C.O.C.A. Times

Issue: 2005-July - Vol 6 Num 2

Raise your hand if you
have SMOKED A CIGAR in
the last week. MONTH?
YEAR ? I see only a couple
of hands. Most of you don't
smoke at all. But if you
lived one hundred years ago,
there would be only a couple
of men's hands raised who
DIDN'T smoke.
to work on making thousands
of different machine designs,
from crude mechanical con-
traptions to ingenious and artis-
tic achievements. Between the
late 1880's through 1917, the
cigar vender was the most pro-
duced and patented type of
coin-in-the-slot
machine.
Hundreds of thousands were
manufactured for sale, rental ,
profit-sharing and route opera-
tors. While in the beginning
they had to prove to the cus-
tomer that the freshness of its
cigars was equal to the local
tobacco store, the machine 's
Rubin •
convenience and novelty trans-
action had very strong appeal.
They impinged on the market held by licensed
retail tobacco stores and cigar stands but they all
lived in harmony while sales were brisk and grow-
mg.
Antique
Cigar
Venders:
All Sublime,
Some
Ridiculous
Cigars soared in popular-
ity in the 1870's and 80's. In
1890, the cigar industry
turned out 4 billion cigars,
all made by hand. At the
beginning of the 20th centu-
ry, 6.7 billion cigars were
by Ken
produced each year repre-
senting about 200,000 different brands. The aver-
age number of cigars smoked per capita was 75.
That's 75 cigars smoked for every man, woman,
and child per year! Yes, the men smoked them and
the women and children made them.
By the early 1890's, coin-op cigar machines had
flooded into retail locations, such as saloons, bar-
ber shops, general stores, drug stores, hotels, and
even cigar stores. Neither the machines nor their
locations were licensed or inspected. The young
coin-op cigar machine industry was made up of
small , local manufacturers and operators and exist-
ed under the radar of the Internal Revenue
Department. But again some unscrupulous cigar
sellers were revealed to be tax cheating by refilling
their machines with non-taxed cigars. The wrath of
the Internal Revenue Department was re-awakened
and they declared that all cigar machines must sell
directly from tax paid boxes and that the tax stamps
must be di splayed through a window or otherwise
be clearly in sight. This outlawed all previously
manufactured machines that did not show the tax
stamps on original cigar boxes (see, Catcher Cigar
Vender), and had to be removed from the pubic
scene. Most of them were destroyed by their own-
ers out of fear of being accused of wrong-doing.
In 1862, Congress imposed a tax on manufac-
tured cigars to help finance the Civil War and in
1865 required that all cigars sold in the U.S. be
packed in boxes to make them easier to count tax.
The factory number, tax district, number of cigars,
and such were mandated to be on every box in the
form of stickers, stamps, seals and label s.
Congress also passed laws in 1868 and '79 that a
distinct "caution notice" be pasted on every box
warning retailers of the illegality of refilling empty
cigar boxes with cigars on which the tax had not
been paid, as some were caught doing.
Enter coin-operated cigar vending machines in
the middle to late 1880's. The demand for cigars
was enormous and the appetite for coin-op
machines was too. The marriage was perfect and
they both thrived together. Individual inventors
and tinkerers were captivated by the prospect of
making a fortune from machines that sold cigars.
Using the power of American ingenuity they went
12
however, survived by having a larger variety of
goods to sell, especially cigarettes. After the
Second World War, the cigar industry was burned
further, as the fashion of cigarette smoking
replaced cigar smoking and later, the no-smoking
movement began. Much of the cigar making
industry with all its cigar machines disappeared for
good.
This edict slowed down the cigar machine busi-
ness for a short time as the word of the new law cir-
culated. Once again, inventors and wizards took
up the new design challenge to re-program the
cigar vender accordingly.
Soon new cigar
machines emerged in the market with the original
version of Windows.
The IRS rule accounts for why there are
(almost) no very early cigar machines that have
survived. But why aren't more of the later win-
dows machines still around? The IRS again. In
1917, in response to the First World War's need for
capital, they changed the tax rate on cigars. The
more expensive cigars were taxed at a higher rate
than those selling for a nickel, unlike the flat rate
before. The tax on a 25¢ cigar, for instance, was
set at six times as much as the tax on a 5¢ cigar.
This squeezed the machine operators to the point of
being unprofitable and thus many cigar machines
themselves went up in smoke. The smoke shops,
From the coin-op collector's point of view, the
rarity of antique cigar machines is especially dis-
appointing because they are some of the most sub-
lime and ridiculous of all vending machines. Cigar
machines reflect the image of cigars, and cigars
carry the history and personalities of the people
who smoked them. In today's anti-smoking world
we no longer have that connection. I guestimate
we have around 30 styles totaling 100 antique cigar
venders that survive. But at least from what we
still have left, like those presented here, we're
close.
The Elm City
Automatic Cigar Cabinet
A classic two brand 5¢ and 1 O vender, The Elm City stands tall in its
handsome Eastlake style oak case with a
center beveled mirror. It is well con-
structed in a furniture quality cabinet.
The cigars are stacked single file into a
shallow tray. Simply putting in a coin at
the top and pulling the drawer knob
releases a cigar to the tray.
Henry T
Crepeau,
the inventor,
claimed he
designed a
machine simple
in construction
and cheap to
manufacture.
It works reliably.
None of this
model has
survived.
The Elm City Automatic Selling
Machine Company of New Haven, CT.,
started in business in 1890 making The
Elm City, a larger version of the earlier
patented Crepeau model. That went
on for a year or two and then was faced
with the problem of new federal laws
that decreed: cigars must be sold from
the box they came in to be sure the
tobacco tax per box was paid. This reg-
ulation pushed the machine over to the
New Haven Car Register Company, also located in New Haven, and they took over manufacturing of the Elm City
as their own. They had pull and got approval from the Internal Revenue Department to sell individual cigars, as
long as the taxed box brand label was visible. Whether any other cigar companies were allowed to do the same
is not known.
An estimated 8 or 9 Elm Cities still exist in various conditions. New Haven Car Register Co., New Haven, Conn.
Patented Dec. 17, 1889. 30"h.
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