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Famous Pipe Smokers and their Preferred Tobacco (Smokingpipes)

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Pssh. Half of these people I’ve never heard of. Yet no mention of Hemingway (interesting giving the articles slant towards authors), Einstein, or possibly the world’s most famous pipe smoker, Hugh M Hefner?
 
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Pssh. Half of these people I’ve never heard of. Yet no mention of Hemingway (interesting giving the articles slant towards authors), Einstein, or possibly the world’s most famous pipe smoker, Hugh M Hefner?
I'd guess Kiser intentionally kept his concentration to lesser known pipers.
Well known pipe/cigar smokers (e.g. Einstein, Clemens, Nat King Cole) have been covered in detail ad nauseam.
 
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I'd guess Kiser intentionally kept his concentration to lesser known pipers.
Well known pipe/cigar smokers (e.g. Einstein, Clemens, Nat King Cole) have been covered in detail ad nauseam.
Sorry, I didn’t mean to get all feisty. I was actually curious what type of pipe/tobacco Hemingway preferred, something I have searched for in the past and always come up short.

fun fact: although an iconic pipe smoker, Hemingway actually wasn’t much of a cigar smoker despite his ties to Cuba, something the Fuentes would probably rather leave in the closet…. :LOL:
 
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fun fact: although an iconic pipe smoker, Hemingway actually wasn’t much of a cigar smoker despite his ties to Cuba, something the Fuentes would probably rather leave in the closet…. :LOL:
Interesting.
Also, stories are conflicted Ernest actually smoked a pipe.
The two well known pictures (one clenched, the other hand holding) were for photo purposes only. Supposedly.
Though, there are many documented instances of Hemingway receiving pipe tobacco as gifts.
 
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I've never seen an official complete list, though one would be helpful.
Here's a quick copy/paste I found on several different forums.
Some entries were contradicted. For those I went with the challenger.

Aaron Spelling - Mixture#79
Albert Einstein smoked Revelation.
Alfred Hitchcock smoked Dunhill blends.
Basil Rathbone smoked what is now known as Pipeworks & Wilke's #515.
Benny Hill liked Gondor.
Bing Crosby smoked various blends, but we know he smoked Hayward Mixture, as seen in a photo on a book about him.
Carl Jung smoked Granger.
Charles Dickens loved his Syrian Latakia.
Charles Nelson Reilly smoked Mick McQuaid Ready Rubbed and Three Star Blue.
Chesty Puller smoked Prince Albert according to the author of his biography.
Clement Attlee - Will's Cut Golden Bar
Edward G. Robinson smoked a variety of blends, including the one named after him and Dunhill blends.
Fred MacMurray supposedly enjoyed Kramers Father Dempsey
Gen. MacArthur smoked Harkness D and F, the House of Windsor blends, and "whatever was available at the PX."
Gerald Ford was reported to have smoked Field & Stream and Walnut. A resent book says Ford's tobacco of choice was Edgeworth Ready Rubbed.
Groucho Marx lent his name to ERR ads, but his son said Groucho smoked a Dunhill blend.
Hugh Hefner is known for smoking Mixture #79, but his right hand man (who had started working for Hefner in 1960) told me in 2003 that Hefner preferred Sail Yellow, and smoked mainly for show.
J M Barrie - Craven A ("the Arcadia"), later, John Cottons 1&2
Robert Oppenheimer Middleton's Walnut.
Shelby Foote smoked Edward G. Robinson's Pipe Bend for a while, until he decided to cut it by adding a third of various OTCs to it. However, the last blend he was known to smoke was two parts EGR and one part Barking Dog.
Stalin smoked Edgeworth Ready Rubbed.
Tony Benn - St. Bruno
Walter Cronkite enjoyed Wilke No. 72, Sail Green and various Dunhill English blends.
William Conrad smoked a lot of Dunhill blends, but apparently settled on Amphora Full Aroma.
 
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I've never seen an official complete list, though one would be helpful.
Here's a quick copy/paste I found on several different forums.
Some entries were contradicted. For those I went with the challenger.

Aaron Spelling - Mixture#79
Albert Einstein smoked Revelation.
Alfred Hitchcock smoked Dunhill blends.
Basil Rathbone smoked what is now known as Pipeworks & Wilke's #515.
Benny Hill liked Gondor.
Bing Crosby smoked various blends, but we know he smoked Hayward Mixture, as seen in a photo on a book about him.
Carl Jung smoked Granger.
Charles Dickens loved his Syrian Latakia.
Charles Nelson Reilly smoked Mick McQuaid Ready Rubbed and Three Star Blue.
Chesty Puller smoked Prince Albert according to the author of his biography.
Clement Attlee - Will's Cut Golden Bar
Edward G. Robinson smoked a variety of blends, including the one named after him and Dunhill blends.
Fred MacMurray supposedly enjoyed Kramers Father Dempsey
Gen. MacArthur smoked Harkness D and F, the House of Windsor blends, and "whatever was available at the PX."
Gerald Ford was reported to have smoked Field & Stream and Walnut. A resent book says Ford's tobacco of choice was Edgeworth Ready Rubbed.
Groucho Marx lent his name to ERR ads, but his son said Groucho smoked a Dunhill blend.
Hugh Hefner is known for smoking Mixture #79, but his right hand man (who had started working for Hefner in 1960) told me in 2003 that Hefner preferred Sail Yellow, and smoked mainly for show.
J M Barrie - Craven A ("the Arcadia"), later, John Cottons 1&2
Robert Oppenheimer Middleton's Walnut.
Shelby Foote smoked Edward G. Robinson's Pipe Bend for a while, until he decided to cut it by adding a third of various OTCs to it. However, the last blend he was known to smoke was two parts EGR and one part Barking Dog.
Stalin smoked Edgeworth Ready Rubbed.
Tony Benn - St. Bruno
Walter Cronkite enjoyed Wilke No. 72, Sail Green and various Dunhill English blends.
William Conrad smoked a lot of Dunhill blends, but apparently settled on Amphora Full Aroma.


Charles Dickens loved his Syrian Latakia. This is another huge loss to the pipe smoking community.
 
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Charles Dickens loved his Syrian Latakia. This is another huge loss to the pipe smoking community.
Sad indeed.
Faintly remember reading it was their unique mix of hard to find wood species mixed with spices that produced a special flavored smoke that put their Latakia's taste above all competitors.
 
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