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Schiege Cigar Factory

Round Top, Fayette County

Marker Text

By 1859 the U.S. was importing 900 million cigars yearly, mainly from Germany. Tariffs, levied on imported cigars beginning 1862, resulted in a dramatic increase in domestic cigar manufacturing. Tobacco was still an important cash crop when Charles Schiege, Jr., erected a one-room frame cigar factory here in 1882. The factory's roadside facade bore a sign reading "Segars & Tobaccos." Factory workers made the cigars by hand and mainly from U.S. domestic tobaccos. Schiege marketed his cigars under a variety of labels, including "Texas Star," until 1932 when he closed the factory. Sesquicentennial of Texas Statehood 1845-1995

Marker Details

Address 407 S. White St.
Location Description FM 237 (Washington Rd)
Marker # 4599
Dedicated 1995
Size, Type 18" x 28"
Code agriculture, general; design and construction; factories, industrial buildings; German immigrants/immigration
Latitude, Longitude 30.063903, -96.698199

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