157. The James Fox – Peterson Small Batch Lines: An Interview with Yiorgos Manesis

If you haven’t heard of James Fox, the tobacconist, either in its (famous) London shop location or its original in Dublin, you’ve missed out on one of the great experiences and pilgrimage sites for pipe smokers from all over the globe. And I do mean missed, at least insofar as Dublin is concerned, because the glory days—for pipe & tobacco enthusiasts—are largely gone. In Ireland these days there only remain two great pipe and tobacco shops: Peterson’s on Nassau Street in Dublin, and the less well-known but perhaps more remarkable M. Cahill & Son in Limerick. 1 But let’s get caught up on James Fox. From their website history: We have been trading in fine tobacco and smokers' accessories from 19 St James's Street [London] for over 225 years and our customers have included discriminating smokers from all walks of life – from commoners to kings. Among them have been Sir Winston Churchill, Oscar Wilde, British and Foreign Royalty, the officer's mess of famous British regiments, and the leading lights of the stage, film, sport, tv, radio, music and literature. Our world famous tobacco business started with Robert Lewis, who began trading fine tobacco in St James's Street in 1787. James J Fox was formed in Dublin in 1881 and opened its first tobacco shop in London in 1947. Fox acquired the business of Robert Lewis on 14 September 1992, uniting two of the most respected names in the cigar world. Both companies now trade as JJ Fox (St James's) Ltd and run the cigar departments of Harrods and Selfridges. Frederic James Fox (1913-1990)was born in 1913, the fourth of five children and the youngest of James Fox’s three sons. He found himself in charge of the family business, a single cigar shop on Dublin’s Grafton Street, after the untimely death of his two brothers. Stanley Fox was shot dead by armed thieves thought to be members of the IRA in 1926, while Ronald (Biffy) was missing in action over the Dutch coast in 1942 during an RAF mine laying mission. Freddie, not content with just one shop, took the business from strength to strength. He established a successful import and wholesale business in Ireland alongside the world’s first Duty Free outlet which expanded the retail cigar business into London. He developed numerous brands including Punch Nectares, Bolivar Amado, Hoyo Royal Hunt and La Corona Policromia, and established the Astor Tobacco Company. His enterprising nature also saw Freddie acquire and develop a successful import and wholesale business in the Channel Islands; and he oversaw the origin of the business’s entry into the property markets, developing several high profile office buildings in St Helier, Jersey including Sir Walter Raleigh House on the Esplanade. Freddie Fox died in 1990. He is still sorely missed by his family, friends and colleagues from the cigar industry. Were he to be asked to comment on his career achievements, he might say: “Not bad for a beginner.” (You can read about Freddie and Harry Kapp’s friendly…

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