Exercising on a treadmill often feels like torture, and that’s not
exactly a coincidence. In 1818, an English civil engineer named Sir William Cubitt
devised a machine called the “tread-wheel” to reform stubborn and idle
convicts.
Prisoners would step on the 24 spokes of a large paddle wheel,
climbing it like a modern StairMaster. As the spokes turned, the gears were
used to pump water or crush grain. (Hence the eventual name treadmill.)
In
grueling eight-hour shifts, prisoners would climb the equivalent of 7,200 feet.
The exertion, combined with poor diets, often led to injury and illness (as
well as rock-hard glutes), but that didn’t stop penitentiaries all over Britain
and the United States from buying the machines. In 1824, prison guard James
Hardie credited the device with taming New York’s more defiant inmates. He
wrote that it was the treadmill’s “monotonous steadiness, and not its severity,
which constitutes its terror."
Over the years, American wardens gradually stopped using the
treadmill in favor of other backbreaking tasks, such as picking cotton,
breaking rocks, or laying bricks. In England, the treadmill persisted until the
late 19th century, (wait for it...) when
it was abandoned
for being too cruel.
The machine was all but lost to history. But when Dr. Kenneth Cooper
demonstrated the health benefits of aerobic exercise in the 1960s, the
treadmill made a triumphant return. Today, personal trainers have happily taken
the place of prison wardens.
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