Dunhill: Difference between revisions

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Alfred Henry was a scholar and sequenced his father's work. Mr. Dunhill maintained that tobacco was as rich and rewarding as wine or food, and he published several books on the subject. They included “The Gentle Art of Smoking” (1954) and “The Pipe Book,” a revised survey of the pipes of the world, first published by his father in 1926.<ref name=ahd5>The Times - (July 9, 1971). Obituary - Mr. Alfred Dunhill, Pipes, tobacco, and cigars. (P. 34). London [https://pipedia.org/images/b/b9/The_Times_1971-07-09.jpg]</ref>
Alfred Henry was a scholar and sequenced his father's work. Mr. Dunhill maintained that tobacco was as rich and rewarding as wine or food, and he published several books on the subject. They included “The Gentle Art of Smoking” (1954) and “The Pipe Book,” a revised survey of the pipes of the world, first published by his father in 1926.<ref name=ahd5>The Times - (July 9, 1971). Obituary - Mr Alfred Dunhill, Pipes, tobacco and cigars. (P. 34). London [https://pipedia.org/images/b/b9/The_Times_1971-07-09.jpg]</ref>
[[File:ADold.jpg|thumb|right|120px| Henry's father - Alfred Dunhill.]]
[[File:ADold.jpg|thumb|right|120px| Henry's father - Alfred Dunhill.]]
<center>'''The Pipe Book - Foreword by Alfred H. Dunhill.'''</center>
<center>'''The Pipe Book - Foreword by Alfred H. Dunhill.'''</center>