Historical remedies
for menstrual period pain and problems. See more
remedies here.
A discussion of the
letter testimonials, and their
authenticity, of the Pinkham company (in a
discussion of a Pursettes ad with a letter
testimonial)
See two letters to MUM about the ingredients of her
Compound, and one about the lyrics of an English pop song, Lily the Pink, about
her.
Other amazing women:
Nelli Bly, Dr. Marie
Stopes, Dr. Grace
Feder Thompson
|
The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co.,
maker of medicine for headaches,
stomach illness, insomnia, depression, cancer,
tumors, women's diseases,
flatulence, menstruation, fertility, etc.:
Newspaper ad, October
21, 1897, Cambridge [Ohio] Jeffersonian
newspaper
Mrs. Pinkham made medicine for sick
women. Just as with many patent
medicine makers (here), she
solicited and replied to sick women's
letters . So effective was this
process that even after her death
other "Mrs. Pinkhams" replied in her
name (which caused credibility
problems). But women often
trusted her more than doctors. Even
though Johns Hopkins at that very
moment was revolutionizing American
medicine the New World still lagged
behind Europe.
Her diagnosis was often grim. The
cure? Her alcoholic Vegetable Compound
or another of her concoctions. Two
e-mailers have criticized
my skepticism about her products but
even as a vegan I doubt that they
could cure cancer or regulate
menstruation.
In the ad below scrofula is
tuberculosis of the lymph glands in
the neck. Tuberculosis, often fatal,
had a powerful hold on the public's
imagination in this era before any
effective treatment.
Notice the terror the ad creates.
Quick! Buy a bottle of my Vegetable
Compound before it's too late!
I thank the generous genealogist
who contributed this ad as well as
dozens of others!
|
The
Schlesinger Library, of the
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced
Study, part of Harvard University,
has probably the largest collection
of material about the Pinkham
enterprise, the records of the Lydia
E. Pinkham Medicine Company.
Part of the donation of SarahAnne
Hazelwood to this museum, much of it
patent medicine and old medical
equipment, was a very interesting
biography and study of Mrs. Pinkham's
business, Female
Complaints: Lydia Pinkham and the
Business of Women's Medicine,
by Sarah Stage.
See two letters to MUM about the ingredients of
her Compound, and one about the
lyrics of an English
pop song,
Lily the Pink, about her.
Other amazing
women: Nelli Bly, Dr.
Marie Stopes,
Dr. Grace Feder Thompson
See also the patent
medicine Cardui, Dr.
Grace Feder Thompson's
letter appealing for patients, Dr. Pierce's
medicines, and Orange
Blossom medicine.
©2006 Harry Finley. It is
illegal to reproduce or distribute
work on this Web site in any manner or
medium without written permission of
the author. Please report suspected
violations to hfinley@mum.org
|
|