Back in the day digging out honey hole bottle spots along The Rahway and Elizabeth rivers in NJ. We came up with several pipes dating from colonial times. It was a rare find because very little was tossed out because everything (glass containers/bottles were usually repurposed. Some of the examples were clay rolls placed into the palm and packed down on each end. They were tossed into a kiln as a firing test for clay. you could actually see the palm print from the individual on it. But , these honey holes were few and far in between. My buddy once dug an ale bottle with an old cartridge in it..complete. Must have been one heck of a conversation that night. SM
Nice argument but don't hold water. Are you a smoker?
First: Tavern pipes. I never said they were 'carried about', re-read the posts. As for even the 9" plus I was stated the would 'not' fair well in a pack.
For travel purposes the ones 7" and smaller would (and still are) more sturdy. The small one that pipe makers call the "Elizabethan" is only a few inches.
Now for "broken tips":
1) if you are a pipe smoker (as I am), continued biting on clay, gnawing, chewing, etc will eventually saw right through it - when it snaps off it can (and has) look just like someone Snipped it off! Pipe is still good just a little shorter.
Now thinking of a Tavern Pipe at a tavern; they are not (usually) passing it around as if sharing Wacky Backy, no they 'Rent it' or just borrow depending on the owner, and That Person has it for the evening (or however long his meal and/or gambling may last. I that time he is eating, drinking, yackity yacking... and very often Chewing on the end of the pipe. Depending on how vigorous a chewer, depending on the state of his teeth, it may not take long before - Snap - he bits it right off.
Another scenario; as mentioned the Tip is a point of clogging (so is the vent entry from the bowel, also depends on the moisture content of the tobacco). With saliva, and as said food material, the tip can clog up and 'snipping' or simply braking it off is an easy remedy for a 15" to 24" long stem. Holding over the candel does tend to create 'extra' smoke that may be frowned upon in some circles. As smokers we have a saying "Control your smoke, man" for those who start to become chimney stacks in the room.
As for the 'next customer'; perhaps some found the tip too fowl and might break it off, but as for the tavern owner, it would be far more Profitable to just hold over a flame for a few minutes - better to rent the pipe for a month until broken then a few nights because you keep snipping shorter.
Yes, where ever taverns have been found, Many shards and 'tips' can be found. A friend of mine who was crew a few years ago sailed to the infamous Tortuga. He brought back many tales, one was that it is said "The streets are paved with the shards of broken clay pipes". He swears it looked like it and despite it no longer being allowed was able to sneak a few back he now has on his mantle. (a perk of sailing a tall ship dressed as a pirate).
No, there is no evidence that tavern pipes were 'Snipped' between users, at least not by the tavern owner (or his employed). The most obvious explanation for 'broken tips' found at any dogs is...they were broken, perhaps bit off, but not as any kind of 'typical' handling.