The Golden Age of cigars and the Golden Age of the newspaper were closely parallel. Although newspapers trace their origins to the 1600’s, daily newspapers weren’t widely available to the working class until shortly before the Civil War when giant presses were developed that could mass produce daily newspapers on cheap paper and publishers could afford to sell them for a penny.
        When the Treaty of Paris was signed in 1783, ending the Revolutionary War, the US was home to 43 newspapers, perhaps outnumbering cigar factories by a few. By 1880, the number of newspapers had risen to 11,314 different titles, the cigar factories keeping pace. But cigar factories produced many brands, so the number of cigar brands outstripped the number of newspapers tenfold or more. By the 1890’s, at least one paper reported printing 1,000,000 copies per day, a figure only a handful of New York City cigar factories could match. In the late 1800’s, the boom in newspapers which had been precipitated by interest in the Civil War was fueled by the introduction of comic strips, the rise of organized sports and the Spanish-American War. Both the cigar industry and the newspaper business continued to grow through the turn of the century. The Post-World War One world witnessed the beginning of the end for both. Radio, television, and now the internet, have made most daily papers irrelevant except for opinion pages and local sports. Those same decades saw the rise of the fully automated short-filler cigar, then centralization, reduce the American cigar industry to fewer factories operating today than existed two centuries ago. Citizens of today’s world dominated by non-smoking laws and instant communication find it hard to imagine how common it was for a man to relax and smoke a cigar while reading the daily paper a century ago.
        Given their parallel histories and related activity, it’s no surprise that newspaper front pages were widely reproduced on cigar labels. But, with the exception of the common DETROIT FREE PRESS, these reproductions are hard to find today because they generally pictured local small town papers and sale of the cigars was limited to the area in which the paper was distributed.
Newspaper Gallery
A National Cigar Museum Exclusive
© Tony Hyman
The 5 great illustrated weeklies are depicted on this box used by NYC’s giant Lichtenstein Fact. 50 with its 1,000 rollers. Harper’s Weekly, Puck, Judge,  Frank Leslie’s Weekly and Harper’s Bazar. The brand was created for Alter Bros. of Toledo. 1885.
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The Jamestown, NY, Journal for Saturday May 7, 1898, forever reports news of the Spanish-American War. A very rare, possibly unique, newspaper box. Factory 455, 28th Dist (which included Jamestown) is not listed.
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The most common of all newspaper pages, created after Grant died on August 9th 1885. Made in Detroit by giant Brown Bros. Fact. 902, 1st Michigan.
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When American Cigar Co. (the Tobacco Trust) bought Brown Bros. they changed the label.
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A very rare newspaper box also made in Detroit, this in Fact. 74 by Lagora Fee Co. on Jefferson Ave. Datelined Havana January 2, 1902, it pictures the first elected President of Cuba, Thomas Palma.
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The similarities in color and design were not accidental. An unknown company and brand was trying to capitalize on one of the nation’s largest by mimicking both the inner and outer labels.
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Datelined Boston, April 10, 1885, this is one of the oldest, and most rare of newspaper boxes. Depicts the cover of a weekly 5¢ paper aimed at the “grocery, produce and provision trades.” Note cross-promotion for Chase & Sanborn coffee and Boss Lump chewing tobacco.  [5766]
End label of previous, depicting the headquarters of the newspaper and the Grocer’s Exchange. Cigars made by giant Kerbs & Spiess, Fact. 13, 3rd NYC. The Caution Notice says the cigars were made for W.H.I. Hayes of Lowell, Mass.
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Bad idea to print directly on the box with metal dies leaves no detail, making text impossible to read. Dateline is Jan 1, 1901 “Dawn of the 20th Century.”
1901, not 1900, started the millennium. Cigars by Alvis Krause, Fact. 695, Binghamton, NY. [8393]
Dateline November 13, 1906, doesn’t seem to have any great news significance. Turning the front page into a wall poster is both attractive and distinctive.
Cigars by Morris Schostak, Fact. 547, Milwaukee.
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In addition to front pages, newspaper buildings were often imposing structures worthy of a cigar label.
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H. Fendrich, Fact. 202, 7th Dist Indiana, depicted their Evansville factory, which they claimed was the largest cigar factory in the country in 1901, on the flap, making a dramatic pair of buildings.
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Newspaper style (Ben Day) photo of newspaper building seems fitting. Cigars by H. Berlowitz,
1007 Winnebago St., Milwaukee
Fact. 468, 1st Dist, Wisconsin, 1901-1910.
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Clever play on words, both the newspaper and the cigar are “leaders” in Canton, Ohio. Rough condition kept me from buying this rare newspaper box when it was offered on ebay. Featured story describes Theodore Roosevelt taking the oath of office.
Not in the NCM.
“Tobacco expert discovers best cigar for world need” reads the label on this 1938 box filled by Goodman & Newman, 171 Elm, in Westfield, Mass,
Factory 194 Massachusetts.
Dramatic use of only two colors.
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Vanity label, probably of a local editor. “None genuine without my name on the cover” is signed by M.E. Gransom [editor? Maker?]   Cigars made in
Factory 142, 3rd Dist Iowa, c. 1912.
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Beautiful late 1870’s or early 1880’s depiction of a cigar smoking newspaper reader and city scene used by J.B. Fralich, Fact. 394, 9th Dist.,
Manheim, PA in 1912. Outstanding example of a label used far after it was created.
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Homeless boys by the thousands sold newspapers on city street corners across America to eke out a living. This lovely 1880’s label shoves various ways for transmitting news. Cigars made by giant factory Kerbs & Spiess, Fact. 13, 3rd NYC.
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Cigar smoking newsboy seen on book-shaped box used by Hunsicker & Co., Allentown, PA,
Factory 1234, 1st Dist. PA, c.1890.
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Trade card featuring newsboy.
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Dutch cigar box from around 1900 depicting a newsboy and the front page of a popular daily newspaper.
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