Posts Tagged: ‘history’

Cuban Cigars ? A Brief History Of Cigars

October 16, 2011 Posted by

If you are a cigar lover, or if you know someone who is, then you have probably heard plenty about the amazing allure of Cuban cigars. As a matter of fact, many people who have absolutely no interest in cigars still have heard about how great these cigars actually are. A big reason why these cigars get talked about so much is that they truly are the best cigars in the world. There is not one thing wrong about these cigars and everything about them is right. This means that they are perfectly rolled, they smell terrific, and they also have an amazing flavor.

Another reason why these cigars are so well known is because of the tumultuous history behind them. Even if you were not alive in the early sixties, you have probably heard plenty of the stories.

Here are the basics about the history of Cuban cigars. To begin with, the embargo on Cuba was instituted by President Kennedy in 1963, and it was done in order to protect the U.S.

at a very scary time. Even if you were not yet born, you have probably heard about the Cuban Missile Crisis. This was a time when Americans were scared that Communism was going to take over. While everyone is thankful that this never happened, many Americans back then took this as a real threat, and the possibility of another war seemed very likely. This is why Kennedy had to go ahead and stop all trade with Cuba. This is what an embargo is, by the way. It places a stop to all trade.

While everyone understands why Kennedy had to place the embargo on Cuba, many people got angry anyway. AT this point, you can probably guess why they were angry. These angry Americans were lovers of Cuban cigars, and they knew that this embargo meant that they could no longer legally have the cigars.

This doesn’t stop these people from finding ways to get the cigars anyway. As a matter of fact, there were whole black market businesses constructed simply to give cigar lovers their precious cigars from Cuba. Nowadays things have loosened up a little.

As a matter of fact, it is not actually illegal to have Cuban cigars. It’s important to note that if you privately have some cigars, you will probably not be fined. It’s only the large businesses that sell the cigars en masse who are fined. For the most part, however, you are risking very little if you happen to get your hands on a cigar from Cuba.

If you’re interested in reading more about the aficionado lifestyle associated with Cuban cigars and learn everything you ever wanted to know about cigars, then I highly recommend you visit the website below. It’s been a great source of information, advice and irresistible cigar specials to me for the past 10 years.

You can view this website now by clicking this link: http://www.cigarexport.com/

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Cigar Blog 101 Highlights Advice and History From Cigar Industry Veteran

March 18, 2011 Posted by

Cigar Blog 101 Highlights Advice and History From Cigar Industry Veteran

Tampa, FL (PRWEB) March 16, 2006

Al Remp, a 46-year veteran of the cigar industry and currently a product specialist and trainer at Thompson Cigar Co. of Tampa, has begun writing a series of historical pieces and advice columns for Cigar Blog 101.

Remp started his career as a cigar salesman in 1960 and has since worked with some of the world’s most renowned cigar makers. His educational focus for cigar lovers highlights the basic tenets of cigar smoking: Appearance; Taste; Aroma and Construction. Remp’s posts will blend history of the cigar industry with useful tips for everyday enjoyment.

“Your introduction to cigars – regardless of the fact that you are either a long-time cigar connoisseur or are calming seeking that perfect pleasure, rests with when you enjoy them,” Remp stated late on Cigar Blog 101.

This new site for cigar aficionados and beginners will also include lifestyle tips and timely cigar news. Cigar Blog 101 has a variety of RSS subscriber buttons for users and a growing number of links to swollen-established cigar sites that promote the industry.

Cigar Blog 101 is sponsored by Thompson Cigar Company, the oldest mail order cigar companioning and leading online retailer of cigars in the United States. Thompson Cigar Company, founded in 1915, offers sole and national brands of cigars, as well as humidors and cigar accessories.

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History Channel Cigar Video

January 23, 2011 Posted by

A video that was brought forth by the History channel provides us with lots of cigar information. Arturo Fuente and the family are part of this video, tips and secrets are partaken, and all around advisory. This video was shown on puffingcigars.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Cigar Bungalows: A Little Bit of History

December 2, 2010 Posted by admin

Since the 19th century, Key West has been one of the historical centers of cigar tradition. At one time boasting more cigar factories per capita than anyplace else in the world, Key West had always played a major role in the cigar industry. Just after the American Civil War, this city became a Mecca for Cuban citizens fleeing their countries long running revolution against Spain. By the late 1870′s there were over 100 factories making cigars.


Cuban influence in Key West first began on a massive scale in 1868 when the first war against Spanish authority created a mass exodus. When Cubans faced forced conscription into the Spanish army to fight against their countrymen, thousands of skilled cigar artisans and their families fled their homeland.


On a single September day in 1869, over 2,000 Cubans lined the docks of Havana to flee their mother country. While some left for New York City or New Orleans, a majority boarded steamers for the 12-hour trip to a destination ninety miles to the north, a city Cubans called Cayo Hueso, today’s Key West.


The civil war against Spain failed by 1878, however it created a social upheaval in Key West as Cuban immigrants continued arriving intermittently for decades, virtually revolutionizing Key West’s social fabric and economy.


Prior to 1868, Key West had less than 500 residents, noted primarily for acquiring wealth from shipwrecks, but a new form of wealth was about to arrive when Cuban immigrants, with talented cigar making skills, arrived by the thousands in the matter of a year or two.


At the peak of the industry, Key West embodied the largest cigar-producing city in the nation. It featured 57 major makers of cigars–many of whom relocated from Havana–and each made use of between five and 500 workers. In 1883 alone, 42 million hand-rolled cigars were created.


To house their cigar laborers, factory owners frequently constructed little cottages–bungalow-style structures principally of frame construction–and rented them out for low sums. To assure an ample supply of laborers, these homes were adjacent to manufacturing plants. These structures still comprise the biggest category of frame vernacular (simple structures, made of wood with few or no ornamental details) in Key West proper.


They were built from termite-proof Dade County pine with high ceilings for ventilation. They were elevated off the ground, allowing air to flow under the houses where roosters and hens lived and were part of the family, raised for eggs or meat or were trained for cock fights.


Although little by today’s criteria, these cottages were far better than living circumstances in Havana they were surely far superior to condemnable tenement houses in Northern cities. Many times a cigar artisan would change jobs to another factory simply to have a newer house to live in. These homes were offered for inexpensive rent or with the option to purchase at a reasonable price to maintain a stable work force.


With good homes, good wages and the freedom to affirm the revolution, the cigar artisans existed well. Their clever unions assured substantial strength, and while many union laborers in the North were cowered in deplorable tenement housing, Key West cigarworkers were reveling in Shangri-la. Even their many strikes, which finally helped bring about the decline of the cigar industry, reflected the luxury of their position. In the strike of 1918, work stopped, as was normal, until the union requirements were met. The petitions: no sweeping before 6 a.m., ice in the drinking water, and coal, not wood, fuel for winter heating.


The little cigar bungalows have endured the test of time. Many of these Key West structures are diminutive, only 300 or 400 square feet. They frequently have porches, minuscule yards with picket fences and little or no grass to mow. The bungalows were made from Dade County pine by ship’s carpenters, who constructed with a tongue-and-groove technique which lasts.


Property values are high, crime is low and the climate is about perfect. The bungalows are adequate for one or two friendly persons to live in–when you can be outside 350 days of the year. Key West has become such a desirable paradise for artists, the affluent and retirees that these pastoral cottages now cost at least $125,000–if you can get hold of one.

For the best cigars, more tips and information on cigars visit http://cigars.gogoodpages.com

Interesting article about the history of cigar making in Detroit: http://bit.ly/9QpfWX

November 23, 2010 Posted by

cigar making in Detroit: http://bit.ly/9QpfWX by PromoteMichigan (PromoteMichigan)

The History (And Value) Of Cigar Bands

November 4, 2010 Posted by admin

For many cigar smokers, the small paper band encircling their stogy is just a piece of trash, to be discarded along with the shrinkwrap around the box. But for others that cigar band is a bit of history – a collectible that adds immeasurably to the romance and mystique of smoking.

What is the cigar band, and how did it become so important? As is so often true when it comes to cigars, the story begins in Cuba – early-19th-century Cuba, to be exact, when that island nation had already come to be recognize as the cigar capital of the world. At that time cigar packaging was minimal – often no more than a wooden barrel or box, with the manufacturer’s name inscribed. The cigars themselves were generally left blank. This situation, not surprisingly, created a cheat’s paradise, in which cheap European cigars were bundled in boxes with “Cuban” markings on them and sold, domestically, to unsuspecting customers who thought they were getting fine imported Cubans.

Gustave Bock, a Dutch immigrant who owned a cigar factory in Cuba in the 1830s, is credited with being the first to place a paper band around his cigars. (Bock’s “cigar band” was just a paper ring with his signature on it.)

Many other makers adopted this practice, to the point where, by 1855, most Cuban cigar exporters were using them. These bands cut down on instances of counterfeiting while giving cigar manufacturers a way to increase name recognition and loyalty.

The practice spread from Cuba to cigar makers everywhere, and its popularity was encouraged by breakthroughs in printing technology, which developed alongside changes in the economy of Europe and the Americas that favored cigar smoking. Specifically, cheap color printing (through chromolithographic processes developed in Germany) was made widely available during the latter part of the century, and paper-embossing followed in the 1880s.

Between the expansion of the cigar industry and the new possibilities developed by the printing industry, a “Golden Age” of cigar advertising was almost guaranteed, and that’s what followed. Cigar makers began working not only to manufacture their cigars, but to differentiate their products from others. The late 19th and early 20th centuries featured elaborate, distinctive cigar box and cigar band artwork, often produced by highly-regarded commercial artists. These well-wrought bands featured images of famous figures of the day, historical figures, nationalistic imagery, nature scenes and animals. As with today’s postage stamps, special bands would be made to commemorate special events.

And, also like stamps, the bands had that combination of ephemerality and workmanship that so often draws collectors. While they were often well-made, they weren’t intended to last – so they gave collectors a challenge, as baseball cards, comic books and cheap children’s toys would later in the 20th century. And they always gave off a whiff of nostalgia, reminding dedicated smokers of good times shared with a cigar and a friend.

Children also found these bands attractive, since they were often left discarded on streets during the height of cigar-smoking’s popularity. Manufacturers even made “albums” with blank pages in which a person’s cigar band collection could be displayed – the forerunner of those plastic display sheets that every sports-card collector knows so well.

Adding to the boom in band collecting, some cigar makers gave premiums to customers who turned in a certain number of bands – everything from a set of children’s silverware (50 bands) to a Scientific American subscription (600 bands) to a baby grand piano (180,000), according to the American Cigar Co. catalog of 1904. (Those of you who used to collect Marlboro Miles during the 1990s should be feeling deja vu right about now.)

After World War I, cigars fell in popularity relative to cigarettes. Cigar makers stopped putting as much energy into the production of attractive cigar bands, as it became more necessary to cut costs. Cigar bands – at least in the US – grew generic, boring. The cost cut wasn’t enough – many thousands of cigar companies closed up shop for good in the US during the ’20s and ’30s.

Band collecting continues in the US among a hardy group mostly consisting of old-timers and nostalgia buffs, but in Europe it remains a thriving hobby, and cigar makers there continue to print colorful but cheap bands, some of which come as part of a series (again like stamps), others of which are created specifically for collectors.

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How To Create Life History Videos

October 28, 2010 Posted by admin

E-book on how to capture and archive the life stories of those you love.
How To Create Life History Videos

Cigar Box Guitars – Their History and Players

October 28, 2010 Posted by admin

The cigar box guitar is an instrument that has fascinated many guitar players, mainly in relation to whether they are real musical instruments. Many people who have learnt how to make a cigar box guitar have done so simply to give their children something to amuse themselves with but the truth is they can make serious music. The origin of the cigar box guitar is in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when there were many people seeking to express themselves through music but could not afford to but real musical instruments. The use of homemade musical instruments like the cigar box guitar had a resurgence in the years of The Great Depression.

The need for improvised musical instruments led to the proliferation of jug bands which gave people the opportunity to play melodies and generate rhythm for dancing using homemade instruments. So musical gatherings featuring washtubs, spoons and kazoos became commonplace in communities all over America. Gourds with guitar necks attached originally provided the basis of homemade guitars but as cigars began to be shipped in small boxes and the boxes were left lying around the house, sooner or later somebody had to try them out as resonators for guitars. The neck for your average cigar box guitar was often a broom handle with one or two strings attached.

If you want to make your own cigar box guitar you will need some basic tools: a box cutter or pocket knife, a hacksaw, a drill, some fine and coarse grade sandpaper. The raw materials for making your guitar are: a cigar box, a one inch by two inch piece of lightweight soft wood (poplar is a good choice), a dozen one inch nails, wood glue, some wood stain and an applicator. To tune your cigar box guitar just buy three tuning pegs from your local musical instruments store. Their are plans available from expert cigar box guitar makers, in fact there is even a Yahoo Group you can join.

Once you have made your three string cigar box guitar you have several options for tuning. These tunings are from bass to treble: A E A, G D G, A E G.

Many guitar legends are supposed to have played cigar box guitars but not many are talking openly about it. Here is an unverified list of reputed cigar box guitar players who have made names for themselves using conventional instruments: Rockabilly legend Carl Perkins, jazz guitarist George Benson, epitome of refinement Ted Nugent plus other noted musicians like BB King and Jimi Hendrix.

There are also guitarists who make and play their cigar box guitars as their sole musical outlet. One cigar box guitar mover and shaker is Shane Speal, the curator of the National Cigar Box Guitar Museum in York, PA. Shane is archiving cigar box guitar history. He has found the earliest known plans for a cigar box banjo (circa 1870), unearthed etchings of Civil War Soldiers playing cigar the box fiddle and owns a genuine dated and signed cigar box violin from 1899.

John Lowe, a musician and bookstore owner from Memphis who makes electric cigar box guitars called Lowebows. They are made from two oak dowel rods, a wooden cigar box, three guitar strings and a bass string. You play Lowebow with a slide. Lowe’s repertoire has everything from Johnny Cash to Iggy Pop. You can find him busking on Beale Street.

Do you want to learn to play the guitar? http://playaguitarforfree.com/ is my blog which shows you that there are many people like you who wish to learn how to play bass, acoustic or electric guitar. You will find guitar lessons, videos, articles and reviews to answer your questions, calm your fears and help you play the guitar.

Cigars history

October 22, 2010 Posted by admin

Cigars have a long history of nearly 2000 years. There’s a belief that they descend from Central America where smoking habits were very popular among such ancient cultures as Mayans and Aztecs. Cigars which they smoked somewhat resembled modern stogies and had the shape of tubes of not tightly rolled tobacco.

The Europeans had no idea of such plant as tobacco till the glorious Columbus’ discovery of America in 1492. Namely Ramon Pane who was priest during the second Columbus voyage habituated European society to tobacco culture. With time the smoking habit became very popular in Spain and Portugal thanks to sailors and in France with the help of Jean Nicot – the French ambassador to Portugal – whose name was given to nicotine. Britain and Italy got acquainted with tobacco a little later.

Already by the middle of the 16th century the entire Europe got accustomed to smoking and afterwards America began cultivating the plant for trading purpose. Though the majority believed tobacco had medical qualities, even at that time there where people who considered it to be a bad thing and it was criticized by James I of England and Philip II of Spain.

The cigar in its current shape came to us after the year of 1762 with American general Putnam’s return from Cuba. The general brought a large collection of Havanas and Cuban tobacco.

In Europe, namely, the north of the Pyrenees the cigar manufacture appeared not until the 1790, when small enterprises were established in Germany and France. In Britain cigar making appeared only in 1820 when imported cigars were considered as something of luxury because of high taxes. But smoking cigars itself gain popularity in France and Britain solely after the Peninsular War of 1808-1814.

Strange as it may seem, the majority of the United States citizens were accustomed to cigar smoking only after the Civil War of 1860s. A little later cigar became a symbol of belonging to upper classes here.

At about the same time, smoking cigars became such a popular habit in Europe that special smoking coaches in trains appeared and smoke rooms – in clubs and hotels. Also at that period there was introduced the custom of smoking cigars after dinner with a glass of brandy or port.

In 1920′s first machines making cigars appear in Cuba, in response to the invention of cigarette making mechanism. As a result, both the smoking and the manufacture of hand rolled cigars fell gradually into decay.

In 1960′s it was announced that smoking is harmful for people’s health. This report by American Surgeon General led to considerable decline in tobacco consumption. However, in 1990′s it recovers its former glory.

With the Cuban Revolution and U.S. embargo, many Cuban cigar manufacturers moved their factories to the Dominican Republic, Honduras, Mexico and some other regions. Nowadays these countries are the main cigar suppliers for the United States.

As regards Cuban cigar production, it now has to compete with the countries listed above, however Cuba is still considered the World’s best cigar manufacturer and is highly appreciated for the best soil for growing tobaccos.

http://www.coffee4dummies.com/coffee_history

History of Cigars

July 3, 2010 Posted by admin

Ah, the fine premium cigar. There truly is nothing to compare to the experience of a fine cigar, a glass of really good cognac, and an evening in the shade. It is a peaceful experience to say the least.

However, have you ever looked at your high-profile smoke and wondered what the events were that led to the making of it? Most true cigar aficionados have at one point or another.

The chain of events that led to the production of the cigar that you now hold in your hand is a long one, spanning back over 500 years. It all began when a brave explorer by the name of Christopher Columbus decided to throw caution to the wind and risk it all to prove that there was more to the world than everyone knew at the time. In 1492, he found success, along with a little something in the new world called tobacco.

Ironically, Luis De Torres of a Spanish Envoy to America decided to take some back to his home for personal use. After spotted lighting it, he was arrested for witchcraft and sentenced to a decade in prison.

The presence of tobacco popped up again as Cortez stumbled upon a tribe of Aztec natives that are smoking tobacco. Through Cortez, the tobacco makes its way throughout Spain. From there, the pipe-smoked substance began to grow in fame and use. By the mid 1500’s, tobacco had made its’ way all the way to France where the first seeds were planted and cultivated by a monk by the name of Andre Thevet.

From there, tobacco made its’ way to the distant lands of Portugal, Russia, Turkey, and Italy. The Portuguese, via a trade route, introduce it to the Japanese. Onward it spreads to Morocco, Egypt, and even to the Philippines. Finally, in the early 1600’s, it makes a full historical circle as documents reveal that the husband of Pocahontas, John Rolfe, brings tobacco to the state of Virginia.

By the early 1600’s, Cuba has built a solid name for fine tobacco growth and becomes the major supplier for the majority of the known world.

In the mid 1700’s, the infamous Catherine the great creates the cigar band as a concept. It seems that Catherine would smoke cigars so often that her fingers would take on a brownish colored stain. Therefore, to avoid this, she had a band designed so she could hold her cigars without the irritating stain.

From there, it is only a matter of time until the major brands began to establish themselves. Cohiba, H. Upmann, Partagas, El Rey del Mundo, Sancho Pancza, Romeo y Julieta, Hoyo de Monterrey, Montecristo and the rest of the premium cigars that you and I enjoy today become very notable over the next century.

That brings us to the here and now. Today, we can sit back and enjoy our fine cigars knowing that they have a history that dates all the way back to Christopher Columbus. So when you enjoy that next high-profile smoke, blow a plume and say, “Here’s to you Chris!”.

Denis is the author and webmaster for CigarInspector.com, your source for cigar reviews and cigar ratings.