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Pages
from History:
by
Robert Noah Calvert
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Slabs,
Couches and Tables
This is the first of installment in new
column on the history of massage equipment, tools and products.
The history of massage has been largely forgotten, and much of it
is yet to be revealed. Learning about the past can instill pride
and create traditions, as it has in many other professions. In an
industry that is sometimes tainted by allusions to its relationship
with prostitution and sexuality, it is important to understand that
massage has a rich and long history that has nothing to do with
these elements of human activity. In an industry striving for recognition,
with a history virtually unknown and unappreciated, telling the
story of its past can instill self-respect - and the knowledge that
massage has a long and significant past.
The first so-called massage tables were
used during the time of the Greeks and Romans, and were marble or
wood slabs called plinths. These were used in the great gymnasiums
of Greece from about 800 B.C. to 146 B.C.; and in the palatial baths
of the Roman Empire from about 300 B.C. to A.D. 476.
The
term "massage table" is less than 100 years in use, arriving
sometime during the late 1920s. Prior to this, devices used for
massage were called couches, and were truly pieces of furniture.
These were used during the Victorian era of the late 19th century
and were stuffed with horse hair, but were upholstered with velvet
or similar material. They were quite cushy in their comfort, compared
to the physician's exam table, and fashionably colored in the warm,
rich hues of the era.
The next generation of massage tables
were medical examination tables. Usually made of solid oak, they
had various adjustments and were designed for multiple uses, massage
being one (physical exams and surgical procedures were two others).
The padding on these exam tables was horse hair covered with heavy
leather. Horse hair was the most widely used stuffing because it
was resistant to insects or other damage, whereas cotton and straw
were not.
Between 1910 and 1925 electric vibrating
tables were manufactured for use primarily
in sanitariums and physicians' offices. These were solid wood with
no cushions, except those that might be added for a thinner person’s
comfort.
A stationary massage table used after
World War I was made from common woods with cotton or straw padding
under a thin plastic covering. The first portable massage table
was developed around 1930 and was made of a wood frame with metal
or wood legs. Portable massage tables of this period were quite
sophisticated in their design and quality, especially those that
had mechanisms to unfold the legs and fold them back again as the
table was opened and closed.
The
Battlecreek Company, of Battlecreek, Michigan, manufactured the
first light-weight massage table, an aluminum folding portable table
introduced in the 1940s.
The stationary table presented by George
Downing in his 1972 book, The Massage Book, was a homemade
model copied by many practitioners until later in that decade, when
commercially manufactured tables became more readily available.
Neither the first stationary nor portable
massage tables contained face holes. The
face hole cut into the head of a stationary or portable table appeared
in the late 1940s. The face cradle that attaches to the end of the
massage table was first introduced in the 1980s.
Today's models are ergonomically designed,
with special alloy tubing or specialty woods and multi-layered padding
that comes in a variety of colors and styles. Specialty tables,
such as those with removal stomach-holes designed for working on
pregnant women; extra-wide table tops for working on large clients
or doing special types of bodywork; built-in spa-therapy water tubs;
and those which fold to lie flat on the ground for Asian therapies,
are among the numerous types available today.
Robert Noah Calvert is the
founder and CEO of MASSAGE Magazine. The material for this column
comes from two sources: the World of Massage Museum's collections
and Calvert's book, The History of Massage, published in
February 2002 by Healing Arts Press.
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