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In 1914, a skin cream was created called "Dr. Bunting's Sunburn Remedy." A customer claimed that the cream had "knocked out his eczema." The name was then changed to what we know now as Noxema. 
 
How Noxema “Creamed” Eczema

To meet ladies’ demand for a product that would keep their skin smooth and protected from the harsh sun, pharmacist Dr. George Bunting compounded his own ingredients into Dr. Bunting’s Sunburn Remedy. Not only was it a big hit as a beauty product in 1914, but one amazed customer wrote in to exclaim how his sunburn remedy had “knocked out her eczema”. Bunting knew a good thing when he saw it, and promptly renamed his product Noxema.

The first full-fledged factory for the commercial manufacturing of Noxema, was housed in a small row house in Baltimore. But going from your own store, to selling a product to everyone else, wasn’t as easy as it sounds. The new company struggled along until 1923, when it started to turn a profit. Times were so lean, that Bunting paid their bills, which included $27 monthly rent for the factory, with $10 stock certificates.

By the Second World War, Noxema’s business was booming, and grew even more by supplying troops with a cream for their hot, sore feet. They were now running a $4 million dollar a year business in a facility with room for about 1/3 of that kind of production.

Noxema surged forward with the times, building a new 44,000 square foot facility, and when television opened up a new medium for advertising, an estimated 50% of 45 million television owners were learning how to keep their skin soft and smooth.

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