Newton's Jaundice Bitters, circa 1880

Summary

Nineteenth-century entrepreneurs promised cures with patent medicines. Some of these concoctions, however, contained harmful ingredients or ingredients used in unsafe quantities -- the industry was unregulated and manufacturers were secretive about their recipes. Beginning with the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906, national legislation increasingly prohibited misleading health claims and required manufacturers to list their product's contents.

Nineteenth-century entrepreneurs promised cures with patent medicines. Some of these concoctions, however, contained harmful ingredients or ingredients used in unsafe quantities -- the industry was unregulated and manufacturers were secretive about their recipes. Beginning with the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906, national legislation increasingly prohibited misleading health claims and required manufacturers to list their product's contents.

Artifact

Patent medicine

Date Made

circa 1880

Location

Not on exhibit to the public.

Object ID

37.314.2

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Material

Cardboard
Paper (Fiber product)

Color

White (Color)

Inscriptions

NEWTON'S/JAUNDICE/BITTERS,/.../PRICE 25 CENTS. [side, .1-.22] | STAMPED./DR. I. NEWTON'S/GENUINE ANTIBILIOUS/BITTERS/_ZEN BOXES [label, .23]

Specifications

Overview: In 2009, The Henry Ford conservation department teamed with Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Detroit Mercy to analyze a selection of patent medicines in The Henry Ford's collections. The purpose of this analysis was to identify the exact composition of the medicines. Armed with this information, conservators at The Henry Ford will be able to determine appropriate storage methods of the medicines and, in some instances, proper disposal methods for any hazardous materials.

Abstract: A series of patent medicines and nostrums, permanently housed in The Henry Ford in Dearborn, MI, have been analyzed by energy dispersive Xray fluorescence (EDXRF) spectroscopy and multi-nuclear NMR. Such materials were created over a century ago in relative secrecy, and thus the ingredients and recipes have never been made public. The initial findings for metals and organics in these items are presented.

Product Label: Newton's Jaundice Bitters

Possible Ingredients: Nux Vomica, Mercury, Hepar, Chelidonium, Marioe?, tincture cardius, Lachesis, Nitric acid, sulphur, chamomile pg 377

Form: Fibrous Powder

Physical Description: Browns, yellow and orange color all mixed together. Very textured, lots of fibers, some fine powder, and earthly material present.

Size (mm): N/A

Elements Present at 20.0 keV, grouped by Qualitative Peak Size: Detectable: Iron (Fe), Silver (Ag)

Elements Present at 40.98 keV, grouped by Qualitative Peak Size: N/A

Method of Analysis: A combination of EDXRF and 1H NMR was used to help determine these compositions. When analyzing for a wide spectrum of elements, a semi-quantitative system was determined. A 1,000 ppm Pb standard was used to compare against peak sizes of the unknowns.

References: The Merck Index an encyclopedia of Chemicals, Drugs, and Biologicals, Tenth edition, Published by Merck and Co., Inc. Rahway, N. J. USA 1983. Wicked Plants by Amy Stewart, Published by Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, PO Box 2225, Chapel Hill North Carolina 27515. 2009.

Citation: Examination of the Patent Medicines and Nostrums Archived at The Henry Ford via Energy Dispersive Xray Fluorescence and Multi-nuclear NMR. Danielle Garshott (1), Elizabeth McDonald (1), Andrew Diefenbach (1), Thomas Sanday (1), Mary Fahey (2), and Mark A. Benvenuto (1). (1) Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Detroit Mercy, 4001 W. McNichols Road, Detroit, MI 48221-3038. (2) The Henry Ford, 20900 Oakwood Boulevard, Dearborn, MI 48124-5029.

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