Sanford Bennett | |
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Born | 1841 |
Died | 1926 |
Occupation(s) | Businessman, writer |
Sanford Bennett (1841–1926) was an American businessman and writer associated with thephysical culture movement, best known for his publications onanti-aging andnatural hygiene.
Bennett was born inPhiladelphia. He invented an extensive exercise regime of self-care that involvedmuscular contraction and relaxation exercises forrejuvenating the body.[1] His ideas were popularized in theSan Francisco Chronicle in 1906 and in two books. Bennett added medical diagrams of the muscles and organs of the body to his descriptions of exercise routines.[2] Bennett claimed that his exercise regime gave him youthful vigour and made him healthy and stronger. His exercises could be carried out in bed for a quarter or half-hour.[3]
Bennett endorsedperiodic fasting and a vegetarian diet characterized by "well-cooked vegetables".[1] He recommended "nature's principal methods of inducing health—sunlight, pure air, pure water, nourishing food, cleanliness and exercise".[4] His bookOld Age, Its Cause and Prevention was published at least four times between 1912 and 1927.[4] It was advertised byBernarr Macfadden's Physical Culture Publishing Company.[5] Bennett was a close friend of Bernarr Macfadden and his wife, Mary.[6] He helped Macfadden to edit thePhysical Culture magazine. Bennett practiced some strange eating habits. For example, he wouldregurgitate his food after a meal by vomiting in a brass bowl. Mary called him the "Old Roman Regurgitator."[6]
Bennett died fromchoking on a chicken bone.[6]
Bennett'sExercising in Bed was reviewed in theNature journal, which concluded "we have no doubt that the exercises suggested, if carried out, would be of considerable benefit, even if they did not actually rejuvenate or restore good looks, as the author claims."[3]
Historian James F. Stark has commented that Bennett was "one of the most high-profile advocates of rejuvenating methods in the twentieth century prior to the First World War, and his exercises, promising rejuvenation at an old age, were hugely popular, particularly in the United States, as he embodied the powerful cultural cache of the physical culture movement, then at its height."[1]