You
probably know people who drink soda pop all day long, and they may even
tell you they’re “addicted” to it. You might be one of those people
yourself. In the modern age, we can find out all the ingredients in what
we drink, and make our decisions accordingly. We all know those
ingredients are not necessarily good for us. But once upon a time, soda
pop was billed as a health tonic and there were often things in there
that were far worse than sugar and carbonated water. Tristan Donovan,
the author of
Fizz: How Soda Shook Up the World, tells us about early soda drinks.
Besides
booze, sodas of the 19th century also incorporated drugs with much
stronger side effects, including ingredients now known as narcotics.
Prior to the Pure Food & Drug Act of 1906, there were few legal
restrictions on what could be put into soda-fountain beverages. Many
customers came to soda fountains early in the morning to get a
refreshing and “healthy” beverage to start their day off right: Terms
like “bracer” and “pick-me-up” referred to the physical and mental
stimulation sodas could provide, whether from caffeine or other
addictive substances.
Pharmacists were soon making soda mixtures
with stronger drugs known as “nervines,” a category that included
strychnine, cannabis, morphine, opium, heroin, and a new miracle
compound called cocaine, which was first isolated in 1855. “Cocaine was a
wonder drug at the time when it was first discovered,” Donovan
explains. “It was seen as this marvelous medicine that could do you no
harm. Ingredients like cocaine or kola nuts or phosphoric acid were all
viewed as something that really gave you an edge.
“Recipes I’ve
seen suggest it was about 0.01 grams of cocaine used in fountain sodas.
That’s about a tenth of a line of coke,” he says. “It’s hard to be sure,
but I don’t think it would’ve given people a massive high. It would
definitely be enough to have some kind of effect, probably stronger than
coffee.” While the dosages were small, they were certainly
habit-forming, and soda fountains stood to profit from such consistent
customers.
That’s just part of the history of soda.
How did they develop fizzy water in the first place? How did we
eventually lose the drugs? And why did some sodas stick around while
others faded?
Learn the history of soda at Collectors Weekly.
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