See what might
                        be the first (or very
                          early) Tampax brand tampon, early 1930s- a dealer's advisory  
                          - advice to dealers about explaining
                          the tampon to customers
                    See more
                        Tampax items: American ad from August 1965 - nudity in
                      an ad: May 1992 (United
                      Kingdom) - a sign
                      advertising Tampax during World War II - the
                      original patent -
                      an instruction sheet
                      from the 1930s  
                    
                    
                    
                    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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                              Did Tampax menstrual tampons have a
                                little-known predecessor?
                              Tampax tampons made history by
                                allowing women to insert tampons into
                                their vaginas with an applicator - and
                                they might have been the first tampons
                                designed for menstruation (more here).
                              But were they really the first with an
                                applicator - or the first menstrual
                                tampons? The Tampax history, Small
                                  Wonder, claims that Dr. Earle Haas
                                created the Tampax in the late 1920s and
                                early thirties after seeing the problems
                                his wife had with menstrual pads. (Read
                                genius adman Albert
                                  Lasker's anecdote about women not
                                willing to buy the early Kotex.) The
                                Denver osteopath graduated from the
                                Kansas College of Osteopathy in 1918 and
                                practiced in rural Colorado, moving to
                                Denver in 1928. He was interested in
                                business opportunities and spent much
                                time working on his tampon. 
                              Did he know of the company below?
                              In late 2006 I received an image of a
                                stock certificate - below - from a man
                                in Colorado who found it in some
                                belongings he inherited. He's related to
                                the person who owned the stock (and he's
                                embarrassed about the whole topic!). As
                                you see, the company called itself The
                                American Tampon & Applicator Co. The
                                stock is signed and dated 1916, the seal
                                1914.
                              Physicians traditionally used cotton
                                tampons - the Tampax history calls them
                                makeshift tampons, implying that they
                                were created on the spot - to absorb
                                fluids from wounds and to apply
                                medication. A poster from World War I,
                                below the stock certificate, shows such
                                a tampon at the upper right. Women often
                                volunteered to make such medical
                                dressings - applications? - for the
                                troops in Europe.
                              But the woman who has contributed many
                                items to MUM through her access to
                                genealogy data bases examined the
                                certificate and wrote me the following:
                              
                                This stock certificate is
                                  fascinating! I was not able to find
                                  anything about the company, nor could
                                  I narrow down F. W. Kaiser by just the
                                  initials because there were too many
                                  options. (I would need his brother's
                                  name or something in order to find out
                                  more about him)  But I was able
                                  to find out about the other two men,
                                  see attached census. 
                                In 1910 Augustus A. Ellis lives in
                                  Denver Co. with his wife Edith. He is
                                  a physician in general practice. He is
                                  English-Canadian, emigrated from
                                  Canada in 1890. By 1920 he is deceased
                                  as Edith is widowed but still living
                                  in Denver. This may have caused the
                                  demise of the company together with
                                  the cotton shortage caused by WWI. 
                                In 1910 William T. Child is also in
                                  Denver and is an architect. He appears
                                  on the Denver census from 1900 until
                                  1930, which is the latest census
                                  available to the public so I can't go
                                  any further. The only other thing of
                                  note is his neighbor is also a
                                  physician. Since this certificate is
                                  only 100 of 100,000 shares it would be
                                  interesting to know who some of the
                                  other investors might be, plus I am
                                  wondering if Wm Child's contribution
                                  may have been the design of an
                                  applicator. It isn't possible to tell
                                  if it was medical or menstrual from
                                  this but I can tell you that all the
                                  research I have done about medical
                                  tampons only one referred to an
                                  applicator and it was a description of
                                  a wooden stick to wrap the cotton
                                  around until you formed a tampon the
                                  size of a cigarette and that was to
                                  put medicine on to place in the nose,
                                  so not something I think you would
                                  include in the company name. 
                                The other thing that is fascinating
                                  is it is Denver! So you have to wonder
                                  if this was the design that was later
                                  patented. Did the company fold and was
                                  it up for grabs? Was the stock sold
                                  when Dr. Ellis died? . . .  I
                                  have more questions than answers. 
                                It may help to simply put this
                                  information on your site and maybe
                                  someone from Dr. Ellis or Mr. Child's
                                  family will see it. Otherwise,
                                  contacting a librarian in Denver who
                                  may be able to look up something on
                                  the architect, since he was there so
                                  many years he must have designed some
                                  of the historic buildings. I think it
                                  would make a great newspaper article
                                  if you could get the interest of a
                                  reporter there who would have the
                                  access to local records and that is
                                  what you would need. 
                                I am fascinated! 
                               
                              But it's possible "applicator"
                                referred to items separate from tampons,
                                maybe other devices to apply medication.
                                But maybe not.
                              In any case it looks as though there
                                was a company that intended to make
                                commercial tampons, whether for
                                menstruation or for medical use. Did it
                                ever?
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                              Below: A
                                stock certificate for a tampon - and
                                applicator - company in the same town
                                the inventor of the Tampax tampon - and
                                applicator - lived and practiced. Tampax
                                tampons (is this the first one?)
                                earned their fame by combining with an
                                applicator, unlike other early American
                                'pons like Wix
                                and fax
                                and Tux (see all the tampons
                                on MUM).
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                              Below:
                                The poster, typical for WWI posters in
                                its beauty, shows items volunteers often
                                made for soldiers. Look at the tampon in the upper
                                  right corner, which is maybe a
                                piece of cloth wrapped around cotton and
                                closed with string around a knot at
                                upper left; medical people probably used
                                it to apply medication or soak up
                                  fluids from wounds.
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                    See what might
                        be the first (or very
                          early) Tampax brand tampon, early 1930s- a dealer's advisory  
                          - advice to dealers about explaining
                          the tampon to customers
                    
                      
                        
                          
                            
                              See more Tampax
                                  items: See Tampax bulletins
                                from the early 1950s - Read Dr.
                                Dickinson's study
                                of the advantages of tampons over pads.
                                See Dutch
                                Tampax ads from 1938 (and here,
                                virtually identical to a contemporary
                                American ad) American ad from August 1965 -
                                nudity in an ad: May
                                  1992 (United Kingdom) - a sign
                                advertising Tampax during World War II -
                                the original patent
                                - an instruction
                                sheet from the 1930s
                                
                              copyright 2006 Harry Finley
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