- The Great Binge
The "Great Binge" is a term used by historians to describe the period between 1870 and 1914 when various drugs were developed and widely consumed, alongside strong alcoholic drinks, without prohibition and in quantities that nowadays are considered excessive.Fact|date=July 2007
The "binge" started in the 1860s, when
Absinthe became popular inEurope . After theFranco-Prussian War , most French vines were destroyed by thephylloxera epidemic, destroying the supply of wine. This created an opening for the then new and unfamiliar drink. Following this, in 1862 Merck patentedcocaine , which found its way into several popular drinks such asVin Mariani (cocaine and wine) andCoca-Cola (cocaine, wine, and kola nuts). Cocaine was also used in medicine: in 1879 to treatmorphine addiction, and in 1884 as a local anaesthetic. Around this timeSigmund Freud published his workÜber Coca , in which he wrote that cocaine caused:In the 1890s, as cocaine was gaining in popularity, pharmacists at the
Bayer pharmaceutical company were attempting to acetylate morphine to producecodeine , a natural derivative of the opium poppy, similar to morphine but less potent and less addictive. But instead of producing codeine, the experiment produced a substance that was actually almost two times more potent than morphine itself. Bayer would name the substance "heroin ."From 1898 to 1910 heroin was marketed as a non-addictive morphine substitute and cough medicine for children. Bayer marketed heroin as a cure for morphine addiction before it was discovered that heroin is converted to morphine when metabolized in the liver. The company was somewhat embarrassed by this new finding and it became a historic blunder for Bayer.
Thus, by the start of the twentieth century, cocaine, heroin, morphine, and strong alcoholic drinks such as absinthe were being widely consumed throughout the U.S. and Europe, without any state prohibition. These substances were considered as innocuous as tobacco and alcohol are today, more so in fact, as both cocaine and heroin were marketed as medications for children. The popular fictional character
Sherlock Holmes was shown in several stories consuming either cocaine or morphine, depending on his condition. Real-life heroes also made use of drugs: in 1909,Ernest Shackleton took "Forced March" brand cocaine tablets toAntarctica , as didCaptain Scott a year later on his ill-fated journey to theSouth Pole .Harrods , a large store in London, sold morphine and cocaine gift-boxes, which were marketed during theFirst World War as special gifts for soldiers on the front. The gift-boxes were eventually withdrawn in 1916.Such consumption, however, did not last. Public tolerance of alcohol and drugs was beginning to wane as the effects of addiction became more obvious. The first to be banned was absinthe, after a Swiss alcoholic named
Jean Lanfray killed his wife and children after a binge on absinthe, wine, and brandy (although no link was found between the effects of the drink and the behaviour of the individual). This event gave strength to various anti-absinthe groups, and led to various bans which saw it almost completely removed from European society by 1915. Around this time, similar bans on cocaine, morphine, heroin, and other drugs also began to come into effect. The binge's last gasp was the widespread sale ofBenzedrine (anamphetamine ) inhalers by Smith, Kline and French as decongestants in 1928, but addictive effects were noticed soon enough and sale was then restricted to the military. That said, even as late as 1938, theLarousse Gastronomique published a recipe for "cocaine pudding"; by this point, however, controls had been placed on all drugs and the pharmacological and beverage industries had both come under government regulation, effectively bringing The Great Binge to an end.
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