Description: Dr. Macaura's Blood Circulator with original box and advertising and operating manual insert. I believe it had two rubber attachemsnts originally, these are missing. The circulator crank operates quite smoothly. "Items such as the Pulsocon were readily available in the Sears catalog, and went underground later only because of the preponderance of 1920s-era stag films that graphically highlighted what these massage instruments were really intended for.This particular device was invented by Dr. Gerald Macaura, whose on-the-record goal was to help women “loosen their joints and increase the circulation of blood.”On May 15, 1914, in Paris, The New York Times reported, “Gerald Macaura, an American citizen, was sentenced to three years imprisonment and to pay a fine of $600 on a charge of fraud in connection with the sale of a vibratory massage instrument.”Sadly, Dr. Macaura was not a doctor at all. And the cure-all claims he had attached to his Pulsocon could not rightly be proved. But his device, 120 years later, still vibrates like a champ."reference: Schulz, Bill (2015-08-14). "From the Vault of the Museum of Sex: Macaura's Pulsocon"The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
Price: 275 USD
Location: Canton, New York
End Time: 2024-09-01T01:13:16.000Z
Shipping Cost: 0 USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Time Period Manufactured: Pre-1930