Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Snake Oil
Episode Date: August 16, 2021If you were to call someone a snake oil salesman, it usually means they are trying to defraud someone, and more specifically it often implies making false medical claims. But what exactly is snake oi...l, and why did it develop such a bad reputation, and why specifically do we use snake oil for such a negative metaphor? Learn more about snake oil and why we still reference it on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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If you were to call someone a snake oil salesman, it usually means that they're trying to defraud someone,
and more specifically, it often implies making false medical claims.
But what exactly is snake oil, and why did it develop such a bad reputation, and why
specifically do we use snake oil for such a negative metaphor?
Learn more about snake oil, and why we still reference it, on this episode of Everything Everywhere
Daily.
This episode is sponsored by audible.com.
By audiobook recommendation today is Quackery, a brief history.
of the worst ways to cure everything by Lydia King and Nate Pedersen.
What won't we try in our quest for perfect health, beauty, and the fountain of youth?
Well, just imagine a time when doctors prescribed morphine for crying infants, when liquefied gold
was touted as immortality in a glass, and when strychnine was given out like Viagra.
Looking back with fascination, horror, and not a little dash of dark humor, quackery
recounts the lively, at times unbelievable history of medical misfires and malpractices.
Ranging from merely weird to the outright dangerous,
here are dozens of outlandish, morbidly hilarious treatments
conceived by doctors and scientists,
by spiritualists and snake oil salesmen,
that were predicated on a range of cluelessness,
trial and error, and straight-up scams.
You can get a free one-month trial to Audible
and to free audiobooks by going to audibletrial.com
slash everything everywhere,
or by clicking on the link in the show notes.
The first thing you need to know about snake oil
is that it is an actual thing. Snake oil is not a metaphor. The reason why snake oil became a metaphor for
something fraudulent and why snake oil salesmen are considered hucksters is actually really interesting.
And it all began in 19th century America. As railroads were being built across the country,
much of the labor was being done by Chinese immigrants who came over to work on the railroads.
Working on the railroad was extremely hard work. Much of the work on railroads in the 19th century was still being done by
hand, moving rails and hammering spikes with sledgehammers, all had to be done manually.
The result of such back-breaking labor was that the hands and muscles of Chinese laborers would
often get very sore. To ease their muscle pains, they would often rub their hands and muscles with
a traditional Chinese ointment known as snake oil. Snake oil is an actual product that is created
from Chinese water snakes, also known as Iroboos snakes. It's been used as a traditional Chinese
remedy for centuries. Chinese water snakes live in ponds and rice patties. They're slightly venomous snakes
under a meter long that feed on fish and amphibians. The snake oil, which is derived from the water snakes,
is very high in the omega-3 fatty acid known as EPA. Snake oil was and is considered by many people
to be effective in relieving the pain of ailments such as arthritis, brisitis, and sore muscles. A modern
study found that oil from Chinese water snakes actually allowed mice to perform better on cognitive tests.
Take for that what you will.
The Chinese workers began to share their remedy with American workers who were working on the railroad, and the product began to grow in popularity.
As the demand for snake oil grew, people began to figure out ways to meet that demand.
Enter into the story one Clark Stanley, the self-proclaimed rattlesnake king.
Stanley wanted to meet the new demand for snake oil, so he created a product known as Clark Stanley's snake oil liniment.
Just knowing that the word snake was in the title,
began using rattlesnakes for the product. However, a rattlesnake is not a water snake, and they
have totally different fat profiles. Eventually, however, he totally abandoned the idea of putting
rattlesnake oil in the product altogether. For 24 years, Stanley traveled around the country,
touting the medicinal benefits of his snake oil liniment. He created a massive show that he toured with,
positioning himself as the frontiersman while creating an elaborate backstory. He sold the product at
Western shows around the country. He claimed that the recipe for his
snake oil liniment came from a Hoppy medicine man.
The Hoppy did not have anything resembling snake oil, and at no point did he ever mention
the Chinese origins of the product.
Moreover, Stanley made claims about the product which went far beyond what the original
Chinese snake oil was used for.
Stanley claimed that it would cure rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago, a sore throat, frostbites,
toothaches, and many other ailments.
In one famous demonstration at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair, he supposedly created the product
in front of a live crowd.
Science writer Joe Schwartz wrote,
quote, Stanley reached into a sack, plucked out a snake,
slid it open, and plunged it into boiling water.
When the fat rose to the top,
he skimmed it off and used it on the spot to create Stanley's snake oil,
a liniment that was immediately snapped up by the throng
that had gathered to watch the spectacle.
Unquote.
Those people who bought his product at the Chicago World's Fair
had the distinction of being one of the few people to buy his snake oil
that actually had snake oil in it.
The use of these demonstrations with live rattleseakes
added excitement to the demonstration, and it was one of the reasons why it sold so well.
In the United States in the 19th century, there were no regulations or laws regarding the claims you could make,
regarding the effectiveness of drugs and medicine. In 1905, Collier's magazine published a scathing article
on the fraudulent claims made by medicine hucksters. In response, the federal government passed
the Pure Food and Drug Act in 1906, which is one of the very first consumer protection laws in the country.
It prevented the sale of products that were falsely labeled or made exaggerated claims.
In 1917, a shipment of Stanley's snake oil liniment was seized by the government and was given to the Bureau of Chemistry, the predecessor of the Food and Drug Administration.
What they found was that the product had no snake oil whatsoever.
It consisted mostly of mineral oil, beef tallow, chili pepper, turpentine, and a waxy substance called camphor.
After the results of the test became public, thousands of people who had purchased Stanley's snake oil liniment realized that they had been had.
Clark Stanley was given a fine of $20 and basically disappeared from history, having become quite rich after years of selling his snake oil.
The term snake oil began being used for something fraudulent or for a scam.
Likewise, a snake oil salesman became synonymous with a quack, huckster, or a fraud.
The first written use of snake oil as a reference to something fraudulent was in the 1920s.
poem by Stephen Vincent Bennett, John Brown's Body.
The poem said, quote,
Crooked creatures of a thousand dubious trades,
sellers of snake oil bomb and lucky rings, unquote.
Likewise, in 1956,
playwright Eugene O'Neill mentioned it in his play,
The Ice Man Comet.
He described a character as,
quote, standing on a street corner in hell right now,
making suckers of the damned,
telling him that there's nothing like snake oil for a bad burn,
end quote.
Today, snake oil has a very
negative connotation. The strange thing is, the reason why snake oil is associated with scams
is that a popular snake oil product didn't actually have any snake oil in it. Actual snake oil
and its unique omega-3 fatty acid profile has actually been found to have health benefits.
You can still buy it today in traditional Chinese pharmacies. So the next time that someone says
that someone is a snake oil salesman, just remember that if they're actually selling snake oil,
it might not be so bad.
The associate producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Thor Thompson.
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