Leona
                              Chalmer's 1937
                              book with a
                              drawing of a cup.
                          And
                                read comments from people who have
                                used a cup. 
                              Do cups
                              cause endometriosis? Not enough evidence,
                              says the FDA.
                          
                          
                          
                          
                          
                              
                             
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                          A History of the
                              Menstrual Cup
                          Leona Chalmers possibly produces the first
                            commercial  
                            menstrual cup, around 1937  
                            Ad at bottom of page
                          
                            
                              
                                
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                                    Illustrations
                                      from the Chalmers patent.
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                                    Two important innovations in
                                      menstrual hygiene occurred in the
                                      1930s: the commercial
                                        tampon and the menstrual cup
                                      (although a strange
                                        predecessor was patented in
                                      1867, as were others later, not
                                      only in the U.S.A.). But because
                                      of certain characteristics of
                                      these devices, neither threatened
                                      the reign of the sanitary napkin,
                                      essentially meaning Kotex. This
                                      remains true (although Kotex is no
                                      longer the top-selling pad).
                                    The drawing of the cup from
                                      Leona Chalmers's patent (U.S.
                                      patent 2,089,113) (far left) shows
                                      that it is very similar to the
                                      Tassette, Tassaway and The Keeper
                                      cups produced later (see photos).
                                      Chalmers suggested in the patent
                                      that it be made of vulcanized
                                      rubber. (She discusses its use and
                                      shows a drawing in her book
                                      from 1937.)
                                    According to Robert Oreck, the
                                      founder and president of Tassette,
                                      Inc., a later company started in
                                      the late 1950s, this first cup
                                      started production just as World
                                      War ll began, and stalled because
                                      of the shortage of rubber. Women
                                      did not like the cup because it
                                      was hard, too heavy and, I
                                      suspect, simply because they did
                                      not want to put things into their
                                      vaginas with their fingers. The
                                      Tampax tampon, first sold in 1936,
                                      met similar resistance from the
                                      public and also from doctors, who
                                      had some medical objections.
                                    This raises the issue of femininity.
                                      Advertisers for menstrual hygiene
                                      products use the word to mean
                                      daintiness and delicacy and
                                      avoidance of unseemly words,
                                      actions and things, including
                                      those related to sex and the
                                      body's secretions. Ladylike and
                                      modest might mean the same thing.
                                      Especially American women wanted,
                                      and many still want, to avoid the
                                      reality of menstruation, with its
                                      messiness, unpredictability and
                                      its undertones of the unclean,
                                      sex, and sexual avoidance. Most
                                      women must overcome many barriers,
                                      some very practical, before they
                                      will put their fingers into their
                                      vaginas.
                                    The drawing at top right, also
                                      from this patent, shows where the
                                      cup sits, low
                                      in the vagina, just where the
                                      three successor cups sat (which
                                      includes The Keeper). The most
                                      recently developed cup, Instead,
                                      rests high
                                        in the vagina, near the cervix,
                                      which
                                        I think even more affronts the
                                        feeling of femininity, and also
                                        of cleanliness, still held by
                                        many women. But Instead is not
                                        aiming for a large market.
                                    Mrs.
                                        Chalmers, who continued to sell
                                        the cup after the war, wrote the
                                        undated booklet below (here we
                                        see the cover and an interior
                                        page; I made the pages different
                                        sizes to save a bit of bytes)
                                        sometime between the late 1930s
                                        and the middle 1950s, probably
                                        before she joined with Robert
                                        Oreck in 1957 in a second (text
                                          continued under the pictures)
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                                                    Above:
                                                      A booklet
                                                      expaining her
                                                      invention, the
                                                      Tassette menstrual
                                                      cup, by Leona
                                                      Chalmers (cover
                                                      above, reduced,
                                                      and an interior
                                                      page). Her book
                                                        from 1937
                                                      has almost the
                                                      same title and
                                                      does use the same
                                                      photo for the dust
                                                      jacket. Tambrands
                                                          gift,
                                                        1997. 
                                                      
 
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                                            Below:
                                              An undated ad from an
                                              unknown magazine, but
                                              before 1963,  
                                              which is when ZIP codes
                                              appeared. Tassette is
                                              spelled Tass-ette.  
                                              It's possible this
                                              advertises the cup
                                              Chalmers sold in the 1950s
                                               
                                              before Robert Oreck
                                              launched his version of
                                              the Tassette based  
                                              on Mrs. Chalmers's second
                                              patent. The American
                                              Medical  
                                              Association made Tampax
                                              stop putting the AMA
                                              statement you  
                                              read below because it
                                              implied endorsement. 
                                              Tambrands
                                                  gift, 1997.
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                                          Below:
                                                A note that the company
                                                enclosed with her
                                                booklet, above left.
                                                Date unknown. 
                                                 
                                              How
                                                personal
                                                  can a piece of paper
                                                  be when reproduced
                                                  probably by the
                                                  thousands?
                                                  
                                                 
                                                  Tambrands
                                                    gift, 1997. 
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                                    attempt to
                                        sell the Tassette, this time on
                                        a large scale. The style of the
                                        photographs suggests the 1930s.
                                      It was the
                                        late 1950s before the cup
                                        reappeared (part 2) on a
                                      large scale, and this time Mrs.
                                      Chalmers was working with Robert
                                      Oreck, but
                                        America had hardly changed in
                                        its attitudes towards the cup.
                                      It still has not.
                                    (Most of the information above
                                      about Tassette, Tassaway and
                                      Chalmer's patent came from
                                      Advertising Age, Barron's, Drug
                                      Trade News, Editor and Publisher,
                                      Investment Dealer's Digest from
                                      the 1960s and 1970s; and from a
                                      Stock Prospectus dated 28 August
                                      1961, all gifts of Tambrands,
                                      1998. Mr. Oreck refused my request
                                      for an interview, referring me to
                                      another company official, nurse
                                      Barbara Waldron; I could not find
                                      her but see a picture.)
                                    
                                      
                                    © 1997-2006 Harry Finley. It is
                                      illegal to reproduce or distribute
                                      any of the work on this Web site
                                      in any manner or medium without
                                      written permission of the author.
                                      Please report suspected violations
                                      to hfinley@mum.org
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