Description
Fine-cut tobacco packed in loose-form is known as rolling tobacco. It’s used for both RYO ‘roll-your-own’ cigarettes (made using rolling papers) and MYO ‘make-your-own’ cigarettes (made by filling a filter tube with cut tobacco). It’s arguably the most versatile of all JTI traditional tobacco products. Rolling tobacco was once considered a lower quality product. Today it’s made to the same considered, high standard as cigarettes. The quality of fine-cut tobacco is sustained by essential additives such as humectants. Get the same taste as Export A Medium smokes in a RYO format! 100g plastic tub. Note: these are now shipping in plain packaging with graphic warning labels.
About Macdonald Rolling Tobacco
The Macdonald Tobacco Company was founded in 1858 by William Christopher Macdonald and his brother Augustine. While the use of tobacco products was growing in popularity, the American Civil War afforded the fledgling company an opportunity that brought enormous financial success leading to Macdonald Brothers, emerging the preeminent tobacco company in the field in Canada.[3] Since the northern U.S. faced a tobacco shortage due to the Civil War conflict (tobacco growers were located in the south), MacDonald Tobacco, a Canadian company, bought tobacco leaf from the Southern United States and transported it via ocean cargo vessels to Montreal. MacDonald Tobacco further processed it into a finished product, then selling to the northern U.S. tobacco-starved market.
By the early 1870s, the company acquired over 500 employees. During this period, William Macdonald bought out his brother’s stock position.
Deeply proud of his Scottish heritage, William C. Macdonald imprinted a Scottish Lass on the product packaging for nearly a century. Macdonald actually disliked tobacco, and upon his death in 1917, he bequeathed his company to Walter and Howard Stewart, the two sons of company manager David Stewart. Walter Stewart, now president, replaced pipe tobacco with “roll your own” cigarettes. In 1922, packaged cigarette production was added, quickly becoming the mainstay of the business. During the 1960s, David M. Stewart (1920–1984), expanded the business into the manufacturing of cigars.
The Macdonald Tobacco company remained in the Stewart family until 1974 when David M. Stewart sold it to the American tobacco giant R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company who, in light of the uncertainty created by the Quebec sovereignty movement, relocated the head office to Toronto, Ontario. Most of those assets were later purchased by Japan Tobacco.
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