Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dzt6s Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T18:16:08.117Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

BLACK AND WHITE BODY MASS INDEX VALUES IN NINETEENTH CENTURY DEVELOPING PHILADELPHIA COUNTY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2011

SCOTT ALAN CARSON
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Odessa, Texas, USA
PAUL E. HODGES
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Odessa, Texas, USA

Summary

This paper demonstrates that although modern BMIs in the US have increased, 19th century BMIs in Philadelphia were lower than elsewhere within Pennsylvania, indicating that urbanization and agricultural commercialization were associated with lower BMIs. After controlling for stature, blacks consistently had greater BMI values than mulattos and whites; therefore, there is no evidence of a 19th century mulatto BMI advantage in the industrializing North. Farmers' BMIs were consistently heavier than those of non-farmers.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abell, J. E., Egan, B. M., Wilson, P. W., Lipsitz, S., Woolson, R. F. & Lacklund, D. T. (2007) Age and race impact the association between BMI and CVD mortality in women. Public Health Reports 122, 507512.Google Scholar
Aloia, J. F., Vaswani, A., Ma, R. & Flaster, E. (1996) Body composition in normal black woman: the four counterpart model. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 81, 23632369.Google Scholar
Andriot, D. (1993) Population Abstract of the United States. Documents Index, Mclean, VA.Google Scholar
Atack, J. & Bateman, F. (1980) The ‘egalitarian ideal’ and the distribution of wealth in the northern agricultural community: a backward look. Review of Economics and Statistics 63(1), 124129.Google Scholar
Atack, J. & Bateman, F. (1987) To Their Own Soil: Agriculture in the Antebellum North. Iowa State University Press, Ames, Iowa.Google Scholar
Blackett, R. J. M. (1997) Freedom on the martyr's grave: black Pittsburgh to the fugitive slave. In Trotter, J. W. & Smith, E. L. (eds) African–Americans in Pennsylvania: Shifting Historical Perspectives. Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, PA.Google Scholar
Bodenhorn, H. (1999) A troublesome caste: height and nutrition of antebellum Virginia's rural free blacks. Journal of Economic History 59(4), 972996.Google Scholar
Bodenhorn, H. (2002) The mulatto advantage: the biological consequences of complexion in rural antebellum Virginia. Journal of Interdisciplinary History 33(1), 2146.Google Scholar
Calle, E., Thun, M., Petrelli, J., Roriguez, C. & Meath, C. (1999) Body-Mass index and mortality in a prospective cohort of U.S. adults. New England Journal of Medicine 341(15), 10971104.Google Scholar
Carlino, G. & Sill, K. (2001) Regional income fluctuations: common trends and common cycles. Review of Economics and Statistics 83(3), 446456.Google Scholar
Carson, S. A. (2008a) Health during industrialization: evidence from the 19th century Pennsylvania State Prison System. Social Science History 32(3), 347372.Google Scholar
Carson, S. A. (2008b) The effects of geography and vitamin D on African American stature in the 19th century: evidence from prison records. Journal of Economic History 68(3), 812831.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carson, S. A. (2009) Geography, insolation, and vitamin D in 19th century US African-American and white statures. Explorations in Economic History 46(1), 149159.Google Scholar
Carson, S. A. (2011) Height of female Americans in the 19th century and the antebellum puzzle. Economics and Human Biology 9(2), 157164.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carson, S. A.Institutional change, stature, and northeast industrialization: evidence from the 19th century Philadelphia County prison. Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics (in press).Google Scholar
Coclanis, P. & Komlos, J. (1995) The nutrition and economic development in post-reconstruction South Carolina: an anthropometric approach. Social Science History 19(1), 91115.Google Scholar
Cohen, R. (2009) Mass Immigration Under Sail: European Immigration to the Antebellum United States. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Costa, D. (1993a) Height, wealth and disease among native-born in the rural, antebellum North. Social Science History 17(3), 355383.Google Scholar
Costa, D. (1993b) Height, weight, wartime stress, and older age mortality: evidence from the Union Army records. Explorations in Economic History 30(4), 424449.Google Scholar
Costa, D. (2004) The measure of man and older age mortality: evidence from the Gould sample. Journal of Economic History 64(1), 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Craig, L. A., Goodwin, B. & Grennes, T. (2004) The effect of mechanical refrigeration on nutrition in the U.S. Social Science History 28(2), 325336.Google Scholar
Cuff, T. (1993) The body mass index values of mid-nineteenth century West Point Cadets: a theoretical application of Waaler's curves to a historical population. Historical Methods 26(4), 171182.Google Scholar
Cuff, T. (2005) The Hidden Cost of Economic Development: The Biological Standard of Living in Antebellum Pennsylvania. Ashgate, Vermont.Google Scholar
Cutler, D. M., Glaeser, E. L. & Shapiro, J. (2003) Why have Americans become more obese? Journal of Economic Perspectives 17(3), 93118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Easterlin, R. (1971) Regional income trends 1840–1850. In Fogel, R. W. & Engerman, S. (eds) Reinterpretations of American Economic History. Harper & Row, New York, pp. 3849.Google Scholar
Evans, E. M., Rowe, D. A., Racette, S. C., Ross, K. M. & McAuley, E. (2006) Is the current BMI obesity classification appropriate for black and white post menopausal women? International Journal of Obesity 30, 837843.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferrie, J. P. (1994) The wealth accumulation of antebellum European immigrants to the U.S., 1840–60. Journal of Economic History 54(1), 133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferrie, J. P. (1999) Yankeys Now: Immigrants in the Antebellum U.S. 1840–1860. Oxford University Press, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fernandez, J., Heo, M., Heymsfield, S., Pierson, R., Pi-Sunyer, X., Wang, Z. et al. (2003) Body composition and dual energy X-ray absoptiometry in black compared to white women. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 10, 114119.Google Scholar
Flegal, K., Carroll, M. & Ogden, C. (2010) Prevalence and trends in obesity among US adults, 1999–2008. Journal of the American Medical Society 303(3), 235241.Google ScholarPubMed
Flegal, K., Shepherd, J., Looker, A., Graubard, B., Borrud, L., Ogden, C. et al. (2009) Comparisons of percentage body fat, body mass index, waist circumference, and waist-stature in adults. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 89(2), 500508.Google Scholar
Flegal, K., Carroll, M. D., Ogden, C. L. & Johnson, C. L. (2002) Prevalence and trends in obesity among US adults, 1999–2000. Journal of the American Medical Association 288(14), 17231727.Google Scholar
Fletcher, S. W. (1955) Pennsylvania Agriculture and Country Life 1840–1940. Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Harrisburg.Google Scholar
Floud, R., Wachter, K. & Gregory, A. (1990) Height, Health and History: Nutritional Status in the United Kingdom, 1750–1980. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Fogel, R. W. (1994) Economic growth, population theory and physiology: the bearing of long-term processes on the making of economic policy. American Economic Review 84(3), 369395.Google Scholar
Fogel, R., Engerman, S., Trussell, J., Floud, R., Pope, C. & Wimmer, L. (1978) Economics of mortality in North America, 1650–1910: a description of a research project. Historical Methods 11(2), 75108.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (1985) World Health Organization and United Nations University, Energy and Protein Requirements. FAO/WHO/UNU Expert Consultation, Technical Report Series No. 724. World Health Organization, Geneva.Google Scholar
Haines, M., Craig, L. & Weiss, T. (2003) The short and the dead: nutrition, mortality, and the ‘antebellum paradox’ in the United States. Journal of Economics History 63(2), 382413.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herbert, P., Richards-Edwards, J., Manson, J. A., Ridker, P., Cook, N., O'Conner, G., Buring, J. & Hennekens, C. (1993) Height and incidence of cardiovascular disease in male physicians. Circulation 88(1), 14371443.Google Scholar
Hershberg, T. (1997) Free blacks in antebellum Philadelphia: a study of ex-slaves, free blacks, and socioeconomic decline. In Trotter, J. W. & Smith, E. L. (eds) African–Americans in Pennsylvania: Shifting Historical Perspectives. Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, PA.Google Scholar
Jee, H. J., Sull, J. W., Park, J., Lee, S. Y., Ohrr, H., Guallar, E. & Samet, J. (2006) Body-mass index and mortality in Korean men and women. New England Journal of Medicine 355(8), 779787.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kenchaiah, S., Evans, J., Levy, D., Wilson, P., Benjamin, E., Larson, M., Kannel, W. & Vasan, R. (2002) Obesity and the risk of heart failure. New England Journal of Medicine 347(5), 305313.Google Scholar
Koch, D. (2011) Waaler revisited: the anthropometrics of mortality. Economics and Human Biology 9(1), 106117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Komlos, J. (1987) The height and weight of West Point Cadets: dietary change in antebellum America. Journal of Economic History 47(4), 897927.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Komlos, J. & Lauderdale, B. E. (2005) Underperformance in affluence: the remarkable relative decline in the U.S. heights in the second half of the 20th century. Social Science Quarterly 88(2), 283305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Margo, R. & Steckel, R. (1982) Heights of American slaves: new evidence on nutrition and health. Social Science History 6(4), 516538.Google Scholar
Metzer, J. M. (1975) Rational management, modern business practices and economies of scale in antebellum Southern plantations. Explorations in Economic History 12(2), 123150.Google Scholar
Pennsylvania General Assembly (1838) Senate, Select Committee to Visit the Eastern Penitentiary and Philadelphia County Prison. Report read in Senate, 5th February 1838. Thompson & Clark Printers, Harrisburg, pp. 110.Google Scholar
Pi-Sunyer, F. X. (1991) Health implications of obesity. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 53(6) 15951603s.Google Scholar
Sanchez, A. M., Reed, D. R. & Price, R. A. (2000) Reduced mortality associated with body mass index (BMI) in African Americans versus caucasians. Ethnicity and Disease 10(1), 2430.Google Scholar
Soltow, L. (1975) Men and Wealth in the United States, 1850–1870. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT.Google Scholar
Strauss, J. & Thomas, D. (1998) Health, nutrition, and economic development. Journal of Economic Literature 36(2), 766817.Google Scholar
Steckel, R. (1979) Slave height profiles from coastwise manifests. Explorations in Economic History 16(4), 363380.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Steckel, R. (1983) Height and per capita income. Historical Methods 16(1), 17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevens, J., Cai, J., Pamuk, E., Williamson, D., Thun, M. & Woods, J. (1998) The effects of age on the association between body-mass index and mortality. New England Journal of Medicine 338(1), 17.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stevens, J., Keil, J. E., Rust, P. F., Tyroler, H. A., Davis, C. E. & Gazes, P.C. (1992) Body mass index and body girths as predictors of mortality in black and white woman. American Journal of Epidemiology 152(6), 12571262.Google Scholar
Stevens, J. & Nowicki, E. M. (2003) Body mass index and mortality in Asian populations: implications for obesity cut-points. Nutrition Reviews 61(3), 104107.Google Scholar
Waaler, H. T. (1984) Height, weight and mortality: the Norwegian experience. Acta Medica Scandinavica 215(s679), 151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wienphal, J., Ragland, D. R. & Sidney, S. (1990) Body mass index and 15-year old mortality in a cohort of black men and women. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 43(9), 949960.CrossRefGoogle Scholar