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The Treadmill

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Manage episode 329749151 series 106527
Content provided by History Hit. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by History Hit or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Before they found their way into gyms, treadmills had a much darker history. In the 19th Century, they could most commonly be found in prisons.


In contrast to their modern track record of improving health, the Victorians saw treadmills as a way to explicitly inflict pain and punishment. A tool for ‘grinding men good’ through gruelling hours of physical activity.


What were the moral rationalisations of this corporal punishment? Who was the inventor responsible for these machines? And what cautionary tales can we learn from this punishing chapter of penal history?


We answer all these questions and more in this episode of Patented with the help of Rosaline Crone, a Senior Lecturer in History at the Open University who specialised in nineteenth-century criminal justice history.


If you'd like to learn more, we have hundreds of history documentaries, ad-free podcasts and audiobooks at History Hit - subscribe today! To download the History Hit app please go to the Android or Apple store.

  continue reading

1841 episodes

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The Treadmill

Dan Snow's History Hit

6,138 subscribers

published

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Manage episode 329749151 series 106527
Content provided by History Hit. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by History Hit or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Before they found their way into gyms, treadmills had a much darker history. In the 19th Century, they could most commonly be found in prisons.


In contrast to their modern track record of improving health, the Victorians saw treadmills as a way to explicitly inflict pain and punishment. A tool for ‘grinding men good’ through gruelling hours of physical activity.


What were the moral rationalisations of this corporal punishment? Who was the inventor responsible for these machines? And what cautionary tales can we learn from this punishing chapter of penal history?


We answer all these questions and more in this episode of Patented with the help of Rosaline Crone, a Senior Lecturer in History at the Open University who specialised in nineteenth-century criminal justice history.


If you'd like to learn more, we have hundreds of history documentaries, ad-free podcasts and audiobooks at History Hit - subscribe today! To download the History Hit app please go to the Android or Apple store.

  continue reading

1841 episodes

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