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The
curious history of tobacco
"TOBACCO:
A Cultural History of How an Exotic Plant Seduced Civilization"
Iain
Gately
Grove Press
404 pages, $25
by
Peter Galuszka
Tobacco
has always been dear to Virginia. Native Americans used
the vegetable to fight snakebite and depression. At
Jamestown, English settlers found that tobacco, rather
than gold or olives, could sustain their new colony.
In 1619, when the precursor to today's General Assembly
first gathered, the pressing business wasn't finding
ways to survive disease, cold or attacks by natives.
Instead, the Assembly's very first act was passing -
you guessed it - a law creating an early version of
tobacco price supports.
Tobacco
would dominate for hundreds of years. The "Virginian"
variety became the world standard for quality leaf.
The state's climate was favorable for growing, cementing
slavery as a way of life that would bring decades of
grief. Yet tobacco had obvious economic benefits. The
golden leaf helped pay for the Revolution. Later, an
immensely profitable modern tobacco industry developed,
and Richmond became a major center. Today, of course,
the leaf's future is highly uncertain because it has
been shown to be a cancer-causing killer.
Such
are the observations of the new book, "Tobacco,
A Cultural History of How an Exotic Plant Seduced Civilization,"
by British journalist Iain Gately. In this sprightly
read, Gately doesn't ignore the dangers of smoking as
they are understood today, yet has produced an engrossing
cultural history.
Smoking
tobacco, Gately notes, has been celebrated as a medicine,
recreational relaxer, icebreaker among strangers and
prelude to deflowering virgins. It's also been seen
as a destroyer of health, corrupter of youth and instrument
of Satan. Incas in South America began using tobacco
about 18,000 years ago as a curative and a way to commune
with spirits. Its popularity spread northward to other
tribes, who shared it with European explorers from Christopher
Columbus on. Tobacco's appeal wafted throughout much
of the Old World, spreading even to Africa and the East.
The commodity became so precious that it sparked trade
wars as European states competed for power and the weed.
Throughout
tobacco's history, Virginia and the U.S. played key
roles. Pioneering Jamestown settler John Rolfe improved
the leaf in the 1600s by combining Native American and
Spanish forms of curing. Rolfe also is noteworthy for
marrying the Indian princess Pocahontas. The "frisky
one" caught Rolfe's eye as she did cartwheels stark
naked through the streets of Jamestown, Gately notes.
As years passed, U.S. leaf production grew exponentially
in Virginia, giving American revolutionaries a highly
lucrative and exportable product to finance their anti-British
struggles.
History
is also filled with anti-smoking zealots, too. James
I of England wrote the first reasoned treatise against
smoking, when he wasn't busy hunting witches. American
inventor Thomas Alva Edison refused to hire smokers.
In the 1600s, Ottoman Empire ruler Murad IV, better
known as "Murad the Cruel," wandered the streets
of Constantinople seeking smokes in disguise and beheaded
"any good Samaritans who offered relief,"
Gately writes. In Persia about that time, tobacco merchants
were put to death by having molten lead poured down
their throats.
Cigars
and pipes were the preferred method for consuming tobacco
until the 1800s, when Spanish tobacconists started mass-producing
papelotes or paper-bound cigarettes. These were hand-rolled
in Seville factories by beautiful, dark-haired women
who often worked topless because of the heat, making
cigarettes seem sexy and feminine. Yet, cigarettes'
popularity among trench-dwelling soldiers during World
War I gave them a masculine aroma as well, as evidenced
later by the ultra-cool Marlboro Man.
Virginia
played a big role in the huge expansion of smoking in
the late 1800s. The breakthrough came in 1880, when
James Albert Bonsack, a 21-year-old son of a plantation
owner, invented a machine that could roll cigarettes
with research backed in part by Lewis Ginter, the famous
Richmond tobacconist. Ironically, Ginter's firm dropped
the machine, which was picked up in a big way by James
"Buck" Duke, the head of a small Virginia
tobacco company. With the new technology and cutthroat
business practices, Duke created a powerful monopoly
that thoroughly modernized the manufacture of tobacco
products.
This
tremendous growth of smoking led to a dramatic rise
in deaths from lung cancer and other causes. Gately
doesn't spend much time dealing with the cancer fights
of the 1950s to the present time. Nor does he pontificate
on tobacco's less-than-bright future. One other flaw:
He spends too much time discussing tobacco's impact
on domestic British culture. Even so, Gately has produced
an instructive book filled with fun facts and pithy
quotes. One of the best is from satirist Oscar Wilde:
"A cigarette is the perfect type of the perfect
pleasure. It is exquisite and leaves one unsatisfied.
What more can one want?"
Return
to Virginia Business - April 2002
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