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Engraving of the Allen & Ginter warehouses in Richmond, Virginia, from an 1886 promotional book Virginia Brights cigarette box by Allen & Ginter, c. 1888. The firm of Allen & Ginter, born around 1880, was the rebranding of John F. Allen & Company, a partnership formed about eight years earlier by John F. Allen and Lewis Ginter.
In 1872, Ginter joined John F. Allen to form John F. Allen & Company, which manufactured chewing tobacco, pipe tobacco and a small line of cigars. Shortly after, at Ginter's urging, the firm was the first to manufacture cigarettes with mild, 100% domestic bright leaf tobacco, grown in the Virginia and North Carolina piedmont, rather than with ...
[10] [11] The five constituent companies of American Tobacco: W. Duke & Sons, Allen & Ginter, W.S. Kimball & Company, Kinney Tobacco, and Goodwin & Company – produced 90% of the cigarettes made in 1890, the first year the American Tobacco Company was listed on the NYSE. Within two decades of its founding, the American Tobacco company absorbed ...
Topps also produces cards under the brand names Allen & Ginter [2] and Bowman. [3] In the 2010s, Topps was the only baseball card manufacturer with a license with Major League Baseball. [5] Following the loss of that license to Fanatics, Inc. in 2022, Fanatics acquired Topps in the same year.
Arents was born in 1875 to a wealthy family in America. His great uncle Lewis Ginter and father also named George Arents were founders of the Allen & Ginter Tobacco Company, which later became the American Tobacco Company.
Actors and Actresses (Allen & Ginter, c. 1890) AIDS Awareness (Eclipse, 1993) Aircraft (Godfrey Phillips, 1934) Airplane Spotter Playing Cards – World War II (U.S. Games Systems, Inc., 1990) Americana (Donruss, 2008) American Heritage (Topps, 2008–09) American Heritage: Heroes Edition (Topps, 2009)
Beginning in 1879, cards depicting actresses, baseball players, Native American chiefs, boxers, national flags, or wild animals were issued by the U.S.-based Allen & Ginter tobacco company. These are considered to be some of the first cigarette cards. [2] Other tobacco companies such as Goodwin & Co. soon followed suit. They first emerged in ...
Allen and Ginter had ordered a Bonsack machine but quickly rejected it, eager to save their prize money and fearing that consumers would balk at a machine-made product. [ 9 ] Bonsack's partnership with tobacco industrialist James Buchanan Duke made full commercial use of the invention, which could produce 120,000 cigarettes in 10 hours, [ 7 ...