James Crossley Eno

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James Crossley Eno
Born1827/28[1]
Died11 May 1915 (aged 87)
London, England, United Kingdom
Occupation(s)Pharmacist, company founder

James Crossley Eno (1827/28 – 11 May 1915)[2] was a British pharmacist known for compounding and selling a brand of fruit salt that is still popular today as an antacid.

Biography[edit]

James Crossley Eno was born in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, the son of James Eno and Elizabeth Eno, who kept a small general shop.[3] He apprenticed as a druggist and, at the end of his apprenticeship in 1846, joined the staff of a local infirmary as dispenser of prescriptions.[3][4]

Eno Logo
Building constructed for Eno in 1898 in Gatehead, across the river from Newcastle upon Tyne
Eno's 'Fruit Salt' advertisement

At some point he met the Newcastle physician Dennis Embleton, who often prescribed an effervescent compound of sodium bicarbonate and citric acid.[3] Mixtures of this type, combining a fruit acid with a carbonate or tartrate, were known as fruit salts, and they were marketed for a wide range of ailments, only a few of which (e.g. indigestion) they could actually ameliorate. Eno set up his own pharmacy in the Groat Market area of the city and in 1852 began selling his own fruit salt mixture.[3][5][6] Eno gave away his compound to seafarers at the port, and in this way the name Eno became associated with fruit salts around the world.[3] In 1868, he formally founded the company Eno's "Fruit Salt" Works.[3][7][8]: 253 

With the success of his product, Eno's business outgrew its premises and in 1876 he established a larger factory in the New Cross district of London.[3] He himself eventually settled in Dulwich. Eno died in 1915 in London at the age of 87.[3]

Eno's success spawned many competitors in both Great Britain and the United States, but Eno's Fruit Salt continued to be popular. As the pharmaceutical industry moved away from cure-all patent medicines in the mid 20th century, Eno's Fruit Salt became one of the only surviving products of its kind.[9]: 154  Currently owned by GlaxoSmithKline, Eno's Fruit Salt is today sold as an antacid, and its main ingredients are now sodium bicarbonate, sodium carbonate, and citric acid.[10][11] Its main market is in India.[12]

Personal life[edit]

Eno married Elizabeth Ann Cooke in 1852 and they had a daughter, Amy (1855–1942).[5] Amy married Harold William Swithinbank (1858–1928). Eno's granddaughter, Dame Isobel Cripps (1891–1979), was an overseas aid organizer, his great-granddaughter, Peggy Cripps, was a children's book author, and his great-great-grandson Kwame Anthony Appiah is a professor of philosophy at New York University.[13]

Legacy[edit]

A ward in the Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle upon Tyne, was known for a time as the J. C. Eno Ward.[3]

Notes and references[edit]

  1. ^ Corley, T.A.B. "Eno, James Crossley (1827/8–1915)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  2. ^ Different reliable sources give 1820, 1827, or 1828 as Eno's birth year. The earliest date is used here as most likely to be correct.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Campbell, W. A. (June 1966) "James Crossley Eno and the Rise of the Health Salts Trade". University of Newcastle Upon Tyne Medical Gazette 60(3) (June 1966), p.350. Reprinted as an appendix to W. A. Campbell, The Analytical Chemist in Nineteenth Century English Social History, thesis presented for the degree of Master of Letters in the University of Durham. Newcastle upon Tyne, July 1971.
  4. ^ Corley, T.A.B. "Eno, James Crossley (1827/28-1915), manufacturer of patent medicine". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, September 2004.
  5. ^ a b "James Crossley Eno". Geni.
  6. ^ Carolineld. "Eno's fruit salts, made in Hatcham". Caroline's Miscellany, June 1, 2009.
  7. ^ Russell, Colin A., ed. (1999). Chemistry, society and environment : a new history of the British chemical industry. Cambridge: Royal Society of Chemistry. p. 137. ISBN 9780854045990.
  8. ^ Wilkins, Mira (2004). The history of foreign investment in the United States, 1914-1945. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674045187.
  9. ^ Crellin, John K. (2004). A social history of medicines in the twentieth century : to be taken three times a day (Reprint. ed.). New York: Pharmaceutical Products Press. ISBN 9780789018458.
  10. ^ "Eno's Fruit Salt". The Quack Doctor. 17 July 2009.
  11. ^ "Eno – Summary of Product Characteristics at eMC". Electronic Medicines Compendium. Retrieved 2 September 2016. Last updated 1 January 2016
  12. ^ Srinavasan, R. "Pass Me the Fruit Salts". BusinessLine, May 9, 2012.
  13. ^ Schuessler, Jennifer (26 November 2013). "Noted Philosopher Moves to N.Y.U. — and Beyond". The New York Times.