Types and Brands of Pipe Tobacco, 1920's to 1940's

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augiebd

Lifer
Jul 6, 2019
1,321
2,607
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
My stepmom said when she grew up in the late ‘30s and ‘40s they grew tobacco for their personal use. Most people outside the city did. They grew as much of their food as they could and also foraged for mushrooms, etc. They needed to stretch a dollar.
 
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mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,210
60,610
My dad smoked a pipe from the 1920's until the 1980's when he quit to take a job at a non-smoking campus. He owned only one pipe at a time and smoked only Granger from a pouch.

Standard over-the-counter brands were available everywhere -- at grocery stores, drugstores, newsstands, and gas stations -- usually a good selection of brands like Half & Half, Granger, SWR, Velvet, Carter Hall, and others.

Commuter trains routinely had smoking cars where smoking was permitted, and airlines had a smoking section in the back of planes.

My dad served as an officer in the Navy in the Pacific where he advanced to being skipper of YMS minesweepers and was offered a duty station after the war in Hong Kong but came home to be a family man in the Chicago area where he grew up.
 
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sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,668
48,778
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
In the U.K much of what was kicking about in the 1920s was still about until the early 1980s. Examples of such survivors would be Bondman, St Bruno, Condor, endless varieties of plug such as Warrior, War Horse, Yachtsman, Condor Plug, Carrols Gold Bar, Mick McQuaid, Erinmore and Velvan Plug to name a few. One or two survive to this day although plugs have only become popular again recently.
Add to these Dunhill, Three Nuns, Escudo, Capstan in a wider variety of mixtures than just blue and gold, SG 1792, Gawith and Hoggarth ropes and twists, Richmond, various Sobranie Products, various Germain's products, Ardath State Express London Mixture, Laurus&Bro Co Edgeworth Sliced, Carreras' Craven Mixture, Ogden's St Julien, thousands of bespoke tobacconist mixtures, and Wilke, Rattray's, and McConnell, to name just a bit of it.
Of course, the tobaccos of yore bear little resemblance to their descendants. With few exceptions today's tobaccos are the product of a few giant conglomerates pulling from the same suppliers to make their various IPs, not the individual products of a number of idiosyncratic manufacturers often owned by their respective blenders.
 

SmokerLawyer

Lurker
Dec 3, 2019
40
198
I'm from a post-socialist, eastern-european country, Hungary. As far as I know back in the 40's and 50's many pipe smokers prefered to use different types of (mainly russian) cigarette-tobacco. Funfact that Joseph Stalin himself did the same - he was a heavy cigarette smoker but he thought pipe-smoking would make him look wise so he started to fill a pipe with his favourite cig-tobacco.

In the early communist era we also had our own pipe tobacco production. I have no idea what that was, it was a plain yellowish package with the following decoration: a red star, a red pipe and with huge red words: PIPE TOBACCO

Probably nobody knew or cared about what the exact type of tobacco was. I guess most of the people around here didn't cared as much about brands and blends as we do nowadays.

In the 1930's there was Dunhill and some other big western brands available here and we also had hungarian tobacco production. At that time, pipe tobacco packages looked much better than the commie ones but they didn't say anything about the exact content of the bag either. To be honest, I'm guessing that they were mostly orientals as some of the biggest brands in the 20's and 30's got their tobacco from Herzegovina which was a huge balkan/oriental provider.
 

proteus

Lifer
May 20, 2023
1,533
2,562
54
Connecticut (shade leaf tobacco country)
@proteus, have you considered looking at Sears catalogs? No one here has personal knowledge. We're all too young.

This is from the fall 1923 edition (cigars and tobacco are only one page):
View attachment 246032
I've done something similar and perused ebay for a few days for old tins. Have dozens of defunct brand names now and some early dates for existing brands now. Thanks for the pic !
 
Jun 9, 2018
4,386
14,100
England
@proteus, have you considered looking at Sears catalogs? No one here has personal knowledge. We're all too young.

This is from the fall 1923 edition (cigars and tobacco are only one page):
View attachment 246032
That "Legal Tender plug" looks interesting. It says it has a champaigne flavour. Also, I wonder who produced the twist that's advertised at the bottom right of the page. It doesn't state a manufacturer.

In the Harrods catalogue from 1895 (that I posted above) it has an American pipe tobacco section, and one of the tobaccos is called "Ruby Twist", but it doesn't state a manufacturer, either.

I love the names of some of the tobaccos. "Plow Boy" and "Tip Top" as well as "Genuine Bull Durham".
 
Jun 9, 2018
4,386
14,100
England
Interesting seeing honeydew listed. If I remember correctly, that is still a flavor used by the great Gawith Company.
Indeed it is. They had to change the name because of EU regulations. It used to be called "Rich Dark Honeydew", but now it's named "Rich Dark Spring Dew". Companies aren't allowed to name tobacco after foods and Honeydew is a mellon.

That's why when you go on a UK tobacconists website all the Gawith flavoured tobaccos are abbreviated. CH for chocolate, RM for Rum & Maple etc. The funny thing is that they always add - (formerly Rum & Maple) - in brackets in the description.

The people that think up some of these laws are absolute donuts🍩🤦🏻‍♂️.
 

proteus

Lifer
May 20, 2023
1,533
2,562
54
Connecticut (shade leaf tobacco country)
Indeed it is. They had to change the name because of EU regulations. It used to be called "Rich Dark Honeydew", but now it's named "Rich Dark Spring Dew". Companies aren't allowed to name tobacco after foods and Honeydew is a mellon.

That's why when you go on a UK tobacconists website all the Gawith flavoured tobaccos are abbreviated. CH for chocolate, RM for Rum & Maple etc. The funny thing is that they always add - (formerly Rum & Maple) - in brackets in the description.

The people that think up some of these laws are absolute donuts🍩🤦🏻‍♂️.
Sometimes I think the laws in UK and US are made by muppets.
 

dingdong

Part of the Furniture Now
Apr 2, 2024
579
5,847
Jakarta, Indonesia
I believe in the olden days tobaccos are less processed, much stronger nicotines? I use to try my Dad's Van Nelle Shag, a Zware (heavy) - can't even taste it today, too much too hard puffy puffy puffy
 
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johnnyflake

Starting to Get Obsessed
Jul 29, 2023
185
358
83
Henderson, Nevada
I remember well that my father and grandfather both smoke pipes. In the 40s I was too young to notice but in the 50s I was a teenager and noticed everything. I recall, they both smoked Prince Albert. My grandfather also smoked Granger and my father also smoked Revelation. My grandfather was a serious smoker 4 or 5 bowls a day and my father a moderate smoker, a couple of bowls at night, 3 or 4 times a week. I loved the Good Old Days!
 
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