The Cigarette was the last method of taking tobacco to be developed.
Previously it had been smoked in pipes and cigars, inhaled as snuff (in powder
from) and chewed. Tobacco itself was brought to Europe and the rest of the world
when Columbus discovered America, and it was thought to have marvelous medicinal
properties.
No one could be said to have actually invented the cigarette. It began as a
kind of Ci8gar. Cigars were made in Spain, by hand, and were very expensive. The
story goes that the beggars of the Spanish city Seville used to collect up the
cigar butts thrown into the street shred the tobacco from them and roll it into
paper, which they smoked. They called these concoctions cigarillos.' poor man’s
smokes’.
Whether or not this is true, the idea of smoking tobacco rolled in a piece of
paper spread slowly through eighteenth century Europe until it reached France.
Here the new smokes were given the name ‘cigarettes’. There were several reasons
for their popularity; they were cheaper than cigars, less trouble than a pipe, and more fashionable than snuff. A man would carry his
own tobacco and a booklet of paper from which he would form his own cigarettes.
Cigarette smoking finally reached Britain in the 1850 when soldiers fighting
in the Crimean War picked up the habit from the Turks and Russians. From there
it spread to America, where tobacco had first been discovered, centuries before.
AT first, cigarettes were made by hand, but in 1880 an American invented a
machine to do the job, increasing the numbers made every year from 500 million
to 4,000million - in America alone! Today a Cigarettes every minute.