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					State Legislator
				 
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					03-24-2016, 01:08 PM 
				 
				
Post: #1 
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				State Legislator 
				 
					Perhaps the following is well known, but it is news to me.  In Lincoln's state legislature days there was a low quality cigar called "long nine."  Several contemporary references are quoted in the tobacco chapter of Marc McCutcheon, The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in the 1800s (Cincinnati:  Writer's Digest Books 1993, p. 182).  No doubt the Sangamon County delegation was composed of tall gentlemen, but I suspect that the appellation “Long Nine" given to them was also connected to the cigar, perhaps a way of ridiculing the delegation's members but a name which they gloried in.  Or maybe it was used affectionately.  Anyway, persons of Lincoln's time would have seen the term's connection to a cheap cigar.  Just as if a group of thin Virginia legislators today were called the Virginia Slims.
				 
				
				
				
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					03-24-2016, 02:57 PM 
				 
				
Post: #2 
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				RE: State Legislator 
				 
					Very interesting, Richard! 
				
				
				
			I found an article which talks about "long nines" here: http://firecured.blogspot.com/2011/01/ea...nines.html Also, here: http://firecured.blogspot.com/2011/01/ma...igars.html  | 
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					03-24-2016, 03:24 PM 
(This post was last modified: 03-24-2016 06:50 PM by Gene C.)
				 
				
Post: #3 
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				RE: State Legislator 
				 
					Thanks Richard, I didn't know that. 
				
				
Kind of funny now that I think about it. So when is this "Old Enough To Know Better" supposed to kick in?  | 
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