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Hay there:
Civil War buffs are well familiar with John Hay
(pictured above), who was Abraham Lincoln’s personal
secretary in the White House. He later became a
national political figure on his own and served as
Assistant U.S. Secretary of State from 1879-1881 and
later as U.S. Secretary of State from 1898-1905 in
the McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt Administrations.
He is most famous for his “Open Door” policy on
trade which helped open relations with China and for
doing some of the groundwork for the construction of
the Panama Canal.
As was common at the time,
“John Hay” became a cigar brand in 1882
when W.W. Stewart created it – with Hay’s permission
– in Newmanstown, Pennsylvania. The brand lasted for
almost 50 years, finally dying around 1930 as the
memory of Hay faded and cigarettes become more
popular.
The Chester County Daily Local reported in a
recent feature, however, that the brand was
resurrected in the 1990s by Craig Stewart, the
great-grandson of W.W. Stewart as a machine-made
cigar using mostly Pennyslvania-grown leaf.
Stewart retired in 2004 and sold the business to
Lauren and David Patrick, who run it today.
It’s still a small brand, but it’s tripled in size
since the Patricks took over three years ago. The
machine-made series is manufactured in McSherrystown,
Pennsylvania, offered in three sizes with one
available in four flavors. Beginning in 2005, John
Hay returned to the market as a handmade cigar from
the Dominican Republic, with a medium-to-full body
with a Connecticut wrapper or full-bodied with a
Dominican-grown maduro wrapper, in one size, a
5-inch by 50-ring robusto called – of course – the
“Ambassador.”
Like it was in W.W. Stewart’s day, it’s mostly a
local brand for now. The Patricks showcase the brand
at events throughout the state and, according to
Lauren, have developed an overseas clientele. “We
have clients in France, the U.K. and Canada,” she
told Daily Local reporter Justin McAneny. “We
even ship them to New Zealand. We have a client
there named Sir John Hay . . . but he’s no
relation.”
Despite the challenges, the Patricks are enjoying
themselves and are hoping to turn their hobby into a
full-time job. Lauren is now part-time in her job
with Lincoln Financial (an irony in itself) and if
the brand keeps growing, David may join in. What the
Hay, why not!
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