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Pages
from History:
by
Robert Noah Calvert
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Trade
Tools, Part Two
To
Read Part
One
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Originally known as the Body Roller, the Massage Vibrator
was renamed and improved after 25 years in 1904. This
advertisement claims the "appliance" delivers
"triple action: revolving, vibratory, and compression."
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The electric vibrator was introduced in
1902 and thus began the broad marketing of vibrators to the general
public. But the introduction of electric devices did not hinder the
development and marketing of manual tools. Over time the manual tools
would outnumber electric ones in sheer volume of product. Many of
the manual tools introduced from 1980-1999 were remakes of the original
devices that appeared a century earlier.
At one time, Racine,
Wisconsin, had more than 20 manufacturing companies producing electric
vibrators. Most of these products were small hand-held units sold
from catalogs, retail stores and advertisements in magazines. The
electric vibrator evolved from being a device used largely by barbers
and massage practitioners, to one used hardly at all by barbers
and very little by the massage industry, to an almost exclusive
trade with the general public. Many of these devices were advertised
as self-help units, but soon became related to sexual pleasure.
But this article is
not about those latter types of devices; it is about the wide variety
of electric and manual tools used for relaxation and self-help.
As noted in the previous column, most of the earlier vibrating devices,
particularly the hand-crank types, were used by physicians. With
the advent of electrical devices the marketplace expanded exponentially
to consumers everywhere.
One of the earliest
devices, sold around the turn of the 20th century, and still sold
today in a myriad of revised versions, is the original massage vibrator.
Stringed beads made
of rubber, Bakelite or metal were configured on a chain of brass
or other heavy metal. Vibration was achieved by rolling the beaded
device over the body in long pressure strokes. Some were even made
on elastic material so they could be stretched between a doorway.
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The bongers, originally called the ball beaters, were
first introduced about 1885. This photograph from the
1904 text Common Disorders, by W.R. Latson, shows the
ball beaters being used in the treatment of female disorders.
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Another hand-held device,
bongers, sold today in retail stores nearly everywhere, was originally
introduced in 1885. Bongers deliver vibration by pounding the body
in rhythmical beats.
The physician's use
of hand-cranked vibrators in the late 19th century gave way to delegating
manual therapies to the physical therapist. Over time manual therapy
was almost completely replaced by electric vibrators. Faradic massage,
or electric stimulation of the muscles, was quite popular within
the new field of physiotherapy during the 1920s in America and Europe.
Originally used as medical treatments, electric vibrators soon became
quack devices. Today they are again being sold to consumers in various
forms for weight reduction, to reduce muscle spasm and as muscle
relaxants.
The vast array of hand
tools used to rub the body found in stores today are made of common
and exotic stone, molded plastics and polymers, copper, glass, crystal
and even porcelain. All of these devices are merely copies of the
1,000-year-old Chinese jade massage knuckle we have in the World
of Massage Museum (WOMM) collection. Some of these modern devices
are shaped as turtles, dolphins and branches--there are as many
shapes and colors as one can imagine.
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This 1902 illustration is part of a promotional brochure
that came with the purchase of this vibrator. Recommended
uses were for imparting beauty to the cheeks, throat
and muscles by toning.
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Even the best-selling
TheraCane® and Backnobber products have their roots in
the ancient Polynesian lomi sticks. Most modern vibrators--the G-5,
Thumper® and others--deliver similar vibration techniques
to the body as their hand-cranked predecessors did more than 100
years ago. And if you think the vibrating chairs sold today are
new, think again. The vibrating chair has been around since Greek
and Roman times, and as an electric device since the late 1800s.
We have a device in
the WOMM collection from the 1960s that produces vibrations up and
down the spine much like a sophisticated chair from Sharper Image
or Panasonic, but with the kneading devices visible, not hidden
inside the chair.
With all the electrical
devices available today, from Thumper to Sharper Image's high-tech
recliner, the most common are manual tools used to supplement the
hands that apply them. Criticisms made by physicians such as Taylor,
Kleen and Kellogg more than a century ago, stating that tools could
never replace the human hand, seem to have taken an interesting
turn. As the electrical devices become more sophisticated and high-tech,
and thus more expensive, manual tools have become more common and
widely used because they cost less and are not replacements for,
but extensions of the human hand that applies them.
Robert Noah Calvert is the founder
and publisher of Massage Magazine. The material for this column
comes from the World of Massage Museum's collection and Calvert's
book, The History of Massage, published in February 2002 by Healing
Arts Press.
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