American Decades
Macfadden, Bernarr Adolphus 1868-1955
ADVOCATE OF "PHYSICAL CULTURE" AND PUBLISHER
Early Life.
Born 16 August 1868 in Mill Spring, Missouri, Bernarr Macfadden was the son of farmer William McFadden and his wife, Mary. Bernard (who later changed the spelling of his first and last names) received only a grade-school education. By the time he was eleven, his parents had divorced and then died—his father from alcoholism and his mother from tuberculosis. After a brief period spent with farmer relatives, Macfadden left home and worked a series of odd jobs that included farm laborer, delivery boy, printer's assistant, bookkeeper, and bill collector. Years later he would observe about this period that he "had no chance to indulge in those exercises so necessary to the health of boys ofthat age.… At the age of sixteen I was a complete wreck. I had the hacking cough of a consumptive; my muscular system had so wasted that I resembled a skeleton; my digestive organs...
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1900's Medicine and Health
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- The American Medical Association Reorganizes
- Diversity in the Medical Profession: African American Physicians
- Diversity in the Medical Profession: Women Physicians
- Hookworm in the South
- Human Subjects in Medical Research
- Medical Education Reform
- Pellagra in the South
- Plague in San Francisco
- The Tuberculosis Movement
- Yellow Fever
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Medicine and Health, 1900–1909
