco each. An employee in the store named Tudor said they were made in England in the 1920s — he thought — but I’d like to find out for sure who made them and when. Tudor said he found that information on the internet, but I have not been able to find anything and I have lost touch with Tudor.
I have asked Frank Burla, Ben Rapaport, Tony Hyman, Eugene Umberger, Sykes Wilford and Ken Barnes, but none of them know the answers to my questions. So I am wondering if a reader of pipesmagazine.com might know — or if someone can find this online and post a link.
The top photo is labeled “Sweet Returns,” and the other is called “Honey Dew.” There is an Indian painted on the sides of each of these tins (bottom picture). They are lined with pottery or ceramic and are surprisingly heavy. They weigh three pounds each.
Any help your readers can give me would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
Rick











