This article was scraped from Rochester Subway. This is a blog about Rochester history and urbanism has not been published since 2017. The current owners are now publishing link spam which made me want to preserve this history.. The original article was published December 26, 2015 and can be found here.
Driving down East Main Street recently, I spotted the name "Martha Matilda Harper" engraved on a building near the old Beech Nut packaging plant. My interest was piqued, since the building at 1233 East Main Street
currently houses Tire Trax sales and service. It turns out that the facility is the former laboratories for Martha Matilda Harper, Inc.
I can't believe that I'd never heard of Martha Matilda Harper, but we can thank her for just about everything having to do with our modern salon experiences, as well as her groundbreaking business methods that pioneered modern retail franchising...
Born in Ontario, Canada in 1857, Harper was sent out as a domestic servant at the ripe old age of seven. She eventually went on to work for a physician who had developed a tonic that stimulated hair growth. He taught Harper how to increase blood flow to the scalp with robust hair brushing and scalp hygiene (for example, using a fine comb to clear way obstructions from the hair follicles and a stiff brush to help stimulate the scalp). On his deathbed, he shared with Harper the secret formula for his hair tonic. She brought that formula with her to Rochester when she emigrated here in 1882 to take another job as a domestic servant.
Harper began manufacturing her hair tonic in a backyard shed, likely behind the home at 717 East Main Street where she worked as a domestic servant.
Here's an iconic image of Harper and her floor length, flowing hair...
She experimented with the tonic on her own hair, which cascaded in luxurious waves to the floor and became her trademark, and then started treating the hair of society women (friends of her employer). The women were hooked.
In 1888, using her lifetime savings of $360, Harper rented space in the Powers Building to open her first beauty shop. In 1889, she was still boarding at the same address on East Main St., but now the city directory listed her occupation as "hair tonic, and shampooing rooms, 517 Powers bldgs".
She resided at 717 East Main Street until 1901, when, according to the directory, she moved to 881 Main St.
With her proven hair tonic and a loyal clientele, Harper drew customers from far and wide to her Rochester beauty shop, including Susan B. Anthony, Mabel Graham Bell (wife of Alexander Graham Bell) and future First Lady Grace Coolidge. Socialite and philanthropist Bertha Honore Palmer, whose husband owned Chicago's Palmer House hotel, traveled to experience the Harper Method firsthand and convinced Martha Matilda Harper to open a shop in Chicago in time for the World's Fair. It would be the start of a female-empowering franchising revolution.
From her beauty headquarters in Rochester and with the goal of helping women achieve business success, Harper started training poor women in her methods of beauty treatment, which included facial and scalp massages, healthy approaches to skin and hair care, and creating a calm environment for customers.
She created incentives for shop owners to encourage fair compensation for workers. She required Harper beauty shops to use only her organic, chemical-free products and beauty methods (which included diet and exercise in the beauty routine) and to conform to her precise business practices.
She even created a reclining salon chair as a way to shampoo hair without getting soap suds in the client's face - a design she unfortunately failed to patent...
SIDE NOTE: Harper's products have been touted as being organic and chemical free, so when I got to see some of the products that the Rochester Museum and Science Center (RMSC) has in its collection, I was amused to see that the bottle of Tonique for oil hair lists the ingredients as "Cantharides, Sage, Salt, Quinine and Alcohol 50% by Volume." According to sources online, a cantharide is an aphrodisiac. I wonder if that effect was part of the appeal of a Harper Method scalp massage!
That consistency in consistent training, high quality products and impeccable customer service was the key to her success - and the foundations of business franchising. At its peak in the 1920s, there were 500 Harper beauty shops worldwide, and, before the business closed, Martha Matilda Harper, Inc. boasted a full line of beauty products and clients including Jacqueline Kennedy, Danny Kaye, Helen Hayes, and First Lady Lady Bird Johnson.
In 1920, at age 63, Harper married Robert MacBain, a man more than 20 years her junior who liked to be called The Captain. Martha Matilda Harper kept her maiden name.
In 1921, the building at 1233 East Main St. was built as the headquarters and laboratories of Martha Matilda Harper, Inc.
Several artifacts including photos, beauty products, and even the trowel used to lay the cornerstone of the building can be found in the Martha Matilda Harper collection at Rochester Museum & Science Center.
The building now houses Tire Trax
, a retail tire warehouse. The owner Paul Palmer, took me on a tour recently and he warned me that the place was jam packed with tires.
He wasn't kidding. Every space on the first and third floors is crammed with tires; the only reason the second floor isn't, he explained, is because the freight elevator doesn't stop on that floor.
There have been some renovations to the building since it was the Harper headquarters, but the stairwells are still there and the old elevator, which is original to the building, is still in use.
It's amazing to think that almost 100 years ago, students and beauty professionals walked these same halls, creating products and honing skills that would impact the beauty industry around the world.
When she became too old to run the company, Harper passed the reins on to her husband. She died in August 1950, a month shy of her 93rd birthday.
[ Find her grave at Riverside Cemetery
]
In 1956, MacBain sold the company. It was sold again and eventually acquired by the largest operator of trades schools in the country. That company closed down all the Harper training programs; the Harper franchises continued to operate independently until owners died or retired. The last remaining franchised salon, the Harper Method Founder's Shop, was owned by Centa Sailer and located in The Temple Building. It closed in the early 2000s; Ms. Sailer passed away in 2014.
Martha Matilda Harper's methods of beauty and business live on, despite the fact that most people have never heard of her. The former home of Martha Matilda Harper, Inc. Laboratories on East Main stands as a legacy to the woman who changed beauty and business around the world, from right here in Rochester, NY.
* * *
For an in-depth look at Martha Matilda Harper, check out Jane R. Plitt's book, Martha Matilda Harper and The American Dream: How One Woman Changed The Face of Modern Business
from Syracuse University Press. * * *
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