Belt topics 
                  See how women wore a
                  belt (and in a Swedish ad).
                  See a modern belt for a
                  washable pad and a page from the 1946-47 Sears catalog
                  showing a great variety - ad for Hickory belts, 1920s? - Modess belts in Personal
                  Digest (1966)
                
                See a Modess True or False?
                  ad in The American Girl magazine, January 1947, and
                  actress Carol Lynley in
                  "How Shall I Tell My Daughter" booklet ad (1955) - Modess . . . . because ads
                  (many dates).
                
                
                
                    
                    
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                  The Museum of Menstruation and Women's Health
                  
                
                  
                    
                      
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                          Imagine having to wear this sanitary apron (left)
                            to prevent menstrual blood from leaking to
                            your clothing! Sears, Roebuck offered this
                            and other models for many years in its
                            catalogs; this one is a facsimile of a
                            menstrual apron from the 1914 catalog (below). See more sanitary aprons.
                            
                          Dr. Ann Wass,
                            who has created
                              costumes for the Folger Shakespeare
                              Theater in Washington, D.C., made this
                              menstrual apron on commission from MUM.
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                           (Above) The menstrual
                            apron and pad holder in front are
                            cloth-covered rubber. The wearer pinned
                            absorbent cloth, such as bird's-eye diaper
                            cloth, onto the inner side of the holder. Of
                            course, the woman wore the whole contraption
                            "backwards," under her dress, and over her
                            buttocks, to keep the menstrual blood away
                            from her clothing.
                          A black American
                              visitor to MUM said that she knew of many
                              women today who would buy one! She said
                              black women tend to gush in the early days
                              of their menstrual periods.
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                            Sears offered at the same time a nifty traveling kit for
                                menstruation (below),
                              consisting of a simple apron, together
                              with several washable menstrual pads and
                              belts, and a waterproof pouch to carry
                              used pads so they could be washed when the
                              traveler returned home. 
                            
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                           What DID women
                              do when they were traveling? In
                            1914 virtually every woman used cloth
                            menstrual pads; commercial
                              tampons for menstruation did not
                            appear until the late 1920s or early 1930s
                            (Tampax appeared about 1933), but they
                            were not popular. Apparently women either
                            (1) took the sanitary napkins home to wash
                            them (or used the facilities where they were
                            staying, but that seems problematic); or (2)
                            burned them in a fireplace in the room they
                            were occupying. There
                              were also special portable burners
                              available as early as the 1890s in England
                            specifically to
                              burn menstrual pads!
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                © 1998 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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