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The History of Smoking Bans

By: Jon Tipping

By the late 1600s, cities began banning smoking. These cities included those in Europe and Austria. Bans established in Berlin (1723), Konigsberg (1742), and Stettin (1744) were soon after repealed during the 1848 revolutions.

In 1876, New Zealand become home to the first building on Earth to boast a no-smoking policy. The Old Government Building situated in Wellington outlawed smoking, not out of worry for the health of the general public, but rather to cut back the chance of fire. The building is the globe’s second largest made of wood.

Unexpectedly, Adolf Hitler had his hand in the first trendy national tobacco ban. Hitler’s Nazi Party prohibited tobacco use in German post offices, universities, Nazi offices, and military hospitals. The rule was founded in 1941 based on info provided by the Institute for Tobacco Hazards Research.

As the twentieth Century came to a close, researchers began to recognize the risks of second hand smoke and tobacco use. In response, the tobacco business started airing “courtesy awareness” campaigns to preserve its buyers. In the U.S., states began to pass laws that provided separate areas for smokers.

Minnesota became the first U.S. state to prohibit public smoking in 1975. The state implemented the Minnesota Clean Indoor Act which required restaurants to supply diners with non-smoking sections. Bars, however, were excepted from this law.

A Californian town, San Luis Obispo became the first town to ban smoking in restaurants, bars, and other indoor places. The law was passed in 1990 and was the first of its kind. Nowadays, nearly the whole planet enforces some kind of smoking or tobacco use ban. Merely a a small amount of nations have yet to crack down on second hand smoke.

The planet’s initial ban on smoking was recognized in 1575 when an ecclesiastical commission in Mexico put a ban on tobacco use all churches situated in Mexico and the Spanish Colonies of the Caribbean. Some years later, in 1633, Murad IV, an Ottoman ruler affirmed a ban on smoking in the entire territory.

Pope Urban VII was the next to put his foot down, banning smoking in the church in 1590. The Pope not only made it illegal to smoke, he claimed he would excommunicate anyone who used tobacco in any way in the church or on its porch-way. Pope Urban VII bolstered his predecessor’s ban in 1624.

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