In A Nutshell
- Snuff is ground tobacco.
- Snuff bottles and boxes were widely used from 17th to mid-19th centuries throughout the world to hold and store snuff for personal use.
- All the boxes in the Badger Collection were hand-carved from the coquilla nut, a small, hard nut, 3-4 inches long.
- Coquilla nuts are from a palm tree native to Brazil.
- Coquilla nuts were carved into bottles and boxes in the form of people, animals, ships, and religious imagery.
- Millions of Africans were forcibly transported to Brazil to work on sugar plantations, gold mines, and in the shipping and whaling industries.
- Brazil was a Portuguese colony from 1500 to 1822.
- Snuff containers were often created by Africans who were enslaved in Brazil during the centuries of the transatlantic slave trade.
- More Africans were enslaved in Brazil than in any other country: approximately 4.7 million (10 times that of the U.S.).
- Snuff boxes were created, commissioned, and distributed throughout the world.
- Some 40% of all mariners working on ships in the Brazilian slave trade in the 18th and early 19th centuries were Black.
- Africans and Afro-Brazilians were instrumental in the spread of revolutionary ideas throughout the Black Atlantic.
- Many snuff boxes represent political figures from anti-slavery and independence movements in the Americas: examples are Thomas Paine, John Brown, George and Martha Washington, Benjamin Franklin.
- Many snuff boxes are intricately carved boxes representing Napoleon and ships that fought during the Napoleonic Wars.
- Coquilla nut snuff boxes shed light on a previously unknown and understudied art form.
- Snuff containers reflect the global influences and interactions of artistic, cultural, and commercial exchange.