LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,823
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Whenever you see a product advertised in a women's magazine for its "germicidal" properties, it's more than likely a product that was covertly sold as a contraceptive. Lysol and Zonite were the products most commonly marketed in this way -- and no, people weren't so stupid as to put full-strength Lysol in their delicate places, the recommended dilution was a few drops in a quart of water. Listerine was also occasionally used for such purposes, but was not effective.
Diaphragms were available from doctors, with a prescription, but such prescriptions were usually only given to married women unless you had an "understanding" with a sympathetic doc.
There were plenty of folk contraceptives too, including Coca-Cola and half-a-lemon, which were used exactly the way you're thinking. There was actually some reason to think these might work given the acidity, but they weren't exactly foolproof.
In 1939, after my mother was born, my grandmother was told that because of damage suffered during that birth, she'd be in danger if she had another child. That night she told my grandfather he'd be sleeping in the kitchen, and that's where he slept for the next forty years.
Diaphragms were available from doctors, with a prescription, but such prescriptions were usually only given to married women unless you had an "understanding" with a sympathetic doc.
There were plenty of folk contraceptives too, including Coca-Cola and half-a-lemon, which were used exactly the way you're thinking. There was actually some reason to think these might work given the acidity, but they weren't exactly foolproof.
In 1939, after my mother was born, my grandmother was told that because of damage suffered during that birth, she'd be in danger if she had another child. That night she told my grandfather he'd be sleeping in the kitchen, and that's where he slept for the next forty years.