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Social
and Cultural Analyses
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The Consumers Union
Report on Licit and Illicit Drugs
by Edward
M. Brecher and the Editors of Consumer Reports Magazine, 1972
Part VIII -
Marijuana and Hashish
54. Marijuana in
the New World
The first definite
record of the marijuana plant in the New World dates from 1545 A.D.,
when the Spaniards introduced it into Chile. 1
It has been suggested, however, that African slaves familiar with marijuana
as an intoxicant and medicine brought the seeds with them to Brazil
even earlier in the sixteenth century. 2
There is no record
that the Pilgrims brought marijuana with them to Plymouth but the Jamestown
settlers did bring the plant to Virginia in 1611, and cultivated it
for its fiber. 3 Marijuana was
introduced into New England in 1629. 4
From then until after the Civil War, the marijuana plant was a major
crop in North America, and played an important role in both colonial
and national economic policy. In 1762, "Virginia awarded bounties
for hemp culture and manufacture, and imposed penalties upon those who
did not produce it." 5
George Washington
was growing hemp at Mount Vernon three years later presumably
for its fiber, though it has been argued that Washington was also concerned
to increase the medicinal or intoxicating potency of his marijuana plants.
*
* The argument
depends on a curious tradition, which may or may not be sound, that
the quality or quantity of marijuana resin (hashish) is enhanced
if the male and female plants are separated before
the females are pollinated. There can be no doubt that Washington
separated the males from the females. Two entries in his diary supply
the evidence:
May 12-13,
1765: "Sowed Hemp at Muddy hole by Swamp."
August 7,
1765: " began to seperate [sic] the Male from
the Female Hemp at Do rather too late." 6
George Andrews
has argued, in The Book of Grass: An Anthology of Indian
Hemp (1967), that Washington's August 7 diary entry "clearly
indicates that he was cultivating the plant for medicinal purposes
as well as for it's fiber." 7
He might have separated the males from the females to get better
fiber, Andrews concedes but his phrase "rather
too late" suggests that he wanted to complete the separation
before the female plants were fertilized
and this was a practice related to drug potency rather than to fiber
culture.
British mercantile
policy hampered American hemp culture for a time during and after the
colonial period by offering heavy bounties on hemp exported from Ireland;
but the American plantings continued despite this subsidized competition.
At various times in the nineteenth century large hemp plantations flourished
in Mississippi, Georgia, California, South Carolina, Nebraska, and other
states, as well as on Staten Island, New York. 8
The center of nineteenth-century production, however, was in Kentucky,
where hemp was introduced in 1775. One Kentuckian, James L. Allen, wrote
in 1900: "The Anglo-Saxon farmers had scarce conquered foothold
in the Western wilderness before they became sowers of hemp. The roads
of Kentucky... were early made necessary by the hauling of hemp. For
the sake of it slaves were perpetually being trained, hired, bartered;
lands perpetually rented and sold; fortunes made and lost.... With the
Civil War began the decline, lasting still." 9
The invention of the cotton gin and of other cotton and wool machinery,
and competition from cheap imported hemp, were major factors in this
decline in United States hemp cultivation.
The decline in commercial
production did not, however, mean that marijuana became scarce. As late
as 1937, the American commercial crop was still estimated at 10,000
acres, much of it in Wisconsin, Illinois, and Kentucky. 10
Four million pounds of marijuana seed a year were being used in bird
feed. During World War II commercial cultivation was greatly expanded,
at the behest of the United States Department of Agriculture, to meet
the shortage of imported hemp for rope. Even decades after commercial
cultivation has been discontinued, hemp can often be found growing luxuriantly
as a weed in abandoned fields and along roadsides. Indeed, the plant
readily spreads to additional territory. The area of Nebraska land infested
with "weed" marijuana was estimated in 1969 at 156,000 acres.
* 11
* One acre of
good land yields about one thousand pounds of marijuana, enough
for almost one million marijuana cigarettes.
The medicinal
use of marijuana in the United States. It has often been alleged
that American marijuana, cultivated primarily as a fiber, has little
or no psychoactive effect. Nineteenth-century observers knew better.
Dr. Walton sums up:
Hemp grown for
fiber in Kentucky has been shown to contain a substantial degree of...
potency. H. C. Wood, in 1869, prepared an alcoholic extract of hemp
grown near Lexington and proceeded to test the product himself. A
large [oral] dose (20 to 30 grains) produced marked effects and, on
subsequent occasions, milder but definite effects were obtained with
doses as low as 1/4 grain. This latter dose is lower than the usual
dose of the Indian extract and was probably the result of a more than
usually selective extraction. Houghton and Hamilton in 1908 concluded
from animal experiments that the Kentucky hemp was fully as active
as the best imported Indian product. In any event, it is clear that
the potentiality of hashish abuse has always existed with this type
of hemp production. 12
Comparative studies
made by the National Institute of Mental Health on marijuana experimentally
grown at the University of Mississippi in 1969 and 1970 indicate that
the relative low potency of American-grown marijuana is determined primarily
by the seed planted. 13 Marijuana
grown in Mississippi from high-quality Mexican seed proved to contain
much more of the psychoactive substance (THC) than marijuana from domestic
seed grown on the same plot and harvested and processed in the same
way. 14
The NIMH studies
also refute the widespread belief that the female marijuana plant yields
more potent leaf. Flowers and leaves of male plants from Mexican seeds
yielded 1.47 percent THC as compared with 1.31 percent for female plants.
15 The female plant does,
however, yield more resin or hashish.
Laboratory tests
of United States "weed" marijuana indicate that its THC content
is very low. A 1971 study published in Science, however, suggests
that the THC determinations as currently made are a poor index of the
effectiveness of marijuana when smoked; the smoke may be considerably
more potent than the THC determinations indicate. 16
Between 1850 and
1937, marijuana was quite widely used in American medical practice for
a wide range of conditions. The United States Pharmacopeia,
which through the generations has maintained a highly selective listing
of the country's most widely accepted drugs, admitted marijuana as a
recognized medicine in 1850 under the name Extractum Cannabis
or Extract of Hemp, 17 and
listed it until 1942. 18 The
National Formulary and United States Dispensatory,
less selective, also included monographs on marijuana and cited recommendations
for its use for numerous illnesses. In 1851 the United States Dispensatory
reported:
Extract of hemp
is a powerful narcotic [here meaning sleep-producing drug], causing
exhilaration, intoxication, delirious hallucinations, and, in its
subsequent action, drowsiness and stupor, with little effect upon
the circulation. It is asserted also to act as a decided aphrodisiac,
to increase the appetite, and occasionally to induce the cataleptic
state. In morbid states of the system, it has been found to cause
sleep, to allay spasm, to compose nervous disquietude, and to relieve
pain. In these respects it resembles opium; but it differs from that
narcotic in not diminishing the appetite, checking the secretions,
or constipating the bowels. It is much less certain in its effects,
but may sometimes be preferably employed, when opium is contraindicated
by its nauseating or constipating effects, or its disposition to produce
headache, and to check the bronchial secretion. The complaints in
which it has been specially recommended are neuralgia, gout, rheumatism,
tetanus, hydrophobia, epidemic cholera, convulsions, chorea, hysteria,
mental depression, delirium tremens, insanity, and uterine hemorrhage.
19
Many eminent British
and American physicians recommended marijuana as an effective therapeutic
agent. Dr. J. Russell Reynolds, Fellow of the Royal Society and Physician
in Ordinary to Her Majesty's (Queen Victoria's) Household, reported
in Lancet in 1890, for example, that he had been prescribing
cannabis for thirty years and that he considered it "one of the
most valuable medicines we possess" 20
Sir William Osler, professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins and later
Regius Professor of Medicine at the University of Oxford, stated in
his 1898 discussion of migraine headaches that marijuana "is probably
the most satisfactory remedy" for that distressing condition. *
28
* Others who
recommended marijuana for migraine headaches included the Committee
on Cannabis Indica of the Ohio State Medical Society (1860); 21
Dr. G. S. D. Anderson in the Boston Medical and Surgical
Journal (now the New England Journal of Medicine) (1863); 22
Dr. Edward John Waring in his textbook, Practical Therapeutics
(1874); 23 Dr. C. W. Suckling
in the British Medical Journal (1881); 24
Dr. J. B. Mattison in the St. Louis Medical and Surgical
Journal (1891); 25
and Dr. A. A. Stevens in his textbook, Modern Materia Medica
(1903). 26 (We are indebted
to Dr. Tod H. Mikuriya 27
for a number of these and other historical references to the medical
history of marijuana.)
To meet the substantial
nineteenth- and early twentieth-century medical demand for marijuana,
fluid extracts were marketed by Parke Davis, Squibb, Lilly, Burroughs
Wellcome, and other leading firms 29
and were sold over the counter by drugstores at modest prices. Grimault
and Sons actually marketed ready-made marijuana cigarettes for use as
an asthma remedy. 30 As medicine
progressed after 1903, marijuana's use declined, but its therapeutic
value remained unchallenged, and doctors continued to prescribe it.
Early recreational
use of marijuana in the United States. A number of colorful
references to the recreational use of marijuana and hashish in the nineteenth
century are available. Lush descriptions of their personal experiences
were published by Baudelaire, Gautier, Dumas pere, and other members
of a Parisian institution, the Club des Hachichins, 31
where strong forms of marijuana were eaten. In December 1856 a young
American, Fitz Hugh Ludlow, of Poughkeepsie, New York, published an
account of his own marijuana-eating experiences in Putnam's
Magazine, which he then expanded to 371 pages in The Hasheesh
Eater, a book published by Harper and Brothers the following year.
Young Ludlow had
read De Quincey's Confessions of an English Opium Eater,
and was probably influenced as well by the French accounts of hashish
eating published in the 1840s. His interest in drugs thus kindled, he
made friends with a Poughkeepsie apothecary named Anderson and soon
Anderson's drugstore was his favorite "lounging place."
Here, many an
hour have I sat.... [he later wrote,] and here especially, with a
disregard to my own safety which would have done credit to Quintus
Curtius, have I made upon myself the trial of the effects of every
strange drug and chemical which the laboratory could produce. Now
with the chloroform bottle beneath my nose have I set myself careering
upon the wings of a thrilling and accelerating life, until I had just
enough power remaining to restore the liquid to its place upon the
shelf, and sink back into the enjoyment of the delicious apathy which
lasted through the few succeeding moments. Now ether was substituted
for chloroform, and the difference of their phenomena noted, and now
some other exhilarant, in the form of an opiate or stimulant, was
the instrument of my experiments, until I had run through the whole
gamut of queer agents within my reach.... 32
When the circuit of all the accessible tests was completed, I ceased
experimenting, and sat down like a pharmaceutical Alexander, with
no more drug worlds to conquer. 33
He was sixteen years
old at this time.
One spring morning
in the early 1850s, however, apothecary Anderson greeted young Ludlow
with a question: "Have you seen my new acquisitions?"
Ludlow "looked
toward the shelves in the direction of which he pointed, and saw, added
since my last visit, a row of comely pasteboard cylinders enclosing
vials of the various extracts prepared by Tilden & Co.... I approached
the shelves, that I might take them in review." 34
One of the Tilden products was a marijuana extract. After consulting
the United States Dispensatory (quoted above) and Johnson's
Chemistry of Common Life, Ludlow took ten grains of it.
Nothing happened. A few days later he took fifteen grains. Again nothing
happened.
Gradually, by
five grains at a time, I increased the dose to thirty grains, which
I took one evening half an hour after tea. I had now almost come to
the conclusion that I was absolutely unsusceptible of the hasheesh
influence. Without any expectation that this last experiment would
be more successful than the former ones, and indeed with no realization
of the manner in which the drug affected those who did make the experiment
successfully, I went to pass the evening at the house of an intimate
friend. In music and conversation the time passed pleasantly. The
clock struck ten, reminding me that three hours had elapsed since
the dose was taken, and as yet not an unusual symptom had appeared.
I was provoked to think that this trial was as fruitless as its predecessors.
Ha! what means
this sudden thrill? A shock, as of some unimagined vital force, shoots
without warning through my entire frame, leaping to my fingers' ends,
piercing my brain, startling me till I almost spring from my chair.
I could not doubt
it. I was in the power of the hasheesh influence. 35
Ludlow went on eating
marijuana extract on occasion for the next four years, from the age
of sixteen to the age of twenty. Then he stopped, and reported his experiences
at inordinate length.
Marijuana continued
in use after the Civil War as a rare and exotic drug claiming relatively
few devotees by twentieth-century standards. The Scientific
American reported in 1869: "The drug hashish, the cannabis
indica of the U.S. Pharmacopeia, the resinous product of hemp, grown
in the East Indies and other parts of Asia, is used in those countries
to a large extent for its intoxicating properties and is doubtless used
in this country for the same purpose to a limited extent." 36
The December 2,
1876, issue of the Illustrated Police News confirmed that
conjecture with a drawing showing five attractive young women in exotic
clothing, reclining on divans several of them visibly intoxicated.
The drawing was captioned, "Secret Dissipation of New York Belles:
Interior of a Hasheesh Hell on Fifth Avenue." Water pipes (hookahs)
similar to those used for smoking hashish were conspicuously displayed.
37 The most impressive evidence
of hashish smoking in nineteenth-century America appears in an anonymous
* article published in Harper's New Monthly Magazine for
November 1883, entitled "A Hashish-House in New York." It
opened with a dialogue:
* The Oxford
English Dictionary attributes the article to Dr. H. H. Kane,
author of a standard 1880 textbook on the medical uses of morphine
(see Chapter 2) and an 1882 study of opium smoking. The article
was recently discovered by lexicographer David Rattray, who sent
a copy to the poet Allen Ginsberg, who passed it on to Dr. Michael
Aldrich of the Marijuana Research Association, who in turn made
it available for this Report.
"And so you
think that opium-smoking as seen in the foul cellars of Mott Street
and elsewhere is the only form of narcotic indulgence of any consequence
in this city, and that hashish, if used at all, is only smoked occasionally
and experimentally by a few scattered individuals?"
"That certainly
is my opinion, and I consider myself fairly well informed."
"Well, you
are far from right, as I can prove to you.... There is a large community
of hashish smokers in this city [New York], who are daily forced to
indulge their morbid appetites, and I can take you to a house up-town
where hemp is used in every conceivable form, and where the lights,
sounds, odors, and surroundings are all arranged so as to intensify
and enhance the effects......... 38
The next night the
author with his friend visited a "hasheesh house" on or near
Forty-second Street west of Broadway. The hashish smokers there, the
author was informed, "are about evenly divided between Americans
and foreigners; indeed, the place is kept by a Greek, who has invested
a great deal of money in it. All the visitors, both male and females
are of the better classes, and absolute secrecy is the rule. The house
has been opened about two years, I believe, and, the number of regular
habitues is daily on the increase. " 39
Dr. Kane was also told: "Smokers from different cities, Boston,
Philadelphia, Chicago, and especially New Orleans, tell me that each
city has its hemp retreat, but none so elegant as this." 40
The maintenance
of secrecy, the date of opening (presumably 1881), and other aspects
of the New York City account suggest that when police pressure was put
on opium-smoking dens in New York City and elsewhere after 1875 (see
Chapter 6), their place was taken by "hasheesh hells" modeled
after them.
Liquid cannabis
plus ergot the drug from which LSD was later derived
were taken by Frank Dudley Beane, M.D., and reported by him in the Buffalo
Medical Journal in 1884. Dr. Beane's "trip," after a period
of "hilarious exhalation and constant volubility," ended in
deep sleep. 41 The ready availability
of hashish in candy form in Baltimore was reported in 1894 by Dr. George
Wheelock Grover in his book, Shadows Lifted or Sunshine Restored
in the Horizon of Human Lives: A Treatise on the Morphine, Opium, Cocaine,
Chloral and Hashish Habits: "Once while passing down the leading
business street in Baltimore, I saw upon a sign above my head, 'Gungawalla
Candy, Hashish Candy.' I purchased a box of the candy and, while waiting
with two or three medical friends at the Eutaw House in Baltimore, determined
that I would experiment upon myself [and] test the power of this drug.
I took a full dose at 11 o'clock in the forenoon." Hashish taken
orally is much slower-acting than smoked hashish, and Dr. Grover felt
nothing for about three hours. Then the drug "manifested its peculiar
witchery with scarcely prelude or warning." Dr. Grover remarked
to his friends, sitting at the dining room table with him:
It is undoubtedly
here a day of jubilation or of something in the way of celebration.
You perceive that the tables are set with golden plate, that the waiters
all seem to be dressed in velvet costumes, and that hundreds of canary
birds are singing in gilded cages. It must be a celebration of a good
deal of magnitude, as the many bands of martial and orchestral music
seem all to be playing at once. 42
The occasional use
of cannabis for recreational purposes continued into the twentieth century.
One New York City physician, Dr. Victor Robinson, reported in 1910 that
he personally had taken fluid extract of cannabis (U.S.P.) and had on
several occasions supplied it to his friends in part out
of scientific curiosity but also just for fun. 43
General John J. Pershing's troops were said to have brought marijuana
back with them from Mexico where they were chasing Pancho Villa in 1915.
44
"Old persons
in Kentucky report seeing colored field hands break up and load their
pipes with dried flowering tops of the plants and smoke them,"
Dr. J. D. Reichard of Lexington, Kentucky, told a scientific meeting
in 1943. 45
In short, marijuana
was readily available in the United States through much of the nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries, its effects were known, and it was occasionally
used for recreational purposes. But use was at best limited, local,
and temporary. Not until after 1920 did marijuana come into general
use and not until the 1960s did it become a popular drug.
Footnotes
Chapter 54
1. J. Bouquet, "Cannabis,"
United Nations Bulletin on Narcotics, 3 (1951): 36.
2. Ibid.
3. Richard Brotman and Alfred M. Freedman,
"Perspectives on Marijuana Research," prepared for Center
for Studies in Substance Use, unpublished, p. 19.
4. S. S. Boyce, Hemp, A Practical Treatise on the Culture of
Hemp for Seed and. Fiber with a Sketch of the History and Nature of
the Hemp Plant (New York: Orange Judd, 1900), p. 35.
5. Ibid.
6. Cited by George Andrews and Simon Vinkenoog, eds., The Book of Grass:
An Anthology of Indian Hemp (New York: Grove Press 1967), p. 34.
7. Ibid.
8. Ibid., pp. 35-36, 41.
9. James L. Allen, The Reign of
Law (1900), cited by Robert P. Walton, Marijuana, America's
New Drug Problem (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1938), p. 45.
10. W. IV. Robbins and F. Ramalay (1933),
cited by Walton, Marijuana, p. 45.
11. Crime in America--- A Mid-America View, Hearings before
the Select Committee on Crime, House of Representatives, 91st Cong.,
Ist Sess., pursuant to H. R. 17, October 11, 1969, Lincoln, Nebraska
(Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969), p. 168.
12. Walton, Marijuana, p.
44.
13. Richard Colestock Pillard, "Medical Progress: Marijuana,"
New England Journal of Medicine, 283 (August 6, 1970): 294-295.
14, Ibid., p. 295.
15. Ibid.
16. Leo E. Hollister, "Marijuana
in Man: Three Years Later," Science, 172 (April 2,
1971): 22,
17. The Pharmacopoeia of the United
States of America (Easton, Pa.: Mack Printing, 1851), pp. 332-334.
18. The Pharmacopeia of the United States of America, 11th
ed. (Easton, Pa.: Mack Printing, 1936), p. lxviii.
19. George B. Wood and Franklin Bache,
eds., The Dispensatory of the United States of America,
9th ed. (Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo, 1851), pp. 310-311.
20. J. Russell Reynolds, "On the
Therapeutic Uses and Toxic Effects of Cannabis Indica," Lancet
(March 22, 1970): 637,
21. R. R. McMeens, "Report of the
Committee on Cannabis Indica," from Transactions of the
50th Annual Meeting of the Ohio State Medical Society (Columbus,
Ohio: Follett, Foster, 1860), pp. 75-100.
22. G. S. D. Anderson, "Remarks on
the Remedial Virtues of Cannabis Indica, or Indian Hemp," Boston
Medical and Surgical Journal, 67 (1863): 427-430.
23. Edward J. Waring, Practical
Therapeutics (Philadelphia: Lindsay and Blakiston, 18741), pp. 157-161.
24. C. W. Suckling, "On the Therapeutic
Value of Indian Hemp," British Medical journal, 2
(1881): 12.
25. J. B. Mattison, "Cannabis Indica
as an Anodyne and Hypnotic," St. Louis Medical and Surgical
Journal, 61 (1891): 265-271.
26. A. A. Stevens, Modern Materia
Medica and Therapeutics (Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders, 1903), pp.
77-78.
27. Tod H. Mikuriya, "Marijuana in Medicine, Past, Present and
Future," California Medicine, 110 (January, 1969):
34-40,
28. W. Osler and T. MacCrae, Principles
and Practice of Medicine, 8th ed. (New York: D. Appleton, 1916),
p. 1089.
29. Marty Sasman, "Cannabis Indica
in Pharmaceuticals," Journal of the Medical Society of
New Jersey, 35 (1938): 51-52.
30. P. H. Blachly, "Use of Amphetamines,
Marijuana and LSD by Students," New Physician, 15
(April, 1966): 90.
31. David Solomon, ed., The Marijuana
Papers (New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1966), p. 121.
32. Fitz Hugh Ludlow, "The Hasheesh Eater," quoted in Solomon,
The Marijuana Papers, pp. 148-149.
33. Ibid., p. 149.
34. Ibid.
35. Ibid., p. 150.
36. Scientific American,
21 (September 18, 1869): 183.
37. Reprinted in the New York Times
Magazine, December 13, 1970, p. 26.
38. H. H. Kane (according to Oxford English Dictionary), "A Hashish-House
in New York," Harper's New Monthly Magazine (November,
1883), pp. 944-949.
39. Ibid., p. 945.
40. Ibid., p. 948.
41. Quoted by Michael R. Aldrich, Heads
Hidden in the Hemp Fields (Mill Valley, Calif.: Marijuana Research
Association, 1970), p. 7.
42. George Wheelock Grover, Shadows Lifted or Sunshine Restored
in the Horizon of Human Lives: A Treatise on the Morphine, Opium, Cocaine,
Chloral and Hashish Habit (Chicago, 1894, quoted in Tuli Kupferberg's
Birth Magazine, no. 3, book 1 (Autumn, 1960), p. 48.
43. Victor Robinson, "Experiments
With Hashish," cited in Solomon, The Marijuana Papers,
pp. 201-215.
44. Walton, Marijuana, p. 25.
45. J. D. Reichard, "The Marijuana Problem," JAMA,
125 (June 24, 1944): 594-595.
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