Wallace M. Rogerson

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Wallace Matthew Rogerson (1880 - 1943), President of the Wallace Institute of Chicago, was an early 20th-century era exercise leader and record producer.

Rogerson was born in Moline Rock, Illinois on November 29, 1880. He made exercise records for the phonograph like "Get Thin to Music," and presaged the work of Jack LaLanne.[1] Wallace Rogerson founded the Wallace Institute around the turn of the 20th century[2] and offered in-person physical training and developed Wallace Records, or Wallace Reducing Records.[3] For many years he conducted the WGN programme Keep Fit to Music.[4] A 09/06/2011 PBS "History Detectives" broadcast found that Wallace Records preceded a competitor (named Walter Camp) in marketing records for (largely women's) exercising for weight reduction. Rogerson died on February 24, 1943, in Chicago, Illinois[4]

Rogerson's Wallace Institute is not to be confused with another Wallace Institute, which ceased operating September 1, 2002.

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References[edit]

  1. ^ History Detectives, 09/06/2011 Transcript of PBS Broadcast on Wallace Rogerson, and others
  2. ^ Official Reference Book, Press Club of Chicago, 1922
  3. ^ "Wallace M. Rogerson". Discogs. Retrieved 2022-08-11.
  4. ^ a b "Obituary Wallace M. Rogerson". Chicago Tribune. 1943-02-25. p. 21. Retrieved 2022-08-11.

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