Russell Thacher Trall
Russell Thacher Trall | |
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Florence, New Jersey , U.S. | |
Occupation(s) | Hydropathic physician, writer |
Russell Thacher Trall (August 5, 1812 – September 23, 1877)[1] was an American physician and proponent of hydrotherapy, natural hygiene and vegetarianism. He authored the first American vegan cookbook in 1874.
Biography
Trall was born in
Trall authored the two volume Hydropathic Encyclopedia in 1851.[7] He recommended daily bathing and using cool or cold water.[7] In 1853, Trall founded the New York Hydropathic and Physiological School that issued diplomas. It became known as the New York Hygeio-Therapeutic College in 1857.[8] He transferred operations to New Jersey in 1867, with his Hygeian Home. He edited The Water-Cure journal, which he later renamed The Herald of Health.[2] Trall was an advocate of a system known as "hygeiotherapy", a mixture of hydrotherapy with diet and exercise treatment regimes that included fresh air, hygiene and massage.[9] It almost disappeared by his death in 1877 but was revived by Sebastian Kneipp in the 1890s.[9]
Relationship with the Seventh-day Adventist church
One of Trall's students was
Trall earned the Whites trust and he was asked to become a regular contributor to The Health Reformer magazine.[10] The former editor, Horatio S. Lay was removed and James White re-organized the magazine with an "Editorial Committee of Twelve" with Trall's "Special Department" of articles. Trall disbanded his own monthly Gospel of Health magazine and turned its subscription list to The Health Reformer.[10] The newly re-organized magazine had high hopes but problems soon emerged. The readers of the magazine resented Trall's extreme dietary strictures against the use of butter, eggs, milk, oil, salt and sugar.[10][11] Trall's opinions on diet were regarded by readers as "radical and fanatical" and many gave up becoming subscribers. The Whites were disappointed that readers were cancelling their subscription.[10] In 1871, James White took over editorship of The Health Reformer and pledged to take away the extreme dietary ideas, however, Trall continued to write for the magazine.[10]
Trall's department remained in the magazine but James had Ellen start a second "Special Department" which clarified in the March 1871 issue that readers "should not feel disturbed on seeing some things in these departments which do not agree with their ideas of matters and things".[10] The magazine soon became a White family production with advertisements, articles by James and Ellen's monthly department. Within two years, White had successfully raised subscriptions of The Health Reformer from 3000 to 11,000.[10] Trall remained on good terms with James and Ellen White but resigned from their magazine in 1874. However, John Harvey Kellogg blamed Trall for the magazine's early difficulties.[10] Kellogg became its editor in 1874 and changed the magazine's name to Good Health in 1878.[11]
Vegetarianism
Trall was an influential promoter of vegetarianism and was Vice-President of the
In 1910, physician David Allyn Gorton noted that Trall's diet was "most simple and abstemious, consisting chiefly of Graham bread, hard Graham crackers, fruits, and nuts—two meals a day, without salt."[14]
Selected publications
- The Hydropathic Encyclopedia (two volumes, 1851)
- Tobacco: Its History, Nature, and Effects, with Facts and Figures for Tobacco-Users (1854)
- Fruits and Farinacea: The Proper Food of Man (John Smith, with notes and illustrations by R. T. Trall, 1856)
- The New Hydropathic Cook-Book (1857)
- Water-Cure for the Million (1860)
- The Scientific Basis of Vegetarianism (1860)
- Hand-Book of Hygienic Practice (1864)
- The True Healing Art: Hygienic vs. Drug Medication (1872)
- The Hygienic Hand-Book (1873)
- The Hygeian Home Cook-Book (1874)
- Popular Physiology (1875)
Gallery
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New York Hygeio-Therapeutic College, 1857
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The Hygeian Home Cook-Book, 1874
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Sketch of Trall
References
- ^ Donegan, J. (2000, February). "Trall, Russell Thacher (1812-1877), hydropathic physician and health reformer". American National Biography. Ed. Retrieved 5 Feb. 2019.
- ^ ISBN 0-19-514071-0
- ISBN 0-275-97541-X
- ^ ISBN 978-0313214158
- ^ Green, Harvey. (1986). Fit For America: Health, Fitness Sport and American Society. Doubleday. p. 63
- ^ ISBN 0-8014-8433-2
- ^ ISBN 978-1-4766-7459-9
- ^ Weiss, Harry Bischoff; Kemble, Howard R. (1967). The Great American Water-Cure Craze: A History of Hydropathy in the United States. The Past Times Press. p. 37
- ^ ISBN 0-299-16694-5
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Number, Ronald L. (1976). Prophetess of Health: A Study of Ellen G. White. New York: Harper & Row. pp. 117-121
- ^ ISBN 978-1-4422-4188-6
- ISBN 978-0-313-37556-9
- ^ ISBN 978-0-19-939702-0
- ^ Gorton, David Allyn. (1910). The History of Medicine: Philosophical and Critical, From Its Origin to the Twentieth Century, Volume 2. G. P. Putnam's Sons. p. 192