The Most Expensive Canadian Cigarette Packs at Auction
From $55,000 Tobacco Tins to Pre-1915 Rarities — The Surprising World of Tobacco Collecting
🏷️🚬 You probably toss your empty cigarette pack in the trash without a second thought. But some rare Canadian cigarette packages have sold for tens of thousands of dollars at auction — and one tobacco tin even fetched $55,000 CAD. From pre-1915 tax stamp packs to baseball-themed chewing tobacco tins hidden in walls for a century, Canadian tobacco memorabilia has a passionate (and deep-pocketed) collector base. This article explores the most expensive Canadian cigarette packs and tobacco-related collectibles ever sold, what makes them valuable, and how you can start collecting.
🥇 The Record Holder: “3 Strikes” Chewing Tobacco Tin — $55,000 CAD
Sale date: June 2025
Sold by: Miller & Miller Auctions
Estimate: $9,000-12,000 CAD
Final price: $55,000 CAD (more than 5x estimate) [citation:4]
📦 The Story:
A couple renovating their bathroom in New Hamburg, Ontario, found a small red-and-yellow tin hidden in the wall cavity. The tin was a “3 Strikes” brand chewing tobacco container, produced around 1900 by the Erie Tobacco Company in Kingsville, Ontario — located just 200 metres from the couple’s home [citation:4].
The tin features a vintage baseball player illustration, making it a “cross-collectible” — appealing to both tobacco memorabilia collectors and baseball memorabilia enthusiasts. Only seven such tins are known to exist worldwide [citation:4].
🏆 The Buyer:
The winning bidder was Glen Paruk, a 75-year-old Vancouver lawyer known in collecting circles as “TinCanada.” Paruk had owned a “3 Strikes” tin 30 years earlier but sold it to finance a house. He told the auctioneer: “I never thought I’d see another one” [citation:4]. His wife’s reaction to the $55,000 purchase? “A very, very thorough frown” [citation:4].
🚬 Rare Cigarette Packs — The 1915 Collection
Lot of 3 Imperial Tobacco Packs (Millbank, Guinea Gold, Rex) — 1915
Estimated value: Moderate to high (specific sale price undisclosed)
Era: 1915
Manufacturer: Imperial Tobacco Co. of Canada, Montreal
📦 What They Are:
This lot included three empty cigarette packs from 1915, all manufactured by Imperial Tobacco Canada [citation:8]:
- Millbank Cigarettes — featuring graphics of the Canadian Pay and Record Office, 7 Millbank, London, England
- Guinea Gold Cigarettes — “Sweet & Fragrant” Ogden’s brand
- Rex Virginia Straight Cut Cigarettes — 10-cigarette pack with intact tax label
These packs were found in an attic with several others containing tobacco cards. All are empty (display pieces) with foam blocks inside to retain shape [citation:8].
Millbank Straight Cut Cigarettes — 1920s-30s
Sold for: $7.50 CAD (plus buyer’s premium)
Auction: 2025
Location: Prince Albert, Saskatchewan [citation:7]
📦 Notes:
This single pack sold at a smaller regional auction for just $7.50 — showing that not all vintage packs are valuable. Condition, rarity, and brand recognition matter enormously.
📦 Mid-Century Collectibles: Player’s Cigarettes (1961)
Canadian Player’s Cigarettes Package — 1961 “White Tippin” Rare
Sold for: $17.00 CAD [citation:1]
Condition: Used (display)
Location: Abbotsford, British Columbia
💡 What Makes It Collectible:
- “White Tippin” variant — different from standard Player’s packaging
- 1961 vintage — early 1960s packaging is increasingly scarce
- Canadian provenance — manufactured in Canada, not imported
While $17 is modest compared to the $55,000 record, it shows that mid-century Canadian cigarette packs have a collector market. Pristine, unopened examples would sell for significantly more.
⚾ The Ultimate Baseball Collectible: 1897 “Base Ball” Cigar Box
B.F. Honsinger “Base Ball” Cigars Wooden Box — 1897
Estimated value: Museum-grade (specific sale price NFS — held in collections)
Manufacturer: B.F. Honsinger Company, St. Thomas, Ontario
Printer: London Ptg. & Litho. Co.
⚾ The Rarity:
This extremely rare cigar box features an unusual game-in-progress baseball scene (most baseball cigar boxes featured still photos of players). The Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau, Quebec, and the Elgin County Museum in St. Thomas both hold examples of this box — a testament to its historical significance [citation:2].
Why so rare? The Canadian market for cigars was substantially smaller than the U.S. market. This meant smaller production runs, and most boxes were discarded after the cigars were used [citation:2].
📜 Historical Context:
B.F. Honsinger was a prominent tobacconist in St. Thomas, best known for his “Owl Brand” cigars. Historical records mention Honsinger hitting a home run in a local baseball game in the late 1890s — likely the inspiration for this “Base Ball” brand [citation:2].
🏛️ The World’s Largest Collection — At the Canadian Museum of Civilization
The Canadian Museum of Civilization (now the Canadian Museum of History) holds the world’s largest collection of Canadian cigar boxes, with over 400 boxes in its collection [citation:5].
📦 Between 1883 and 1930:
- Over 1,500 cigar factories operated across Canada
- Manufacturers competed fiercely by producing colourfully illustrated boxes to grab customers’ attention
- Artists were hired to adorn boxes with lithographs featuring current events, celebrities, politicians, beautiful women, sporting men, and cartoons [citation:5]
The museum’s exhibition “Canada in a Box: Cigar Containers that Store Our Past 1883–1935” features 180 cigar boxes depicting subjects including Jumbo the elephant, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, the Yukon Gold Rush, and a character named “Jack Canuck” [citation:5].
🪒 Unusual Collectible: “Toothpick” Brand Cigars
Harold E. Cooke & Co. “Toothpick” Brand Cigar Box — 1922-1924
Manufacturer: Harold E. Cooke & Co., Owen Sound, Ontario
Printer: Crown Litho. Co. Limited, Ottawa
Collection: Grey Roots Museum [citation:10]
📜 Description:
This wooden cigar box once held 50 “Toothpick” brand cigars. The label features King George in the design, and the inner label shows a cigar and two toothpicks resting on an ashtray [citation:10].
The H.E. Cooke & Co. factory was established in the 1890s and went out of business between 1924-1926. Mr. Cooke died in 1935 [citation:10].
📊 What Makes a Vintage Cigarette Pack Valuable?
| Factor | Low Value | High Value |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 1960s+ | Pre-1915 (tax stamp era) |
| Rarity | Mass-produced | Only 7 known to exist |
| Condition | Torn, faded, crushed | Near-mint, unopened |
| Subject matter | Generic design | Baseball, celebrities, historical events |
| Complete vs. empty | Empty pack (with insert) | Unopened with cigarettes intact |
🔍 How to Start Collecting Canadian Tobacco Memorabilia
- Check your attic and walls — The $55,000 “3 Strikes” tin was found during a bathroom renovation [citation:4]. Old houses often hide treasures.
- Look for pre-1915 tax stamps — Packs with intact Canadian tax stamps from 1915 or earlier are most valuable [citation:8].
- Focus on baseball or sports themes — Cross-collectibles attract multiple bidding pools.
- Preserve empty packs with foam inserts — Don’t flatten them; keep the shape intact using foam blocks [citation:8].
- Check eBay and WorthPoint — Recent sales like the 1961 Player’s pack ($17) show active but modest markets for mid-century items [citation:1].
- Join collecting forums — “TinCanada” (the $55,000 buyer) has been collecting since 1978 [citation:4]. Knowledge is key.
💰 Notable Canadian Tobacco Auction Results
| Item | Era | Sale Price (CAD) | Year Sold |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 Strikes chewing tobacco tin | ~1900 | $55,000 | 2025 [citation:4] |
| Imperial Tobacco lot (3 packs) | 1915 | Not disclosed (high) | Pre-2020 [citation:8] |
| Player’s “White Tippin” pack | 1961 | $17 | 2024 [citation:1] |
| Millbank Straight Cut pack | 1920s-30s | $7.50 (+premium) | 2025 [citation:7] |
📌 Honest Summary
What’s the most expensive Canadian cigarette item ever sold? A “3 Strikes” chewing tobacco tin from ~1900 — $55,000 CAD in June 2025 [citation:4].
Are vintage cigarette packs valuable? Some are — but most aren’t. Pre-1915 packs with intact tax stamps, rare brands, or baseball themes can fetch hundreds or thousands. Mid-century packs (1960s) typically sell for under $20 [citation:1][citation:8].
What makes a pack valuable? Age, rarity, condition, and subject matter. The “3 Strikes” tin combined all four: only 7 known, near-mint, baseball theme, and over 120 years old [citation:4].
The bottom line: Your everyday cigarette pack isn’t worth anything. But if you find an unopened pre-1915 pack in pristine condition — especially with baseball imagery — you might be sitting on a collector’s dream.
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🛒 Shop Native Cigarettes →Sources: Miller & Miller Auctions (3 Strikes tin) ; WorthPoint (1915 Imperial Tobacco packs) ; eBay (1961 Player’s pack) ; Canadian Museum of History collection ; Grey Roots Museum (Toothpick brand).