Another Bottle Treasure

IMG_6281Greeting loyal readers and fellow maremmas. Continuing on from mummy’s find in the garden, the next bottle comes from New York, cos that is what is says on the side of the bottle. It is “Barry’s Tricopherous for the skin and hair”.

From our friend “Dr Google:

The self-declared “Professor,” Alexander C. Barry, was a New York wigmaker who had never actually received any academic degree. Barry’s Tricopherous for The Skin and Hair was nonetheless a popular product. The “Professor” claimed that his father established the Tricopherous formula in 1801, although this too may be another Barry tale. The product was first sold in the United States around 1842.

Advertisements for Barry’s hair preparation included popular trade cards, typically featuring a beautiful woman with luxurious, long-flowing hair. The ads claimed the product was “guaranteed to restore the hair to bald heads and to make it grow thick, long and soft.”

The bottle   contained Barry’s alcohol-based formula combined with some castor oil and other fragrant oils. The product’s most active ingredient, though, was its one-percent tincture of cantharides. Cantharides came from the dried, crushed bodies of the blister beetle or Spanish fly. When threatened, the beetle produces a caustic irritant called cantharidin. The theory was that this substance would stimulate blood supply to the scalp, which in turn would promote hair-follicle growth. Barry claimed that “if the pores of the scalp are clogged, or if the blood and other fluids do not circulate freely . . . the result is scurf, dandruff, shedding of the hair, grayness, dryness and harshness of the ligaments, and entire baldness. . . .”
 
“Stimulate the skin” he claimed, with Tricopherous, and “the torpid vessels, recovering their activity, will annihilate the disease.” Cantharidin, however, is today recognized as a toxic substance that can cause severe gastrointestinal disturbances if ingested, sometimes leading to convulsions, coma, and possible death. Still, Barry’s formula was sold well into the 20th century.

http://odysseysvirtualmuseum.com/products/Barry’s-Tricopherous-for-the-Skin-and-Hair-Bottle.html

A chemist advertisement from a local Wanganui paper from 1867 for the hair tonic.

barrybarrys ad wrapperSee you learn lots from your friendly three maremmas.

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11 Responses to Another Bottle Treasure

  1. Seems like some things never change.

  2. Kismet says:

    Here’s a good bottle for you

  3. Mummy says daddy would agree with you. He likes a good bottle of whiskey.

  4. that’s so interesting to read about the magic potions of the past! maybe you will find such a genie in a bottle once too and you can make some wioshes?

  5. You dogs are great treasure finders . . . or at least bottle finders!

    Your Pals,

    Murphy & Stanley

  6. hello jaspersdoggyworld its dennis the vizsla dog hay hair tonic!!! do yoo think it wurks on furs??? becuz my furs hav never grown bak in all the way!!! maybe is hud order myself a bottel!!! Ok bye

  7. iloveschnauzers says:

    All that from a bottle? Who knew?

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