On 6/1/05 (7:25:21 AM MDT), Peter Holloran ([log in to unmask]) writes, "Massachusetts and Connecticut still grow tobacco today. You see it driving I-90." The following (follows my name) bit of information on the Connecticut tobacco farming industry has been extracted from: www.cigaraficionado.com/Cigar/CA_Archives/CA_Show_Article/0,2322,305,00.html Regards, Walter Greenspan The Connecticut River Valley was immortalized in the 1961 film "Parrish", which starred Troy Donahue as an ambitious young man trying to make a living working on a Connecticut-shade tobacco farm. An evil tobacco baron played by Karl Malden gets in his way. There's far less tobacco in the ground today than there was when Parrish was filmed. Growing reached its peak in 1921, when 30,800 acres of shade a year were planted in the valley, according to Bade. In those days the growing region stretched from Portland, Connecticut, all the way up to Brattleboro, Vermont. The shade tents seemed to go on forever, as if some giant had wrapped most of the valley with bright white cloth, like a Christmas present. "It was the second largest industry in Connecticut, behind insurance," says George Gershel, senior vice president of tobacco for Consolidated Cigar. In the days when the United States was still a major producer of handmade cigars, Connecticut supplied much of its wrapper. The creation of homogenized, or sheet, tobacco wrapper in the 1950s ushered in the decline of the valley. Sheet tobacco is the particle board of the industry, a mixture of chopped scrap tobacco and an adhesive, which is extruded into a sheet that can be cut to any size.