The First Cigarette Factories of Canada
From Montreal to Hamilton to Quebec City — The Birth of an Industry (1862–1899)
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🏭 Long before plain packaging and health warnings, Canada’s first cigarette factories were rising in Montreal, Hamilton, and Quebec City. The late 19th century saw the birth of a major manufacturing industry that would eventually become Imperial Tobacco Canada. From Samuel Davis’s pioneering cigar factory in 1862 to Rock City Tobacco’s founding in 1899, this article traces the origins of Canada’s first cigarette factories — and the visionaries who built them.
Samuel Davis opens a small tobacco manufacturing shop in Montreal — Canada’s first major cigar factory .
George Tuckett and John Billings establish the Tuckett & Billings Tobacco Manufactory in Hamilton [citation:1].
Davis builds a large seven-storey factory on Rue Côté in Montreal — the largest cigar factory in Canada [citation:2].
Tuckett moves to a five-storey plant on Queen Street in Hamilton, eventually employing over 600 workers [citation:7].
Tuckett introduces cigarettes to his product line — among the first in Canada [citation:1].
The Drouin brothers found Rock City Tobacco in Quebec City [citation:3].
Imperial Tobacco Company of Canada is formed, consolidating the major players [citation:8].
Samuel Davis (1862) — Montreal’s Cigar King
Location: 987 Rue Côté, Montreal (originally at smaller location, moved to Rue Côté in 1883-84) [citation:2].
Founded: 1862 [citation:4].
Founder: Samuel Davis (1834–1895), a London-born immigrant who learned the tobacco trade in New York [citation:4].
Samuel Davis arrived in Montreal in 1862 and opened a small tobacco manufacturing shop. At the time, Montreal was quickly becoming the cigar capital of Canada, producing nearly four times the combined output of Toronto and Hamilton [citation:4]. Davis’s timing was perfect.
📊 The Rise of a Giant
- 🏆 1867: First prize at the universal exposition in Paris — international recognition for Canadian cigars [citation:4].
- 🏅 1876: First prize for cigars at the Philadelphia Centennial International Exhibition [citation:4].
- 👥 1888: Employed 457 people — the average Montreal cigar factory employed only 74 [citation:4].
- 📈 1894: Average of 600 people a year laboured in Davis’s seven-storey factory, equipped with steam elevators and an internal telephone system [citation:4].
- 🔝 Market position: S. Davis and Sons was the largest cigar manufacturer in Canada [citation:4].
👑 The “Tobacco King” Legacy
Davis’s son, Mortimer Barnett Davis (1866–1928), would later become president of the Imperial Tobacco Company of Canada and was famously nicknamed the “Tobacco King” [citation:2]. In 1895, the company was absorbed into the American Tobacco Company, with Samuel Davis becoming a major shareholder [citation:4].
Tuckett & Billings (1866) — Hamilton’s Progressive Pioneer
Location: Initially on King Street, Hamilton; moved to Queen Street (near York Boulevard) in 1890 [citation:7].
Founded: 1866 [citation:1].
Founder: George E. Tuckett (learned cigarmaking in Alfred Quimby’s local shop) [citation:7].
George Tuckett learned cigarmaking in the local shop of Alfred Quimby, where he became a member of the local cigarmakers’ union. In 1866, he teamed up with bookkeeper John Billings to start a tobacco plant. Their initials became the trademark for the popular “T.&B. Tobacco” [citation:1].
📊 Factory Growth
- 🏭 1890: Moved to a large new plant on Queen Street near York Boulevard [citation:1].
- 👥 Employment peak: At times employed over 600 men and women [citation:1].
- 🚬 1891: Cigarettes were added to the product line — among the first Canadian factories to produce cigarettes [citation:1].
- 🌍 International reach: The T.&B. cigarette brand spread to England, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand [citation:8].
⭐ A Progressive Employer
George Tuckett was exceptional among 19th-century employers [citation:1]:
- ⏰ Nine-hour day: While other factories worked 10-12 hour shifts, Tuckett’s employees worked nine hours [citation:1].
- 💰 Merit-based bonuses: Awarded bonuses on the basis of merit [citation:1].
- 🚫 No fining system: Shunned the strict system of fining common in most other tobacco factories [citation:1].
- 🏠 Home ownership: Gave long-time employees deeds to city lots and enough ready cash to build their own homes [citation:1].
- 🤝 Union arbitrator: The trust he gained was evident when he was invited to help arbitrate an 1883 dispute between two rival cigarmakers’ unions [citation:1].
Rock City Tobacco (1899) — Quebec City’s French-Canadian Factory
Location: Saint-Roch district, Quebec City [citation:3].
Founded: 1899 [citation:3].
Founders: The Drouin brothers (Olivier-Napoléon, Joseph) and Joseph Picard [citation:6].
Rock City Tobacco was founded in 1899 by the Drouin brothers — one of whom, Olivier-Napoléon Drouin, would become mayor of Quebec City in 1910 — along with their cousin and business partner Joseph Picard [citation:6]. The company’s name refers to Cap Diamant (the rocky promontory of Quebec City) [citation:3].
📊 Factory Highlights
- 📈 Prosperity: Rock City became one of the largest tobacco product manufacturers in Canada, with assets in Ontario and elsewhere in Quebec [citation:3].
- 👥 Employment: At its peak, the factory employed approximately 500 people, mostly women, with about 20 sales representatives across Canada [citation:3].
- 🔄 Adaptation: The company followed market trends, successfully transitioning from chewing tobacco to cigarettes [citation:6].
- 🏛️ Longevity: Remained in the Drouin family until the 1960s [citation:3].
- 🏭 Current owner: Today, the factory is owned by RBH (Rothmans, Benson & Hedges) [citation:6].
Other Notable 19th Century Manufacturers
- 🔴 Jean-Marie Fortier, Montreal: Second-largest cigar manufacturer in Montreal after Davis, employing 275 workers in 1888 [citation:4].
- 🔵 D. Ritchie and Company, Montreal: Produced “Old Chum” tobacco brand; later absorbed by Davis [citation:4].
- 🟢 Empire Tobacco Co., Montreal: Formed in 1893 by John and Edward Archibald; later produced “Old Fox” chewing tobacco [citation:4].
- 🟡 William Kelly & Sons, London (1870): London’s first cigar factory, located at the forks of the Thames [citation:London historical records].
- 🟠 Brenner Brothers, London (1880s): Jewish immigrants who produced about 10 million cigars per year by 1912 [citation:London historical records].
First Canadian Cigarette Factories Comparison
| Factory | Location | Founded | Founder | Peak Employment | Legacy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S. Davis and Sons | Montreal | 1862 | Samuel Davis | ~600 | Became American Tobacco; son “Tobacco King” |
| Tuckett & Billings | Hamilton | 1866 | George Tuckett | 600+ | Acquired by Imperial Tobacco (1930) |
| Rock City Tobacco | Quebec City | 1899 | Drouin brothers | ~500 | Now owned by RBH |
| Jean-Marie Fortier | Montreal | c. 1870 | Jean-Marie Fortier | 275 | Second-largest in Montreal |
Working Conditions in the First Factories
The cigar industry was one of the lowest-paying industrial sectors in 19th-century Montreal and one of the largest employers of women and children [citation:4].
⚠️ Harsh Conditions in Most Factories
- 👧 Child labour: Young boys and girls as young as 14 worked as “apprentices” [citation:4].
- 💰 Low wages: The cigar industry was one of the lowest paying in Montreal [citation:4].
- ⚙️ Mechanization: By 1888, cigar-making machines were replacing skilled workers with unskilled children disguised as “apprentices” [citation:4].
- 💸 Arbitrary fines: Workers’ already meagre wages were often reduced by a system of fines [citation:4].
- 🔨 Internal police: Some employers maintained an internal police force and jail for punishing apprentices [citation:4].
⚡ Labour Resistance
- Workers formed several unions, including the Cigar Makers’ Union (branches 58 and 226) — the most militant [citation:4].
- 1883: Industry-wide strike for wage increases, beginning with S. Davis and Sons [citation:4].
- 1894: Successful strike against Davis to stop a proposed 20% wage cut [citation:4].
- 1895: Repeat strike action against Davis — results unknown [citation:4].
🌟 The Tuckett Exception
Unlike other manufacturers, George Tuckett had no fine or punishment system. The trust he gained in Hamilton’s working community was evident when he was invited to help arbitrate an 1883 dispute between two rival cigarmakers’ unions [citation:1].
The Great Transition: From Cigars to Cigarettes
The late 19th century saw a fundamental shift in smoking habits:
- 🚬 1891: Tuckett introduced cigarettes to its product line — among the first in Canada [citation:1].
- 📈 1896: Tuckett’s first cigarette brand, T.&B., became a success, spreading to England, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand [citation:8].
- 🏭 1923-1924: Tuckett began producing Buckingham cigarettes, which would eventually hold 80% of the Canadian market for blended cigarettes [citation:8].
- 🔄 Rock City’s adaptation: The Quebec City factory successfully followed market trends, transitioning from chewing tobacco to cigarettes [citation:6].
The Birth of Imperial Tobacco Canada (1908)
The late 1890s saw the American Tobacco Company (ATC) aggressively enter the Canadian market, acquiring local manufacturers [citation:4].
- 1895: S. Davis and Sons was absorbed by the American Tobacco Company [citation:4].
- 1908: Imperial Tobacco Company of Canada was formed, merging ATC’s Canadian interests with local companies [citation:8].
- 1912: Imperial received its Dominion charter, under which it still operates [citation:8].
- 1930: Tuckett Tobacco Company was acquired by Imperial Tobacco [citation:1].
- 1966: The Tuckett plant on Queen Street closed as operations moved to a modern plant in Guelph [citation:1].
Preserving Canada’s Tobacco Heritage
Several of Canada’s first tobacco factories have been preserved as heritage sites:
- 🏛️ S. Davis and Sons building (Montreal): Classified as a heritage immovable property on July 20, 2023. The building is part of Montreal’s Chinatown heritage site [citation:2].
- 🏭 Rock City Tobacco factory (Quebec City): The Saint-Roch factory building still stands, now owned by RBH (Rothmans, Benson & Hedges) [citation:3].
- 🏚️ Tuckett plant (Hamilton): While the Queen Street plant closed in 1966, the site is marked on Hamilton’s 19th Century Industrial Trail [citation:1].
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