Mr Wm h comstock
Dear sir we have sent you one tierce & 3 cases of pill boxes wich
we want you to send us a check for as soon as you git this for we
have to pay it the first of next month & must have the money if you
want eney moure boxes we will send them & wait for the money till
the first of april youres truly
Quay & Champion
Quay continued to supply the boxes for at least fifteen years,
during which his need for prompt payment never diminished.
Comstock also bought large quantities of bottles, corks, packing
boxes, and wrappers. Throughout the company's long existence,
however, more frequent payments were made to printers and
stationers—for the heavy flow of almanacs, handbills,
labels, trade cards, direction sheets, and billheads—than
for all the drugs and packaging materials. In the success
achieved by the Indian Root Pills, the printing press was just as
important a contributor as the pill-mixing machine.
The Final Years
When William Henry Comstock, Sr., moved the Indian Root Pill
business to Morristown, in 1867, he was—at age 37—at
least approaching middle life. Yet he was still to remain alive,
healthy, and in direct charge of the medicine business for more
than half a century longer. And the golden era of the
patent-medicine business may be said to have coincided very
closely with Mr. Comstock's active career—from about 1848
to 1919.
| shawf_029s (75K) |
FIGURE 24.—In its
final years the Comstock factory discontinued most of its old
remedies and concentrated upon the three most successful:
Comstock's Dead Shot Worm Pellets, Comstock's N. & B.
Liniment, and Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills.
|
While no schedule of sales, net income, or financial results are
available, the fragmentary records make it obvious that the
business continued to flourish beyond World War I, and long after
the passage of the first Food and Drug Act—in 1906. The
almanacs were still printed as recently as 1938; while the labels
and other advertising matter abandoned their ornate
nineteenth-century style and assumed a distinctly modern
aspect—to the extent of introducing comic-style picture
stories, featuring the small boy who lacked energy to make the
little league baseball team (he had worms), and the girl who
lacked male admirers because of pimples on her face (she suffered
from irregular elimination). Sales volume of the Morristown
factory, however, apparently did reach a peak early in the
present century—perhaps around 1910—and began a more
rapid decline during the 1920s. During this same period the
geographical character of the market shifted significantly; as
domestic orders dropped off, a very substantial foreign business,
particularly in Latin America, sprang up. While this did not
compensate fully for the loss of domestic sales, it did provide a
heavy volume that undoubtedly prolonged the life of the Indian
Root Pill factory by several decades.
William Henry Comstock, Sr., who first came to Brockville in
1860, at a time when the struggle with White for the control of
the pills was still in progress, married a Canadian girl,
Josephine Elliot, in 1864; by this marriage he had one son,
Edwin, who lived only to the age of 28. In 1893 Comstock married,
for a second time, Miss Alice J. Gates, and it is a favorable
testimony to the efficacy of some of his own virility medicines
that at age 67 he sired another son, William Henry Comstock II
(or "Young Bill") on July 4, 1897. In the meanwhile, the elder
Comstock had become one of the most prominent citizens of
Brockville, which he served three terms as mayor and once
represented in the Canadian parliament. Besides his medicine
factories on both sides of the river, he was active in other
business and civic organizations, helped to promote the
Brockville, Westport & Northwestern Railway, and was highly
regarded as a philanthropist. Although he lived well into the
automobile age, he always preferred his carriage, and acquired a
reputation as a connoisseur and breeder of horses. As remarked
earlier, his steam yacht was also a familiar sight in the upper
reaches of the St. Lawrence River.
The medicine business in Morristown was operated as a sole
proprietorship by Comstock from the establishment here in 1867 up
until 1902, when it was succeeded by W.H. Comstock Co., Ltd., a
Canadian corporation. St. Lawrence County deeds record the
transfer of the property—still preserving the 36-foot strip
for the railroad—from personal to corporate ownership at
that time.
Comstock—the same callow youth who had been charged with
rifling Lucius' mail in the primitive New York City of
1851—came to the end of his long life in 1919. He was
succeeded immediately by his son, William Henry II, who had only
recently returned from military service during World War I.
According to Mrs. Planty, former Morristown historian, "Young
Bill" had been active in the business before the war and was
making an inspection of the company's depots in the Orient, in
the summer of 1914, when he was stranded in China by the
cancellation of transpacific shipping services and was therefore
obliged to cross China and Russia by the Transiberian Railway.
This story, however, strains credulity a trifle, as the journey
would have brought him closer to the scene of conflict at that
time, and he was, in any event, only 17 years old when these
events are supposed to have occurred.
The decline of the patent-medicine business was ascribed by
Stewart Holbrook in his
Golden Age of Quackery
to three
main factors: the Pure Food and Drug Acts; the automobile; and
higher standards of public education. All of these were, of
course, strongly in evidence by the 1920s, when William Henry
Comstock II was beginning his career as the head of the Indian
Root Pill enterprise. Nevertheless, the Morristown plant was
still conducting a very respectable business at this time and was
to continue for some four decades longer. The Comstock enterprise
never seemed to have been much embarrassed by the muckraking
attacks that surrounded the passage of the Federal Food and Drug
Act of 1906. Aside from the enforcement of these measures by the
energetic Harvey Wiley, the two most effective private assaults
upon the patent-medicine trade probably were the exposures by
Samuel Hopkins Adams in a series of articles in
Collier's
magazine in 1905-1906, under the title, "The Great American
Fraud," and the two volumes entitled,
Nostrums and
Quackery
, embodying reprints of numerous articles in the
Journal of the American Medical Association
over a period
of years. Both sources named names fearlessly and described
consequences bluntly. But the Comstock remedies, either because
they may have been deemed harmless, or because the company's
location in a small village in a remote corner of the country
enabled it to escape unfriendly attention, seemed to have enjoyed
relative immunity from these attacks. At least, none of the
Comstock remedies was mentioned by name.[13] To be sure, these
preparations—or at least those destined for consumption
within the United States—had to comply with the new drug
laws, to publish their ingredients, and over a period of time to
reduce sharply the extensive list of conditions which they were
supposed to cure. Nevertheless, it seems probable that the
general change in public attitudes rather than any direct
consequences of legislative enforcement caused the eventual
demise of the Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills.
| shawf_030s (75K) |
FIGURE 25.—Comstock
packaging building (upper floor used as residence for
manager—note laundry) at left, hotel at right. Ferry slip
directly ahead. About 1915.
|
Foreign business began to assume considerable importance after
1900; shipments from Morristown to the West Indies and Latin
America were heavy, and the company also listed branches (perhaps
no more than warehouses or agencies) in London, Hongkong, and
Sydney, Australia. Certain of the order books picked up out of
the litter on the floor of the abandoned factory give a
suggestion of sales volume since 1900:
SALES OF DR. MORSE'S INDIAN ROOT PILLS
gross Estimated
Dollar
Domestic Foreign Total Amount
1900 —— —— 6,238 100,000
1910 5,975 —— —— 96,000
1920 3,243 —— —— 52,000
1930 —— 1,893 —— 30,000
1941 316 —— —— 5,000
The foregoing data show sales of the Indian Root Pills only; this
was by far the most important product, but the factory was also
selling Worm Pellets, Judson's Pills (up to 1920), and N & B
Liniment. Also, this tabulation excludes sales in quantities less
than one gross, and there were actually many such smaller orders.
Only physical shipments were shown in the records recovered, and
the dollar volume is the author's computation at $16 per gross,
the price which prevailed for many years. Through 1900 there was
only a single order book; beginning prior to 1910, separate
domestic and foreign order books were introduced, but most of
them have been lost. On the assumption that there was a fair
volume of foreign sales in 1910, total sales must have continued
to climb through the decade then ending, but by 1920 domestic
sales—and probably total sales—had dropped
materially. The number of employees, apparently about forty at
the peak of the business, had dropped to thirteen according to
the 1915 paybook but recovered slightly to sixteen in 1922. These
fragmentary data suggest that the Morristown branch of the
Comstock enterprise probably never grossed much over $100,000,
but in an era when $12 or $15 represented a good weekly wage and
the clutching grasp of the income-tax collector was still
unknown, this was more than adequate to support the proprietor in
comfort and to number him among the more influential citizens of
the district. It is not known how Morristown sales compared with
those of the Brockville factory, but it may be assumed that the
company utilized its "dual nationality" to the utmost advantage,
to benefit from favorable tariff laws and minimize the
restrictions of both countries. The Morristown plant supplied the
lucrative Latin American trade, while during the era of Imperial
preference, Brockville must have handled the English, Oriental,
and Australian business.
| shawf_031s (75K) |
FIGURE 26.—In its
final years the Comstock advertising assumed a modern guise.
Depicted here is the N. & B. Liniment (originally registered
with the Smithsonian as Carlton's Celebrated Nerve and Bone
Liniment for horses, in 1851).
|
For many decades—from 1900 at least up into the
1930s—a number of very large shipments, normally 100 gross
or more in single orders, were made to Gilpin, Langdon & Co.,
Baltimore, and to Columbia Warehouse Co. in St. Louis, important
regional distributors.
Many substantial orders were also received from legitimate drug
houses, such as Lehn & Fink; Schieffelin & Co.; Smith,
Kline & French; and McKesson & Robbins. Curiously, A.J.
White & Co. of New York City also appears in the order book,
around 1900, as an occasional purchaser. Among the foreign orders
received in 1930 the United Fruit Company was, by a wide margin,
the largest single customer.
Pills destined for the Latin American market were packaged
alternatively in "glass" or "tin," and were also labeled
"Spanish" or "English," as the purchasers might direct. Spanish
language almanacs and other advertising matter were generally
inserted in the foreign parcels, along with many copies of
"tapes"—the advertisements of the worm pills conspicuously
illustrated with a horrifying picture of an enormous
tapeworm.
Sales volume began to decline more precipitously in the 1930s,
and the Morristown factory was no longer working even close to
capacity. The domestic order book for 1941 shows sales of the
Indian Root Pills, in quantities of one gross or more, of only
316 gross. The Royal Drug Co. of Chicago gave one single order
for 44 gross, and Myers Bros. Drug Co. of St. Louis bought 25
gross in one shot, but otherwise orders in excess of five gross
were rare, and those for one gross alone—or for one half
gross, one fourth gross, or one sixth gross—were far more
common. The number of orders was still substantial, and the
packing and mailing clerks must have been kept fairly busy, but
they were working hard for a sharply reduced total volume. Some
stimulus was provided for the factory during the war years by a
military contract for foot powder, but the decline became even
more precipitous after the conflict. The Comstock Hotel was
destroyed by fire in 1925, never to be rebuilt. And by the late
1940s the once-busy railroad bisecting the factory
property—the old Utica & Black River—had
deteriorated to one lonely train crawling over its track in each
direction, on weekdays only, but still carrying a New York City
sleeping car. The 1950 order book reveals a business that had
withered away to almost nothing. Once again, as in 1900, both
foreign and domestic sales were recorded in a single book, but
now foreign sales greatly outstripped the domestic. In fact, a
mere 18 gross of the pills were sold—in quantities of one
gross or more—in the domestic market in that year,
contrasting sadly with nearly 6,000 gross in 1910. Even the Henry
P. Gilpin Co. of Baltimore, which at one time had been ordering
100 gross or more every month or six weeks, took only a meager
four gross during the entire year. There were a large number of
very small shipments—such as four boxes of pills here, or a
bottle of liniment there—but these did not aggregate very
much and gave the appearance of merely accommodating individual
customers who could no longer find their favorite remedies in
their own local drug stores.
The foreign business—chiefly in the West Indies, Puerto
Rico, and South America—was still fairly substantial in
1950, amounting to 579 gross of the Indian Root Pills, but this
was far from compensating for the virtual disappearance of the
domestic market. At the old price of $16 per gross—which
may no longer have been correct in 1950—the Morristown
factory could not have taken in a great deal more than
$10,000—hardly enough to justify its continued operation.
In any case, it was obviously only the foreign business that kept
the plant operating as long as it did; without that it would
probably have closed its doors 20 years earlier.
A number of customers were, however, faithful to the Comstock
Company for very many years. Schieffelin & Co. and McKesson
& Robbins were both important customers way back in the
1840s, and their favor had been an object of dispute in the split
between Lucius and the other brothers in 1851. Schieffelin still
appeared frequently in the order books up to the 1920s; during
the final years McKesson & Robbins was by far the largest
single domestic customer. A number of other firms—John L.
Thompson Sons & Co. of Troy, N.Y.; T. Sisson & Co. of
Hartford, Conn.; and Gilman Brothers of Boston,
Mass.—appear both in the 1896 and the 1950 order books,
although unfortunately the quantities taken had fallen from one
or two gross at a shot in the earlier year to a mere quarter
gross or a few dozen boxes by 1950.
Toward the end, in the late 1950s, employment in the factory
dropped to only three persons—J.M. Barney (foreman),
Charles Pitcher, and Florence Cree—and they were only doing
maintenance work and filling such few orders, mostly in
quantities of a few dozen boxes only, that came to the factory
unsolicited. Gone were the days of travelers scouring the back
country, visiting country druggists, and pushing the pills, while
simultaneously disparaging rival or "counterfeit" concoctions;
gone were the days when the almanacs and other advertising
circulars poured out of Morristown in the millions of copies;
long since vanished were the sweeping claims of marvelous cures
for every conceivable ailment. In these final days the Indian
Root Pills, now packaged in a flat metal box with a sliding lid,
were described modestly as the Handy Vegetable Laxative. And the
ingredients were now printed on the box; nothing more was heard
of Dr. Morse's remarkable discovery gleaned during his long
sojourn with the Indians of the western plains.
| shawf_032s (75K) |
FIGURE 27.—The
pill-mixing building, about 1928 (building torn down in
1971).
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Although the records disclose nothing to this effect, it is a
fair premise that the Comstock family often must have considered
closing the Morristown plant after World War II and, more
particularly, in the decade of the 1950s. Such inclinations may,
however, have been countered by a willingness to let the plant
run as long as a trickle of business continued and it did not
fall too far short of covering expenses. The last few surviving
employees were very elderly, and their jobs may have been
regarded as a partial substitute for pensions. This view is
evidenced by an injury report for George Clute, who suffered a
fit of coughing while mixing pills in January 1941; he was then
77 years old and had been working in the factory for 34 years.
The final paybooks show deductions for Social Security and
unemployment insurance—specimens of vexatious red tape that
the factory had avoided for most of its existence.
The decision to close the Morristown factory was finally forced
upon the family, on May 15, 1959, by the death of William Henry
Comstock II—"Young Bill"—who had been president of
the company since 1921. Like his father, "Young Bill" Comstock
had been a prominent citizen of Brockville for many years, served
a term as mayor—although he was defeated in a contest for a
parliamentary seat—was also active in civic and social
organizations, and achieved recognition as a sportsman and
speedboat operator.
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FIGURE 28.—The
packaging and office building at left, depot in center, and
Comstock Hotel at right. Canadian shore and city of Brockville
(location of another Comstock factory) in background.
|
The actual end of the business came in the spring of 1960. The
frequency and size of orders had dropped sharply, although the
names of many of the old customers still appeared, as well as
individuals who would send one dollar for three boxes of the
pills. These small shipments were usually mailed, rather than
going by express or freight, as formerly. The very last two
shipments, appropriately, were to old customers: One package of
one-dozen boxes of pills on March 31, 1960, to Gilman Brothers of
Boston, and two-dozen boxes to McKesson & Robbins at Mobile,
Alabama, on April 11. And with this final consignment the factory
closed its doors, concluding ninety-three years of continuous
operation in the riverside village of Morristown.
Very little of this story remains to be told. Mrs. Comstock
became president of the company during its liquidation—and
thus was a successor to her
father-in-law
, who had first
entered the business as a clerk,
119 years earlier
, in
1841. The good will of the company and a few assets were sold to
the Milburn Company of Scarborough, Ontario, but the Comstock
business was terminated, and the long career of Dr. Morse's
Indian Root Pills brought to a close. The few superannuated
employees were assured of protection against all medical
expenses, by the company or by the Comstock family, for the rest
of their lives. A few years later the associated Canadian factory
standing in the heart of Brockville was torn down; during its
lifetime that community had grown up around it, from a village to
a flourishing small city. The buildings in Morristown were sold
to other parties and left to stand untenanted and forlorn for
years. The upper (packaging) building, from which the records
were recovered, remains in fair condition and may yet be
renovated for some further use. The lower (pill-mixing) building,
after standing derelict and at the point of collapse for many
years, was finally torn down in 1971. The hotel, a large water
tank behind the factory, and the combination depot and customs
house have all vanished from the scene. The shed where the
Comstocks kept their yacht has been maintained and still shelters
several boats, but the ferry slip just below the factory steps is
now abandoned, and no longer do vessels ply back and forth across
the river to connect Morristown and Brockville. The railroad only
survived the passing of the factory by a year or two and is now
memorialized by no more than a line of decaying ties. The main
highway leading westward from Ogdensburg toward the Thousand
Islands area has been straightened and rerouted to avoid
Morristown, so that now only the straying or misguided traveler
will enter the village. If he does enter he will find a pleasant
community, scenically located on a small bay of the St. Lawrence
River, commanding an enticing view of the Canadian shore, and
rising in several stages above the lower level, where the factory
once stood; but it is a somnolent village. No longer do river
packet steamers call at the sagging pier, no longer do trains
thread their way between the factory buildings and chug to a halt
at the adjacent station. No longer do hope-giving pills and
elixirs, or almanacs and circulars in the millions, pour out of
Morristown destined for country drugstores and lonely farmhouses
over half a continent. Only memories persist around the empty
ferry slip, the vanished railroad station, and the abandoned
factory buildings—for so many years the home of the
distinguished Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills.
Footnotes
National Cyclopedia of American
Biography
, VII: 280.
The Comstock brothers' grandmother,
Esther Lee, was apparently unrelated to Dr. Samuel Lee, the
inventor of the Bilious Pills.
Receipts for these registrations were
signed by the prominent librarian, Charles Coffin Jewett, later
to be superintendent of the Boston Public Library for many
years.
Young, James Harvey,
The Toadstool
Millionaires, A Social History of Patent Medicines in America
before Federal Regulation
. Princeton University Press.
1961.
Moore claimed later (his affidavit of
November 22, 1859) that he thought he was hired only by White
personally, and did not realize that A.J. White & Co. was
controlled by the Comstocks.
The "temporary" tax placed upon drug
manufacture as a revenue measure during the Civil War remained in
effect until 1883.
National Cyclopedia of American
Biography
, IV:500.
Or perhaps Mr. Comstock merely failed
to pay for an engraved plate and to order a book; these county
histories were apparently very largely written and edited with an
eye to their subscribers.
These facsimile bills were registered
as a trademark at the United States Patent Office. In his
registration application, Mr. Comstock described himself as a
citizen of the United States, residing at Morristown,
N.Y.—although he had served three terms as mayor of
Brockville, Ontario, prior to this time.
In connection with this offer the
pills were priced to agents at $2 per dozen boxes—$24 per
gross—and were to be retailed at $3 per
dozen—25¢ per box. Other agreements, however, probably
intended for more substantial dealers, specified a price of $16
per gross for the Indian Root Pills.
Actually, the formula for the
Indian Root Pills would seem to have corresponded closely with
that for "Indian Cathartic Pills" given in
Dr. Chase's
Recipes
, published in 1866. These were described as
follows:
Aloes and gamboge, of each 1 oz.; mandrake and
blood-root, with gum myrrh, of each 1/4 oz.; gum camphor and
cayenne, of each 1-1/2 drs.; ginger, 4 oz.; all finely pulverized
and thoroughly mixed, with thick mucilage (made by putting a
little water upon equal quantities of gum arabic and gum
tragacanth) into pill mass; then formed into common sized pills.
Dose: Two to four pills, according to the robustness of the
patient.
However, additional items were
manufactured by the Dr. Howard Medicine Co., affiliated with the
Comstock factory in Brockville. Also, during World War II the
company accepted an Army contract for the manufacture and
packaging of foot powder.
Bibliography
The principal source of information for this history of the
Comstock medicine business comprises the records, letters,
documents, and advertising matter found in the abandoned
pill-factory building at Morristown, New York. Supplemental
information was obtained from biographies, local and county
histories, old city directories, genealogies, back files of
newspapers, and materials from the office of the St. Lawrence
County Historian, at the courthouse, Canton, New York.
Two standard histories of the patent-medicine era in America
are:
Holbrook, Stewart H.
Golden Age of Quackery.
New York
City: Macmillan Co. 1959.
Young, J.H.
The Toadstool Millionaires, A Social History of
Patent Medicines in America Before Federal Regulation.
Princeton University Press. 1961.
Early in the present century, during the "exposure" of the
patent-medicine industry, two principal critical works also were
published, each highly specific and naming names fearlessly:
Adams, Samuel Hopkins.
The Great American Fraud.
Serially
in
Collier's
Magazine in 1905-1906. (Reprinted in book
form, 1906.)
American Medical Association.
Nostrums and Quackery.
Chicago: American Medical Association Press. (Reprints from the
Journal of the American Medical Association
: volume I,
1911; volume II, 1921; volume III, 1936.)
Recently two books have appeared, which are largely pictorial,
essentially uncritical, and strive mainly to recapture the
colorfulness and ingenuity of patent-medicine advertising.
Carson, Gerald.
One for a Man, Two for a Horse.
128 pages.
New York City: Doubleday and Co. 1961.
Hechtlinger, Adelaide.
The Great Patent Medicine Era.
New
York City: Grosset and Dunlap. 1970.
A highly recommended source of information on the very early
history of patent medicines in America is:
Griffenhagen, George B., and James Harvey Young. Old English
Patent Medicines in America.
United States National Museum
Bulletin 218, Contributions from the Museum of History and
Technology
, paper 10: 155-183 1959.
DR. MORSE'S PILLS LIVE ON
Although the original Comstock enterprise has been dissolved
and
all of its undertakings in North America terminated, as has
been
related herein, Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills and Comstock's
Worm
Tablets are still being manufactured and sold—by the W.H.
Comstock
Company Pty. Ltd., in Australia. This concern, originally a
subsidiary of the Canadian company, is headed by the former
branch
manager for the Comstocks, who acquired the rights for
Australia
and the Orient following the dissolution of the Brockville
company.
Distribution is also carried out from this source into New
Zealand,
Singapore, and Hong Kong. Packaging and directions are now
modern,
the pills being described as "The Overnight Laxative with the
Tonic
Action," but a reproduction of the old label and the
facsimile
signature of William Henry Comstock, Sr., are still being
portrayed. Thus, the Indian Root Pills have been
manufactured
continuously for at least 115 years and the Comstock
business,
through the original and successor firms, has survived for
nearly
140 years.
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