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rocketwerks · 5 years
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Falls of the James
The Falls of the James are the central physical fact of Richmond, having directly influenced its history through their effect upon trade, energy, community and nourishment.
Trade As the Falls of the James are a natural barrier between the sea and the interior the area immediately surrounding the Falls has for centuries been a center for trade. Before European settlement, the Powhatan and Monacan Indians exploited the lands around the Falls as a trading center for the entire region. With the arrival of Europeans, trade between the settlers and Indians flourished and the warehousing and export of tobacco grew in importance. Later, Richmond became a major transportation hub as a result of the construction of the James River and Kanawha Canal, built to by-pass the Falls. Transportation, hydro-power and nearby coal deposits made Richmond a center for manufacture and trade of flour, wheat, tobacco and iron.
Energy Though a barrier to navigation, the Falls were a boon to industry. Richmonders harnessed the water flow of the Falls to drive flour mills, iron plants, and paper mills, all major components of the city's manufacturing growth. Later hydro power from the Falls was utilized to generate electricity which ed the industrial and residential needs of the community. This included the powering of Richmond's trolley system, the first in the world to successfully operate by electricity.
Community The Falls and its environs have always provided the most basic physical requirements for settlement and community: food, water, energy, and transport. With the growth of trade and industry along the Falls, Richmond became a more culturally diverse community as immigrants from all parts of Europe followed English settlers to the region. African-American slaves provided much of the labor and many of the skills and crafts essential to the early growth of Richmond, and upon achieving their freedom, became a major factor in the culture and growth of the city. Richmond's selection as Virginia's capital and later as capital of the Confederacy can be traced to the city's growth along the river. While the livelihood of Richmond depends less today on the James, our community's mutual bond still begins at the Falls.
Nourishment The Falls provided a wealth of vegetation, fish, wildlife and fresh water to nourish both Native Americans and early European settlers. By the early 1800's, hydro power from the Falls drove pumps which provided the City with its first municipal drinking water system. Today, the Falls of the James continue to provide Richmnders with spiritual nourishment, whether through contemplation of the natural beauty of the Falls or through the unique recreational opportunities available along the James: white water rafting, kayaking, canoeing, fishing and swimming.
SW intersection of Tredegar and Seventh Streets
September 2019
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drazowsky · 7 years
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I love these people because of those people. #angels #tampa #SeventhStreet #Pride #yborcity (at Ybor City Historic District)
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Found a ton of neighborhood kids sitting out on the curb. #familyphotos #dekalb #seventhstreet (at DeKalb, Illinois)
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sociallyblogwards · 7 years
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#parkinggarage #skyscraper #skyscrapers #downtowncincinnati #seventhstreet #7thstreet #cincinnati #cincy #cincyusa #ontheroad #ohio #cincinnatiohio #cincygram (at Cincinnati)
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slownight · 8 years
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/home/
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ilkacska · 3 years
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@josynobre @est-stranges @sordidsaints @cvryn @greyskies-brightcity-lights-blog @thecrazyone4 @rihanna-styles @futurebullshit @dribldaturtle @jezarinee-blog @xgyja-blog @vivarin @sinyugaev0kmv-blog @fallingdawn123 @aardourr @vijudderi-blog @gabrielacaperochipi @dancing-out-on-seventhstreet @cravingthinandbones-blog @satanshawty @666chola @ajaeni @t-ilds-blog @andershaal @thatweiya @parislindsaybritney @jbln @arcahouse @haussondamien @lolita-applebum-blog 
Ray-Ban Sunglasses
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peterterhune · 7 years
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I’ll always bring a taste of IDAHO back to L.A and a spice of L.A. to IDAHO... 🧜🏼‍♂️ #seventhstreet (at Los Angeles, California)
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mrdeleveaux-blog · 8 years
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You know we had to do it #7A #seventhstreet #mannequinchallenge #epiphanyschool #epiphany (at Epiphany School)
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rocketwerks · 5 years
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T. C. Williams Tobacco Company
117 South Seventh Street
403 South Seventh Street
Sixth & Canal Streets NE
Sixth & Canal Streets SW
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[RVCJ93] — T. C. Williams Tobacco Company's Works — Sixth & Canal Streets NE?
A tobacconist that named a law school.
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(Library of Congress)  — Box making in the T. C. Williams Tobacco Co. — Images collected by W.E.B. Du Bois & Thomas J. Calloway for the "American Negro Exhibit" at the Paris Exposition of 1900
The T. C. Williams Company, tobacco manufacturers at the foot of Seventh street, operates here, as a single concern, two of the largest factories, making plug and twist chiefly, and fine export tobaccos largely, not of Richmond only, but of the United States. 
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(Library of Congress)  — “Lumpers” at T. C. Williams Tobacco Co., circa 1899 — Images collected by W.E.B. Du Bois & Thomas J. Calloway for the "American Negro Exhibit" at the Paris Exposition of 1900 — “Lumpers,” a term used to describe anyone whose job it is to manually handle freight in a warehouse
This company was incorporated in 1889, upon the death of the late Thomas C. Williams (from whom it takes its name), as successor to the old firm of Thomas C. Williams & Co., whose predecessor was James Thomas, Jr., established more than fifty years ago. It has $400,000 capital stock. 
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(Library of Congress) — African Americans, mostly women, sorting tobacco at T. C. Williams Tobacco Co. — Images collected by W.E.B. Du Bois & Thomas J. Calloway for the "American Negro Exhibit" at the Paris Exposition of 1900
The output of its two factories is from 3,000,000 to 4,000,000 pounds of finished stock annually. It furnishes employment to some 700 hands, and is, perhaps, the best known concern of the trade here to the dealers in foreign lands.
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(Library of Congress) — Pot presses at T. C. Williams Tobacco Co. — Images collected by W.E.B. Du Bois & Thomas J. Calloway for the "American Negro Exhibit" at the Paris Exposition of 1900
It was a notable establishment before the war, even, and is still manufacturing many of the brands that were originated by it then. It is best known, perhaps, by its famous "Lucy Hinton" brand; scarcely less so, however, than by numerous others, among them the following:
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(iCollector) — advertisement for Nosegay — note the brand is now owned by American Tobacco Co.
"Mattaponi," "May Apple," "Nosegay," "Paris Medal," "Golden Eagle," "Plum," "Old Dominion," and many others for domestic consumption; and for foreign trade, "Imperial Ruby," "Bird’s-Eye Twist," "Victory," "Golden Eagle," "Mabel," "Juno," "Janus," etc.
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(VCU) — 1889 Baist Atlas Map of Richmond — Plate 1 — showing the Sixth & Canal Street locations
It is hardly necessary to go into details concerning the processes of manufacture in this establishment. It is sufficient to say, in that respect, that its management is in the hands of experts in the business of life-long identification with it, and that its fame, both in this country and abroad, conclusively establishes the superiority of its products.
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(Find A Grave) — Thomas C. Williams Sr.
The late T. C. Williams was manager of it for the founder of the business before he reached the head of it himself; and to his efforts, in large part, the development of this trade is due. He succeeded Mr. Thomas in 1862, and the firm of T. C. Williams & Co. succeeded him in 1886. 
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(VCU) — 1889 Baist Atlas Map of Richmond — Plate 8 — showing the 403 South Seventh Street factory
Robert S. Bosher, James T. Parkinson and Thomas C. Williams, Jr., were his partners in that firm. Mr. Bosher is president of the company now; Mr. Williams, vice-president; Mr. Parkinson, superintendent; and Mr. W. S. Wortham, secretary and treasurer. 
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[RVCJ93] — T. C. Williams Tobacco Company Factory 2 — 403 South Seventh Street?
Mr. J. C. Knox manages the company’s "No. 2" factory. Mr. Bosher is a native of the city, and has been with the house from his sixteenth year. He may certainly be said to have been raised to the business. Mr. Parkinson has been in the business twenty-two years; Mr. Wortham seventeen years; and Mr. Williams eight or ten years. [RVCJ93]
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[RVCJ93] — T. C. Williams Tobacco Company Factory 3 — Sixth & Canal Streets SW?
T. C. Williams was another of those tobacco men who also dabbled in railroads and banks, and became stinking rich in the process. He was also a trustee of Richmond College and gave generously to that institution.
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September 2019 — looking toward Sixth & Canal Streets NE
When he died at the relatively young age of 57 in 1899, the family donated $25,000 as an endowment for the Richmond College law school, which was named the T.C. Williams School of Law in 1920. Sadly, UR rebranded it as the University of Richmond School of Law in recent years and lost the connection to its early benefactor. (Find A Grave)
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September 2019 — looking towards Sixth & Canal Streets SW
As for the company, in 1903 it was gobbled up by the British-American Tobacco Company, a joint venture of Imperial Tobacco and the American Tobacco Company as part of their tobacco war truce. T. C. Williams continued to operate as a subsidiary in Petersburg, but eventually, the company vanished. (Duke University Libraries)
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September 2019 — looking toward 117 South Seventh Street
As for the factory locations, the 1893 edition of Richmond, Virginia: The City on the James doesn’t tell the whole story. It says that the business operated “at the foot of Seventh street”, and Baist shows both of these South Seventh Street locations as belonging to the James Thomas Estate, so they are likely the originating factories.
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September 2019 — looking towards 403 South Seventh Street, which would be somewhere near the top of the stairs
However, Baist also shows the Sixth Street addresses under the ownership of T. C. Williams, so the business expanded to four locations by 1889. Unfortunately, Richmond, Virginia: The City on the James is aggravatingly silent as to where each of the three illustrated buildings actually stood. The tentative identification here is purely guesswork based on orientation and topography.
(T. C. Williams Tobacco Company is part of the Atlas RVA! Project)
Print Sources
[CDRVA] Chataigne’s Directory of Richmond, Va. J. H. Chataigne. 1881.
[RVCJ93] Richmond, Virginia: The City on the James: The Book of Its Chamber of Commerce and Principal Business Interests. G. W. Engelhardt. 1893.
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sociallyblogwards · 7 years
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#plumstreet #7thstreet #seventhstreet #pureromance #us22 #ohioroute3 #downtowncincinnati #cityscape #downtown #romantic #cincinnatiphotography #cincinnatiphoto #cincinnati #cincinnatiohio #ohio #cincy #cincyusa #cincygram #cincinnatioh #instagram #cincyoh #cool #skyscrapper (at Cincinnati)
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ilkacska · 3 years
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@josynobre @est-stranges @sordidsaints @cvryn @greyskies-brightcity-lights-blog @thecrazyone4 @rihanna-styles @futurebullshit @dribldaturtle @jezarinee-blog @xgyja-blog @vivarin @sinyugaev0kmv-blog @fallingdawn123 @aardourr @vijudderi-blog @gabrielacaperochipi @dancing-out-on-seventhstreet @cravingthinandbones-blog @satanshawty @666chola @ajaeni @t-ilds-blog @andershaal @thatweiya @parislindsaybritney @jbln @arcahouse @haussondamien @lolita-applebum-blog @sexy-skater-chicks @carbonrepairs @katascorner-blog @youdo2me @andriene99 @marijatomislav-blog @spoiledsweets-blog @mirkomicidio @rafinhabion @writergypsywolf @aocairdodia @pushingupdaisies13 @innocencecanneverlastt-blog @akindofstuff @lanalenbro-blog @halfbakedgretel @remivergnanini @emetresproducemadafaka @claudia-kobein @flordelosangeles-blog 
Ray-Ban Sunglasses
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mrdeleveaux-blog · 8 years
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Reggie Gibson on Seventh Street #What?! #seventhstreet #defjampoet #arts #epiphany #epiphanyschool (at Epiphany School)
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rocketwerks · 5 years
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Allen & Ginter
Sixth & Cary Streets NW (Warehouse)
600 East Cary Street (Stemmery)
Seventh & Cary Streets SW (Factory)
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[IOR] — Allen & Ginter, Manufacturers of Cigarettes and Smoking Tobacco — Office and Factory
P. H. Mayo may have been the first, but Allen & Ginter became the king.
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(NCpedia) — Harper's Weekly illustration, January 15, 1887 issue — showing women hand-rolling cigarettes in a Virginia factory
This establishment, which was the first of its kind in Virginia, was founded in 1865, by Messrs. Allen & Ginter. They employ eleven hundred hands, nearly all of whom are girls, have eighteen commercial salesmen on the road, and their goods are known all over the world. This was the first Cigarette Factory in the United States that employed female help in manipulating Cigarettes, and the superiority of this labor over all other is attested by the fact that all other Cigarette factories are following the example of Messrs. Allen & Ginter.
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(VCU) — 1889 Baist Atlas Map of Richmond — Plate 1 — showing the warehouse (left), stemmery (center), & factory (bottom) locations
They occupy three large brick buildings, each 70x150 feet, five stories high, which gives them the vast amount of 157,500 square feet of floor space. The two buildings at the corner of 7th and Cary streets, are the manufacturing and shipping departments, while the one at the corner of 6th and Cary streets is used exclusively for the storage and preparing of leaf.
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August 2019 — looking towards former warehouse location at Sixth & Cary Streets NW
The entire works are fitted throughout with the most modern machinery, and other appliances, for the successful prosecution of their immense business. The establishment is a paragon of neatness, and the most complete system reigns throughout the premises. They have branch houses in New York, Chicago, San Francisco and London. 
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August 2019 — looking towards former stemmery location at 600 East Cary Street
Their production is chiefly fine grades of Cigarettes and Smoking Tobacco. Their Cigarettes have a reputation that has made them a standard article in all parts of the world. They have received the highest awards of merit at the great exhibitions in Philadelphia, Paris, Sydney, Melbourne and New Orleans.
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August 2019 — looking towards former factory location at Seventh & Cary Streets SW
In addition to their immense sale in this country, they export them to all parts of the world, and there is scarcely a country in which they are not sold. While the sale of adulterated brands of many American manufacturers has been prohibited in Great Britain, their absolutely pure goods have attained the largest popular sale ever known in Cigarettes in that country, with a steadily increasing demand.
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(EBay) — Allen & Ginter Tobacco Reverse Painted Glass Sign, circa 1890
Their Cigarettes are made with different degrees of strength to suit all tastes. They use the tasteless French rice paper, made in France expressly for them. It has no smell, and its purity is such that in burning scarcely an atom of ash remains.
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(Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden) — advertisement for Richmond Gem, Richmond Straight Cut, & Our Little Beauties
Among their leading brands, are "Richmond Straight Cuts," "The Pet," "Dubec" (genuine Turkish), "Virginia Brights," "Opera Puff," "Our Little Beauties," "Perfection," "Richmond Gem," "Sunny South," "Dixie," and "Dainties."
Among their Smoking Mixtures, are "Imperial," "Richmond Gem," " Richmond Straight Cut, No. 1," "Perique," "Turkish," "Richmond Mixture, Nos. 1 and 2."
Cut Plug Tobaccos. "Cable Coil," "Dixie Chop," "Richmond Cavendish, Nos. 1 and 2," "Imperial Cavendish," &c, &c. Granulated Tobaccos. "Matchless," "Buds and Blossoms," "Dixie," and "Killickinnick."
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(Find A Grave) — John Frederick Allen
In 1882, Mr. Allen, the senior partner, retired, and Mr. Lewis Ginter admitted Mr. John Pope into co partnership, continuing under the old firm name. No firm in existence is more liberal to its employees, or mindful of their interests. Messrs. Ginter and Pope are two of Richmond's most progressive and representative business men. [IOR]
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(Find A Grave) — Lewis Ginter
Allen & Ginter succeeded in dominating the cigarette market in large part due to Lewis Ginter’s singular business acumen. Not only did he create a successful blend of bright and burley tobaccos for a tempting, tasty smoke, he also knew how to market his ciggies. [CIGC] 
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(Rocket Werks RVA Cigarette Cards)
Starting in 1875, Allen & Ginter became the first tobacco company to issue colorful trading cards with each pack of smokes. Originally, the intent was practical, to stiffen the soft cigarette packs, but by adding a colorful advertising plug, they set off a collector craze that drove sales and forced the industry to follow suit. (Collectors Weekly)
Unfortunately, Ginter’s skills were not universal, and it cost him.
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(U. S. Patent & Trademark Office) — diagram from James Albert Bonsack's U.S. patent 238,640, granted March 8, 1881
As mentioned above, Allen & Ginter’s factory output was all derived by hand. Rolling cigarettes was time-consuming, required a large labor force, and limited production. As cigarettes became more popular with the smoking public, tobacco companies started looking for ways to automate the process. Allen & Ginter sponsored a competition for a solution, which was won in 1881 by 22-year-old American inventor James Bonsack.
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(PeoplePill) — James Albert Bonsack, sporting a smug “I’m so smart” expression that makes you want to smack him
Bonsack produced a machine that rolled a single long cigarette that was then cut into separate pieces. However, the technology was new and finicky, requiring lots of tinkering to keep it operational. In a singular example of not being able to read the tea leaves, Allen & Ginter elected not to use the device, preferring to stay with their tried and true process.
Enter everyone’s favorite tobacco villain, James Buchanan Duke, President of American Tobacco Company.
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(Duke University Libraries) — James Buchanan Duke
Duke saw the promise of the Bonsack Machine and immediately inked a deal for its exclusive use. American Tobacco Company actively worked with Bonsack to improve the device, which eventually came to dominate the industry. It gave Duke a powerful competitive advantage over his rivals and led to Ginter’s surrender in 1890. Allen & Ginter was reduced to a being a subsidiary of the new American Tobacco Company Trust, led by Duke as its new president. [CIGC]
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(Vintage Richmond) — showing the Imperial Tobacco Company building that replaced the former Allen & Ginter warehouse in 1904 at the NW corner of Sixth & Cary, itself demolished in the late 70s
As for the Allen and Ginter locations, it is difficult to pin down when they were built and when they fell, but their operations would eventually relocate to the American Tobacco Company’s new factory on North Twentieth Street. The former Allen & Ginter buildings were picked up by other tobacco enterprises, and their glory days were over.
(Allen & Ginter is part of the Atlas RVA! Project)
Print Sources
[CIGC] The Cigarette Century. Allan M. Brandt. 2007.
[IOR] Industries of Richmond. James P. Wood. 1886
[RVCJ03] Richmond, Virginia: The City on the James: The Book of Its Chamber of Commerce and Principal Business Interests. G. W. Engelhardt. 1903.
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