Grizzly (tobacco)

Grizzly is an American brand of dipping tobacco (moist snuff) first made in 1782[1] and currently made by the American Snuff Company. It is available in pouches, Fine Cut, Long Cut, and Extra Long Cut. All Grizzly varieties are packaged in a 1.2 oz black plastic container with a metal lid. Depending on the cut, Grizzly delivers 2.31-2.67 mg nicotine per gram. It is also fondly referred to as "the welfare bear", especially by armed forces personnel because of the value of cost at only Average: 3.09$ for the regular can of Grizzly tobacco.

Varieties

The worlds most favored Tabacco Grizzly product is Grizzly Wintergreen

200 Years Of Smokeless Tobacco [2]

American Snuff Company's ancestral roots predate the formation of the United States. A certain Captain John Garrett of the Sixth Delaware Militia came home from fighting the British in the Revolutionary War and established, in 1782, a snuff mill on Red Clay Creek in Delaware. His descendants, William E. Garrett and Levi Garrett, are memorialized in two of American Snuff Company's major brands. One of these dry snuff products displays a trademark that is the oldest U.S. trademark in continuous use. This mark was one of the first ten recorded on October 25, 1870, the first day the U.S. Patent Office began granting trademarks.

The new snuff industry, like the new nation, grew rapidly and proliferated during the next 75–100 years. Beginning in the 1880s James B. Duke's efforts continued the growth but slowed the proliferation as he acquired and amalgamated tobacco companies, both cigarette companies and snuff companies. By 1900, he had created a giant "tobacco trust" organized as two companies - the American Tobacco Company and the American Snuff Company. What Duke had joined together, Teddy Roosevelt put asunder. Armed with new anti-trust legislation (Sherman Act and Clayton Act) enacted to break up the steel, oil, tobacco trusts, and others, Roosevelt, acting through the Department of Justice, filed, in 1907, an antitrust lawsuit against the American Snuff Company. The government-mandated separation was finalized in 1911, resulting in three companies: the American Snuff Company, Weyman-Bruton (later, U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Company) and Helme (which continues today as Swisher International, Inc.). These three companies today are three of the four largest smokeless tobacco manufacturers.

In 1912, the American Snuff Company headquarters moved from New York to Memphis, Tennessee. For the next 40 years, the Company's operations were focused on dry snuff. In the 1950s, the American Snuff Company began diversifying. In 1952, Taylor Brothers, Inc., a manufacturer of chewing tobacco located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, was acquired. In 1967 Scott Tobacco Company, a manufacturer of twist chewing tobacco, was acquired. In the period beginning in the mid-1960s and continuing for the next twenty years, the Company began a process of diversification and acquired several non-tobacco businesses, which produced and distributed such products as insecticides, shoe polish, popcorn, military pyrotechnics, playground equipment, theater supplies and yogurt. In 1966, to reflect its diversified operations, the American Snuff Company changed its name to Conwood Corporation.

In 1985, Conwood Corporation was restructured as a privately owned company pursuant to a merger which resulted in the formation of Conwood Company, L.P. In 2006, Conwood Company, L.P. was reorganized as Conwood Company, LLC. The diversification trend which extended the Company's involvement in non-tobacco products was reversed in the eighties as Conwood altered its business strategy to focus again solely on the manufacture and distribution of smokeless tobacco products. To reflect this return to the Company's smokeless tobacco origins, in 2010 Conwood Company, LLC was renamed American Snuff Company, LLC.

The Company has made significant contributions in the development of the smokeless tobacco industry. The Company has been responsible for innovative packaging of smokeless products, including the development of a foil pouch for chewing tobacco and a plastic can for moist snuff. Products such as Levi Garrett, Hawken, Kodiak, and Grizzly, achieved consumer acceptance quickly upon being introduced and have had dramatic impact on the marketing of smokeless tobacco products.

From its origins on the Red Clay Creek in Delaware in 1782, the Company has become identified as an innovative industry leader committed to high standards in its production operations and in the servicing of its customers' needs.

Notes

Grizzly is awesome.