Feminine Hygiene Products

This section includes products such as tampons and douches. The text below provides some historical context and shows how we can use these products to explore aspects of American history, for example, cultural discomfort with menstruation. To skip the text and go directly to the objects, CLICK HERE 

 

The Museum’s collection of feminine hygiene products is small and lacks examples of many common and important products. Before the late 1970s, feminine hygiene was not understood to be a subject warranting serious cultural and historical research, and feminine hygiene products were not prioritized for collection or preservation. This attitude mirrored Americans’ discomfort with the idea of women’s hygiene. This discomfort is especially apparent in our continued reliance on the euphemism “feminine hygiene,” a term which we often use to discuss products associated with menstruation, genital cleanliness, and contraception. Use of this euphemism allows us to avoid any direct reference to female anatomy.

 

a can of Lorate douche powder
Lorate Douche Powder

Feminine hygiene objects reflect this cultural discomfort. Sharra L. Vostral writes that these products assist “women in passing as healthy. They allow women to present themselves as non-menstruants.” Tampons, powders, douches and other similar products help us avoid personal or public awareness of a women’s menstruation. Advertisements for these products reassure women that no one will know that they are menstruating, that they are clean and inoffensive, and that they are free to live normally.  

Despite our hesitance to focus on them, feminine hygiene products play a huge part in the daily health, well-being, and financial expenditures of American women. The global feminine hygiene industry is estimated to be worth $15 billion, and growing. Many women see these products not as a mere convenience, but as a necessity for performing their professional, social, and familial responsibilities. Yet, in the past few decades, concerns about the safety of feminine hygiene products, their effect on the environment, and the prohibitive cost or inaccessibility of the products for poorer women have emerged. These concerns have driven innovation within the feminine hygiene product market.

Before the advent of commercial feminine hygiene products, women used pieces of cloth to absorb menstrual fluids. They then washed and reused these cloths.  Although Johnson & Johnson marketed a disposable sanitary napkin in 1896, it met with limited acceptance. However, surgical dressings developed during the First World War spurred innovation in commercial sanitary napkin designs, including products by Sfag-Na-Kins and Kotex.

Sfag-Na-Kins were developed from sphagnum moss, which can absorb more than 20 times its own dry weight in fluids and possesses antibacterial properties. The moss was grown in the Pacific Northwest, and Portland’s Sphagnum Moss Products Company processed the moss and wrapped it in a gauze covering. The packaging for Sfag-Na-Kins features a picture of an American Red Cross-capped “Sphagnum Moss Girl,” a reference to the product’s origin as a surgical dressing. Despite the product’s claims regarding its antibacterial action and greater absorbency than cotton, Sfag-Na-Kins do not appear to have been a success in the feminine hygiene market.

 

 a box of Sfag-Na-Kins with the Sphagnum Moss Girl a Sfag-Na-Kin
A box of Sfag-Na-Kins with the Sphagnum Moss GirlA Sfag-Na-Kin

 

Kotex napkins, however, met with great success. Introduced in 1921, Kotex used the same cellucotton (a wood pulp product with the texture of cotton) enclosed within a gauze sheath that it had developed for wartime bandages. A substantial advertising campaign in women’s magazines garnered strong sales through pharmacies and mail-order catalogs. The success of Kotex jumpstarted the feminine hygiene product market.

Tampons were used in medical practice before they were introduced for menstruation. They were used to stop bleeding in deep wounds as well as to introduce medicines, including those with contraceptive properties, into the vagina. Several patents for menstrual tampons were filed in the late 1920s and early 1930s. However, the design that is usually cited as the first successfully marketed tampon originated with the patent filed in 1931 by E.C. Haas. This design, with its paper-tube applicator, became the Tampax tampon.

 

Dr. Pierce's Medicated TamponsCashay Sanitary PuffsAntiseptic Tampanade
 Dr. Pierce's Medicated Tampons  Cashay Sanitary PuffsAntiseptic Tampanades

 

Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanitative Wash packet
Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanitative Wash

Environmental and safety concerns about tampons and sanitary napkins have led to the promotion of alternative products on the market. The plastic applicators and synthetic materials used in tampons and napkins contribute to American landfills. Some consumers have worried that the chemicals used to make tampons leach into their bodies, and the rare but serious risk of toxic shock syndrome is especially associated with high absorbency and synthetic-material tampons. Alternative feminine hygiene technologies include custom-made reusable fabric napkins, sea sponge tampons, silicon cups, and underwear containing special absorbent and antibacterial fibers.

Douches, suppositories, creams, and spray deodorants are also represented within the Museum’s collection. Older product packaging often masked the product’s intended effect, which sometimes included contraception, with vague language stating only that the product was “for feminine hygiene.” The collection also contains examples of products that we now associate mostly with household disinfectants or oral care, such as Lysol and Lavoris, which were also advertised as vaginal douches.

 

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

Freidenfelds, Lara. The Modern Period: Menstruation in Twentieth-century America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009.

Johnson, Emma. “Can These Panties Disrupt a 15 Billion Feminine Hygiene Market?” Forbes. Accessed May 6, 2016. https://www.forbes.com/sites/emmajohnson/2015/05/28/can-these-panties-disrupt-a-15-billion-feminine-hygiene-market/#6ed1444d6b78

Stalheim, T., S. Ballance, B. E. Christensen, and P. E. Granum. “Sphagnan – a Pectin-like Polymer Isolated from Sphagnum Moss Can Inhibit the Growth of Some Typical Food Spoilage and Food Poisoning Bacteria by Lowering the pH.” Journal of Applied Microbiology 106, no. 3 (March 1, 2009): 967–76. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2672.2008.04057.x.

Vostral, Sharra L. “Rely and Toxic Shock Syndrome: A Technological Health Crisis.” The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 84, no. 4 (December 2011): 447–59.

Vostral, Sharra L. Under Wraps: A History of Menstrual Hygiene Technology. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2008.

The indications or uses for this product as provided by the manufacturer are:Cashay - the moden internal sanitary protection for the menstrual period. Cashay is hailed as the miracle invention. No wonder!
Description
The indications or uses for this product as provided by the manufacturer are:
Cashay - the moden internal sanitary protection for the menstrual period. Cashay is hailed as the miracle invention. No wonder! It has at last freed women from discomfort, embarrassment and social-inactivity during their "difficult days". Cashay, worn internally, eliminates chafing bulging pads, hot binding belts, offensive tell-tale odors. Cashay brings the new freedom demanded by modern women!
date made
ca 1934
patent date
1934-01-02
maker
Park and Tilford
ID Number
1978.0883.212
accession number
1978.0883
catalog number
1978.0883.212
patent number
US1941717A
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Texas Medico Pharmacal Laboratories
ID Number
1979.1144.065
accession number
1979.1144
catalog number
1979.1144.065
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Texas Medico Pharmacal Laboratories
ID Number
1979.1144.066
accession number
1979.1144
catalog number
1979.1144.066
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
after April, 1933
trademark registration date (parahydrecin)
1933-08-15
maker
Norwich Pharmacal Company
ID Number
1979.1144.141
accession number
1979.1144
catalog number
1979.1144.141
In 1930, Rosemarie Lewis established the Certane Company to produce "feminine hygiene" products in Los Angeles, California.
Description
In 1930, Rosemarie Lewis established the Certane Company to produce "feminine hygiene" products in Los Angeles, California. "Feminine hygiene" was a code term used by marketers for women's contraceptive products at a time when dealing in these products was illegal in most of the U.S. Lewis's first products were antiseptic vaginal jellies and douche powders, but she soon added cervical caps, diaphragms, and vaginal suppositories (cones) to the Certane line. Lewis sold her products through drugstores and other retail outlets and mail-order. She was investigated by the Federal Trade Ccommission (FTC) in 1938 and charged with false and misleading advertising. She was charged again in 1942 by the U.S. Postal Service for conducting unlawful business (selling contraceptives) through the mail. By 1948, Rosemarie Lewis began doing business as the Vogarell Products Company, the maker name on this product. In the 1950's Vogarell added Lanacane skin ointment for acne and Hemex rectal ointment to the product line. Certane douche powder, vaginal jelly, and vaginal suppositories appear to have remained on the market through the 1960s, and Lewis continued to do business as Vogarell into the early 1980s.
Reference: Tone, Andrea. Devices and Desires: A History of Contraceptives in America. New York: Hill and Wang, 2001.
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Vogarell Products Company
ID Number
1979.1144.142
accession number
1979.1144
catalog number
1979.1144.142
In 1930, Rosemarie Lewis established the Certane Company to produce "feminine hygiene" products in Los Angeles, California.
Description
In 1930, Rosemarie Lewis established the Certane Company to produce "feminine hygiene" products in Los Angeles, California. "Feminine hygiene" was a code term used by marketers for women's contraceptive products at a time when dealing in these products was illegal in most of the U.S. Lewis's first products were antiseptic vaginal jellies and douche powders, but she soon added cervical caps, diaphragms, and vaginal suppositories (cones) to the Certane line. Lewis sold her products through drugstores and other retail outlets and mail-order. She was investigated by the Federal Trade Ccommission (FTC) in 1938 and charged with false and misleading advertising. She was charged again in 1942 by the U.S. Postal Service for conducting unlawful business (selling contraceptives) through the mail. By 1948, Rosemarie Lewis began doing business as the Vogarell Products Company, the maker name on this product. In the 1950's Vogarell added Lanacane skin ointment for acne and Hemex rectal ointment to the product line. Certane douche powder, vaginal jelly, and vaginal suppositories appear to have remained on the market through the 1960s, and Lewis continued to do business as Vogarell into the early 1980s.
Reference: Tone, Andrea. Devices and Desires: A History of Contraceptives in America. New York: Hill and Wang, 2001.
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Vogarell Products Company
ID Number
1979.1144.143
accession number
1979.1144
catalog number
1979.1144.143
In 1930, Rosemarie Lewis established the Certane Company to produce "feminine hygiene" products in Los Angeles, California.
Description
In 1930, Rosemarie Lewis established the Certane Company to produce "feminine hygiene" products in Los Angeles, California. "Feminine hygiene" was a code term used by marketers for women's contraceptive products at a time when dealing in these products was illegal in most of the U.S. Lewis's first products were antiseptic vaginal jellies and douche powders, but she soon added cervical caps, diaphragms, and vaginal suppositories (cones) to the Certane line. Lewis sold her products through drugstores and other retail outlets and mail-order. She was investigated by the Federal Trade Ccommission (FTC) in 1938 and charged with false and misleading advertising. She was charged again in 1942 by the U.S. Postal Service for conducting unlawful business (selling contraceptives) through the mail. By 1948, Rosemarie Lewis began doing business as the Vogarell Products Company, the maker name on this product. In the 1950's Vogarell added Lanacane skin ointment for acne and Hemex rectal ointment to the product line. Certane douche powder, vaginal jelly, and vaginal suppositories appear to have remained on the market through the 1960s, and Lewis continued to do business as Vogarell into the early 1980s.
Reference: Tone, Andrea. Devices and Desires: A History of Contraceptives in America. New York: Hill and Wang, 2001.
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Vogarell Products Company
ID Number
1979.1144.144
accession number
1979.1144
catalog number
1979.1144.144
In 1930, Rosemarie Lewis established the Certane Company to produce "feminine hygiene" products in Los Angeles, California.
Description
In 1930, Rosemarie Lewis established the Certane Company to produce "feminine hygiene" products in Los Angeles, California. "Feminine hygiene" was a code term used by marketers for women's contraceptive products at a time when dealing in these products was illegal in most of the U.S. Lewis's first products were antiseptic vaginal jellies and douche powders, but she soon added cervical caps, diaphragms, and vaginal suppositories (cones) to the Certane line. Lewis sold her products through drugstores and other retail outlets and mail-order. She was investigated by the Federal Trade Ccommission (FTC) in 1938 and charged with false and misleading advertising. She was charged again in 1942 by the U.S. Postal Service for conducting unlawful business (selling contraceptives) through the mail. By 1948, Rosemarie Lewis began doing business as the Vogarell Products Company, the maker name on this product. In the 1950's Vogarell added Lanacane skin ointment for acne and Hemex rectal ointment to the product line. Certane douche powder, vaginal jelly, and vaginal suppositories appear to have remained on the market through the 1960s, and Lewis continued to do business as Vogarell into the early 1980s.
Reference: Tone, Andrea. Devices and Desires: A History of Contraceptives in America. New York: Hill and Wang, 2001.
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Vogarell Products Company
ID Number
1979.1144.146
accession number
1979.1144
catalog number
1979.1144.146
Blue and white and silver-colored cardboard box with divided interior for holding 24 vaginal cones (suppositories). Box is empty. Certane vaginal cones contained phenylmercuric acetate, 0.05% and oxyquinoline sulphate.
Description
Blue and white and silver-colored cardboard box with divided interior for holding 24 vaginal cones (suppositories). Box is empty. Certane vaginal cones contained phenylmercuric acetate, 0.05% and oxyquinoline sulphate. Printed on box: "Must be kept cool to avoid melting." Information about the use of the cones is printed on the bottom of the box: "Convenient and quick to use. CERTANE Cones can be quickly inserted and pushed deeply into the vagina by the fingers. Their non-irritating base carrying the medical ingredients melts promptly in contact with body heat and moisture and after a little while spreads upon the vaginal membranes."
In 1930, Rosemarie Lewis established the Certane Company to produce "feminine hygiene" products in Los Angeles, California. "Feminine hygiene" was a code term used by marketers for women's contraceptive products at a time when dealing in these products was illegal in most of the U.S. Lewis's first products were antiseptic vaginal jellies and douche powders, but she soon added cervical caps, diaphragms, and vaginal suppositories (cones) to the Certane line. Lewis sold her products through drugstores and other retail outlets and mail-order. She was investigated by the Federal Trade Ccommission (FTC) in 1938 and charged with false and misleading advertising. She was charged again in 1942 by the U.S. Postal Service for conducting unlawful business (selling contraceptives) through the mail. By 1948, Rosemarie Lewis began doing business as the Vogarell Products Company, the maker name on this product. In the 1950's Vogarell added Lanacane skin ointment for acne and Hemex rectal ointment to the product line. Certane douche powder, vaginal jelly, and vaginal suppositories appear to have remained on the market through the 1960s, and Lewis continued to do business as Vogarell into the early 1980s.
Reference: Tone, Andrea. Devices and Desires: A History of Contraceptives in America. New York: Hill and Wang, 2001.
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Vogarell Products Company
ID Number
1979.1144.282
accession number
1979.1144
catalog number
1979.1144.282
Blue and white and silver-colored cardboard box with divided interior for holding 12 vaginal cones (suppositories). Box is empty. Certane vaginal cones contained phenylmercuric acetate, 0.05% and oxyquinoline sulphate.
Description
Blue and white and silver-colored cardboard box with divided interior for holding 12 vaginal cones (suppositories). Box is empty. Certane vaginal cones contained phenylmercuric acetate, 0.05% and oxyquinoline sulphate. Printed on box: "Must be kept cool to avoid melting." Information about the use of the cones is printed on the bottom of the box: "Convenient and quick to use. CERTANE Cones can be quickly inserted and pushed deeply into the vagina by the fingers. Their non-irritating base carrying the medical ingredients melts promptly in contact with body heat and moisture and after a little while spreads upon the vaginal membranes."
In 1930, Rosemarie Lewis established the Certane Company to produce "feminine hygiene" products in Los Angeles, California. "Feminine hygiene" was a code term used by marketers for women's contraceptive products at a time when dealing in these products was illegal in most of the U.S. Lewis's first products were antiseptic vaginal jellies and douche powders, but she soon added cervical caps, diaphragms, and vaginal suppositories (cones) to the Certane line. Lewis sold her products through drugstores and other retail outlets and mail-order. She was investigated by the Federal Trade Ccommission (FTC) in 1938 and charged with false and misleading advertising. She was charged again in 1942 by the U.S. Postal Service for conducting unlawful business (selling contraceptives) through the mail. By 1948, Rosemarie Lewis began doing business as the Vogarell Products Company, the maker name on this product. In the 1950's Vogarell added Lanacane skin ointment for acne and Hemex rectal ointment to the product line. Certane douche powder, vaginal jelly, and vaginal suppositories appear to have remained on the market through the 1960s, and Lewis continued to do business as Vogarell into the early 1980s.
Reference: Tone, Andrea. Devices and Desires: A History of Contraceptives in America. New York: Hill and Wang, 2001.
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Vogarell Products Company
ID Number
1979.1144.283
accession number
1979.1144
catalog number
1979.1144.283
The indications or uses for this product as provided by the manufacturer are:superficial burns; prickly heat; insect bites; sunburn; after shaving; vaginal doucheCurrently not on view
Description
The indications or uses for this product as provided by the manufacturer are:
superficial burns; prickly heat; insect bites; sunburn; after shaving; vaginal douche
Location
Currently not on view
date made
after 1906
maker
Frederick Stearns & Co.
E. C. DeWitt and Company
ID Number
1980.0698.071
accession number
1980.0698
catalog number
1980.0698.071
The indications or uses for this product as provided by the manufacturer are:Cleansing Douche for Hygenic Purposes after Menstruation and Coitus.
Description
The indications or uses for this product as provided by the manufacturer are:
Cleansing Douche for Hygenic Purposes after Menstruation and Coitus. / Vaginal Douche: A pleasant nonirritating douche for routine hygenic purposes, use when needed.
Gargle and Mouth Wash: For minor irritations of the mouth and throat. Use when needed.
Foot Wash: As a refreshing bath for perspiring or itching feet. Use when needed.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1950-1960
maker
S. E. Massengill Company
ID Number
1980.0698.146
accession number
1980.0698
catalog number
1980.0698.146
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Blue Line Chemical Co.
ID Number
1980.0698.148
catalog number
1980.0698.148
accession number
1980.0698
The indications or uses for this product as provided by the manufacturer are:A perfected Douche Powder especially prepared for irrigation of the vaginal tract.
Description
The indications or uses for this product as provided by the manufacturer are:
A perfected Douche Powder especially prepared for irrigation of the vaginal tract. Its cleansing action is soothing to the mucous membranes.
Directions: Dissolve a tablespoonful in a quart of moderately warm water. Jar cap measures one tablespoonful. Be sure the powder is well dissolved before use.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1940s
maker
Norwich Pharmacal Company
ID Number
1980.0698.150
accession number
1980.0698
catalog number
1980.0698.150
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1970s
maker
Purdue Frederick Company
ID Number
1981.0760.005
accession number
1981.0760
catalog number
1981.0760.005
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1970s
maker
Purdue Frederick Company
ID Number
1981.0760.006
accession number
1981.0760
catalog number
1981.0760.006
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Beecham-Massengill Pharmaceuticals
ID Number
1981.0760.033
accession number
1981.0760
catalog number
1981.0760.033
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Reed & Carnrick Manufacturing Chemists
ID Number
1981.0760.059
accession number
1981.0760
catalog number
1981.0760.059
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Reed & Carnrick Manufacturing Chemists
ID Number
1981.0760.078
accession number
1981.0760
catalog number
1981.0760.078
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1980
maker
Beecham Products
ID Number
1982.0370.06
accession number
1982.0370
catalog number
1982.0370.06
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1978 - 1979
ID Number
1982.0531.076
accession number
1982.0531
catalog number
1982.0531.076
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
maker
D'Orsay
ID Number
1983.0871.92
accession number
1983.0871
catalog number
1983.0871.92
One Hy-Kup menstrual cup in an blue and white cardboard box with cellophane wrapper. Each side of the box has the Hy-Kup brand name with a white cross below. A single word -- Scientific - Sanitary - Comfortable - Odorless -- appears on each of the four sides.
Description
One Hy-Kup menstrual cup in an blue and white cardboard box with cellophane wrapper. Each side of the box has the Hy-Kup brand name with a white cross below. A single word -- Scientific - Sanitary - Comfortable - Odorless -- appears on each of the four sides. Inscriptions on the bottom of the box include: "Price $2.00" and the phrase "Lasts for a Year."
The Hy-Kup appears to have been first marketed in 1928. It was advertised as "scientifically correct, invented, tested and perfected for the modern woman," it "eliminates belts and pads, odor and chafing," and is "absolutely secure." Advertisements also claimed that the cup was endorsed by leading doctors and nurses. The company recruited women to serve as distributors for Hy-Kup in their communities. The cups sold for $2.00 each and were advertised to last for a year. Paul Allen Wilkey (died June, 29, 1974), of Indiana, was named as owner and distributor of Hy-Kup in his obituary.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1930s
copyright date ("why you should use a hygienic menstrual cup" Hy-Kup distributors)
1928-01-29
collection
Reid Drugstore
maker
Hy-Kup Distrubutors
ID Number
1984.0351.067
accession number
1984.0351
catalog number
1984.0351.067
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1938 - 1939
collection
Reid Drugstore
maker
American Sponge and Chamois Company
ID Number
1984.0351.308
accession number
1984.0351
catalog number
1984.0351.308

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