Showing posts with label snuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snuff. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

A Pinch of Snuff

Cowrie Shell Snuff Box
Accession Number: 1903.0002

What introduces Whig or Tory,
And reconciles them in their story,
When each is boasting in his glory?
A pinch of snuff.

Where speech and tongue together fail,
What helps old ladies in their tale,
And adds fresh canvas to their sail?
 A pinch of snuff.


            From the seventeenth century through the mid-nineteenth century, the consumption of snuff played an important role in the social lives of men and women. As implied by the preceding poem, snuff stimulated conversation at social gatherings or allowed for a point of contact for those of different backgrounds. An 1863 article in Harper’s Weekly claimed snuff was consumed to prevent infections and “amuse the vacant mind” in the presence of dull company. Snuff also created moments of surprise and cultural difference, such as the shock many eighteenth century northerners experienced when encountering elite southern women regularly using snuff.
Clearly it was an important part of colonial and early American life, but what is snuff? Snuff was made by curing tobacco leaves and then grinding the leaves by hand or with a mortar and pestle, a method initially adopted from Native Americans. With the wide variety of tobacco leaves available in colonial and early America, snuff came in a variety of types and flavors. For example, a common type of snuff called “Maroco” called for “forty parts of French or St. Omar tobacco with twenty parts of fermented Virginia stalks in the powder.” Usually a pinch of snuff was inhaled through the nose, sometimes as often as every hour.
Snuff users developed distinctive mannerisms and technologies associated with the production and intake of snuff. Of particular interest was the emergence of small, pocket-sized containers used for carrying snuff known as snuff boxes. These boxes were made of materials including shells, paper-mache, wood, and silver and were often decorated with engravings, portrait miniatures, or jewels. Snuffboxes functioned as an accessory for many men and women, therefore demonstrating their social class based on the materials used to construct the box or the beauty of the piece. Paper-mache boxes were common and less ornate, while boxes made of shells or jewels were more rare and associated with the upper class.

The collection at Wilton House Museum contains a mid-eighteenth century brown and white cowrie shell snuffbox with silver hinges and a silver bottom engraved with “E.T” in script. Although the original owner of the snuffbox is unknown, the Randolph family likely owned an object similar to the cowrie shell snuff box because of their great wealth. Cowrie shells were associated with womanhood, fertility, birth, and wealth. Since cowrie shells were only found in Africa and Asia, Europeans and American colonists typically acquired cowrie shells through their involvement with the West African slave trade. Cowrie shell snuff boxes were quite rare compared to other types of boxes and it is exciting, and unique, that Wilton has one in their collection!

This blog entry is by Caitlin Foltz, a graduate student at Virginia Commonwealth University studying 19th and 20th century American history.  Listen to the podcast version here.

Bibliography

Betts, Vicki. “The ‘Social Dip:’ Tobacco Use by Mid-19th Century Southern Women.” (Accessed Feb. 2, 2014), http://www.uttyler.edu/vbetts/snuff.htm.

“Cowrie Shell.” Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia. (Accessed Feb. 7, 2014), http://www.monticello.org/site/research-and-collections/cowrie-shell.

Curtis, Mattoon M. The Book of Snuff and Snuff Boxes. (USA: Van Rees Press, 1935).

“You Say Six Reasons Are Enough.” Harpers Weekly. (Sept. 28, 1867, p. 619). 



Wednesday, February 27, 2013

A Box for a Fragrant Powder

Object: Snuff Box
Accession #: 1952.2.1A-B
Snuff, which is prepared by drying, toasting, then crushing cured tobacco leaves, was the preferred method of tobacco consumption by the Incas. Containers used for storage of snuff included bottles, pockets, and bags as well as boxes.  The term "japan" entered the English language in 1688 as a word synonymous with black varnish or lacquer applied to wood.  One such "japanned" box in Wilton’s collection is this black wooden snuff box. Painted on the lid is a landscape with people on horses, a village, trees, and mountains in the distance.  As on many 18th century plantations, the cash-crop at Wilton was tobacco.  It is likely that the tobacco from Mr. Randolph’s plantation was made into snuff that was sold to the elite.
Snuff-taking was considered fashionable amongst the elite as well as being useful for preventing contagious diseases, colds, and consumption.  John Murray wrote Snuff Taking: its utility in preventing bronchitis, consumption, etc. in 1870 and includes a chapter with prescriptions.  He attests in his book that the first reception among the elite was “due much more to its reputed virtues, as a valuable remedy, than as an article of luxury; hence, the early names of the plant—southern all heal, holy herb, holy healing herb, &c.”  A powder of herbs was taken through the nose and used as a remedy for diseases as early as Hippocrates, in 400 B.C.  Jean Nicot, French diplomat and scholar who is connected with the introduction of tobacco in a granulated form, presented the powder to Catherine de Medici.  Catherine, the wife of King Henry II of France from 1547 until 1559, had been looking for a remedy for her headache.

There was an importance placed on how the “fragrant powder” was taken into one’s nose. One historian expresses the attitude of the times that “a polished snuff taker also required a steady hand, smooth nostrils and a clean shaven face.  Careless snuffers were a mess.”  Schools in London in the early 17th century were formed to teach the proper use of snuff.  Charles-Maurice-de-Talleyrand-Perigord, French statesman and diplomat under Napoleon during the French Revolution, “held snuff-taking to be essential to the politicians, as it gives time for thought in answering awkward questions while pretending only to indulge in a pinch.”  A box such as this one would have been ideal for a snuff-taker, such as Talleyrand, to keep a stash of the ground tobacco close by his side.
Mr. Randolph may have owned a box similar this one which could be set on a table for easy access to the snuff for the sniffing of the owner or for offering of it to a guest.  Either way, he would have been familiar with snuff as the owner of a tobacco plantation and a member of the elite.

Bibliography
Curtis, Mattoon M. The book of snuff and snuff boxes. Bramhall House. New York: 1935.

Gately, Iain. Tobacco: The Story of How Tobacco Seduced the World. Grove Press, 2001. New
York.

Le Corbeiller, Clare. European and American Snuff Boxes 1730-1830.. Viking Press. New York:
1966.

Murray, John Carrick. Snuff-Taking. J. Chruchill. London: 1870.

“Charles-Maurice-de-Talleyrand, prince de Benevent”. Encyclopaedia Britannica. 7 February
2013. < http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/581601/Charles-Maurice-de-Talleyrand-prince-de-Benevent>