History
Early Years
On the 29th September 1902 the UK's Imperial Tobacco Company merged with the American Tobacco Company. Ending a trade war each company agreed not to operate in the other firm's home country. Businesses outside the UK and US were then transferred to the British and American Tobacco Company, giving them operations in Germany, Japan, Canada, Australia, China and South Africa.
Over the next ten years the company expands into India, Egypt, Holland, Belgium, Sweden, Norway, Finland, East Africa and Malaysia. By 1910 the group was selling over ten billion cigarettes worldwide.
B.A.T becomes British
A major event in the company's history was in 1911 when British and American Tobacco become British owned by divesting its shares in the joint venture. B.A.T became listed on the London stock exchange leading to British investors buying most of its American partners shares.
The company then continued expanding acquiring Argentine firm Bozetti and Co. in 1913. Then in 1914 a tobacco manufacturer in Brazil, Souza Cruz was bought.
World War One
The First World War in 1914 had a very positive impact on company sales, increasing B.A.T's sales to twenty five billion due to the increased demand from soldiers.
In the Years following 1921 when Cigarrera Bigot Sucs was acquired in Venezuela acquisitions were also made in Chile, Mexico and Central America.
Expansion into US
In 1927 B.A.T made an important move into the American tobacco market through the acquisition of Brown & Williamson, a small North Carolina company. By this time it was already becoming one of the worlds leading tobacco manufacturers, controlling one hundred and twenty subsidiaries and employing over seventy five thousand wor ...