Popular Post Havanaaddict Posted Thursday at 06:08 PM Popular Post Posted Thursday at 06:08 PM THE HISTORY OF THE DUNHILL CUBAN CIGARS If you can find one, it is worth buying a Dunhill Cuban made cigar. There are few about these days: occasionally some come up for sale at vintage cigar auctions in London, others are sold by famous cigar merchants wanting to dispose of the contents of a private keep of an untraceable customer. But those are rare occasions and one must consider himself fortunate to get hold of what many consider the ultimate Havana cigar. The reason for their scarcity value – they are not made any more and are still sought by many, cigar collectors and aficionados alike. Dunhill stopped producing cigars in Cuba in 1989, when there was an amicable parting of the ways between Alfred Dunhill Ltd, the English company which at that time owned the Dunhill trademark for tobacco products, and Cubatabaco, the Cuban company which was responsible then for the manufacture and distribution of Cuban cigars around the world. In post-Revolution Cuba there has been only one other non-Cuban company that was allowed to market and sell Cuban cigars with its own brand: Davidoff of Switzerland. At the time (as is still the case today) the Cubans would only manufacture cigars for which they owned the trademark or tradename. Dunhill and Davidoff were the exceptions to this rule. As for the Davidoff, it is the trademark which is the key to the success of the Dunhill range of cigars. A bit of history But it wasn’t cigars that helped establish the Alfred Dunhill company in the first place. Mr. Alfred Dunhill started selling motor accessories back in 1893, and only later in 1907 did he become involved with tobacco, opening his first shop at 30 Duke Street, Mayfair, London. As is the case today, personal service, attention to detail and exceptional taste were the order of the day, as a sales assistant would escort a potential customer around the shop discussing their individual smoking (and non-smoking) needs. Pipes, pipe tobacco, hand made cigarettes and cigars were all available. As well as imported Havanas such as Beck, Sol and Carolina, there was also a British made cigar Coronette de Ora priced at 36 shillings per 100 units! Business was soon thriving and new cigarette and pipe manufacturing premises were established as well as an additional shop in Soho, London. Mr. Alfred Dunhill was certainly inventive, and it is thought he may well have developed the first traveller’s humidor. Airtight cigar tins for the traveller, the yachtsman or the cigar smoker resident abroad became available around 1912. They were much appreciated when in 1914, during the 1st World War, cigars labelled for the war campaign were shipped to the British troops in these airtight tins. In 1921, only fourteen years after the opening of the first shop, Alfred Dunhill received its first Royal warrant as Tobacconist to Edward Prince of Wales. Another most important customer was Winston Churchill. Throughout the 2nd World War, Dunhill supplied him with his favourite cigar, El Trovador. Bill Carter, the longest serving member of staff, was often to be seen delivering these by hand, as well as to King George VI. For his services, Mr. Alfred Dunhill was offered an MBE decoration after the war was over, but he insisted that it went instead to the indefatigable Mr. Carter. War wreaked havoc in Central London, and on 17th April 1941 at around 3.00 am in the morning, the Alfred Dunhill shop was hit by two parachuted land mines destroying much of the premises in Duke Street. In a typically English fashion, Mr. Alfred Dunhill maintained his self-control: undeterred by the tragic consequences, seated at a simple table amongst all the rubble, he was busily selling pipes to passers by and well wishers the next day. The post war years saw the expansion of Dunhill continue. Shops were opened in the USA, Canada and later in a number of prime locations in the Far East. Famed for luxury goods, cigars however remained a fundamental part of the business. The USA was a very important market for Dunhill cigars, but in 1959 with Fidel Castro coming into power, a completely different perspective was put on the cigar industry. As a result of Castro’s communist beliefs, President Kennedy declared an embargo on all imported Cuban goods to the USA. Availability of Cuban and Cuban made Dunhill cigars was wiped out overnight. Many of the American principal cigar distributors had to go elsewhere for their supplies such as the Canary Islands and at the same time many of the famous Cuban cigar producing families settled in the Dominican Republic, Honduras and Nicaragua, which emerged as the new cigar making countries. In the late 1960s/early 1970’s, Alfred Dunhill re-launched Cuban made cigars on to European markets under the Don Alfredo and Flor del Punto brands. In America in 1981, Dunhill Montecruz and Dunhill Ramon Allones were available, both produced in the Canary Islands. However, in the late 1980’s, manufacture of Dunhill Cuban cigars ceased and production of the Canary Islands cigar moved to the Dominican Republic. Today, the Dunhill tobacco trademark is owned by the Swiss international luxury goods group Richemont. The Dunhill “Selección Suprema” Initially Dunhill sold Havana cigars produced by the leading Cuban brands: Partagás, H Upmann, La Corona, Cabañas, Romeo y Julieta, Ramon Allones, Hoyo de Monterrey, Bolivar, Por Larranaga and La Flor de Cuba. These were ordinary production cigars coming out of the factories in Havana, with one important difference: selection. Dunhill put in place a system that made sure that the most meritorious products of leading Havana makers were set aside to form its “Selección Suprema”: the output of a few highly skilled workers in each factory whose cigars were worthy to be graded “supreme”. The selection process would take place in Cuba where the finest cigars of each brand would be chosen by Dunhill’s agents, put aside and form part of the “Selección Suprema” range. The boxes and cabinets of Havana cigars found at the Dunhill shops would therefore be marketed differently to ordinary cigars sold elsewhere, as they would have the “Selección Suprema” words added before the designation of the particular vitola – in the case of Dunhill cigars this would be represented by the vitola number, another marketing innovation of the English company. This systematic process, according to a Dunhill publication of the time [1], guaranteed that “n such cigars the distinct and jealously-prized characteristics of each brand are brought to perfection”. Dunhill “Selección Suprema” cigars were packed in cabinet bundles of 50 or boxes of 25, as well as in gift cabinets of 100 or more (up to 1000 cigars in some cases). Although hard to come by, intact Dunhill “Selección Suprema” boxes and cabinets can still be found at cigar auctions or in keeps of customers of well known cigar merchants in London and abroad. And what a site it is when a well conditioned one can be found! Dunhill exclusive brands: Don Candido, Don Alfredo and Flor del Punto Alfred Dunhill Ltd also had three exclusive Cuban brands it used to market and distribute under its name. Some of these were existing brands (such as Don Candido), others were newly created (such as the Don Alfredo), others less certain (Flor del Punto). Of these three brands the Don Candido is the oldest and by many considered the ultimate Dunhill cigar ever produced. According to the Illustrated Encyclopaedia [2] it was created in 1935 by Candido Vega, owner of the El Rey del Mundo factory in Padre Varela No. 90, Havana, where it is believed the Don Candidos were made (although official records show that production was also at the Briones Montoto factory). Don Candido cigars came in nine versions, from “Selección No.500” to “Selección No.508” and included the following seven vitolas de galera: mareva, cervante, campana, entreacto, corona gorda, panetela larga and an unusual parejo measuring 48×165, the largest cigar of the line. The Don Alfredo brand was introduced in the late 1960s and ended production when the Dunhill brand was started in the early 1980s. It was offered in six sizes (mareva, cervante, piramide, corona, corona grande and perla) corresponding to a different Selección number, from “Selección No.51” to “Selección No.56”. As the name suggests it was created by Cubatabaco specifically to pay homage to Alfred Dunhill. Very little is known of the Flor del Punto. It was created in the mid to late 1970s and is believed the cigars were produced in the Partagás factory. There were six known sizes (cervante, corona, mareva, carolina, and two unusual parejos measuring 40×160 and 42×160, respectively), although it is likely this brand came in at least one other shape as the known numbering goes from “Selección No.301” to “Selección No.307”, suggesting there was also a “Selección No.306”. These three brands have achieved today worldwide fame and recognition. The Don Candido and Don Alfredo in particular are by general consensus some of the best cigars that have ever been produced in Cuba [3]. Selection was once again the key success factor setting these cigars apart from its competitors. The sourcing of the material, the curing of the tobacco, the blending, the quality controls standards and the final packaging were all tightly controlled processes that more or less guaranteed a consistent and high quality product with tremendous aging potential. The Dunhill Cigar Rooms Another important aspect that should not be underestimated is the conditioning process that Dunhill cigars underwent once they reached the Dunhill cigar rooms in London. And now I would like to spend a few words on this. Mr. Alfred Dunhill believed that the Havana cigar, once it leaves Cuba and reaches Britain, starts to deteriorate. In his opinion a newly-imported cigar is subjected to a process of “drying-out” which – and I quote – “inevitably destroys much of the delicate flavour and bouquet of the cigar, while these qualities are again impaired by the subsequent exposure during storage: by the time they reach the smoker these cigars are travesties of what they should be and no longer representative of the care and skill lavished upon their cultivation and manufacture [4]”. To restore a cigar’s condition a long and complicated process of maturing is essential. The maturing is in fact an extension of the fermentation or ageing of tobacco which all imported cigars must undergo before they are smoked and which, through loss of moisture, causes a radical change in the composition and quality of the leaf [5]. The conditioning of Dunhill cigars took place in three different rooms, the Maturing Room, the Keeping Room and the Humidor. Each of these had constantly controlled temperature and regulated humidity and continually renewed and purified air flow, freed of any out-door impurities. The Maturing Room was used to slowly mature and ripen Havana cigars until they reached a condition that was preferred by the European consumer of the time, who generally smoked drier cigars than those found in Cuba. The maturing process, which lasted twelve months or more, required a constant control of temperature and humidity. During this process cigars were tested at regular intervals to ensure that each was mellowing at the correct rate. Dunhill claim that no cigars were sold until they had reached the appropriate level of maturity. The Keeping (or Storing) Room is where cigars were transferred once they were brought at the correct condition and were kept here until they were required for smoking. Customers of Dunhill would store their purchases in private cedar wood cabinets and withdraw them, as required, once they had reached an ideal age of maturity. The Humidor was set up so that it reproduced the humid conditions and warmth of Cuba. Here is where a selected quantity of “green” cigars or cigars considered to be too “fresh” would be kept. Also cigars of domestic manufacture were stored here, indicating that different conditioning was thought appropriate to apply to cigars of non-Cuban provenance. The Dunhill Havana Cigars In the late 1970s negotiations between Dunhill and Cubatabaco ensued for the introduction of a prestigious range of handmade Havana cigars under the “Dunhill” name. The “Dunhill” brand was to replace the three existing Dunhill Cuban retail brands, Don Candido, Don Alfredo and Flor del Punto, with one authoritative internationally distributed trademark. The objective was to create a new brand of Havana cigars, produced to the highest quality specifications of the English importer, to be marketed worldwide. The collection was seen as a tribute to the heritage of the company and its founder: it was to be based on specifications originated from Mr. Alfred Dunhill himself in the 1920s and put to fruition by his grandson, Mr. Richard Dunhill, the then Chairman of Alfred Dunhill Limited. An exclusive manufacturing agreement was entered into between Alfred Dunhill Limited and Empresa Cubana del Tabaco (Cubatabaco) at the beginning of 1982 for “the manufacture and sale of the finest quality hand-made Havana cigars under the “Dunhill” brand” [6]. It covered matters such as the quality of the cigars, advertising and promotion, sales and marketing, payment terms and pricing, presentation and termination rights. The product was to be positioned at the top of the luxury sector of the handmade cigar market and compete against Davidoff, the Swiss brand, and was to have the following features: – hand selected colour matched wrappers – a secret blend of prime filler and binder – handmade by the finest and most experienced rollers – matured before shipment in the Dunhill Havana room in Cuba – conditioned and stored in the cigar humidors of Alfred Dunhill’s shops. The “Dunhill” cigar range included eight sizes, all handmade and featured: – the Atado, 175×28 (a panatela larga) – the Varadero, 129×42 (a petit corona) – the Mojito, 142×42 (a corona) – the Tubos, 155×42 (a corona grande) – the Malecon, 165×42 (a cervante) – the Estupendo, 178×47 (a churchill) – the Havana Club, 235×47 (a gran corona); and – the Cabinetta, 124×50 (a robusto). The packaging consisted of boite nature layer boxes of 25 (Varadero, Mojito and Malecon), boite nature layer boxes of 10 (Estupendo), dressed label layer boxes of 25 tubes (Tubos), traditional cabinet selection bundles of 25 (Atado and Cabinetta) and individual cedar boxes in packs of 10 (Havana Club). There were also gift packs of 3, 4 and 5 for selected cigars. The distinctive Dunhill cigar ring appeared on every cigar, regardless of size or pack configuration. The design incorporated the Dunhill “d” logo embossed in gold against a strong red background contained in the Dunhill hexagon. The words “Dunhill” and “Havana” appeared to the left and right, respectively, of the central logo. The ring was produced in two sizes, one for the panatela larga and the other for all other sizes. As we all know the manufacture of the Cuban “Dunhill” cigars did not last long. The exclusive manufacturing agreement was in fact terminated in 1989 and production discontinued shortly thereafter when Cubatabaco ended the practice of manufacturing cigars for non-Cuban brands. Alex R. Iapichino London, April 2009 [1] About Smoke – An Encyclopaedia of Smoking, Alfred Dunhill Ltd., c 1932. [2] An Illustrated Encyclopaedia of post Revolution Havana Cigars, Min Ron Nee, Interpro Business Corporation, First Edition, January 2003, page 125. [3] Min Ron Nee describes the Don Candido as “monumental”, see An Illustrated Encyclopaedia, page 128. [4] About Smoke – An Encyclopaedia of Smoking, Alfred Dunhill Ltd., c 1932, page 109. [5] See Cigars – Selección Suprema, Alfred Dunhill Ltd., date unknown. [6] Draft dated 6 October 1981 of the Exclusive Manufacturing Agreement. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ I don't know if any of you have ever had the chance to sample a Dunhill or any of the others Don Candido, Don Alfredo and Flor del Punto. But in the cigar smoking world I would say they are the white whales of all cigars! I have been lucky enough to experience the the Atado, 175×28 (a panatela larga), Varadero, 129×42 (a petit corona), Mojito, 142×42 (a corona), Tubos, 155×42 (a corona grande), Malecon, 165×42 (a cervante), Estupendo, 178×47 (a churchill), Cabinetta, 124×50 (a robusto). All have been mind blowing with the Cabinetta and the Atado being my favorite of the list. 7 6
Popular Post Puros Y Vino Posted Thursday at 06:30 PM Popular Post Posted Thursday at 06:30 PM Great write up. I hope it wasn't AI. 😉 I've had a 1980 Don Alfredo Piramide. It was epic and I got to smoke it inside on the last day of Toronto's LCDH. I managed to score two nice Seleccion Suprema boxes (empty sadly). When I was chasing Cuban Davidoffs around 2011 the few Dunhills out there were at least 3x the price. 8
CigarCulture09 Posted Thursday at 06:39 PM Posted Thursday at 06:39 PM Very much enjoyed this. Love learning about the history behind different brands past and present. Keep these post coming. 2
CigarCulture09 Posted Thursday at 06:44 PM Posted Thursday at 06:44 PM On 6/6/2025 at 4:30 AM, Puros Y Vino said: Great write up. I hope it wasn't AI. 😉 I've had a 1980 Don Alfredo Piramide. It was epic and I got to smoke it inside on the last day of Toronto's LCDH. I managed to score two nice Seleccion Suprema boxes (empty sadly). When I was chasing Cuban Davidoffs around 2011 the few Dunhills out there were at least 3x the price. What happened to the LCDH in Toronto? I mean obviously they closed. How long ago was this? What’s the scene currently like in Toronto? Isn’t there a LCDH in Windsor?
Puros Y Vino Posted Thursday at 06:49 PM Posted Thursday at 06:49 PM On 6/6/2025 at 4:44 AM, CigarCulture09 said: What happened to the LCDH in Toronto? I mean obviously they closed. How long ago was this? What’s the scene currently like in Toronto? Isn’t there a LCDH in Windsor? It closed permanently Dec 2019 IIRC. It was popular despite pricing (mostly due to our taxes). It's always been located in Yorkville. Toronto's equivalent to Rodeo Dr in Los Angeles. Lots of monied types who live, hang around there. Current Toronto cigar scene seems good. There's a lot of clandestine indoor events happening throughout the year. I'm going to one tonight. Cigar smokers are splintered across various parts of town and suburbs. There's a few decent B&M's and they seem to be growing. Haven't been to the Windsor LCDH but from what friends tell me. It's kinda sad. That's probably due to Canada being low on the current Habanos supply chain. 1 1
Havanaaddict Posted Thursday at 07:01 PM Author Posted Thursday at 07:01 PM On 6/6/2025 at 4:30 AM, Puros Y Vino said: Great write up. I hope it wasn't AI. 😉 I've had a 1980 Don Alfredo Piramide. It was epic and I got to smoke it inside on the last day of Toronto's LCDH. I managed to score two nice Seleccion Suprema boxes (empty sadly). When I was chasing Cuban Davidoffs around 2011 the few Dunhills out there were at least 3x the price. I ran across this on Cigar Sense there is the transcript from the podcast, you can find the podcast below! https://www.cigarsense.com/the-history-of-the-dunhill-cuban-cigars/ 2
Popular Post Havanaaddict Posted Thursday at 07:58 PM Author Popular Post Posted Thursday at 07:58 PM I have collected a few of the beautiful boxes! 8 1
Jack Posted Thursday at 08:50 PM Posted Thursday at 08:50 PM I haven't spoken with Alex I. in many, many years. He was always happily enthusiastic to pass the odd pieces I tripped over by Simon Chase or Jemma. 1
CigarCulture09 Posted Thursday at 10:37 PM Posted Thursday at 10:37 PM On 6/6/2025 at 4:49 AM, Puros Y Vino said: It closed permanently Dec 2019 IIRC. It was popular despite pricing (mostly due to our taxes). It's always been located in Yorkville. Toronto's equivalent to Rodeo Dr in Los Angeles. Lots of monied types who live, hang around there. Current Toronto cigar scene seems good. There's a lot of clandestine indoor events happening throughout the year. I'm going to one tonight. Cigar smokers are splintered across various parts of town and suburbs. There's a few decent B&M's and they seem to be growing. Haven't been to the Windsor LCDH but from what friends tell me. It's kinda sad. That's probably due to Canada being low on the current Habanos supply chain. Thanks for the in-depth response. Much appreciated. Yeah, I have a few friends in Toronto so I come into town a few times a year. Never knew the LCDH was in Yorkville though. Beautiful area indeed. Yeah, I visited a few local shops like The Casablanca Tobacconist Cigar Shop and the other was called The Smokin' Cigar Inc. Yeah, the stock was not good at either shop this past October when I was in town. Again, thanks for the rundown. I greatly appreciate it. 1
wjs Posted yesterday at 02:53 AM Posted yesterday at 02:53 AM Great read, thank you for sharing. Added a few quests for my time machine
Montezüma Posted yesterday at 03:16 AM Posted yesterday at 03:16 AM On 6/6/2025 at 4:08 AM, Havanaaddict said: A bit of history But it wasn’t cigars that helped establish the Alfred Dunhill company in the first place. Mr. Alfred Dunhill started selling motor accessories back in 1893, and only later in 1907 did he become involved with tobacco, opening his first shop at 30 Duke Street, Mayfair, London. I used to live right by the shop, their address is quite a legacy. You can still visit this shop today. It has a cafe and last time I checked, visitors can still smoke in the terrace, especially in Spring and Summer. It's a secluded place behind the business of Mayfair, so its quite a blessing that it still exists. As it is owned now by Richemont, I am guessing that the property was part of the acquisition. There is a Dunhill shop inside selling what you would expect. Its a classy cafe and as mentioned, with plenty of history. Worth a visit, its also not too far from JJFox and others at St James St. There are other historic sights in the area. 1
Coloniales Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago I spoke to Alex yesterday, he was at Amicigar, he knows a lot of great info. He keeps some cigars still with Dunhill, in Mayfair. 1
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