Disturbing History
Before the Food and Drug Administration, before warning labels, before anyone had to prove a medicine was safe or even admit what was inside it, America ran on the bottle. This episode opens the cabinet on the patent medicine era, the long stretch of years when a quarter and a clipped newspaper advertisement could buy a family a cure-all that promised relief from nerves, weakness, pain, sleeplessness, women's complaints, and almost anything else a body could suffer, and then it asks the only question that matters, which is what those beautiful bottles actually held. We start in a winter farmhouse with a crying baby and a spoonful of morphine, then trace the machinery of the whole trade, the secret formulas that were never really patented, the newspapers bought and silenced by advertising money, the torchlit medicine shows rolling out of town before dawn, the fake Indian remedies of the Kickapoo Medicine Company, and Clark Stanley's famous snake oil that a federal laboratory found contained no snake at all. From there we look hard at the soothing syrups that dosed infants with morphine until doctors gave them the name baby killers, at the women's tonics that hid hard liquor and harder drugs behind a kindly face, at the electric belts sold to ashamed men, and at the mercury and arsenic ladled into cures for the dying. We follow cocaine into children's toothache drops and into a famous Atlanta soda fountain, and heroin into a cough remedy sold by a household name, and we end up at the glowing horror of Radithor and the millionaire whose jaw rotted off his face. Then comes the reckoning, the muckraker Samuel Hopkins Adams and his Great American Fraud, the government chemist Harvey Wiley and his Poison Squad, the Pure Food and Drug Act of nineteen oh six and the two enormous holes that law left open, and finally the raspberry-flavored disaster of nineteen thirty-seven that killed one hundred five people, many of them children, and forced the country at last to demand that a medicine be proven safe before it could be sold. It is a true crime story with no single murderer and a body count no one will ever fully tally, because the weapon was hope, the killers printed kind words on the label, and nearly every protection we take for granted today was written after the fact, in answer to the dead. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.
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