The shop’s manager, Leo Reyes, has been teaching customers about cigars and pipes since 1986. The Tinder Box doesn’t have a single employee who has worked there fewer than fifteen years. “Things change and nothing lasts forever,” Jeanette said. The going rent in the neighborhood has since skyrocketed beyond what the store can afford. She negotiated a special rate for the store for a five-year lease, which expired this month. While there are still Tinder Box stores in about 18 states, the franchise has since been sold and five years ago Jeanette made the difficult decision to sell the property on Wilshire. The worse the Dow Jones becomes, the better our business.” “People may lose their jobs, but they continue to smoke expensive cigars. “Our stores have never been affected by downturns in the economy,” Karl Kolpin reportedly told The Times. Suddenly, cigarette smokers turned to cigars and pipes to get their fix without inhaling and wean themselves off their daily pack. In 1977, Ed’s son told the New York Times that business began thriving after the Surgeon General’s warning that cigarette smoking was a health hazard. In 1973, the company began leasing its name and selling its product as a franchise, spreading the Tinder Box name all over the world. Icons from every generation have walked through the wooden doors and smelled the cedar inside the cigar room – from Clark Gable to Nicholas Cage to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. He claimed to have once been flashed by Marilyn Monroe herself and to have skinny dipped in the Taj Mahal. Over the years, loyal customers relished Ed’s stories of famous actresses and actors and their exploits. The strip is perhaps a fitting resting place for what has been a symbol of Hollywood’s smoke-filled glamour since Ed began selling cigars to the stars in the 1920’s. It is now headed to Glendale where it will be repaired and restored and placed in the museum. On Friday, a construction crew used a crane to pull the old Tinder Box sign from its corner on Wilshire and Harvard St. “It will be hard,” Jeanette Kolpin said as she held back tears and pulled out some pamphlets from the Museum of Neon Art. When Kolpin’s daughter-in-law turns out the lights and locks the door one last time Monday, the nearly 90-year-old store will have fulfilled that promise. That his little shop on Wilshire Boulevard would continue to sell handcrafted pipes, high-end cigars and custom blended tobacco for ten more years. When Santa Monica’s oldest tobacconist, Edward Kolpin Sr., died in April 2007, he had a wish.
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