Snuff
Somebody said snuff?
It was quite the habit among older girls and younger lower to middle class rural women in the mid-19th century South, and some on this board will remember their grandmothers or great-grandmothers sporting a dipping stick out of the side of their mouth, and toting a spit jar around. Of course, we're not talking Copenhagen here, but fine dry Garrett snuff and other brands. I haven't found much mention of men partaking of snuff--they seemed to prefer chaws and pipes and segars.
If anyone is interested in tobacco habits among Southern women, please see my article on "The Social Dip" at
Just this week I located a new Civil War letter from the southeast corner of Smith County, Texas (my home county), written by an aristocratic young man who had refugeed in from West Feliciana Parish, La. The letter is dated August 9th, 1864--
"Brother is making a good deal of tobacco, this year, he is now taking the leaves off the stems, and getting ready to press some of it, he can sell that, at an enormous price, it is now selling at twenty dollars per pound, both men and women use it, it is perfectly disgusting to see the women take snuff, they have a box full all the time and use it with a stick they dip this stick in the box and then put it in their mouths, several have offered their boxes to Sarah, and I have seen the young girls at school use it."
Vicki Betts
vbetts@gower.net
Somebody said snuff?
It was quite the habit among older girls and younger lower to middle class rural women in the mid-19th century South, and some on this board will remember their grandmothers or great-grandmothers sporting a dipping stick out of the side of their mouth, and toting a spit jar around. Of course, we're not talking Copenhagen here, but fine dry Garrett snuff and other brands. I haven't found much mention of men partaking of snuff--they seemed to prefer chaws and pipes and segars.
If anyone is interested in tobacco habits among Southern women, please see my article on "The Social Dip" at
Just this week I located a new Civil War letter from the southeast corner of Smith County, Texas (my home county), written by an aristocratic young man who had refugeed in from West Feliciana Parish, La. The letter is dated August 9th, 1864--
"Brother is making a good deal of tobacco, this year, he is now taking the leaves off the stems, and getting ready to press some of it, he can sell that, at an enormous price, it is now selling at twenty dollars per pound, both men and women use it, it is perfectly disgusting to see the women take snuff, they have a box full all the time and use it with a stick they dip this stick in the box and then put it in their mouths, several have offered their boxes to Sarah, and I have seen the young girls at school use it."
Vicki Betts
vbetts@gower.net
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