Quacks and Crusaders: The Fabulous Careers of John Brinkley, Norman Baker, and Harry Hoxsey

Front Cover
University Press of Kansas, 2002 - Biography & Autobiography - 215 pages
One promoted goat gland transplants as a remedy for lost virility or infertility. Another blamed aluminum cooking utensils for causing cancer. The third was targeted by the Food and Drug Administration as "public enemy number one" for his worthless cures.

John Brinkley, Norman Baker, and Harry Hoxsey were the ultimate snake oil salesmen of the twentieth century. With backgrounds in lowbrow performance—carnivals, vaudeville, night clubs—each of these charismatic con men used the emerging power of radio to hawk alternative cures in the Midwest beginning in the roaring twenties, through the Depression era, and into the 1950s. All scorned the medical establishment for avarice while amassing considerable fortunes of their own; and although the American Medical Association castigated them for preying on the ignorant, this book shows that the case against them wasn't all that simple.

Quacks and Crusaders is an entertaining and revealing look at the connections between fraudulent medicine and populist rhetoric in middle America. Eric Juhnke examines the careers of these three personalities to paint a vision of medicine that championed average Americans, denounced elitism, and affirmed rustic values. All appealed to the common man, winning audiences and patrons in rural America by casting their pitches in everyday language, and their messages proved more potent than their medicines in treating the fears, insecurities, and failing health of their numerous supporters.

Juhnke first examines the career of each man, revealing their geniuses as businessmen and propagandists-with such success that Brinkley and Baker ran for governor of their states and Hoxsey had thousands of supporters protest his "persecution" by the FDA. Juhnke then investigates the identity, motives, and willingness to believe of their many patients and followers. He shows how all three men used populist rhetoric—evangelical, anti-Communist, anti-intellectual—to attract their clients, and then how their particular brand of populism sometimes mutated to anti-Semitism and other sentiments of the radical right.

By treating the incurable, Brinkley, Baker, and Hoxsey took on the mantles of common folk crusaders. Brinkley was idolized for his goat gland cures until his death, and Hoxsey's former head nurse continued his work from Tijuana until her death in 1999. In considering who visits quacks and why, Juhnke has shed new light not only on the ongoing battle between alternative and organized medicine, but also on the persistence of quackery—and gullibility—in American culture.
 

Contents

Silent film promoting Brinkleys goatgland operation
7
John and Minnie Brinkley in 1932
17
Political rally for Brinkley in 1932
23
Iowas
36
Norman Baker at the height of his career
37
A gathering outside Bakers studio during
43
Baker emphasized the AMAs Chicago connections
51
Baker as a modern man
60
Senseless Dupes or Sensible Pragmatists?
92
Cartoon published in Bakers TNT magazine in 1931 99 vii
99
Cartoon boosting Hoxsey during the mid1950s
102
The Popularity
119
Discount gas prices at Bakers Muscatine filling
122
Publication celebrating Hoxseys crusade against
137
Conclusion
147
Notes
157

The Career of Cancer Charlatan
64
A highway billboard advertising Hoxseys clinic
71
Hoxsey with biography in hand
83
Part of the FDA campaign to discredit Hoxsey
90

Common terms and phrases

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