By Deborah Swift
Collection of snuff boxes from 18th -20th century (Hanson's auctioneers) |
Many different snuff mills grew up next to watercourses in London, Sheffield and Manchester to supply the habit. Retailers soon set up shops solely dealing in snuff and snuff accoutrements.
Kendal's snuff factory in the 19thC, click picture for history of snuff in Kendal |
Morden Hall snuff grinding mill |
Tiny, decorative boxes were popular, because prolonged exposure to air causes snuff to dry out and lose its scent. Snuff boxes were so small because they were designed to hold only one day's worth of snuff.
Carved wooden snuff bottle with hare courtesy of Wikipedia |
In the coffee houses of the 17th century people took tobacco in three forms - as nasal snuff, inhaled into the nose, as chewing tobacco, and by 'drinking' it, i.e. by smoking it through a pipe.
Advertisement from circa 1700 |
The use of snuff was at its height in the 18th and 19th centuries, and it was recommended by doctors as a general cure-all, ironically as a treatment for coughs, colds or headaches.
Another interesting video on the history of snuff http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZNFIYByVXCE
Professor A. Phillips Griffiths, of http://www.snuffbox.org.uk/ has been a regular snuff user since the 1940's. He says the habit is catching on with a new generation since the ban on smoking here in the UK. But if you are writing about a period any time between the 16th and the 20th century, chances are at least one of your characters would be familiar with the stuff.
My new novel, A Divided Inheritance, which will be out in October features a snuff factory, and I think it must have been wonderfully atmospheric with the ground particles of tobacco floating in the atmosphere and the scent of all the ingredients.
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