In 1890, pharmacist
Lunsford Richardson of
Selma, North Carolina, took over the retail drug business of his brother-in-law Dr. John Vick, of
Greensboro, North Carolina. After Dr. John Vick saw an ad for ''Vick's Seeds
, Lunsford Richardson began marketing Vick’s Family Remedies''. The basic ingredients of the range of products included
castor oil,
liniment, and 'dead shot'
vermifuge. The most popular remedy was
Croup and Pneumonia Salve, which was first compounded in 1891, in Greensboro. It was introduced in 1905 with the name Vick's Magic Croup Salve and rebranded as
VapoRub in 1912 at the instigation of H. Smith Richardson, Lunsford's oldest son, who had gained valuable sales and marketing experience while working for a period in New York and Massachusetts after attending college. Smith Richardson assumed the presidency of the company in 1919 upon his father's death. Lunsford Richardson sent out millions of samples of Vicks VapoRub, "inadvertently" inventing the concept of
junk mail, say North Carolina state historians. The
flu epidemic of 1918 increased sales of VapoRub from $900,000 to $2.9 million in just one year. In 1931, the company began selling cough drops. The Vicks VapoInhaler, a portable nasal inhaler providing mentholated vapor relief, was introduced in 1941, and became colloquially known as the Vick Stick.In 1948,
Edward Mabry became president of Vicks, then known as the
Vick Chemical Company. In 1952, Vicks began selling cough syrup, and in 1959 they introduced Sinex Nasal Spray. The company began selling NyQuil in 1966. In March 2015, Procter & Gamble sold the Vicks VapoSteam U.S. liquid inhalant business to
Helen of Troy Ltd. ==References==