Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The History of Tobacco
Episode Date: March 3, 2026When Christopher Columbus arrived in the Americas, members of his crew observed the Taíno people offering them dried leaves as gifts. They had no clue why, but they soon found out that native people... smoked the burning leaves, and when they brought these leaves back to Europe, it became a sensation. It created a demand for the product, which lasted for centuries and defined entire economies, until research in the 20th century found that it was doing far more harm than good. Learn more about tobacco and how it shaped the world on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/Ds7Rx7jvPJ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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When Christopher Columbus arrived in the Americas, members of his crew observed the native people they met, offering them dried leaves as gifts.
They had no clue why, but they soon found out that the native people smoked the burning leaves, and when they brought these leaves back to Europe, it became a sensation.
It created demand for a product which lasted for centuries and defined entire economies, until research in the 20th century found that it was doing far more harm than good.
Learn more about tobacco and how it shaped the world on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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Before I begin, let me make a disclaimer. I am in no way advocating tobacco use.
I personally have never smoked anything in my life, not even once, and I don't even like
being around people while they're smoking. It's a horrible habit, and the best thing you can do
is never start. That being said, we also have to be intellectually honest and recognize the importance
this product has had economically and politically over the last 500 years.
That recognition is the purpose of the episode.
With that, let's start with the actual plant itself.
Tobacco refers primarily to plants in the genus, Nicosciana,
a member of the Nightshade family, which also includes potatoes and tomatoes.
The two most historically significant cultivated species are Nicosiana Tobacum and Nicosciana Rustica.
Nicosiana Tobacum, the milder and more commercially important species, is native to the Americas and is now grown worldwide.
Tobacco's significant stems from a chemical called nicotine, a natural defense mechanism the plant evolved to ward off herbivores.
Nicotine is what makes tobacco unique in human history.
It's rapidly absorbed through the lungs, mouth, or nasal membranes, and acts on the central nervous system by binding to nicotinic acetyl-clomene receptors.
The result is a combination of stimulation and relaxation, heightened alertness, and critically,
dependence. Few plants are as easily grown, psychoactively potent, and highly addictive.
Archaeological and botanical evidence suggests that tobacco has been used by human beings
for at least 8 to 10,000 years, and some estimates push that figure considerably higher.
The plant was cultivated and used across an extraordinarily wide swath of the Americas,
from the southern reaches of South America to the far north of Canada,
and its uses were as varied as the cultures that used it.
For most indigenous peoples, tobacco was not simply a recreational substance,
but a profoundly sacred plant.
It occupied a central role in spiritual, ceremonial, and medicinal life.
Among many nations in the eastern woodlands,
tobacco was considered a gift from the creator
and served as the primary medium of communication between humans and the spirit world.
When offered in prayer, burned in sacrifice, or left at a site of spiritual significance,
tobacco was believed to carry human intentions upward to the divine.
It was used in pipe ceremonies to seal agreements, form alliances, welcome guests,
and mark significant transitions in community life.
The shared pipe, often called a calumet or peace pipe by Europeans, represented a binding covenant.
To smoke together was to invoke the sacred as a witness to one's
word. Tobacco leaves also had reported medical uses, applied topically, chewed, or consumed as
infusions to treat pain, parasites, and respiratory conditions. In South America, shamanistic uses
of tobacco was particularly intense. Among Amazonian peoples, shamans consumed tobacco in concentrated
forms, as snuff blown through tubes, as liquid drunk through the nose, or as thick pace
absorbed through the skin, in doses far exceeding anything European smokers would later encounter.
Tobacco in the Amazon wasn't merely recreational. It was, in the words of anthropologist
Johannes Vilbert, a master plant around which entire cosmologies were organized.
When Christopher Columbus arrived in the Caribbean in October of 1492, members of his crew
observed the local Taino people offering them dried leaves as gifts. On November 2, 2nd,
of that year, two of Columbus's men, Rodrigo de Heres and Louis de Torres, became the first Europeans
recorded to have witnessed tobacco smoking when they encountered people in Cuba, inhaling smoke through a
Y-shaped tube called a tobacco. A word that likely referred to the implement rather than the plant
itself and became through linguistic migration the name of the substance.
Rodrigo de Heres returned to Spain as an enthusiastic smoker,
reportedly frightening his neighbors with the smoke issuing from his mouth and nose,
and was briefly imprisoned by the Inquisition on the suspicion that only the devil could grant a man the power to exhale smoke.
European attitudes towards tobacco shifted rapidly from curiosity to enthusiasm.
The Spanish and Portuguese explorers who followed Columbus brought tobacco seeds and leaves back to Europe in the early 16th.
century, and the plant was initially cultivated in Iberian gardens as a botanical curiosity
and soon as medicine. The French diplomat Jean Niccoe, whose name is immortalized in nicotine,
is often credited with popularizing tobacco in France in the 1560s, reportedly sending
powdered tobacco to Catherine Domenici as a remedy for her son's migraines. By the late 16th century,
smoking, snuffing, and chewing tobacco had become fashionable across Spain, France, England,
in the Ottoman Empire. However, not everyone was pleased. King James I of England and James
the 6th of Scotland, same person, published his famous treatise, a counterblast to tobacco in 1604,
a vehement denunciation that describes smoking as, quote, a custom loathsome to the eye,
hateful to the nose, harmful to the brain, and dangerous to the lungs.
The plant that would eventually transform colonial America was not the indigenous tobacco of
Eastern North America, which was milder and less commercially appealing, but Nicosciana Tobacum,
the species found in South America.
The turning point came in 1612 when John Rolf, the husband of Pocahontas, successfully cultivated
a crop of Nicosciana tobacco in the struggling Virginia colony at Jamestown, having obtained seeds
from the Spanish Caribbean.
The first commercial shipment of Virginia tobacco reached England in 1614, and the response was enthusiastic.
By 1617, Virginia was exporting some 20,000 pounds of tobacco annually.
By 1620, that figure had grown to 40,000 pounds, and it continued to grow exponentially.
Tobacco didn't merely save the Virginia colony, it ended up defining it.
The plants shaped the very landscape and social structure of the entire.
Chesapeake region. Because tobacco exhaust soil rapidly, planters were constantly needing
new land, driving an aggressive expansion westward into indigenous territories. Tobacco
cultivation was labor intensive, requiring careful tending throughout the growing season,
skilled harvesting, and meticulous curing, all of which demanded a large, reliable workforce.
This demand was initially met by indentured servants from England, Scotland, and Ireland.
But as the 17th century progressed, planters increasingly turned to enslaved Africans whose labor was permanent.
The tobacco economy was thus one of the primary engines driving the expansion of African slavery in British North America.
By the 18th century, the great plantation houses of Virginia, the Carter's, the Lees, the Washington's, the Jeffersons, were built on tobacco wealth,
and the planter class that emerged from this economy would play a decisive role in shaping American places.
cultural culture, including the revolution against Britain. The tobacco trade also created persistent
debts amongst Virginia planters who purchased luxury goods on credit from British merchants
against future harvests, a cycle that generated genuine resentment to the colonial economic system
and contributed to revolutionary sentiment. Even as tobacco was being entrenched in North America,
it was spreading across the globe at remarkable speed. The mechanisms of the spread were many.
Portuguese and Spanish merchants carried tobacco seeds and the smoking habit to Africa, India,
the Middle East, and East Asia in the 16th and 17th centuries.
Ottoman soldiers encountered tobacco and brought it home.
Russian traders spread it eastward across Siberia.
Japanese merchants received it from the Portuguese in the 1540s and 1550s,
and within a generation, it had spread across the archipelago despite repeated prohibitions.
The speed with which tobacco conquered the world was unprecedented among agricultural products in world history.
By 1620, a mere 125 years after Columbus's first voyage, tobacco was already being grown and smoked
in virtually every inhabited region on planet Earth.
Despite the speed at which tobacco spread, it wasn't consumed like it is today.
It was mostly spoke in pipes or via cigars, which were fully rolled tobacco leaves.
The cigarette fundamentally altered tobacco consumption.
While hand-wold cigarettes had long been present in Spain and the Americas,
their widespread adoption in the West was significantly spurred by soldiers
returning from the Crimean War in the 1850s.
These soldiers brought back the Turkish and Egyptian practice of smoking finely cut tobacco
wrapped in paper.
The decisive technological development came in 1880,
when James Albert Bonsack, a young Virginia inventor,
patented a mechanical cigarette-rolling machine capable of producing
120,000 cigarettes per day, effectively replacing 48 hand-rollers.
James Buchanan Duke of Durham, North Carolina recognized the machine's implications immediately,
licensed it, and began an aggressive campaign of price-cutting, advertising, and corporate consolidation.
In 1890, he merged several competitors into the American Tobacco Company,
a trust that controlled roughly four-fifths of the American tobacco business.
Though the Sherman Antitrust Act forced the trust dissolution in 1911,
the four successor companies remained enormously powerful and continued to dominate the industry.
The invention of the industrially manufactured cigarette dramatically increased tobacco consumption.
Mechanization slash production costs making cigarettes affordable to the working class.
The cigarette was portable, quickly consumed,
could be smoked in context where a pipe was impractical.
The inhalation of cigarette smoke, which was more easily accomplished than with cigar or
pipe smoke due to the milder curing of cigarette tobacco, delivered nicotine to the bloodstream
more rapidly and more efficiently, making cigarettes more addictive.
The low-cost and industrial production of cigarettes created the chain smoker, which was
something that had never really existed before.
The relationship between tobacco and disease had been.
observed sporadically for centuries.
Johann Michael Alassar noted the connection between pipe smoking and lip cancer in 1795,
and scattered clinical observations accumulated throughout the 19th century.
But the scientific case against tobacco was constructed methodically only in the mid-20th century.
The pivotal studies were published in 1950 when Ernst Winder and Evhart-Sgram in the United
States and Richard Dahl and A. Bradford Hill in Britain simultaneously published landmark
epidemiological research, demonstrating a very strong statistical link between cigarette smoking and lung
cancer. The American Surgeon General's report of January 1964 constituted a turning point in public
understanding. The report, which reviewed more than 7,000 studies, concluded unequivocally
that cigarette smoking caused lung cancer in men, was strongly associated with lung cancer in women,
caused chronic bronchitis, and was associated with numerous other diseases.
The cultural impact was immediate and profound, though it would take decades for that impact to
fully manifest in behavioral changes. Warning labels appeared on cigarette packets in 1965.
Broadcast advertising for cigarettes was banned in the United States in 1971.
Restrictions on smoking and public places began to multiply from the 1970s onward.
The legal and regulatory pressure on the tobacco industry escalated dramatically in the final
decades of the 20th century. In the United States and other high-income countries, the decline of
smoking has been substantial. American adult smoking prevalence fell from roughly 42% in 1965 to about 12 to 14%
by the early 2020s. Similar declines were recorded in the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and much of
Western Europe. The reduction in smoking over the last several decades has had one of the largest
positive impacts on public health in modern history. It is not an exaggeration to say that the
declines in smoking have saved tens of millions of lives. Few plants have shaped human history as
profoundly as tobacco. It financed the founding of the American Republic while simultaneously supporting
the institution of slavery. It created fortunes that funded universities, museums, and hospitals,
and it generated tax revenues that built roads, schools, and welfare states.
And it killed a lot of people. A lot of people. By conservative estimates, approximately 100 million
people in just the 20th century alone were killed by tobacco use. Despite the sharp declines in the
West, an estimated 1.2 billion people still use tobacco products around the world today. That is almost
one in five people over the age of 15. Less than what it was 25 years ago, but still, a
staggering amount.
What started as a plant used ritually by Native Americans has become one of the deadliest products
in all of human history.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
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