Object Details
maker
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company
Description
This bottle contained Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, one of the most widely marketed patent medicines in American history. The bottle is approximately 2/3 empty. It is corked. The label is slightly torn.
Although the ingredients for this patent medicine were never officially released, the compound probably consists of a combination of pleurisy root, unicorn root, life root, fenugreek seed, and black cohosh. A significant amount of alcohol was added supposedly as a stabilizer and the tonic was then simmered over the stove before being bottled and sold.
Despite their name, most patent medicines were not patented; they were, however, typically composed of ingredients which were not publicly disclosed. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was never patented but a label patent for “Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound” was registered by Lydia E. Pinkham of Lynn, Massachusetts, with the U.S. Patent Office on February 9, 1876 (Label Patent 536; USPO Official Gazette 9: 1876)
Commercial production of Pinkham’s compound began in 1876. Fm Pinkham, to begin marketing the nostrum in The Boston Herald in 1876, the company experienced a dramatic spike in sales. Later advertising tended to feature images of Lydia Pinkham herself (this bottle does not include what became the famous black and white line drawing of Lydia Pinkham). The medicine was marketed as a cure-all for “women’s complaints,” a broad category of illnesses which ranged from migraines to menstrual troubles to problems that stemmed from pregnancy. The company’s claim that the compound could treat “menstrual irregularities” meant that many women took the compound hoping to cause an abortion (the compound did not function as an abortifacient).
In the years preceding passage of the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act, Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was widely cited as an example of the dangers and excesses of patent medicines. Critics claimed that the probable inclusion of alcohol as an ingredient meant that many women who advocated for temperance took the drug as a pick-me-up (directions for dosage tended to vary over time). The 1906 law did not ban companies such as Pinkham’s from claiming to cure a variety of illnesses without evidence. It did, however, require companies such as Pinkham’s to list ingredients such as alcohol. The label’s statement that the compound contains alcohol probably indicates that this bottle was produced after 1906.
Over the course of the twentieth century, as laws began to restrict patent medicine companies from extravagant claims, the Lydia Pinkham company experienced a slow but steady decline in sales.
The indications or uses for this product as provided on its packaging:
Recommended as a vegetable tonic in conditions for which this preparation is adapted. In use for over 50 years.
Dose: A tablespoonful every four hours through the day. Shake the bottle before using.
Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was prescribed for “all those Painful Complaints and Weaknesses so common to our best female population . . . and is particularly adapted to the Change of Life.”
date made
ca 1920s
ID Number
MG.293320.1616
accession number
293320
catalog number
293320.1616
Object Name
otc preparation
Physical Description
glass (overall material)
alcohol, 15% (drug active ingredients)
Measurements
overall: 8 1/2 in x 3 1/4 in x 1 3/4 in; 21.59 cm x 8.255 cm x 4.445 cm
place made
United States: Massachusetts, Lynn
See more items in
Medicine and Science: Medicine
Health & Medicine
American Enterprise
Balm of America
Exhibition
American Enterprise
Exhibition Location
National Museum of American History
Data Source
National Museum of American History
Subject
Patent Medicine
maker's community
Women Inventors
Subject
Women's Health
Tonics, Minerals & Vitamins
Link to Original Record
Record ID
nmah_651677