The Hidden History Podcast

Shampoo Was Brought to England by and Indian Immigrant — And Nobody Remembers His Name

16 min · 14 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Shampoo Was Brought to England by and Indian Immigrant — And Nobody Remembers His Name

Descripción

For most of human history, "washing your hair" meant rinsing it with water and soap and trying to mitigate soap scum. The word shampoo didn't even exist in English until one man brought it across an ocean — and changed how the Western world bathes. His name was Sake Dean Mahomed. An Indian immigrant, entrepreneur, and storyteller who arrived in 19th-century Britain and opened a "shampooing" bath house in Brighton.  King George IV made him the royal Shampooing Surgeon. He invented the modern hair-care ritual. And almost nobody knows his name. In this episode of Hidden History with Aiden Thomas, we trace shampoo from ancient Indian champu head massages — the Sanskrit word that became the English one — through the soap-and-water improvisations of pre-Victorian Europe, to the apothecary bottles and synthetic surfactants that fill your shower today. It wasn't a beauty product. It was a 4,000-year-old wellness tradition that crossed an empire and built an industry. Take a look around. History is everywhere.

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20 episodios

episode History of Fireworks artwork

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episode The Paperclip Has No Inventor — And It Became a Weapon Against the Nazis artwork

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The modern paperclip is everywhere. On every desk, in every drawer, in every office on earth. And yet — nobody knows who invented it. The Gem paperclip, the design that became the global standard, emerged from an anonymous British factory in the 1870s with no patent, no name, and no recorded origin. The man Norway credits with the invention — Johan Vaaler — patented a completely different design that was never manufactured or sold. The monuments they built to honor him depict the wrong paperclip. The myth persisted for over a century. But in Nazi-occupied Oslo, the paperclip became a secret language. University students wore them on their lapels as an act of silent defiance — a symbol that they stood together as Norwegians against occupation. The Nazi regime made it a criminal offense. A piece of bent wire had become dangerous. And decades later, a class of eighth graders in Whitwell, Tennessee — a town of 1,600 people with almost no Jewish community — set out to collect paperclips to make the Holocaust real. They collected over thirty million. What began as a history assignment became a children's memorial that drew Holocaust survivors from around the world. In this episode, Aiden Thomas traces the full hidden history of the paperclip — from the chaos of pre-paperclip offices to anonymous innovation to Nazi resistance to a small-town memorial that changed a community forever. The Hidden History Project uncovers the surprising stories behind the everyday objects you take for granted. Every invention has a secret past — and it's more dramatic than you'd think. New episodes every week. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.

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episode The Hidden History of Paper: How a Chinese Eunuch, a Lost Battle, and an Accidental Discovery Built the Modern World artwork

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episode History of the Pencil artwork

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episode History of the Grill artwork

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