Bernarr Macfadden
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Bernarr Macfadden | |
---|---|
Born | Bernard Adolphus McFadden[1] August 16, 1868[1] Mill Spring, Missouri, U.S. |
Died | October 12, 1955[1] | (aged 87)
Resting place | Woodlawn Cemetery |
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | Bodybuilder, author, magazine publisher |
Known for | Founder of Macfadden Publications |
Signature | |
Bernarr Macfadden (born Bernard Adolphus McFadden, August 16, 1868 – October 12, 1955) was an American proponent of physical culture,[1] a combination of bodybuilding with nutritional and health theories. He founded the long-running magazine publishing company Macfadden Publications. He was the predecessor of Charles Atlas and Jack LaLanne, and has been credited with beginning the culture of health and fitness in the United States.[2]
Biography
Early life
Born in Mill Spring, Missouri, Macfadden changed his first and last names to give them a greater appearance of strength.[3] He thought "Bernarr" sounded like the roar of a lion, and that "Macfadden" was a more masculine spelling of his last name.
As a young child, Macfadden was weak and sickly. After being orphaned by the time he was 11, he was placed with a farmer and began working on the farm. The hard work and wholesome food on the farm turned him into a strong and fit boy. When he was 13, however, he moved to St. Louis, Missouri and took a desk job. Quickly his health reverted again and by 16 he described himself as a "physical wreck". He started exercising again with dumbbells, walking up to six miles a day and became a vegetarian. He quickly regained his previous health.[4]
Publishing and writings
Macfadden founded Physical Culture magazine in 1899, and was editor up to the August 1912 issue. Aided by long-time Supervising Editor Fulton Oursler, Macfadden eventually grew a publishing empire, including Liberty, True Detective, True Story, True Romances, Dream World, Ghost Stories, the once-familiar movie magazine Photoplay, and the tabloid newspaper, The New York Evening Graphic. Macfadden's magazines included SPORT, a preeminent sports magazine prior to Time Inc.'s Sports Illustrated.
Ghost Stories was a nod in the direction of the rapidly growing field of pulp magazines, though it was a large-size magazine that preserved Macfadden's confessional style for most of its stories.[5] In 1928, Macfadden made more overt moves into the pulps with, for example, Red Blooded Stories (1928–29), Flying Stories (1928–29), and Tales of Danger and Daring (1929). These were all unsuccessful. In 1929, Macfadden underwrote Harold Hersey's pulp chain, the Good Story Magazine Company. Macfadden titles like Ghost Stories and Flying Stories continued as Good Story publications. Other intended Macfadden pulps, like Thrills of the Jungle (1929) and Love and War Stories (1930), originated as Good Story magazines. In 1931, Macfadden purchased the assets of the Mackinnon-Fly magazine publishers, which gave him the pioneering sci-fi pulp Amazing Stories, and several other titles; they were published under the Teck Publications imprint. This apparently made Good Story expendable and financial support was withdrawn almost immediately. The Teck titles lasted under Macfadden control until being sold in the late '30s, after which Macfadden was absent from the pulp field.
Macfadden also contributed to many articles and books including The Virile Powers of Superb Manhood (1900), MacFadden's Encyclopedia of Physical Culture (1911–1912), Fasting for Health (1923), and The Milk Diet (1923).
Health advocacy
Macfadden popularized the practice of fasting that previously had been associated with illnesses such as anorexia nervosa.[6] He felt strongly that fasting was one of the surest ways to physical health. Many of his subjects would fast for a week in order to rejuvenate their body. He claimed that "a person could exercise unqualified control over virtually all types of disease while revealing a degree of strength and stamina such as would put others to shame" through fasting. He saw fasting as an instrument with which to prove a man's superiority over other men.
Macfadden had photographs of himself taken before and after fasts to demonstrate their positive effects on the body. For example, one photograph showed Macfadden lifting a 100-pound dumbbell over his head immediately after a seven-day fast. He also promoted fasting by appealing to racial prejudices, suggesting that fasting was a practice of self-denial that only civilized white men would choose to embrace.[citation needed] Macfadden acknowledged the difficulties of fasting and did not support it as an ascetic practice but rather because he believed its ultimate benefits outweighed its costs.[6]
He was particularly opposed to the consumption of white bread, which he called the "staff of death".[7]
Macfadden established many "healthatoriums" in the eastern and midwestern states. These institutions offered educational programs such as "The Physical Culture Training School". Although he gained his reputation for physical culture and fitness, he gained much notoriety for his views on sexual behavior. He viewed intercourse as a healthy activity and not solely a procreative one. This was a different attitude than most physicians had at the time. He also attempted to found a "Physical Culture City" in Monroe Township, Middlesex County, New Jersey, which folded after a few years and became the vacation-cabin neighborhood, and, later, suburban development of Outcalt.
Nicknamed "Body Love Macfadden" by Time – a moniker he detested – he was branded a "kook" and a charlatan by many, arrested on obscenity charges, and denounced by the medical establishment. Throughout his life, he campaigned tirelessly against "pill-pushers", processed foods and prudery.
Macfadden made an unsuccessful attempt to found a religion, "cosmotarianism", based on physical culture.[8] He claimed that his regimen would enable him to reach the age of 150.
His Macfadden Foundation established two boarding schools for young boys and girls in Westchester County, New York, the Macfadden School in Briarcliff Manor (Scarborough) and the Tarrytown School in Tarrytown. The Macfadden School took the younger children, with some being as young as 3. On March 7, 1943, the advertisement in The New York Times Magazine for the Tarrytown School read: "To Meet the Needs of a Nation at War". The boys at the Tarrytown School wore uniforms and were subject to military type discipline. The Macfadden School operated from 1939 to 1950, the Tarrytown School from 1943 to 1954.
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c. 1905
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In 1923
Other enterprises
At the peak of his career, Macfadden owned several hotels and a major building in Dansville, New York. He also opened a restaurant in New York City in 1902 called Physical Culture, which was one of the city's first vegetarian venues. Physical Culture vegetarian restaurants were established in other cities such as Philadelphia and Chicago. By 1911, there were twenty such restaurants. Macfadden was a proponent of raw foodism and a follower of Sylvester Graham's philosophies.[9]
Personal life
Macfadden was married four times and had eight children, seven of whose names began with the letter "B". One of his sons (Jack) appeared on Groucho Marx's show You Bet Your Life (December 31, 1953) and talked about his father (who was 84 at the time).
He met his third wife, Mary Williamson Macfadden, in England when she won a contest "for the most perfect specimen of England womanhood," sponsored by Macfadden. More importantly, she was a champion British swimmer.[10][11][12] The couple had eight children: Helen, Byrne, Byrnece, Beulah, Beverly, Brewster, Berwyn, and Braunda.[12] Bernarr and Mary separated in 1932 and divorced in 1946.[12]
Macfadden had ambitions for political office. He sought election as Mayor of New York City, US Senator from Florida,[13] and even US President.[14]
When one of his daughters died of a heart condition, he remarked, "It's better she's gone; she only would have disgraced me."[15]
He was an acquaintance of Shirley Temple, Clark Gable, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Will Rogers, and Rudolph Valentino.[citation needed]
Death and legacy
Macfadden died of a urinary tract infection in 1955 in Jersey City, New Jersey, after refusing medical treatment.[1] He is interred in Woodlawn Cemetery in The Bronx, New York City.[16] Upon his death, Edward Longstreet Bodin became the president of the Bernarr Macfadden Foundation.
After his death, his fourth wife Johnnie Lee Macfadden claimed that there was still money that was buried at various locations across the country. She said that Bernarr told her that he buried the money in steel cartridge boxes, and it amounted to millions. Several people have reported that they saw Macfadden leave one of his hotels carrying a bag and a shovel, thereafter returning with only the shovel. Most attempts to locate the buried treasure have failed. People close to Macfadden have said that the rumors of buried money were false, although in 1960 a steel cartridge box was found buried on Long Island on some property that was once owned by Macfadden; it contained approximately $89,000.[citation needed]
Critical reception
Macfadden has drawn criticism for requesting in his books for patients not to consult any professional physician. It has been noted by critics that Macfadden was a proponent of unorthodox ideas that are widely derided as quackery such as grape therapy supposedly healing cancer.[17][18]
Morris Fishbein wrote that "In his campaign, Bernarr Macfadden aligned himself with the border-line cultists that oppose scientific medicine and devote themselves to the promotion of some single conception of disease causation, prevention, and treatment."[19]
Some of Mcfadden's publications also drew criticism for their erotic and sexual content.[20]
Partial bibliography
Macfadden wrote over 100 books. This is a partial list of titles:
- Physical Training. 1900.
- Fasting, Hydropathy, and Exercise. 1900.
- Virile Powers of Superb Manhood. 1900.
- Power and Beauty of Superb Womanhood. 1901.
- Strength from Eating. 1901.
- Strong Eyes. 1901.
- Physical Culture Cook Book. with Mary Richardson, assisted by George Propheter. 1901.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - Natural Cure for Rupture. 1902.
- Vaccination Superstition. 1902.
- Marriage: a Lifelong Honeymoon. 1903.
- Building of Vital Power. 1904.
- Creative and Sexual Science. 1904.
- Health, Beauty, and Sexuality. 1904.
- How Success Is Won. 1904.
- A Perfect Beauty. 1904.
- Physical Culture for Babies. 1904.
- A Strenuous Lover. 1904.
- Muscular Power and Beauty. 1906.
- Macfadden Prosecution: A Curious Story of Wrong and Oppression. 1908.
- Vitality Supreme. 1915.
- Brain Energy. 1916.
- Manhood and Marriage. 1916.
- Womanhood and Marriage. 1918.
- Strengthening the Eyes. 1918.
- Making Old Bodies Young. 1919.
- Truth About Tobacco. 1921.
- The Miracle of Milk. 1923.
- Fasting for Health. 1923.
- Constipation: Its Cause, Effect, and Treatment. 1924.
- How to Raise a Strong Baby. 1924.
- Walking Cure, Pep and Power from Walking – How to Cure Disease. 1924.
- Hair Culture. 1921.
- Diabetes: Its Cause, Nature and Treatment. 1925.
- Headaches: How Caused and How Cured. 1925.
- Strengthening the Spine. 1925.
- Tooth Troubles. 1925.
- Asthma and Hay Fever. 1926.
- Colds, Coughs, and Catarrh. 1926.
- Foot Troubles. 1926.
- Predetermine Your Baby's Sex. 1926.
- Rheumatism, Its Cause, Nature and Treatment. 1926.
- Skin Troubles. 1927.
- Digestive Troubles. 1928.
- Talks to a Young Man About Sex. 1928.
- Tuberculosis. 1929.
- Home Health Manual. 1930.
- After 40 – What?. 1935.
- Practical Birth Control. 1935.
- Woman's Sex Life. 1935.
- How to Gain Weight. 1936.
- How to Reduce Weight. 1936.
- Be Married and Like It. 1937.
- Macfadden's Encyclopedia of Physical Culture. Vol. I, II, III, IV, V.
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See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f Bernarr Macfadden. Encyclopaedia Britannica
- ^ Norman, Geoffrey (March 20, 2009). "Strong Circulation: How a weight-lifting and diet fanatic built a publishing empire a century ago". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved July 10, 2012.
- ^ Macfadden, Mary; Gauvreau, Emile (1953). Dumbbells and Carrot Strips: the Story of Bernarr Macfadden. New York: Holt.
- ^ "Dustbin of History: Bernarr Macfadden". Uncle John's Triumphant 20th Anniversary Bathroom Reader. Bathroom Readers Press. 2007. pp. 213–216. ISBN 978-1-59223-093-8.
- ^ Locke, John, ed. (2010). Ghost Stories: The Magazine and Its Makers: Volumes 1 & 2. Off-Trail Publications.
- ^ a b Griffith, Ruth Marie (2000). "Apostles of abstinence: Fasting and masculinity during the Progressive Era". American Quarterly. 52 (4): 599–638. doi:10.1353/aq.2000.0047. PMID 16850570.
- ^ Copeland, Libby (April 6, 2012). "White Bread Kills". Slate. Retrieved November 18, 2012.
- ^ Ernst, Robert (1991). Weakness Is a Crime: The Life of Bernarr Macfadden. Syracuse University Press. pp. 118, 179.
- ^ Davis, Brenda, RD; Melina, Vesanto, MS, RD (2010). Becoming Raw: The Essential Guide to Raw Vegan Diets.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Endres, Kathleen L. (2011). "The Feminism of Bernarr Macfadden: Physical Culture Magazine and the Empowerment of Women" (PDF). Media History Monographs. 13 (2): 3. Retrieved February 27, 2015.
- ^ Burstyn, Joan N. (1996). "Biographies: 1866–1920, Macfadden". Past and Promise: Lives of New Jersey Women. Syracuse University Press. pp. 167–168. ISBN 978-0-8156-0418-1.
- ^ a b c Bennett, Jim (2012). Mighty Macfadden: An Amazing Life Story. lulu.com. ISBN 978-1-300-54172-1.
- ^ Watson, Bruce (September 9, 2013). "The Strange Tale of a World-Changing Fitness and Sleaze Titan". www.esquire.com. Esquire.
- ^ Daugherty, Greg (October 16, 2015). "Meet the Wackiest Millionaire Ever to Run for President". Money Magazine. TIME Inc.
- ^ Bryson, Bill (2014). One Summer: America, 1927. Anchor. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-7679-1941-8.
- ^ Bennett, Jim (2016). Muscles, Sex, Money, & Fame. pp. 487–. ISBN 978-1-365-55689-0.
- ^ Rosengren, William R. (1980). Sociology of Medicine: Diversity, Conflict, and Change. Harper & Row. p. 213.
- ^ Gardner, Martin. (2012 edition, originally published in 1957). Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science. Dover Publications. pp. 186–192. ISBN 0-486-20394-8
- ^ Fishbein, Morris (1925). The Medical Follies: An Analysis of the Foibles of Some Healing Cults. Boni & Liveright. p. 175.
- ^ Hunt, William R. (1989). Body Love: The Amazing Career of Bernarr Macfadden. Bowling Green State University Press. p. 106. ISBN 0-87972-463-3.
Further reading
- Adams, Mark. Mr. America: How Muscular Millionaire Bernarr Macfadden Transformed the Nation Through Sex, Salad, and the Ultimate Starvation Diet. NY: HarperCollins, 2009.
- Deutsch, Ronald M. The Nuts Among the Berries. New York: Ballantine Books, rev. ed. 1967.
- Endres, Kathleen L. "The Feminism of Bernarr Macfadden: Physical Culture Magazine and the Empowerment of Women". Media History Monographs. Vol. 13, No. 2 (2011).
- Ernst, Robert. Weakness Is a Crime: The Life of Bernarr Macfadden. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1991.
- Fishbein, Morris. The Medical Follies: An Analysis of the Foibles of Some Healing Cults, including Osteopathy, Homeopathy, Chiropractic, and the Electronic Reactions of Abrams, with Essays on the Anti-Vivisectionists, Health Legislation, Physical Culture, Birth Control, and Rejuvenation. NY: Boni & Liveright, 1925.
- Oursler, Fulton. The True Story of Bernarr Macfadden. NY: Lewis Copeland Company, 1929.
- Stuart, John, "Bernarr Macfadden: From Pornography to Politics," The New Masses, May 19, 1936, pp. 8–11.
- Warner, Chas W. (1934). Bernarr Macfadden. In Quacks. Jackson, Mississippi.
- Wood, Clement. Bernarr Macfadden: A Study in Success. NY: Lewis Copeland Company, 1929.
External links
- BernarrMacfadden.com
- Works by Bernarr Macfadden at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Bernarr Macfadden at the Internet Archive
- My Last Million Readers by Emile Gauvreau
- Bernarr Macfadden, the Father of Physical Culture
- Project Gutenberg: Vitality Supreme (1915) by Bernarr Macfadden
- Online archive of the covers of Physical Culture magazine
- "The Milk Diet: How to Use the Milk Diet Scientifically at Home" (1923) by Bernarr Macfadden
- The Physical Culture Magazine collection provides electronic access to editions of Physical Culture from 1918 to 1948.
- 1868 births
- 1955 deaths
- American bodybuilders
- American exercise and fitness writers
- American exercise instructors
- American health and wellness writers
- American magazine founders
- American naturists
- American nutritionists
- Bates method
- Burials at Woodlawn Cemetery (Bronx)
- Fasting advocates
- People associated with physical culture
- People from Englewood, New Jersey
- People from Sedalia, Missouri
- Pseudoscientific diet advocates
- Social nudity advocates