For those of you not familiar with 'snuff', it is a powdered form of tobacco intended to be sniffed into the nostrils (not to be confused with chewing tobacco, also called snuff).
Snuff is a very interesting hobby, and surprisingly harmless. Being the oldest method of taking tobacco, it is also steeped in history.
As there are a lot of history buffs here, I thought I'd post a quote from a book I was reading last night called 'A Pinch of Snuff.' which is a contemporary treatise on snuff and snuff taking from 1840.
It makes reference to snuff-taking by soldiers during the Peninsular War, and most interestingly, to the use of Fribourg & Treyer (a major snuff producer) snuff containers as canisters for grape-shot:
The late gallant Sir Amos Norcott was an admirable connoisseur of the weed in all its shapes, but especially when in pulvio. During the Peninsular war, it would have been deemed heresy in an officer of the Rifle Brigade to regale his olfactories with any but Norcott's Mixture. Those excellent men, Messrs. Evans, of the Haymarket, can vouch for the fact, that they became aware of the magnitude of the military movements in Portugal and Spain by the increased demand for snuff made by the Light Division. Nay, we have heard it affirmed, that in more than one general action, the enemies ranks were thinned by shots delivered in Canisters, bearing the well-known label of Fribourg and Treyer.
I love this kind of thing.
Not only is it a combination of two of my interests, but accounts such as this make the history seem more 'real' to me.