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Ivory Soap Advertising Collection

National Museum of American History

Object Details

Creator
Procter & Gamble Company
Leyendecker, J. C., 1874-1951
Smith, Jessie Willcox, 1863-1935
Elliott, Elizabeth Shippen Green
Topic
advertising
Soap
Provenance
Procter & Gamble donated this collection to the Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution on October 24, 2001.
Creator
Procter & Gamble Company
Leyendecker, J. C., 1874-1951
Smith, Jessie Willcox, 1863-1935
Elliott, Elizabeth Shippen Green
See more items in
Ivory Soap Advertising Collection
Summary
Print advertisements covering almost the entire history of Ivory Soap, including advertisements designed by artists including Jesse Wilcox Smith, Elizabeth Shippen Green, and J. C. Leyendecker.
Biographical / Historical
In 1837, candle maker William Procter and soap maker James Gamble formed a partnership in Cincinnati, Ohio, to sell their products. The new company prospered, and by 1859 Procter & Gamble sales reached one million dollars. Contracts with the United States Army during the Civil War to supply soap and candles increased Procter & Gamble's customer base and reputation. In 1879, James Norris Gamble, son of the founder, developed an inexpensive pure white soap. A factory worker who forgot to shut off the soap-making machine when he left for lunch inadvertently improved the product. When he returned, the soap mixture was frothy due to the air that had been whipped into it, and the resulting soap cakes floated in water. There was immediate demand for the "floating soap." After considering many names for the new product, Harley Procter, son of the founder, finally named the soap "Ivory" after Psalms 45:8: "All thy garments smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia, out of the ivory palaces whereby they have made thee glad." Chemical analyses of the soap in 1882 revealed that 56/100 of the ingredients were not pure soap. Harley Procter subtracted that amount from one hundred and the slogan "99 and 44/100% pure" was born. The first ads appeared in 1882 in The Independent, a weekly newspaper. Innovations in production, distribution, and market research contributed to Procter & Gamble's success. Procter & Gamble also developed other products such as Ivory Flakes, Chipso (the first dishwasher soap), and Crisco. By 1945, Procter & Gamble had become a nearly $350 million company. The company also was an innovator in advertising, developing creative print advertisements aimed at different target groups, sponsoring radio shows and comic strips, and airing its first television commercial (for Ivory Soap) during the first televised major league baseball game. Procter & Gamble is now a global company, selling more than 250 products, including Ivory Soap, to five billion customers in 130 countries.
Extent
10 Cubic feet (30 boxes)
Date
1883-1998
Archival Repository
Archives Center, National Museum of American History
Identifier
NMAH.AC.0791
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Advertisements
Photomechanical reproductions
Citation
Ivory Soap Collection, 1883-1998, undated; Archives Center, National Museum of American History. Gift of Procter & Gamble.
Arrangement
The collection is arranged into two series. Series 1: Ivory Soap Products Advertisements, 1883-1998, undated Series 2: Publications, 1883-1969, undated
Processing Information
Processed by Laura E. Hunt, 2003 and Anne Jones, volunteer, 2017.
Rights
Collection items available for reproduction, but the Archives Center makes no guarantees concerning copyright restrictions. Other intellectual property rights may apply. Archives Center cost-recovery and use fees may apply when requesting reproductions.
Genre/Form
Advertisements -- 20th century
Photomechanical reproductions
Advertisements -- 19th century
Scope and Contents
The collection consists of print advertising and publications covering almost the entire history of Ivory Soap. Researchers may use this collection to examine the evolution of advertising strategies and techniques from the very early days of mass-produced brand-name consumer products to the present. From the beginning, Ivory advertisements proclaimed the product's "99 and 44/100%" purity, its ability to float, and its versatility. The collection, however, is much more than a glimpse into advertising history. It is an extremely rich resource for a wide range of cultural studies. Ivory advertising was primarily aimed at women, and it contains many images of women, babies, and young children. The depictions reflect contemporary attitudes toward class structure, race, immigrants and residents of other countries, cleanliness, and domestic relationships. The advertisements often play upon the guilt of women, suggesting that their main concerns should be their husbands, children, and dishpan hands. Many advertisements associate cleanliness with social and religious propriety, physical fitness, and athleticism. There also are many images of men and women performing every-day tasks in gender-defined situations.
Restrictions
Collection is open for research.
Related Materials
Several collections in the Archives Center have materials relating to Ivory Soap. The J. Walter Wilkinson Papers contain art he created for Ivory Soap advertisements. The Ivory Soap 1940 Essay Contest Collection consists of documents relating to the contest and its winner, Helen Nixon. The Procter & Gamble Product Packaging Collection, 1940s-1970s, includes Ivory brand products. The Warshaw Collection of Business Americana's "Soap" subject category contains documents relating to Procter & Gamble and other manufacturers. About twenty-five per cent of the advertisements in this collection are reproduced in the Archives Center's digital image library.
Separated Materials
Artifacts donated to the Division of Medicine and Science.
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1562730500512-1562730500716-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep88550648b-e85c-4b62-9ccb-f8e6872e4a86

In the Collection

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  • My Improved Ivory Soap is the Talk of the Town! Print advertising.

  • Ivory Soap .. It Floats. Print advertising. St. Nicholas

  • What More Can You Ask of a Soap for Hospital Use? Print advertising. Hospital management publications

  • All Aboard! All Aboard! Print advertising.

  • It's a Guest Pleaser On Every Count! Print advertising. Motel industry publications

  • To week-ending males. Print advertising. Saturday Evening Post

  • "You won't find romance in a book..". Print advertising. Newspapers

  • For what purpose do YOU use Ivory Soap? Print advertising.

  • Ivory Soap .. It Floats. Print advertising. National Geographic

  • Ivory cut our operating costs-and it's the soap most .. Print advertising. Hospital management publications

  • A Treasure! Print advertising. New York newspapers

  • Ivory Soap .. 99 44/100% Pure. Print advertising. General circulation publications

  • Please Be Careful of My Skin! Print advertising.

  • 2 "musts" for your beauty bath! Print advertising.

  • Don't coarsen your skin! Print advertising.

  • A Pleasant Reminder. Print advertising. Hotel industry publications

  • Proprietary Articles / Laboratory of Chemistry / Stevens Institute of Technology. Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • Health is the Vital Principle of Bliss, and Exercise, of.. Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • 75 Years of growing younger! Print advertising. Current Medical Digest

  • Yes, we could guarantee the colors of all these lovely new.. Print advertising. McCall's

  • Getting Ready for the Holidays. Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • 12 Days from Today your HANDS can be LOVELIER! Point-of-purchase display. Newspapers

  • A Stranger's Glance made her blush for her Hands. Print advertising. Women's publications

  • Is this healthy for your business? Print advertising. Grocery trade papers.

  • Don't ask your tenants to go...through this into this. Print advertising. Buildings and Building Management

  • Ivory Soap .. 99 44/100% Pure. Print advertising. General circulation publications

  • In wartime, keep your colors flying!...Get up to TWICE THE WEAR... Print advertising.

  • Why a daily odorless Ivory bath keeps my skin silken. Print advertising. American Weekly

  • The Widow LaRue. Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • If you want a baby's clear, smooth skin use a baby's beauty.. Print advertising. Ladies Home Journal

  • The happy ending... Print advertising, general circulation publications.

  • White--Just as soon as cold weather... Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • A Good Night's Rest. Print advertising. Ladies Home Journal

  • Will her hands keep their loveliness, too? Print advertising.

  • Come, put away your silken thread... Print advertising.

  • Ivory Soap .. 99 44/100% Pure. Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • "Women are on my mind" sic Print advertising. Scribner's Magazine

  • Her face, her hands, her hair.. Print advertising.

  • Can I take tub baths right up to the last minute, Doctor? Print advertising. Medical Economics

  • No-oh..he doesn't look like a Movie Hero! Print advertising. New York Mirror

  • Children grow to enjoy bathing through pure delight... Print advertising. Overland Monthly

  • Laces, fine embroideries and other articles... Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • In Detroit shops, too, she was told.."Keep fine garments..". Print advertising.

  • If I Were A Bride. Print advertising. Pictorial Review

  • The quality of soap at even the best hotels... Print advertising. Harper's Bazaar. ?

  • O.K. From Every Angle. Print advertising: equipment publications,

  • That Ivory Look. Print advertising. Women's publications

  • Ivory Soap .. 99 44/100% Pure. Print advertising. National Geographic

  • Ivory Soap--It Stands Alone. Print advertising. St. Nicholas

  • And Now May I See Your Washrooms? Print advertising. Nations School, The

  • Your barber will use Ivory Soap if you ask for it. Print advertising. The Christian Herald and Signs o?

  • Looking for Suds? Print advertising. Omaha News

  • Ivory Soap Products Advertisements

  • When at the sea-shore the ordinary cares of home life are thrown aside... Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • To preserve the richness of color.. Print advertising. Ladies Home Journal

  • Her skin is sensitive so her soap is Ivory. Print advertising. Saturday Evening Post

  • 75 years young. Print advertising. Hotel industry publications

  • A girl can't be too careful--. Print advertising. General circulation publications

  • ah-h! my Ivory Bath it's a pleasure..pure pleasure! Print advertising. Today's Woman

  • The Ivory Ballads. Print advertising. John Martin's Journal

  • Ivory Soap--99 44/100 Per Cent. Pure. Print advertising.

  • Life and Letter of Ivory Soap. Print advertising.

  • Preserve Your Complexion. Print advertising. Our Little Men and Women

  • Watch those first 10 years. Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • ah-h! my Ivory Bath it's a pleasure..pure pleasure! Print advertising. Ladies Home Journal

  • Ivory Soap .. 99 44/100% Pure. Print advertising.

  • BE LOVELIER--it's Spring! Print advertising. Newspapers

  • Economy. Print advertising. The American Magazine

  • ..hands that hold fast to their loveliness.. Print advertising.

  • Everybody Loves My Improved Ivory Soap! Print advertising.

  • Children take to Ivory Soap like ducks to water. Print advertising.

  • The "Good Old Days" are coming back! Print advertising. Hotel industry publications.

  • Ivory Soap..It Floats. Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • Ivory Soap .. 99 44/100% Pure. Print advertising.

  • Ivory Soap .. 99 44/100% Pure. Print advertising.

  • John Anderson, My Jo. title of poem Print advertising. J.I. Case Threshing Machine Co., *

  • The Children's Latest Craze. Title above text. Print advertising.

  • Have you LOST or FOUND the Beauty Secret every Baby knows? Print advertising. General circulation publications

  • To Wash Flannels. Print advertising. Harper's Bazaar. ?

  • Purity. Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • If you live in a smoky city you find that the lustre of your furniture is soon lost in a smutty haze... first lines of extensive text Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • Where do pretty models come from? color advertisement

  • From Our Mail. Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • Every reader of Ivory Soap advertisements.. Print advertising. Harper's Magazine Advertiser

  • Laugh at Rough Dishpan Hands! Print advertising. Newspapers

  • Advertising Men Reach For The Floater* Instead. Print advertising. General circulation publications

  • That Ivory Look. Print advertising. Women's publications

  • Let his skin breathe Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • How Judy, age 1 taught Jane, age 22 to look more beautiful. Print advertising. Chicago Tribune

  • To girls around twenty... Print advertising. Hygeia

  • The advantage of using an article that is pure... beginning of text Print advertising. The Century Magazine

  • Lady, Beware of Strong Soap In Your Dishpan! Print advertising.

  • Off to a Good Start--. Print advertising. Canada Medical Association Journ

  • Makeup all day. Ingredient soaps at night. How can your poor skin ever get a rest? Print advertising.

  • Clothes hampers are prison cells! Print advertising. New York Times, The

  • My baby's so cross this hot weather! Print advertising. Newspapers

  • He says Sending Flowers is Crazy! Print advertising.

  • Could this happen to you? Print advertising. Newspapers

  • Safety. Print advertising.

  • Ivory Soap .. 99 44/100% Pure. Print advertising. National Geographic

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