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Cigarette card

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Trading cards included in cigarette packaging
"Tobacco card" redirects here. For the Japanese smart card, seeTaspo.
AGros Ventre Chief featured on
anAllen & Ginter card, 1888
TypeCollectible card
Cigarette advertising
Invented byTobacco manufacturers
Availability1875–1940s
MaterialsCardboard
FeaturesVarious topics (including sports, art, vehicles, geography, dressing, history, among others)

Cigarette cards aretrading cards issued bytobacco manufacturers to stiffencigarette packaging andadvertise cigarette brands.

Between 1875 and the 1940s, cigarette companies often included collectible cards with their packages of cigarettes. Cigarette card sets document popular culture from the turn of the century, often depicting the period's actresses, costumes, and sports, as well as offering insights into mainstream humour and cultural norms.[1]

History

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Beginning in 1879, cards depicting actresses,baseball players,Native American chiefs,boxers, national flags, or wild animals were issued by the U.S.-basedAllen & Ginter tobacco company. These are considered to be some of the first cigarette cards.[2] Other tobacco companies such asGoodwin & Co. soon followed suit. They first emerged in the U.S., then the UK, then, eventually, in many other countries.

Daisy Greville featured on a Player's card, c. 1890

In the UK,W.D. & H.O. Wills in 1887 were one of the first companies to include advertising cards with their cigarettes, but it wasJohn Player & Sons in 1893 that produced one of the first general interest sets 'Castles and Abbeys'.

English footballerWalter Bull depicted on an Ogden's card, c. 1906
Walter Smaill illustration on anImperial Tobacco Canada card, c. 1910
An original Taddy's Clowns and Circus Artistes card

Thomas Ogden of Liverpool soon followed in 1894 and in 1895, Wills produced their first set 'Ships and Sailors'. In 1896 Wills produced the first set in the United Kingdom with a sporting theme called 'Cricketers'.[3] In 1906, Ogden's produced a set ofassociation football cards depicting footballers in their club colours, in one of the first full-colour sets.

Each set of cards typically consisted of 25 or 50 related subjects, but series of over 100 cards per issue are known. Popular themes were 'beauties' (famous actresses, film stars and models), sporters (in the U.S. mainly baseball, in the rest of the world mainlyfootball andcricket), nature, military heroes and uniforms, heraldry,[4] locomotives, and city views.

Imperial Tobacco Canada manufactured the firstice hockey cards ever for the inauguralNHL season. There were a total of 36 cards in the set, each one featured an illustration of a player.[5] AfterWorld War I, only one more cigarette set was issued, during 1924–25.

Today, for example, sports and military historians study these cards for details on uniform design.[6]

Some very early cigarette cards were printed onsilk which was then attached to a paper backing. They were discontinued in order to save paper duringWorld War II, and never fully reintroduced thereafter.

Doral, anR. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company brand, started printing cigarette cards in the year 2000. These were the first cigarette cards from a major manufacturer since the 1940s,[7] although the small company Carreras in the UK issued cigarette cards with Turf brand cigarettes for a short period in the 1950s and 1960s, Black Cat brand in 1976.[8][9] Furthermore, card-like coupons with special offers have often been included in cigarette packets over the years.

The first set of "Doral Celebrate America" cards featured the 50 states in two releases, 2000 and 2001. Later themes include Americanfestivals,cars,national parks, and 20th century events.

Natural American Spirit, another R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company brand, also includes cigarette cards on their packs, with information on such things as windpower, diversity, and their farmers.

Philip Morris USA started including "Information For Smokers" cigarette cards in certain packs. One provides information on quitting smoking and the other states that "Light, "Ultra Light", "Mild", "Medium", and "Low Tar" cigarettes are just as harmful as "Full Flavor" ones.

Classification and cataloguing

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The system devised to codify 19th Century American tobacco issues has its origin in the 'American Card Catalog' (ACC), written by Jefferson Burdick. Burdick listed theAmerican Tobacco cards in one section, broken down by companies that issued the card series and by the types of cards. The 19th Century issues were prefixed with 'N' (N1-N694) and the 20th with 'T'. (T1-T235).[10]

The World Tobacco Index (WTI)

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The World Tobacco Index (WTI), published by the Cartophilic Society of Great Britain (CSGB),[11] lists all known tobacco issues from around the world and is still being updated today on reports of new finds. Using a similar alphanumeric system, it assigns a code based on the name of manufacturer, rather than the century in which the cards were issued. For example, Burdick's N2 'Celebrated American Indian Chiefs' byAllen & Ginter is listed as A400-030 (a), with the larger N42 series listed as A400-030 (b).[12]

Sports cigarette cards

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The following list focuses on the sports-only cards manufactured by tobacco companies:

(Sports only) cigarette cards
Manufacturer[n 1]Assoc.
foot.
Aus
foot.
Baseb.BoxingCricketGolfHorse
rac.
Hockey/
Lacrosse
RugbyTennis
United StatesAllen & Ginter[n 2]NoNoYes[n 3]Yes[n 3]NoNoNoNoNoYes[n 3]
United StatesAmerican Tobacco[n 4]NoNoYesYesNoNoNoNoNoNo
EnglandBritish American Tobacco[n 5]YesNoNoYes[n 3]YesNoNoNoNoNo
United States D. BuchnerNoNoYesNoNoNoNoNoNoNo
EnglandChurchmanYesNoNoYesYesYesNoNoNoYes
England Cohen Weenen[13]YesNoNoYesYesNoYesNoYesNo
EnglandGallaher[n 6]YesNoNoNoYesNoYesNoYesNo
EnglandGodfrey PhillipsYesYes[n 7]NoYes[n 3]NoNoNoNoNoNo
United StatesGoodwin & Co.[n 2]NoNoYesYes[n 3]NoNoNoNoNoNo
CanadaImperial Tobacco Canada[n 8]NoNoNoNoNoNoNoYesNoNo
EnglandJohn Player & Sons[n 9]YesNoNoNoYesYesNoNoYesYes
United States W.S. Kimball & Co.[n 2]NoNoYes[n 3]Yes[n 3]NoNoYes[n 3]NoNoNo
EnglandLambert & ButlerYesNoNoNoYes[n 3]NoYesNoYesYes[n 3]
EnglandLorillardNoNoNoYesNoNoNoNoNoNo
England Ogden's[15]YesNoNoYes[n 3]YesYesYesNoYesYes[n 3]
Australia J J Schuh Tobacco CoNoYesNoNoNoNoYesNoNoNo
AustraliaSniders & AbrahamsNoYesNoNoYesNoNoNoNoNo
England James Taddy & Co.[16]YesNoNoNoYesNoNoNoYesNo
EnglandW.D. & H.O. Wills[n 10][n 9]YesYesNoNoYesNoNoNoYesNo
Notes
  1. ^The list include only manufacturing companies and not their individual brands.
  2. ^abcMerged to form American Tobacco in 1890. The "W. Duke & Sons" company was part of the group but did not include sports figures into their card sets.
  3. ^abcdefghijklmAs part of various sports sets, not as individual collections.
  4. ^American Tobacco was formed by 5 companies: W. Duke & Sons, Allen & Ginter, W.S. Kimball & Company, Kinney Tobacco, and Goodwin & Company. It commercialised cards through its brands Fatima, Hassan, Meca, Obak, among others.
  5. ^Formed in 1902, when the UK Imperial Tobacco and the US' American Tobacco agreed to form a joint venture.
  6. ^Founded by Thomas Gallaher in Belfast, the company became the largest independent buyer of tobacco in the world. It owned theBenson & Hedges brand. Gallaher was acquired by American Tobacco in 1974, and the factory closed in 1988. Japan Tobacco acquired Gallaher in 2007.[14]
  7. ^Only traded in Australia.
  8. ^Canadian subsidiary of British Imperial Tobacco, commercialised its ice hockey cards only in that territory.
  9. ^abMerged to formImperial Tobacco in 1901.
  10. ^Also commercialising through its brandCapstan.

Association football

[edit]

Ogden's Limited of Liverpool produced cigarette cards featuring football from 1894 which were included with their Guinea Gold brand until 1901. They were later included with their Tabs brand from 1901 to 1903.[17]

In 1896 Marcus & Company of Manchester produced the first football set called Footballers & Club Colours.[3] In 1902 W.D. & H.O. Wills produced a set of football-related cards called the Football Series with 66 cards featuring advertising for theirWild Woodbine and Cinderella brands. William Clarke & Sons of Liverpool later issued the same set but with a short biography for the player on each one.[17]

In 1906, Ogden's produced a set depicting footballers in their club colours, in one of the first full-colour sets.[3]

Wills issued a 50-card set for the Indian market in 1907 with their Scissors brand, called Football Team Colours. Further sets were issued overseas by Wills in 1910 and 1914.[17]

Wills produced further sets in 1935 and 1939.[3]

Cricket

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See also:List of cricketers in Wills' Cigarettes Cricketers, 1928

Wills produced a set called 'Cricketers' in 1896 and released others sets in 1901, 1908, 1909, 1910 and 1928.[3]

Other cigarette cards

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Another notable and sought-after set of cards is the untitled series issued by Taddy and known by collectors as "Clowns and Circus Artistes". While not the rarest cards in existence (there are a number of series in which only one known example remains), they are still very rare and command high prices whenever they come up for auction. TheT206 Ty Cobb is another example of a notably rare cigarette card.[18]

The Mecca cigarette trading card forGeorge Sutton is also notable for it depicts him with hands. Sutton was known as "the handless billiard player"[19] for mastering the game with such a handicap.

Apart from these examples, there are also cigarette cards that do not focus on people, but on cities or flags.

  • Smyrna, from the City Flags series (N6) for Allen & Ginter Cigarettes Brands (1887)
    Smyrna, from the City Flags series (N6) for Allen & Ginter Cigarettes Brands (1887)
  • Flag of Smyrna (İzmir) pictured on the „Flags of all nations series 150 designs“
    Flag of Smyrna (İzmir) pictured on the „Flags of all nations series 150 designs“
  • Flag of Bavaria

Legacy

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The largest cigarette card collection on record is that ofEdward Wharton-Tigar. His collection,bequeathed to theBritish Museum following his death in 1995, is recognised by theGuinness Book of Records as the largest collection of its kind. Hisautobiography,Burning Bright, details both his obsession with collecting cigarette cards, as well as his business life, which included becoming President of Selection Trust – at the time, one of the largest mining companies in the world – as well as his lifelong passion for cricket, which culminated in his presidency of Kent Cricket Club. When asked what others thought of his collecting he said: "If to collect cigarette cards is a sign of eccentricity, how then will posterity judge one who amassed the biggest collection in the world? Frankly, I care not."[20]

He was the president of the Cartophilic Society of Great Britain until his death in 1995.

World record price

[edit]

The most valuable cigarette card in the world featuresHonus Wagner, one of the great names in U.S. baseball at the turn of the 20th century. TheT206 Honus Wagner has repeatedly set records at auction, most recently in 2016 when it sold for $3,120,000.[21] Wagner was a dedicated non-smoker and objected when America's biggest tobacco corporation planned to picture him on a cigarette card without his permission.[22] Threats of legal action prevented its release, but a few slipped out, and it was one of these that stunned the collecting world when it was auctioned.

Gallery

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References

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  1. ^W. Duke, Sons & Co. Advertising Materials, 1880-1910 on Duke University Digital Library
  2. ^Shaw, James A."Allen & Ginter's champions". Archived fromthe original on 2006-04-05. Retrieved2006-06-21.
  3. ^abcdeThe History of Football Cigarette Cards by John Simkin, on Spartacus Educational, September 1997
  4. ^Heraldic cigarette and tobacco cards
  5. ^History of Hockey Cards on Starr Cards website
  6. ^Backcheck: A Hockey RetrospectiveArchived 2007-10-01 at theWayback Machine at Library and Archives Canada
  7. ^"Doral Revives Collector Cards with Purchase".Brandweek. 2001-01-15. Archived fromthe original on 2005-07-19. Retrieved2006-06-21.
  8. ^Franklyn Cards: A brief history of cigarette cardsArchived March 22, 2007, at theWayback Machine
  9. ^Catalogues, for example: Murray Cards (International). Catalogue of Cigarette & Other Trade Cards. 3.ed. (1981)
  10. ^Forbes, R and Mitchell, T, (1999) 'American Tobacco Cards: Price Guide and Checklist', Virginia: Tuff Stuff Books
  11. ^The Cartophilic Society of Great Britain (2000) 'The (New) World Tobacco Issues Index: Part 1', London: The Cartophilic Society of Gt. Britain Ltd.
  12. ^"Cartophilic Society (CSGB)".Archived from the original on 2002-10-22. Retrieved2002-10-22.
  13. ^Cohen Weenen cards on Spartacus Educational
  14. ^Up to smoke: a history of Gallaher on Let's Look Again, 25 Feb 2016
  15. ^Ogden's cigarette cards on Spartacus Educational
  16. ^James Tadddy cigarette cards on Spartacus Educational
  17. ^abcSmith, Steve (6 August 2011).Red Alert (Bristol City v Ipswich Town). p. 67.
  18. ^Victor, Daniel (2016-03-07)."Ty Cobb Baseball Card Trove Reignites Dreams of Shoebox Jackpots".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2023-02-08.
  19. ^"Sutton plays fine billiards; Handless Player's Remarkable Work Against Expert Thomas Gallagher. New York Times".The New York Times. 1903-03-17.
  20. ^Wharton-Tigar, E. (1987)Burning Bright: The Autobiography of Edward Wharton-Tigar, London: Metal Bulletin Books, p.254
  21. ^Cracknell, Ryan."World Record $3.12 Million for T206 Honus Wagner Baseball Card".Beckett. Retrieved21 March 2020.
  22. ^Davis, Ralph S. (1912-10-21)."Wagner A Wonder: One Player In Game Who Is Not Money Mad"(PDF).The Sporting News. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2007-10-09. Retrieved2007-10-19.

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