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đź§‚ Alum: From Pickles to Nosebleeds

By Dr. Bebout • 05/21/2025 • No Comments

📜 Description:
Alum, specifically potassium aluminum sulfate, was a true jack-of-all-trades in 19th- and early 20th-century medicine cabinets. Sold as a powder or crystal chunk, this sharp-tasting astringent was rubbed, dissolved, or sprinkled on just about anything you wanted to dry up, tighten, or preserve — human or otherwise.

🩸 Common Uses:

  • Nosebleeds: Stuffed up the nostril like an old-school coagulant tampon.
  • Canker sores: Rubbed directly onto the ulcer for that signature “good pain.”
  • Styptic: Applied to shaving cuts, much like modern styptic pencils.
  • Food preservative: Used in pickling recipes (and banned in some countries for that same reason).
  • Textiles & leather: Used to fix dye and tan hides. Because who doesn’t want overlap between medicine and animal processing?

⚠️ Warnings (Historical):
Repeated use could irritate mucous membranes or even lead to aluminum toxicity. But back in the day? If it stung, it must be working.

đź’ˇ Historical Relevance:
Alum appears in apothecary manuals, Civil War-era field kits, and even school science kits (alum crystals = classroom magic). It was part science, part superstition, and 100% sharp enough to put hair on your chest.

🧠 Another relic from Dr. Bebout’s Cabinet of Medical Curiosities — when healing often shared ingredients with household cleaning supplies.

CabinetOfCuriosities #DrBebout #WeirdMedicine #Alum #HistoricalRemedies #Apothecary #OldSchoolMedicine #MedicalCuriosities #VintageMedicine #PhysiciansOfTikTok

Categories:Medical history and curiosities
Tags:Alum Antique Remedies astringent

Dr. Bebout

I am a family medicine physician in a small town in western Kentucky. I am learning to use technology to provide better service to my community.

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