Tobacco, Bowling, and Vintage Home Gyms

While browsing local vintage boutique Retro 101, I stumbled upon packaging that would catch anyone’s eye – manly muscles in a contradictory happy, yet formidable pose. Whatever was in the box, it had to be mine. So goes the power of marketing. Mad Men, eat your heart out.

The Whitely Super Jiffy Gym looked promising. Best guess was with the invention of plastics, came the Super Jiffy Gym – a simplified version of the springed “chest pull” popularized by cartoons…you know the one that Tom and Jerry get tangled up in. Or was it Daffy Duck…

Now I too, could create an array of perfect Grecian poses with my new, vintage Jiffy Gym. Were the trunks required too?



But once taken out of the box, I could barely move it. It wasn’t quite the elastic band you might get from the physical therapist. No. The tension was somewhere between a strap to hold elephants at bay and a rock.

Verdict? The Jiffy Gym was a dud. Could use it to hang plants. The packaging was mesmerizing, however and a little research was in order. It appears Whitely Gyms offered a large array of classic home gym equipment throughout the 1960′s and early 70′s, bizarre precursors to more recent fitness props and home gym toys of today.

Turns out, Whitely Gyms of Hackensack, NJ, was owned at one time by AMF Incorporated, now best known for their bowling centers.

AMF Incorporated was founded in 1900 New York, as the American Machine & Foundry Company Inc. The company manufactured automated machines for the tobacco industry.

AMF, Inc. expanded automated machinery into all kinds of areas including, just prior to World War II, the automatic pinspotter.  Yes, as in bowling. The war delayed the introduction of  the pinspotter until the late 1950′s when it revolutionized tenpin bowling and touched off a boom in the sport. Kingpin was born.

Involvement with bowling led AMF into a broad range of non-automated sporting equipment during the 1960′s and 70′s including; tennis racquets and skis, golf clubs, inflatable balls, scuba gear, yachts and many other recreational products such as snowmobiles, bicycles, children’s toys and even, (during the 1970′s), Harley Davidson motor cycles.


From jump ropes, gym bars, bands, balls and pulley trainers, Whitely offered it all.  Many companies continue to rediscover and  recreate these same gyms toys. They just purport to be safer….and perhaps greener.

The Whitely line of home gym equipment quietly went away in the 70′s, only to be rediscovered now and again in vintage shops and yard sales by cultural fitness anthropologist such as myself. The Jiffy Gym is a shining reminder of how little has changed in American fitness, not to mention the influential power of good advertising. Afterall, I did buy it.


2 Responses to Tobacco, Bowling, and Vintage Home Gyms

  1. I especially lurve the manly-man you have demonstrating the strap! Go quick effective scientific muscular development!

  2. Pingback: Body Workout 101

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