icon for Home page
icon for Kid's Home page
icon for Digital Collection
icon for Activities
icon for Turns Exhibit
icon for In the Classroom
icon for Chronologies
icon for My Collection

Things To Do
Dress Up | 1st Person | African American Map | Now Read This | Magic Lens | In the Round | Tool Videos | Architecture | e-Postcards | Chronologies | Turns Activities

Send an E-Postcard of:
Graham Bread Recipe from "The New Hydropathic Cook-Book"

Title page
(c) Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, Deerfield MA. All rights reserved.
Contact us for information about using this image.

Sylvester Graham (1794-1851) was a Presbyterian minister who is today most famous for inventing the Graham cracker in 1829. Less well-known are the social reforms and health theories he championed. He believed, for example, that a vegetable diet and eating homemade, coarsely ground whole-wheat flour promoted mental and physical health and prevented alcoholism. He also advised Americans to sleep on hard mattresses and to take cold showers, a health regimen that evolved into hydropathy, or the "water cure." By the 1840s Graham was a well-known and eccentric resident of Northampton, Massachusetts, where a newspaper in 1851 derided him as "Dr. Bran, the philosopher of sawdust pudding." Graham's theories influenced many later diet reformers, including the Kellogg brothers and C.W. Post, who pioneered the invention of granola, corn flakes, and other breakfast cereals. This recipe for Graham Bread appeared in a "Hydropathic Cook-Book" in 1855.

 

top of page

Share this image with a friend.
Simply enter their e-mail address below and we'll send them this image in an e-mail greeting, along with a link to see the image on our site.

To E-Mail Address *
From E-Mail Address *
From Name
Message

* = Required


button for Side by Side Viewingbutton for Glossarybutton for Printing Helpbutton for How to Read Old Documents

 

Home | Online Collection | Things To Do | Turns Exhibit | Classroom | Chronologies | My Collection
About This Site | Site Index | Site Search | Feedback