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Posted

This was asked of me earlier in the week and I had no idea but I promised to put it to more learned members on the forum. 

 

"Not including Cuba and the USA,  what are the oldest brands/producers of premium cigars in the Caribbean and central/south/latin America that are pre 1959?  Are any still in existence today?"

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Posted

https://halfwheel.com/revamped-royal-jamaica-coming-to-casa-de-montecristo/384479/amp/

"The Royal Jamaica brand traces its history back to 1935, and as the name would imply, was founded in Kingston, Jamaica and used Jamaican tobacco. While the brand changed hands over the years, it was eventually acquired by Altadis U.S.A. and is believed to still be part of the company’s portfolio. Tabacalera USA owns both Altadis U.S.A. and Casa de Montecristo, as well as JR Cigar."

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Posted
1 minute ago, NSXCIGAR said:

DECEMBER 3, 2020


REVAMPED ROYAL JAMAICA COMING TO CASA DE MONTECRISTO

https://halfwheel.com/revamped-royal-jamaica-coming-to-casa-de-montecristo/384479/

I think we quoted the same article.

For some more background:

https://www.cigaraficionado.com/article/jamaicas-cigar-comeback-7315

"Gore knows hurricanes all too well. In September 1988, Hurricane Gilbert slammed into Jamaica at full strength, maiming the nation's cigar industry. The storm destroyed Gore's factory in Kingston, which had stood since his grandfather James Frederick Gore founded Royal Jamaica in 1935, and ruined 1,000 acres of tobacco in May Pen. It was the worst natural disaster to befall Jamaica since the 1907 earthquake that turned Kingston into rubble. Because of Gilbert, the Jamaican tobacco industry was set back several years, production of Royal Jamaica cigars was shifted to the Dominican Republic, and Jamaican tobacco was no longer used in the island's biggest brand, Macanudo."

 

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Posted

I would probably research Tampa/Ybor city to find that answer?

Posted

I'd wager there are some old marcas from Indonesia, Philippines, and Sumatra though they'd be small shops if still surviving today.

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Posted
7 hours ago, Bijan said:

I think we quoted the same article.

Ha, we did. The headline didn't match the paragraph and it looks like that part of the article was updated or spliced from a previous article. It says it was "updated" on Dec 3 and they didn't amend the paragraph stating it is "believed to still be part" of the portfolio. 

7 hours ago, Chas.Alpha said:

I would probably research Tampa/Ybor city to find that answer?

After 1960 Tampa/Ybor was pretty much out of the game. 99% of US-made cigars were Clear Havanas and I don't believe much NC tobacco was ever rolled in the US. By the 1970s labor costs in the US became too high to compete with Central America.

7 hours ago, Digi said:

Philippines

Yes, as Rob points out above Philippines cigars were extremely popular particularly in England in the late 19th/early 20th century, hence Rudyard Kipling even referring to them as "Manilas" as we still refer to "Havanas"

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  • 10 months later...
Posted

Interesting post thanks for sharing as I had for Manila at this very moment in time.

Any suggestions where I might be able to light up in Makati in a comfortable environment?

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