Fragrance

This section includes products such as perfumes, aftershaves, and powders. The text below provides some historical context and shows how we can use these products to explore aspects of American history. To skip the text and go directly to the objects, CLICK HERE

 Ricksecker's Perfumes
Ricksecker's Perfumes advertisment for Martha Washington perfume, Warshaw Collection of Business Americana, Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution

Perfumes were one of the first cosmetic products to be carried by American pharmacies. Fragrant essential oils, along with dried herbs, tinctures, extracts, and mineral salts, were part of the pharmacist’s stock from which medicines and cosmetics were prepared. Oils such as lavender, rose, sandalwood, and musk were used in toilet waters, as well as to camouflage the less-agreeable scents of various salves and ointments. These oils were also used as flavoring for other medicinal products.

Deodorants and antiperspirants, which prevent odors, weren’t widely marketed until the early twentieth century. Before then, people who could afford to mask body odors did so with perfumes applied directly to clothing and handkerchiefs. Soap manufacturers also added fragrances to make their toilet soaps more appealing and to scent the skin of the user.

By the 1900s, name brand cosmetics and hair products were steadily making their way onto the shelves of American pharmacies, and many of these powders, pomades, creams, lotions, and shampoos were perfumed. The development of synthetic scents and new scent extraction technologies made perfumes less expensive to produce and purchase. As a result, perfume became less of a luxury item restricted only to wealthy buyers.

 

Azurea Sachet Powder, L.T. Piver, ParisLavender Water, Willis H. Lowe, Boston Jockey Club perfume in apothecary bottle Maud Miller Triple Extract for the Handkerchief Aimar's Premium Cologne
Azurea Sachet Powder, L.T. Piver, ParisLavender Water, Willis H. Lowe, BostonJockey Club in apothecary bottle  Maud Miller for the Handkerchief  Aimar's Premium Cologne 

 

Perfume makers, most of whom were in Paris, considered themselves artisans, and of a higher class than American cosmetics manufacturers and perfumers. American consumers appear to have agreed, for American perfume companies often gave their products French-sounding names.

 Cashmere Bouquet Talc Powder Cashmere Bouquet Perfume Cashmere Bouquet Brilliantine for the hair
Cashmere Bouquet Talc Powder  Cashmere Bouquet PerfumeCashmere Bouquet for the Hair

Some of the more successful mass-marketed American perfume companies include Solon Palmer, Richard Hudnut, Colgate, who made the longstanding line of Cashmere Bouquet-scented products, and Caswell-Massey, who in 1840 introduced the well-known fragrance Jockey Club. The Museum’s collection contains many examples of fragranced products from these companies.
 

Historian Geoffrey Jones writes that the success of Frenchman François Coty’s line of fragrances in the American market is emblematic of a major change in the fragrance industry in the 1920s. First, Coty had created a new model for perfume products: he employed jewelry designer René Lalique to create perfume bottles so eye-catching that, as Jones writes, “the bottle came to cost more than the juice within it.” Consumers were willing to pay for small amounts of perfume in exclusive-looking bottles, and Coty had factories that made both the perfumes and the bottles. Second, he was able to successfully market scents across a wider economic spectrum. Finally, Coty invested quickly and heavily in the American market, setting up a separate company to produce perfumes within the United States. Other large, powerful French companies—such as Bourjois, Guerlain, and Caron—made similar moves, opening American offices and sometimes creating perfumes specifically for the American market. These companies were able to dominate the market through powerful brand-identity and advertising campaigns. The perfume industry, previously made up of small perfume houses who sold their scents in generic, mass-produced bottles, evolved into a market composed of large companies that packaged their scents in designer vessels.

 

Radio Girl PerfumeGuerlain ShalimarCharlie Perfume
Radio GirlGuerlain de Paris ShalimarCharlie

 

Before the 1970s, perfumes sold in America were usually either imported from Europe, or manufactured in America to emulate European perfumes. Jones writes that after the launch of the top-selling Revlon scent “Charlie” in 1973, American perfumes became “more sporty and independent than their French equivalents.”

Fragrances marketed to men followed a similar, although slower, trajectory to those marketed to women. Before the early twentieth century, men’s scents were confined to typical barbershop aftershaves, such as Bay Rum and Florida Water. Even then, most men avoided scented aftershaves.

World War II changed the way that men viewed grooming products. Because neat and clean grooming had been a requirement during service, men came home accustomed to using products that kept them clean-shaven, fresh-smelling, and neatly tended. By the early 1950s, now-famous male fragrances such as Aqua-Velva, Seaforth!, Old Spice, and Canoe had become popular.

 Seaforth! Aftershave Lotion and Deodorant Set
Seaforth! Aftershave Lotion and Deodorant

 

Bibliography ~ see the Bibliography Section for a full list of the references used in the making if this Object Group. However, the Fragrance section relied on the following references:

Jones, Geoffrey. Beauty Imagined: A History of the Global Beauty Industry. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2010.

Morris, Edwin T. Fragrance: The Story of Perfume from Cleopatra to Chanel. New York: Scribner, 1984.

Peiss, Kathy Lee. Hope in a Jar: The Making of America’s Beauty Culture. New York: Metropolitan Books, 1998.

Currently not on view
Location
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maker
United Drug Company
ID Number
MG.293320.0864
catalog number
293320.0864
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
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date made
ca 1904
maker
Guerlain
ID Number
MG.293320.0865
catalog number
293320.0865
accession number
293320
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Location
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Brand launched (Ben Hur)
1904
maker
Andrew Jergens Company
ID Number
MG.293320.0866
catalog number
293320.0866
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
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date made
1920s
maker
Colgate and Co.
ID Number
MG.293320.0867
catalog number
293320.0867
accession number
293320
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Location
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maker
Guerlain
ID Number
MG.293320.0868
catalog number
293320.0868
accession number
293320
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Location
Currently not on view
ID Number
MG.293320.0869
catalog number
293320.0869
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1920
maker
Colgate and Co.
ID Number
MG.293320.0870
catalog number
293320.0870
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
early 20th century
maker
Solon Palmer
ID Number
MG.293320.0871
catalog number
293320.0871
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
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date made
after 1856
ID Number
MG.293320.0872
catalog number
293320.0872
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1914
maker
Roger & Gallet
ID Number
MG.293320.0873
catalog number
293320.0873
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1900
maker
Colgate and Co.
ID Number
MG.293320.0874
catalog number
293320.0874
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
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maker
Kerkoff
ID Number
MG.293320.0875
catalog number
293320.0875
accession number
293320
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Location
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ID Number
MG.293320.0876
catalog number
293320.0876
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
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maker
E. W. Hoyt & Company
ID Number
MG.293320.0877
catalog number
293320.0877
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
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maker
Solon Palmer
ID Number
MG.293320.0878
catalog number
293320.0878
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
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date made
after 1887
label registration date
1887-12-20
ID Number
MG.293320.0879
catalog number
293320.0879
accession number
293320
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Location
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maker
A and F Pears, Ltd.
ID Number
MG.293320.0880
catalog number
293320.0880
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
ID Number
MG.293320.0881
catalog number
293320.0881
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1920s
product launch
1922
maker
Colgate and Co.
ID Number
MG.293320.0882
catalog number
293320.0882
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1920
product launch date (As the Petals)
1916
ID Number
MG.293320.0883
catalog number
293320.0883
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
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ID Number
MG.293320.0884
catalog number
293320.0884
accession number
293320
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Location
Currently not on view
ID Number
MG.293320.0885
catalog number
293320.0885
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
ID Number
MG.293320.0886
catalog number
293320.0886
accession number
293320
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
ID Number
MG.293320.0887
catalog number
293320.0887
accession number
293320

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