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  • The history timeline

    I have found something interesting on the web, also being a smart ass used the search engine, but couldn't really find something similiar here, so i am posting it...

    The history timeline

    Here?s a brief look back to the beginning of the cigar, with notes on important (and not so important) moments between 1492 and today.

    1492
    the Italian explorer Christopher Columbus sails to the Americas and on October 28, Rodrigo de Xerez and Luis de Torres visit the interior of what would become known as the island of Cuba. Xerez and Torres meet with the natives and witness a strange ritual in which the smoke of burned leaves is inhaled through a pipe. This is Europe?s introduction to the leaves known as Cohiba by the natives, but later called Tobacco (actually the native name for the pipe) upon the explorer?s return to Europe.

    1493
    Upon returning to Europe, the Spanish envoy, Luis de Torres, having lit up these peculiar tobacco leaves acquired from the New World, was arrested and condemned to 10 years imprisonment for sorcery.

    1499
    Amerigo Vespucci noticed that the American Indians had a curious habit of chewing green leaves mixed with a white powder. They carried two gourds around their necks -- one filled with leaves, the other with powder. First, they put leaves in their mouths. Then, after dampening a small stick with saliva, they dipped it in the powder and mixed the adhering powder with the leaves in their mouths, making a kind of chewing tobacco. (Imperial Tobacco Canada,

    1519
    Cortez arrives in Mexico and is confronted be the Aztecs who are also tobacco smokers but these enjoyed their leaves in pipes.

    1520
    Tobacco is circulating through the Spanish ports of Seville, Cadiz, Cartagena and Moguer and the Portuguese port of Lisbon.

    1525
    The first documented praise of tobacco written by, Jean d'Ango, a famous shipbuilder read, 'Yesterday I met an old sailor and I drank a jug of Brittany wine with him. While drinking he suddenly pilled out of his wallet a while clay object which at first I thought was a schoolboy's inkhorn. You would have said it was an inkhorn with a long pipe and a small mouth; he filled the wide end with brown leaves which he had crushed in the palm of his hands, set fire to it by means of a tinderbox, and the very next moment, having put the pipe between his lips, he was blowing smoke out of his mouth, which I found quite astounding. He apprised me that the Portuguese had taught him this trick, which they had learned from the Mexican Indians. He called it 'smoking' and said that this smoking sharpened the mind and produced happy thoughts.'

    1530
    Tobacco served as the first currency of trade for African coastal slaves.

    1542
    Bartolom? de Las Casas, a Dominican writer wrote in his, Breve Relaci?n dela Destrucci?n de las Indias (A Very Brief Account of the Destruction of the Indies) a most accurate description of the tobacco, "They were dried herbs rolled up in a certain led, also dried, forming a kind of paper 'fusee' like children make for the feast of Pentecost. People lit them at one end, sucked the other, and absorbed the smoke by breathing it in. This smoke...prevented them, they claimed, from feeling sleepy. These 'fusees,' or whatever we may call them, they themselves called 'tobaccos.'"

    1556
    Tobacco came to france first. Revolutionary monk Thevet claims he was the first to transplant Nicotiana tabacum from Brazil; many dispute this. In his writings he describes tobacco as a creature comfort. (ATS)

    1559
    SPAIN: Tobacco is introduced by Francisco Hernandez de Toledo, Philippe II. of Spain's personal physician, who had been sent the year before to investigate the products of Mexico. The seeds Hernandez brings back are at first used only to grow ornamental plants in court.

    1560
    Jean Nicot de Villemain, France's ambassador to Portugal, writes of tobacco's medicinal properties, describing it as a panacea. Nicot sends rustica plants to French court.

    1564
    Tobacco is introduced into England by Sir John Hawkins and/or his crew. Tobacco is used cheifly by sailors, including those employed by Sir Francis Drake, until the 1580s. (Chroniclers of the day took little note of the customs of sailors. Crews under the command of less famous captains than Hawkins would be given even less notice. But Spanish and Portuguese sailors spread the practice around the world--probably first to fellow sailors at port cities. There is no reason to suppose Hawkins' crew particularly advanced in comparison to those on other English ships. In sum, there could well have been a small underground of seafaring tobacco users in England for decades before officialdom took notice. Hawkins and his crew are usually given the credit, but in reality, take this with a grain of sea-salt.)

    1567
    Jean Li?bault, the son of a famous printer, in publishing, Agriculture and the Rustic House, he officially refers to the tobacco plant as Nicotiana, a clear homage to Jean Nicot who first acquired and studied the plant from the royal gardens in Portugal.

    1580
    The English bring tobacco to Russia and the Italians bring the plant to Turkey.

    1590
    Tobacco reaches Japan through the Portuguese navigators.

    1595
    The Indian Mogul Empire is presented with the tobacco plant as is Morocco, Persia, Egypt and the Philippines.

    1610
    Sir Francis Bacon writes that tobacco use is increasing and that it is a custom hard to quit.

    1612
    John Rolfe, the famous husband of Indian princess Pocahontas, introduces tobacco into Virginia.

    1614
    Spain assumed control of Cuba by 1511 and by 1519, the area now known as Havana was settled. In 1614, however, the Spanish crown authorized LA CASA DE CONTRATATACION DE LA HABANA for the development of tobacco production in Cuba. Most of the tobacco was used for snuff, but a small amount was used cigars, mostly produced in the Spanish city of Seville starting as early as 1676 with full factories running by 1731. Some cigar production started in Cuba as well.

    1623
    Following a decree by British King Philip III, the island of Cuba becomes the dispatch hub for tobacco to the entire Spanish Empire to include, Costa Rica, Mexico and the Canary Islands.

    1717
    Madrid builds Cuba's first tobacco factory for exports to Seville.

    1760
    Pierre Lorillard establishes a "manufactory" in New York City for processing pipe tobacco, cigars, and snuff. P. Lorillard is the oldest tobacco company in the US.

    1762
    British Army Colonel Israel Putnam, later a general for the fledgling United States in the Revolutionary War, introduces cigars to the Colonies (specifically his native Connecticut) upon his return from an expedition to Cuba.

    1785
    Conestoga wagons leave Pennsylvania for the West. The rolled tobacco leaves inside lead to the term "Stogies" for cigars.

    1810
    The Cuban trademark office records the first two applications for cigar brand registrations: B. Rencurrel by Bernardino Rencurrel and later, Hija de Caba?as y Carbajal, by Francisco G. Caba?as.
    The first cigar workshops began in the United States about this time.

    1817
    On June 23, Spanish monarch Ferdinand VII ends monopoly control of the Cuban tobacco industry in June and allows private companies to grow and sell tobacco and produce cigars.

    1826
    ENGLAND is importing 26 pounds of cigars a year. The cigar becomes so popular that within four years, England will be importing 250,000 pounds of cigars a year.

    1830
    Prussian Government enacts a law that cigars , in public, be smoked in a sort of wire-mesh contraption designed to prevent sparks setting fire to ladies' "crinolines" and hoop skirts. (BD)

    1834
    The Por Larra?aga brand was introduced in Havana by Ignacio Larra?aga and Julian Rivera. The name means ?For Larra?aga.?

    1836
    Within ten years after Ferdinand?s decree of 1817, exports of Cuban cigars reached 407,000 units. But within 20 years, the industry was firmly established and growing wildly with 4.887 million units exported from 306 factories on the island!

    1837
    Spanish immigrant Ramon Allones introduced a cigar brand named after himself. He is credited with being the first to decorate cigar boxes with brightly-colored lithography.

    1840
    The Punch brand is introduced, trademarked ? according to records ? ?by a German named Stockmann.?

    1844
    The famous brand H. Upmann was begun in Cuba. Reports vary as to whether the brand was started by German banker Hermann Upmann, or his family (which may have actually been named Hupmann). In any case, it quickly became one of the most popular brands made in Havana.

    1845
    Although there were reports that production started as early as 1827, this is the year generally cited for the debut of the Partagas brand in Havana. Don Jaime Partagas created the line and built his famed factory at Industria 520 this year.
    The La Corona brand was also started by Jose Cabarga y Cia. In Havana.

    1848
    Emilio Olmstedt created both the El Rey del Mundo and Sancho Panza brands in Havana.

    1855
    The explosive popularity of tobacco led to exports of 141.6 million Cuban-produced cigars in 1840 and climaxed with a still-standing record of 356.6 million cigars exported in 1855.

    1863
    US Mandates Cigar Boxes. Congress passes a law calling for manufacturers to create cigar boxes on which IRS agents can paste Civil War excise tax stamps. The beginning of "cigar box art."

    1865
    The first reader (?lector? in Spanish) is introduced, reportedly at the El Figaro Factory in Havana, followed in January 1866 at the Partagas Factory. The practice was banned by the Cuban government from 1868-78 and 1895-98; radios were introduced introduced in factories in 1923 at Caba?as y Carbajal factory.
    Jose Gener started the Hoyo de Monterrey brand in Havana. At the time of his death in 1900, his factories were reportedly the largest in the world, producing 50 million cigars a year.

    1873
    The Romeo y Julieta brand was introduced by Inocencio Alvarez and Mannin Garcia in Havana. It became popular, but it took off after being purchased in 1903 by Pepin Fernandez, who made it a worldwide sensation.

    1874
    Samuel Gompers creates the first Union label; persuades a consortium of California cigar makers to apply a label that attest the cigar has been untouched by Chinese labor.

    1883
    Oscar Hammerstien receives patent on cigar rolling machine.

    1890
    Key West, with a population of 18,786, is the largest city in Florida. Its biggest industry is cigar-making, which employs more than 2,000 workers

    1896
    The Ybor City neighborhood in Tampa, Florida was founded by Vincent Ybor. It quickly became the center of cigar-making in America with 60 factories built there by 1910.

    1898
    English poet Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936) publishes a new collection, Bachelor Ballads, including ?The Betrothed,? an ode to cigars which included the lines ?There?s peace in a Larra?aga, there?s calm in a Henry Clay? and ?And a woman is just a woman, but a good Cigar is a Smoke.?

    1903
    The La Aurora factory, apparently the first cigar factory to appear in the Dominican Republic, is opened by Don Eduardo Leon Jimenes. The La Aurora brand produced there is still made there today.

    1912
    In order to battle counterfeiting, the Cuban government authorized (on July 16) a warranty seal to be placed on all cigars produced in the country. The original style of seal was changed in 1931 to the type seen today.
    The Arturo Fuente Cigar Company is founded by Arturo Fuente, a Cuban-born cigar maker who had moved to Tampa, Florida after the Spanish-American War. Fuente ran the company until his son Carlos took control in 1960.

    1915
    U.S. government statistics show 15,732 cigar-making factories to be active in the U.S., making 6.6 million cigars in total.
    The total number of factories declined continuously from this figure, falling to 9,877 factories in service by 1924 and less than 5,000 (4,905) by 1935.

    1920
    Effective cigar-making machines took hold in the United States during this decade. From almost no machine-made production in 1920, 30 percent of all U.S. made cigars were machine-made by 1929. In his autobiography, Cigar Family, A 100 Year Journey in the Cigar Business, Stanford Newman wrote that ?In 1926, machine-made cigars had accounted for a mere 18 percent of the American cigar industry. By 1936, machine-made cigars constituted a whopping 75 percent of the market.?
    One of the enduring images of American politics, the ?smoke-filled room? was first used to describe the behind-the-scenes maneuvering which led to the nomination of Warren G. Harding to be the Republican Party nominee for President of the United States in June of 1920. The room itself was reportedly Suite 404 of the Blackstone Hotel in Chicago, although other sources say the room in question was on the eighth floor. The phrase ?smoke-filled room? was taken from an Associated Press dispatch which reported ?Harding of Ohio was chosen by a group of men in a smoke-filled room.?

    1921
    After three years of discussions and negotiations, six regional cigar companies are merged into Consolidated Cigar Corporation, led by Julius Lichtenstein of the American Sumatra Tobacco Co. The company?s first national success came with the promotion of Dutch Masters, a brand originally owned by the G.H. Johnson Cigar Co.

    1922
    The British firm of J. Frankau, S.A. purchases the H. Upmann bank and cigar factory from the Upmann family.

    1925
    The first cigar-making machines are introduced at the Por Larra?aga factory. The machines caused an uproar, finally leading to a strike and the machines were removed in 1937. They were re-introduced to stay in 1950 at the La Corona, Partagas and Por Larra?aga factories.

    1926
    Consolidated Cigar acquires the G.H.P. Cigar Company and its El Producto brand, promoted by Vaudeville star George Burns.

    1933
    The Retail Tobacco Dealers of America is formed with New York tobacconist William A. Hollingsworth as its first President. The first RTDA national convention and trade show is held in New York, which would be the only site for the event through 1980.

    1935
    The Montecristo brand was introduced by Alonso Menendez shortly after his purchase of the Particulares S.A, factory in Havana. The brand became an overnight sensation and in 1937, the Menendez & Garcia firm purchased the H. Upmann factory from J. Frankau, S.A., where the brand was made thereafter.

    1936
    Zino Davidoff installs what is reported to be the first climate-controlled storage facility for cigars in the basement of his famed shop on the Rue de la Confederation in Geneva, Switzerland.

    1940
    The Technical Director of the Comision Nacional de la Propaganda y Defensa del Tabaco Habano, Jose Perdomo, publishes Lexico Tabacalero Cubano, a complete dictionary of Cuban cigar terminology. The book lists 40 companies and 307 brands are listed as being produced in Havana in 1940.

    1944
    The famed H. Upmann factory at 407 Amistad Street, just around the corner from the Partagas factory in downtown Havana, was opened. It continued operation as the home of H. Upmann, Montecristo and other brands until 2003 when a new H. Upmann factory was opened.

    1946
    Swiss cigar merchant Zino Davidoff teams with Fernandez, Palicio y Cia., producers of Hoyo de Monterrey and other brands, to revive interest in Havana cigars following World War II. Davidoff?s Chateau series of cigars, essentially a private label, is introduced.
    The number of American factories falls below 2,500 during 1946; government statistics cite 2,441 factories in operation. The number would fall below 1,000 (to 971) by 1954.
    Sir Winston Churchill visits Havana, including a trip to the Romeo y Julieta factory. Thereafter, the Clemenceau size (7 inches by 47 ring), originally introduced in 1918 to honor French Premier Georges Clemenceau after World War I is also named for Churchill. Production of the Clemenceau finally ended in the 1980s, but the Churchill is going strong.

    1953
    Standard Cigar Co. of Tampa, a subsidiary of M&N Cigar Manufacturers of Cleveland, is opened by Stanford Newman in the old Regensburg Cigar Company factory built in 1910 and known throughout the area for its giant clock tower. M&N Cigar Manufacturers, founded by J.C. Newman in 1895 in Cleveland, Ohio closes in 1954.

    1954
    Consolidated Cigar acquires the Muriel cigar brand from P. Lorrillard & Co. The brand became nationally famous through television commercials starring Edie Adams and the line ?Pick me up and smoke me sometime.? Adams was succeeded as the Muriel Girl in the 1970s by model Susan Anton.

    1959
    According to the January 1 edition of the Tarifa de los Precios de Venta de Cigarros de la Isla de Cuba, there are 140 brands in production and 999 in-production shapes. Revolutionaries led by Fidel Castro took over the government on January 2.
    At the time, H. Upmann was the leading Cuban brand by sales volume. Its parent, Menendez & Garcia, exported nearly five million cigars to the U.S. annually, to sell for between 50 cents and $1.25 each.

    1960
    Following the takeover of Cuba by Fidel Castro and his fellow revolutionaries, the Cuban cigar industry is nationalized in October. Many firms are closed and owners of many of the most famous brands leave the island. For the first time, boxes of cigars produced in Cuba are stamped ?Hecho en Cuba? instead of ?Made in Havana-Cuba.?
    In the U.S., the Eisenhower Administration imposes a partial economic embargo on October 19, but food and medicine are excluded.

    1961
    U.S. cigar factories keep closing, falling to less than 500 (477) in 1961.
    Edgar Cullman leads a group of investors and buys General Cigar, a profitable firm well known for its White Owl, William Penn, Van Dyck and Robert Burns brands, among others.

    1962
    U.S. President John F. Kennedy expands the partial economic embargo of 1960, banning all trade except for non-subsidized sales of foods and medicines, on February 7. On March 23, the embargo is expanded to cover imports of all goods made from or containing Cuban materials, even if made in other countries, effectively ending imports of Havana cigars to the U.S. Before the embargo took effect, however, Kennedy had his Press Secretary, Pierre Salinger, obtain more than 1,000 of Kennedy?s favorite cigars, the H. Upmann Petit Upmann, for his personal enjoyment.
    A national tobacco monopoly in Cuba, the Empresa Cubana del Tabaco, better known as Cubatabaco, is formed.

    1963
    Looking for an alternative to Cuban tobacco, Stanford Newman begins using wrapper leaf from Cameroon on his hot-selling Cuesta-Rey line.

    1965
    Following the U.S. Surgeon General?s 1964 report on the dangers of smoking cigarettes, cigar consumption in the U.S. exploded to almost 9.9 billion, the highest figure since records were kept beginning in 1920.
    In Cuba, the La Gloria Cubana brand is revived for export.

    1966
    On a trip from a staff member, Fidel Castro becomes enamored with a blend by roller Eduardo Rivera that becomes the Cohiba brand. Factory production of the brand begins at the El Laguito factory in 1967 with Rivera in charge; Avelino Lara took control of the brand from 1970 until his retirement in 1994.

    1968
    The Davidoff brand is released worldwide by Cubatabaco and continues in production until the end of 1991 with distribution ended as of December 31, 1992.

    1969
    General Cigar Co. purchases Gradiaz Annis & Co., makes of the popular Gold Label brand, and also acquires the Temple Hall factory in Jamaica. The latter is home to brands including Creme de Jamaica and Temple Hall and owns a trademark for a little-known brand called Macanudo.
    In the aftermath of F. Palicio y Compania, S.A. v. Brush, 256 F.Supp. 481 (S.D.N.Y. 1966), aff?d, 375 F. 2d 1011 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 389 U.S. 830 (1967), production for the U.S. market of the Cuban brands Hoyo de Monterrey and Punch brands (among others) begins in Honduras. The case established that the Cuban company owners retained ownership of intellectual property assets such as cigar brand names and marks in the U.S. market in the aftermath of having their property confiscated by the Cuban government in 1960.

    1970
    Oettinger Imex S.A., led by Ernst Schneider, purchases the Davidoff retail store and all Davidoff-owned brands and trademarks for four million Swiss francs (about $970,000 U.S. at the time).
    On October 10, a 350-square foot cigar store opens in New York at the corner of 6th Avenue and 45th Street. J & R Tobacco Corporation (better known as J-R Cigars), owned by Lew and LaVonda Rothman, begins a mail-order business in 1971 and enters the wholesale market with its Cigars by Santa Clara division in 1977. In 1972, J-R offers Chivis, apparently the first brand ever to be sold as a bundle-packed, rather than boxed, cigar (seven sizes ranging in price from $9.00 to $16.50 for bundles of 25). By 1983, J-R was the largest retailer of premium cigars in the U.S.

    1971
    Macanudo is introduced in its current form by General Cigar and thanks to a heavy advertising and sales campaign, becomes the leading premium brand in the U.S. by mid-decade.

    1973
    U.S. cigar consumption peaks at 11.23 billion units, an average of 54 cigars (of all sizes) for every man, woman and child in the country at that time.

    1975
    By November, a series of U.S. Federal court cases, including Alfred Dunhill of London, Inc., vs. Republic of Cuba, 425 U.S. 682 (1976) and Menendez vs. Faber, Coe & Gregg, Inc., 345 F. Supp. 527 (S.D.N.Y. 1972), aff?d sub nom, Menendez v. Saks & Co., 485 F.2d 1355 (2d Cir. 1973), cert. denied, 425 U.S. 991 (1976) had established the ownership of Cuban brand names and trademarks in the former owners whose assets were nationalized by the Castro regime. Shortly thereafter, non-Cuban versions of H. Upmann made in the Canary Islands of Spain and Partagas, made in Jamaica, appeared on the U.S. market.
    A new premium cigar factory called the Manufactura de Tabacos, S.A. or ?MATASA? for short opens under the direction of President Manuel Quesada.

    1980
    Cigar shapes are finally standardized in all Cuban cigar factories, ending centuries of factory-specific sizes.

    1981
    Al Goldstein, the maverick publisher of Screw magazine, debuts a 12-page, newsletter-style quarterly publication called Cigar. Subscriptions cost $9.95 for 12 issues, but the venture folds after four issues.

    1982
    Cohiba, until now a private brand for diplomatic uses, is introduced for world-wide sale as a Cuban salute to the FIFA World Cup being held in Spain.
    Production of the Cuban Dunhill brand is also introduced (it ended production in 1991).

    1983
    Henry Schielein, the general manager of the Boston Ritz-Carlton Hotel, inaugurates the hotel?s new smoking lounge with a black-tie dinner and dozens of enthusiastic cigar lovers. It is nothing less than the re-birth of the gentleman?s smoker, now known as the Cigar Dinner.

    1985
    Cubatabaco introduces box codes to bottom of its cigar boxes to track the date and place of manufacture. This set of codes lasts through 1998.

    1986
    Lebanese-born composer Avo Uvezian introduces his own brand, called Avo and made at Tabadom in the Dominican Republic.
    Corral, Wodiska & Co., makers of the immensely-popular Bering brand, is sold to Swisher Intenational.
    Carlos Fuente closes his Tampa-area machine-made cigar factory, asking Stanford Newman of M&N cigar Manufacturers to make his cigars for him. Fuente decides to concentrate on handmade cigars in the Dominican Republic and agrees to make the La Unica brand for Newman; it?s one of the first premium-quality handmade cigars to be offered in bundles.
    Consolidated Cigar acquires the assets of the American Cigar Company, including the well-known Antonio y Cleopatra, La Corona and Roi-Tan brands.

    1987
    Davidoff of Geneva opens its first U.S. store, at 535 Madison Avenue in New York, New York.

    1988
    Consolidated Cigar?s unending chain of acquisitions continues with purchases of the Jamaica Tobacco Co. (including its Royal Jamaica brand) and the Te-Amo/Geryl Corporation, owner of Te-Amo.

    1989
    Baltimore tobacconist Ira ?Bill? Fader takes over as RTDA Executive Director from Malcolm Fleisher, who had served since 1961.

    1990
    Although not yet imagined, the momentum behind the cigar boom of the 1990s started in this year:
    > Davidoff severs its ties with Cuba, moving the production of his icon-status brand to the Dominican Republic. Davidoff?s new cigars will be lighter and aimed directly at the huge U.S. market, viewed as full of untapped potential. He was right.
    > Paul Garmirian publishes The Gourmet Guide to Cigars, a popular work distributed in smokeshops across the U.S. Well illustrated and easy to read, it provides consumers with a new, accessible introduction to the art of the cigar.
    > A new magazine devoted to cigars and pipes ? The Compleat Smoker ? debuts in the summer. Published by Evanston, Illinois-based smokeshop owner Theodore Gage, the inaugural issue contains 40 pages of articles in cigars, pipes, the history of tobacco and the impact of cigars and pipes on health. Advertisers of cigars include Arturo Fuente, F.D. Grave & Sons, Troya, Villazon & Co. (for Punch) and Colibri lighters on the back cover. Unable to reach a wide enough circulation via sales in smokeshops, The Compleat Smoker folds after five issues in late 1991.
    > Sales begin to stir. Although overall consumption of cigars continues to decline in the U.S., albeit by just 1%, new strength is seen in imports ? meaning premium, handmade cigars. Imports total 117.7 million in 1990, a 14.5% increase over 1989 and the highest total since 1985. Of the 117.7 million total, a record 52.3 million are from the Dominican Republic and 39.8 million are from Honduras.

    1992
    In February, The Wine Spectator publishes a richly-illustrated cover story on ?The Allure of Cuban Cigars.? The strong positive reaction to the issue confirms the publisher?s strategy to launch a cigar-themed magazine - Cigar Aficionado - in the fall of the same year.
    Importation of premium cigars falls slightly from 1990 figures to 111.4 million, with the Dominican Republic and Honduras accounting for 76% of the total.
    New strains of tobacco called Habana-92 and Habana -2000 are introduced in Cuba to combat disease and increase yields.

    1993
    American cigar consumption bottoms out at 3.42 billion units, an average of 13 cigars per capita. The number of cigars consumed dropped in 19 of the 20 years following the 1973 high, with overall use down 69.5% in that period.
    Imports of premium cigars, however, reach new highs at 126.9 million (a 15% increase), including 57 million from the D.R. and 44 million from Honduras.

    1994
    Revival! Although the mood at the annual Retail Tobacco Dealers of America trade show in Chicago is muted, overall cigar sales rise by 8.6% for the year, the first increase in 1983. The number of brands in circulation, as shown in the first edition of the Perelman?s Pocket Cyclopedia of Cigars, is 370.
    Imports explode! Total imports for the year total 146 million cigars, another 15% increase over the previous year. Dominican imports reach a dizzying 67 million, with 52.5 million from Honduras.
    Zino Davidoff dies at age 87 in Geneva, Switzerland on January 14. During his lifetime, he introduced the first humidified storage facility for cigars (1936), the first personal humidor (1950s) and the famed cigar brand which bears his name.
    Habanos S.A. is created as the marketing and distribution arm of Cuban cigar industry and a Habanos sticker is placed on the corner of all boxes of cigars made in Havana.
    On July 21, California Assembly Bill 13 becomes law (now Cal. Labor Code sec. 6404.5), banning smoking from most indoor areas effective January 1, 1995.

    1995
    The Boom is on. Overall cigar sales increase for the second year in a row, this time by 8.7%. Imports of premium cigars rise by a stunning 33.3% to 194,547,000. The number of brands in circulation rises by 23% to 457.
    General Cigar, already the producers of the top-selling cigar brands in the nation ? Macanudo and Partagas ? break into apparel with elegantly-designed and beautifully-made shirts, hats and jackets featuring the logos of both brands in time for the holiday season.

    1996
    The cigar expansion continues unabated. Sales rise 13.5% to 4.588 billion and imports of premium cigars go wild, up 64% to 319,748,000. Dominican imports top 100 million for the first time at 138,622,000. Entrepreneurs are everywhere, introducing 202 new brands ? a 44% rise ? to bring the total to 659.
    The Tabacalera A. Fuente introduces its long-promised all-Dominican brand, the Fuente Fuente Opus X ? better known as Opus X ? which is offered in such small quantities and is so sought after as to make it rarer, pricier and more sought-after than virtually any Havana-made cigar. Available only in the eastern part of the U.S., asking prices in some shops top $50 per cigar, many times the manufacturer?s suggested retail price. This achievement in cigar-making and cigar-marketing is perhaps an appropriate icon for The Boom and its transformation of an industry thought to be all but dead just a few years earlier.
    General Cigar continued its push to exploit the power of its top-selling brands with the opening of the posh Club Macanudo bar, restaurant and smoker?s lounge on New York?s Upper East Side in May.
    General also expanded its brand portfolio with the purchase of Villazon & Company, owners of the Belinda, Excalibur, Hoyo de Monterrey, La Escepcion and Punch brands (among others), for about $70 million.
    In Jamaica, Consolidated Cigar Corporation opens a new 35,000-square foot Royal Jamaica factory under the name Jamaica Tobacco Company in Maypen. Hurricane Gilbert destroyed the previous home of the brand in 1988, but production ended and the factory closes in 2000 (the last Royal Jamaicas were rolled in July). The Royal Jamaica brand was founded in 1922.
    On August 16, the Davidoff factory in Santiago, Dominican Republic, was destroyed by fire. It had been purchased by Hendrik Kelner in 1983 and began producing Davidoffs in 1989.
    Oettinger Imex, owner of the Davidoff brand, buys the Avo brand from then-69-year-old Avo Uvezian. Distributed by Davidoff since its beginning in 1986, the brand sold 20,000 units in 1987 but 1.4 million by 1985.
    Media coverage of The Boom becomes intense. Spy magazine puts Madonna on the cover of its September/October issue, puckering up on what appears to be an exploded Don Tomas cigar to promote its cover story ?Smoke and Mirrors.?

    1997
    The pop culture rocket which is cigars hits its highest point. Total cigar sales soar to unimaginable levels, ending at 5.16 billion units, another increase of 12 percent. Imports of premium cigars are insane, with 576.4 million units (an increase of 80 percent!) added to an increasing total of domestically-produced cigars as the U.S.-based hand-made industry is revived. Imports from the Dominican Republic alone total 268,374,000, a 46-fold increase in 20 years!
    Brands are introduced so fast that this book weighed almost as much as a full box of cigars! The year-end edition of the Perelman?s Pocket Cyclopedia of Cigars showed 1,144 brands, more than triple the number from the first edition published just three years before.
    Cohiba is in the news. General Cigar debuts its version of Cohiba at the RTDA in July, but Empresa Cubana del Tabaco (a.k.a. Cubatabaco) sues General Cigar and Culbro Corp. over ownership rights to the Cohiba name in U.S. Federal District Court in New York, New York.
    Tabacalera S.A. of Spain purchases Havatampa, Inc. and Los Angeles-based premium cigar distributor Hollco-Rohr, owner of the Gispert, Juan Lopez, Romeo y Julieta and Saint Luis Rey trademarks in the U.S. The transaction for Max Rohr Importers, Inc. is estimated at approximately $53 million U.S.
    The end of the Boom was also declared, however, at year?s end. A November issue of Barron?s reviewed the cigar craze and declared that the heady days of double-digit sales and price increases were over and that consumption would level off. Right on the money.
    The International Cigar Exposition, billed as an alternative trade show to the RTDA, is held for the first time, in Las Vegas. It became the Int?l Tobacco Exposition in 1999, the National Association of Tobacco Outlets Expo from 2000-2006 and changed its name to the Tobacco Plus Expo for 2007.
    The Cubans introduce two new brands: Vegas Robaina, saluting the famed tobacco farmer of the Vuelta Abajo and Vegueros.

    1998
    Boom turned into what appeared to be bust, but was in fact the inevitable cooling off of an overheated industry.
    Sales continue to rise, however, for the fifth straight year, but only by 3.7 percent, to 5.35 billion. Imports of premium cigars declined for the first time since 1991, by 13.7 percent to 506,809,000 as consumer?s humidors were filled to overflowing.
    Entrepreneurs continued to rush in, however and brand totals reached an all-time high of 1,453 in the year-end edition of our trade publication, Perelman?s Pocket Cigar & Humidor Finder.
    First ?International Seminary of the Habanos? in held in Havana from February 16-20; it?s the precursor of Festival del Habano. The Trinidad brand is introduced to worldwide distribution at the Gala Dinner and Auction on the final evening.
    Hurricane Georges rips through the Caribbean from September 20-22, causing wide-spread damage, especially in the Dominican Republic (380 deaths) and Haiti (209 dead). In Cuba, six deaths were attributed to the storm. Tobacco facilities in the Dominican were severely damaged.
    On November 3, California voters pass Proposition 10 by just 79,728 votes (or 50.5% to 49.5%: 4,042,466 to 3,962,738), passing in only 15 of the state?s 58 counties. In the name of funding early-childhood education, it raises taxes on cigarettes from 50 cents per pack to 87 cents per pack and also raises the tax on the wholesale price of cigars by an ?equivalent? amount.

    1999
    Sales continued to slide as the hundreds of millions of cigars of failed brands continued to move through the market as bargain close-outs, unbanded bundles and mail-order remainder items. At year?s end, imports totaled 248.26 million, down 25.8% from 1998. Supplies of brand-name cigars were more widely available and pricing of many brands ? especially those which had not established a strong presence in the market ? dived.
    The number of brands finally fell, as documented elsewhere in this edition, to a little over 1,220 brands, down by 220 or so from the peak. But quality and innovation at the top end continues, with the introduction of very large cigars, box-pressed models and the wide production once again of perfecto-shaped cigars, which were the dominant shape made at the beginning of the 20th Century.
    Swedish Match purchases General Cigar?s machine-made cigar operations (Garcia y Vega, Tiparillo, White Owl among others) in May and El Credito Cigars (El Rico Habano, La Gloria Cubana, Los Statos De Luxe) in September.
    On January 22, France?s Societe Nationale d?Exploitation Industrielle des Tabacs et Allumettes, S.A. (SEITA) completes the purchase of Consolidated Cigar Corporation from Ron Perelman for about $730 million in cash and assumed debt. On December 17, a new company, Altadis S.A., is formed by the merger of SEITA and Spain?s Tabacalera S.A.
    A new Davidoff factory is opened in Santiago, Dominican Republic, after the original complex was destroyed by fire in 1996.
    A busy year in Cuba: the first Festival del Habano is held February 22-26 in Havana; the Cubans change their box codes; the Cuban warranty seal is modified with the introduction of red serial numbers and a new brand, San Cristobal de la Habana, is introduced. On October 14, Hurricane Irene rips through the island causing widespread damage to the tobacco curing barn infrastructure in the Pinar del Rio province.

    2000
    After the fall, U.S. premium cigar imports rise slightly to 249.15 million, well down from the Boom, but nearly 250% of the figures for 1994!
    On May 11, Swedish Match announces that it will purchase 64% of General Cigar with an option to acquire the rest of the company. On October 12, General Cigar closes the Cifuentes y Cia. factory in Kingston, Jamaica, the long-time home of Macanudo and Temple Hall. Production of these brands is moved to the Dominican Republic.
    The Cuban cigar industry tries its third edition of box codes in 15 years, but this time with easy-to-understand abbreviations for the month and year of production.
    In October, Altadis S.A. buys a 50% stake in Habanos S.A., the distribution and marketing arm of the island?s cigar industry, for about $477 million.
    In November, the Cubans introduce the Edicion Limitada series, a specific set of individual cigars from various brands to be produced in limited quantities and with two-year aged wrappers.
    Ramon Cifuentes, one of the last living ties to the pre-Castro cigar industry in Cuba and once head of the Partagas Factory in Havana, dies in Madrid, Spain on January 3 at age 91. He left Cuba in 1961 and never returned.

    2002
    Habanos S.A. introduces a new, machine-made brand called Guantanamera.
    Hurricanes Isidore (Sepember 24) and Lili (October 2) hammer Cuba and wipe out more than 10,000 curing barns in the Vuelta Abajo area.
    A smoking ban in passes in Florida, so plans to hold the 2003 RTDA Convention and International Trade Show in Orlando are scrapped and the show is moved to Nashville, Tennessee.
    The once-mighty Bering brand is sold by Swisher International to Nestor Plasenscia and will be distributed by Cigars by Santa Clara.

    2003
    U.S. cigar imports rise for the fifth straight year, reaching 257.67 million, best ever except for the two Boom years of 1997 and 1998.
    In Cuba, a fourth set of box codes is implemented, reported to be continuously changing so as to eliminate the ability of buyers to know what factory produced a specific box. In order to prevent counterfeiting, a holographic sticker was added to boxes of cigars sold in Cuba.
    The historic H. Upmann factory in Havana was closed to cigar production and workers moved to a new, modern facility. The old building opened in 1944.
    Altadis S.A. buys controlling interest in 800-JRCigar, Inc., owner of J-R Cigars and its wholesale division, Cigars by Santa Clara on October 10. Altadis can buy the remainder of the outstanding shares in 2008.
    Alfred Dunhill of London closes all of its U.S. retail stores, most of which had richly-appointed humidors, at end of year except for its landmark New York store. Dunhill opened its first U.S. store in 1933, in New York.
    Cigar maker C.A.O. opens its own factories in both Honduras and Nicaragua, both purchased from the Tora?o family.

    2004
    U.S. cigar imports take off, rising 10% above 2003 levels to 283.34 million, the best year ever excepting the two Boom years of 1997 and 1998.
    Cubatabaco wins the first round of its trademark ownership suit over the Cohiba name. The decision is delivered on May 6 by U.S. District Judge Robert Sweet of the Southern District of New York.
    U.S. Cigar Sales, Inc., owner of the Astral, Don Tomas and Helix brands (among others), is handed over to General Cigar (now a unit of Swedish Match) by its parent, U.S. Tobacco, as part of a settlement agreement to an antitrust action by Swedish Match over the marketing of smokeless tobacco.

    2005
    U.S. premium cigar imports soar, surpassing 300 million units and landing at 321.63 million, third-best ever and an astonishing total considering the continued spread of smoking bans across the country.
    On February 24, the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the decision of the District Court in the case of Empresa Cubana del Tabaco (Cubatabaco) v. Culbro Corp., General Cigar Co., Inc. and General Cigar Holdings, Inc. and awarded ownership of the Cohiba trademark in the U.S. to General Cigar. An appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court was promised by Cubatabaco.

    source: cigarsmag

  • #2
    Phew! ..... Took some reading!
    If you want to, you can.
    And, if you can, you must!

    Comment


    • #3
      Superb!

      Comment


      • #4
        Great stuff. Now suffering eye strain!
        Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote.

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        • #5
          That's great, but it misses the introduction of tobacco to civilisation, as recounted by Bob Newhart, here:
          http://www.we7.com/#/track/Introducing-Tobacco-To-Civilization!trackId=1148389

          (press the blue arrow in the middle of the picture to hear one of the funniest monologues ever)

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          • #6
            Great read. Thanks.

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