Alfred Dunhill âPrince of Wales Mixtureâ â Factory Sealed 1950s Knife-Lid Tin ¡ 4oz. Made in Great Britain
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Sold for: $1660.00[57 Bids]
Reserve: [n/a]Winner: mr.jack
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Description
Video showcasing the actual tin listed here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Rs7DsHP0b4
There was once a time when a manâs day began with a newspaper under his arm, a soft felt hat on his head, and a pipe between his teeth. The hum of a trolley car outside, the chime of a shop bell, the familiar comfort of good tobacco and a steady hand with a match. And on the counter at 30 Duke Street, St. Jamesâs, the great house of Alfred Dunhill kept tins lined like medalsâeach one a promise of calm, character, and craftsmanship.
Among those tins sat one with a touch of royalty about it: Prince of Wales Mixture. Born from the days when Dunhillâs blends graced the smoking tables of Londonâs elite, this was no ordinary mixtureâit was created in honor of the very Prince who granted Dunhill his Royal Warrant back in 1921. The Prince was known to favor a tobacco of quiet refinement, and Dunhill obliged with a recipe of poise rather than power.
It was the Englishmanâs English blend: bright and orange Virginias for sweetness, delicate Orientals for fragrance, a trace of black Cavendish for body and a cool, shadowed depth. The result was a mixture as smooth as a Savile Row jacketânever brash, never fussy, just endlessly agreeable. Dunhill described it then as âa smoking mixture of supreme distinctionârich flavor, very cool, of medium strength.â
The tin offered here hails from that golden postwar decade when life regained its polish and the air in the clubroom carried both pipe smoke and possibility. It remains factory sealed, still bearing its knife-lid pry tab and the proud legend âManufactured by Alfred Dunhill Ltd., 30 Duke Street, St. Jamesâs, London S.W.1.â A fragment of the old green U.S. Internal Revenue stamp still clings to the lidâa ghost of the era when every imported tin paid its due before crossing the Atlantic. Turn it over and youâll find the cool certainty of MADE IN GREAT BRITAIN stamped cleanly into the steel. The label, with its cream field and red Roman border, remains remarkably bright, and the lid shows that gentle, natural dome collectors love to seeâ a strong indicator of well-preserved leaf.
To imagine it opened is to picture London in miniature: the warm richness of Virginia and Oriental leaf mingling with the scent of polished mahogany and rain on stone. A note of cedar, a flicker of tea-sweetness, a breath of the fireplace âa tobacco meant not for hurried mornings but for evenings measured by the tick of a mantel clock.
By the early 1960s the Prince of Wales name slipped quietly from Dunhillâs catalogue. The world grew louder, faster, less inclined to linger. But this tin remains, a gentlemanâs relic from the decade of fountain pens, hand-rolled cuffs, and a slower kind of confidence. Few have survived unopened; fewer still with such dignity.
For the collector who appreciates the elegance of a bygone leaf, or the pipe man who still believes a blend should carry itself with mannersâthis is a treasure straight from the Duke Street of the mid-century. A royal echo sealed in tin, waiting patiently since the days of polished shoes and pocket squares.
DETAILS:
-Alfred Dunhill â Prince of Wales Mixture
-Factory sealed ¡ 4 oz (approx. 50 g) ¡ c. 1950-1956
-Bright & orange Virginias ¡ Oriental leaf ¡ Black Cavendish
-Mild to medium strength ¡ Cool, dry, naturally sweet
-Partial U.S. tax stamp ¡ Knife-lid intact ¡ âMADE IN GREAT BRITAINâ base emboss
-Discontinued early 1960s ¡ Exceptionally scarce sealed example
Pipe Appeal â Swell Smokes from a Swell Era



