Difference between revisions of "BrandPlayer's Navy Cut"
From Cigarettes Pedia
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
* [[Player's Navy Cut (Finest Virginia) S-20-B (white and blue) - England]] | * [[Player's Navy Cut (Finest Virginia) S-20-B (white and blue) - England]] | ||
* [[Players KS-50-B - England]] | * [[Players KS-50-B - England]] | ||
+ | * [[Player's Navy Cut Cigarettes 'Medium' S-20-B (blue and yellow) - USA]] | ||
[[Cigarettesp|Cigarettes P]] | [[Cigarettesp|Cigarettes P]] |
Revision as of 01:32, 2 January 2009
- Player's Navy Cut (Finest Virginia) S-10-H (white and blue) - Ireland
- Player's Navy Cut (Finest Virginia) S-20-B (white and blue) - England
- Players KS-50-B - England
- Player's Navy Cut Cigarettes 'Medium' S-20-B (blue and yellow) - USA
John Player founded his tobacco company in the mid-19th century in Nottingham, England. It was expanded later into a thriving cigarette manufactory (based at the Castle Tobacco Factories in Radford, Nottingham - just west of the city centre) and run by his sons, John Dane Player and William Goodacre Player.
In 1901, in response to competitive threats from the USA, the Player's business was merged in to the Imperial Tobacco Group (headquartered in Bristol and including other companies such as WD & HO Wills). However, Players cigarettes retained their own identity (in brands such as 'Navy Cut', 'No.6', 'John Player Special' and 'Gold Leaf') with their distinctive logo of a smoking sailor in a 'Navy Cut' cap.