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INTRO

03 October, 2025

Favorite Pipe Smoking YouTube Personalities


YouTube

1. The Spurgeon Piper: www.youtube.com/@TheSpurgeonPiper

Wilson created The Spurgeon Piper to discuss the art of pipe smoking, assist new beginners, review blends, and touch on all things related to the hobby, theology and reading are also discussed on occasion.


2. The Pipe Cottage: http://www.youtube.com/@thepipecottage

Alan is not your average pipe channel he has discussions about history, his faith, current culture, books, and all with a smooth southern drawl. 


3. The Vobes Show: http://www.youtube.com/@VobesShow

Richard discusses common themes of pipe smoking and is very informative and always a joy to watch.


4. Hobbiton Piper: youtube.com/@hobbitonpiper

Kevin shares his thoughts with you from the Arkansas River Valley. His videos are for adult pipe tobacco enthusiasts to explore the history, flavor, and culture of pipe smoking. . 


5. Malcolm Guite: http://www.youtube.com/@MalcolmGuitespell

Poet, priest and scholar Malcolm Guite discusses musings, readings, and all while smoking his pipe.


6. Smoking Pipes: http://www.youtube.com/@Smokingpipes

Smoking Pipes provides reviews of pipe tobaccos and cigar, interviews from master craftsmen, expert tips on pipe smoking techniques and maintenance. Interviews with industry insiders and artisans. Historical insights into pipe and cigar culture


None of the channels that I discuss are in no way affiliated with my Famous Pipe Smokers blog. 

I am just a fan.

Wilson, The Spurgeon Piper


Wilson is a Pastor, Elder, and Overseer at a Particular Baptist church in Wichita Falls, Texas and a YouTube personality.

Wilson grew up in south Texas.  He grew up in a Christian family and accepted Christ and was baptized at a young age.  He studied theology at Texas State University and met his future wife while there, they have four children.

He started The Spurgeon Piper as a channel created to discuss the art of pipe smoking, assist new beginners, review blends, and touch on all things related to the hobby of pipe smoking.  He does occasionally discuss other topics, such as theology and reading. 

(As a fan and subscriber of  TheSpurgeonPiper I found Wilson's YouTube channel to be very informative and helpful.)

As a safety precaution I will not be including any family or personal information in this biography. 

Please check out Wilson's channel and subscribe and like https://www.youtube.com/@TheSpurgeonPiper.

Elmo Lincoln

Elmo Lincoln was an American stage and film actor whose career in motion pictures spanned the silent and sound eras. He performed in over 100 screen productions between 1913 and 1952, and was the first actor to portray on film novelist Edgar Rice Burroughs' fictional "jungle" character Tarzan, initially appearing in that role in the 1918 release Tarzan of the Apes.

Lincoln was born Otto Elmo Linkenhelt on February 6, 1889in Rochester, Indiana. He at 18 to begin a railroad career as a brakeman on a train. He went on to be a boxer, sailor, and stevedore before he became an actor.

Lincoln began acting for director D. W. Griffith, his first role was in The Battle of Elderbush Gulch (1914), followed by Judith of Bethula (1914), The Birth of a Nation (1915), and Intolerance (1916).

Stellan Windrow, who initially portrayed the title character in 1918's Tarzan of the Apes, went into military service five weeks after filming began. Lincoln replaced Windrow, although author Edgar Rice Burroughs objected to the choice. Lincoln became best known for that role.  He portrayed the character twice more—in The Romance of Tarzan (also 1918) and in the 1921 serial The Adventures of Tarzan.

Following the end of the silent movie era, Elmo left Hollywood. He also had a salvage business in Salt Lake City. In the late 1930s, he returned to the film industry, most often employed as an extra. He appeared, uncredited, in two Tarzan films in the 1940s—as a circus roustabout in Tarzan's New York Adventure (1942), and as a fisherman repairing his net in Tarzan's Magic Fountain (1949).

His final work saw him also playing a brief, uncredited role in the 1952 film Carrie, starring Laurence Olivier. According to Tarzan of the Movies, by Gabe Essoe, Lincoln was quite proud of his work in this film, as he was an admirer of Olivier.

Lincoln died of a heart attack on June 27, 1952, at age 63.