Burma-Shave was a United States brand of brushless shaving cream that was sold from 1925 to
1966.
History
Burma-Shave was the second brushless shaving cream to be manufactured and the first one to become a success. The product was
sold by Clinton Odell and his
sons Leonard and Allan, who formed the Burma-Vita Company, named for a liniment
that was the company's first product. The Odells were not making money on Burma-Vita, and wanted to sell a product that people
would use daily. A wholesale drug company in Minneapolis,
Minnesota, where the company was located, told Clinton Odell about Lloyd's Euxesis, a British product
that was the first brushless shaving cream made, but which was of poor quality. Clinton Odell hired a chemist named Carl Noren to produce a quality shaving cream. After 143 attempts, Burma-Shave was created.
To market Burma-Shave, Allan Odell devised the concept of sequential signboards to sell the product. Allan Odell recalled one
time when he noticed signs saying Gas, Oil, Restrooms, and finally a sign pointing to a roadside gas station. The signs compelled people to read each one in the series, and would hold the driver's
attention much longer than a conventional billboard. In the fall of 1925, the first sets of Burma-Shave signs were erected on 2
highways leading out of Minneapolis. Sales rose dramatically in the area, and the signs soon appeared nationwide.
Burma-Shave sales rose to about 6 million in 1947. Sales stagnated for 7 years, and then
gradually started to fall. Numerous reasons exist, including urban growth(Burma-Shave signs were usually posted on rural
highways) and higher speed limits that caused the signs to be ignored. In 1963, the
Burma-Vita Company was sold to Phillip Morris. Shortly after the sale,
the Burma-Shave signs were discontinued and soon removed from highways. In 1964, a set of
signs ( Within this vale / of toil / and sin / your head grows bald / but not your chin-use / Burma-Shave) was donated to the
Smithsonian Institution.
Roadside billboards
Burma-Shave sign series appeared from 1925 to 1963
in all of the lower 48 states except for New Mexico, Arizona, Massachusetts, and Nevada. Four or five consecutive billboards
would line highways, so they could be read sequentially by motorists driving by.
This use of the billboard was a highly
successful advertising gimmick, drawing attention and passer-by who were curious to discover the punchline.
The first set of slogans were written by the Odells. Before long, Burma-Shave started an annual contest for people to submit
slogans, with winners receiving a $100 prize. Some contests received over 50,000 entries.
Examples
- A peach / looks good / with lots of fuzz / but man's no peach / and never wuz / Burma-Shave
- Does your husband / misbehave / grunt and grumble / rant and rave? / shoot the brute some / Burma-Shave
- Don't take a curve / at 60 per / we hate to lose / a customer / Burma-Shave
- Every shaver / now can snore / six more minutes / than before / by using / Burma-Shave
- He played / a sax / had no B.O. / but his whiskers scratched / so she let him go / Burma-Shave
- Henry the Eighth / sure had trouble / short-term wives / long-term stubble / Burma-Shave
- Grandpa's beard / was stiff and coarse / and that's what / caused his / fifth divorce / Burma-Shave
- Missin' / kissin'? / Perhaps your thrush / can't get through / the underbrush — try / Burma-Shave
- A chin / where barbed wire / bristles stand / is bound to be / a no ma'ams land / Burma-Shave
- Dinah doesn't / treat him right / but if he'd / shave / dyna-mite! / Burma-Shave
- To change that / shaving job / to joy / you gotta use / the real McCoy / Burma-Shave
- Don't lose / your head / to gain a minute / you need your head / your brains are in it / Burma-Shave
- The bearded Devil / is forced / to dwell / in the only place / where they don't sell / Burma-Shave
- In Cupid's little / bag of trix / here's the one / that clix / with chix / Burma-Shave
- A shave / that's real / no cuts to heal / a soothing / velvet after-feel / Burma-Shave
- Riot at / drug store / calling all cars / 100 customers / 99 jars / Burma-Shave
- The wolf / is shaved / so neat and trim / Red Riding Hood / is chasing him / Burma-Shave
- This cooling shave / will never fail / to stamp / its user / first-class male / Burma-Shave
- The monkey took / one look at Jim / and threw the peanuts / back at him / he needed / Burma-Shave
- Use our cream / and we betcha /girls won't wait / they'll come / and getcha / Burma-Shave
- If you / don't know / whose signs / these are / You can't have / driven very far (no final "Burma-Shave" sign)
Special promotional messages
- Free offer! Free offer! / Rip a fender / off your car / mail it in for / a half-pound jar / Burma-Shave
-
- A large number of fenders (real ones scavenged from junkyards, as well as from models) were received by the company, which
made good on its promise.
- Free — free / a trip to Mars / for 900 / empty jars / Burma-Shave
-
- Arliss "Frenchy" French, the manager of a supermarket in Appleton, Wisconsin, took the company up on its offer, creating an
elaborate promotion at his store. Ads saying "Send Frenchy to Mars" appeared in the local newspaper, and men dressed as aliens stood on the roof and fired toy
rocket gliders over the parking lot. French emptied Burma-Shave jars sold at his store into ice cream cartons and kept the jars. After accumulating 900 jars, French sent the jars to Burma-Shave
headquarters via armored car. The company sent him on vacation to Moers (near Duisburg, North Rhine-Westphalia,
Germany).
External link
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