Henry S. Tanner at the end of his 40-day fast at Clarendon Hall, New York City. Photograph by G.E. Hogg, 1880.

  • G.E. Hogg (Firm)
Date:
1880
Reference:
582985i
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Description

Dr Henry S. Tanner, a Minneapolis physician born in England, responding to a challenge from Dr William A. Hammond and the New York Neurological Society, fasted in New York City for forty days, from 28 June to 6 August 1880, and received $1,000 prize money. His aim was to demonstrate the therapeutic value of abstinence from food. He subsequently wrote and lectured on fasting. He died in San Diego, California, in 1919. See Linda Burfield Hazzard, Scientific fasting: the ancient and modern key to health, New York 1927, part 1

Publication/Creation

New York, N.Y. (339 & 341 6th Ave.) : G.E. Hogg, 1880.

Physical description

1 photograph : photoprint, albumen ; sheet 12.5 x 9 cm

Contributors

Lettering

As he appeared after fasting 40 days, in Clarendon Hall, New York City. G.E. Hogg. (Copyright, 1880, by G.E. Hogg)

Reference

Wellcome Collection 582985i

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  • After 21 days and after 40 days

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