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  • 2022-12-03 (xsd:date)
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  • Did Welfare Officials Have No Problem With This 3-Year-Old Cigar Aficionado? (en)
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  • The image of what is described as a 3-year-old boy (and sometimes incorrectly as a 3-year-old girl) smoking a cigar with great confidence periodically goes viral on social media platforms like Twitter and Reddit. In media reports, the boy is usually identified either as Bobby (or Bobbie) Quigley. As the Twitter account Fake History Hunter identified, ample newspaper coverage of Quigley exists from the time of the photos in 1928, and the story was shared widely thanks to its inclusion in syndicated wire reports around the world: On Aug. 30, 1928, the Washington, D.C.-based, paper The Evening Star ran a story with the headline 3-Year-Old Nicotine Addict Dislikes Beer and Eschews Chewing Tobacco. (Newspapers.com) The article was the result of a decision by the D.C. Board of Public Welfare to decline to take action in the case of the 3-year-old, who had developed a cigar habit when he was only 11 months old: According to a reporter for the Evening Star who traveled to the Quiqley residence to investigate, the boy asked the reporter for a cigar upon arrival: Several photographs were taken during the visit, potentially by multiple photographers. Below are the pictures of Quigley Snopes was able to find in the Getty Images archive: (Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images) (Henry Miller News Picture Service/Archive Photos/Getty Images) (George Rinhart/Corbis via Getty Images) Syndicated versions of the Quigley tale began circulating widely the next day — on Aug. 31, 1928. Additional assertions provided by these reports stated that knowledge of Bobby's habit became public after he was photographed for the movies. They also tell the story of how he first got hooked: Later, syndicated stories claimed that a doctor had determined the practice to be safe because smoking would not hurt him if he did not inhale. This, it bears highlighting, is not a view that is held by the modern medical community. Because we found multiple photographs and contemporaneous news reports about this cigar-smoking tot, Snopes rates claims that the photograph and its associated narrative are authentic as True. (en)
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