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A photograph supposedly showing a group of men standing outside of a drug store adorned with a giant marijuana leaf sign sometime in the 1800s is frequently shared by historical picture social media accounts: This is not a genuine photograph of a drug store in the 1800s. The marijuana leaf above the awning was digitally inserted into this image. The picture was created by graphic designer Emmanuel Laflamme circa 2009. It is available via his Deviant Art page, where he describes the art as a mash-up and a piece of digital art created with Adobe Photoshop. The image is also available on the Mashups page of LaFlamme's website, a page dedicated to digital artworks that combine multiple images. But what the image shows isn't entirely far-fetched. In the 1600s, King James I required property owners in the settlement of Jamestown in the Colonial Era to grow hemp plants for export. The crop continued to flourish for the next few centuries, and by the late 1800s, marijuana was a common ingredient in medicinal products sold in pharmacies, according to PBS: Not until the 1930s did the U.S. government start to regulate the drug. Time magazine reported: So while the marijuana leaf in the above-displayed image is the work of a digital artist, the idea that a drug store in the 1800s would sell marijuana products isn't that outlandish.
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