How to ensure it's a boy (according to 100-year-old pregnancy guides)
It all depends on which ovary you decide to use, obviously
If you were serious about producing a male heir around the turn of the 20th century, there was plenty of questionable advice to follow.
1. SCIENCE IS FOR THE UNIMAGINATIVE
First, it's important that we understand how human bodies select gender in reproduction. This is best accomplished through peer-reviewed scientific studies in a clinical environment. Or not. Sometimes you just know in your gut how reproductive microbiology works. Laura Davis, who wrote The Law of Sex Determination and Its Practical Application in 1916, didn't need egghead science. She learned about ovaries and spermatozoa in the school of life:
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Argue with that, if you dare. It is through this extensive experience that Davis feels confident to share with you her secret. If you want a boy, it all depends on which ovary you decide to use.
2. PICK AN OVARY
According to Davis, "Sex of the embryo in man and the higher animals is determined in the ovary from which the ovum in question is developed." She continued:
Therefore Davis would counsel women who wanted a boy to lie on their right sides. Percy John McElrath, who wrote The Key to Sex Control in 1911, also believed gravity was important to conception:
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If society — or, say, his own personal sense of professionalism — had permitted Mr. McElrath to actually talk to a female in this era, he might have learned most women are hard-pressed to know "which ovary" they excreted an egg out of. Similarly, Mr. McElrath would be unlikely to know which of his testicles produced the most virile sperm. (Although he had a solution for that, as we shall soon see.)
3. ENFEEBLE YOURSELF
Henri Médile Gourrier, writing in 1886, didn't think gravity or even ovaries mattered when it came to having a son. Gender was determined by whichever parent was the most feeble:
Therefore, if a man wanted a boy, he must set about handicapping himself with what Gourrier called "The Debilitating Regimen":
So … in the 19th century one "debilitated" oneself by eating lean meats and vegetables, performing physical exercise, and taking warm baths. Somebody needs to tell all those people down at the gym the havoc they are wreaking on their bodies. If they continue that way, extensive bloodletting with an unwashed nail might be the only way for them to regain their health.
If the basic Debilitating Regimen did not result in a son, Gourrier permitted his readers to exercise even harder and then have some wine:
Even better than the above methods was the Disease Method. The absolute best time to conceive a child of your own sex is on the immediate heels of any horrendous illness:
So, if you want a son, see if you can catch yourself a stout case of measles or any of the finer poxes. If you survive that, you and your wife are just one half-conscious encounter of life-sapping love away from a son.
4. DON'T BLAME DAD
Simon Newcomb, writing in 1904, made an earnest effort to reveal the mysteries of sex selection by using the most crafty of all deceits — statistics. His analysis of the birth records from 1900 yielded these conclusions:
Your body doesn't know what's going on, either:
Dad's got almost nothing to do with it:
5. ORGASMIC RUPTURES!
Percy John McElrath may not have known much about women, but he was sure he knew how to get them produce a son. He believed sons resulted specifically from the intervention of the Graafian follicle in the ovary. You had to rupture it early to get a son, and the best way to do that was a well-timed orgasm.
McElrath's theory was the opposite of Gourrier's. It was the robustness of a father, not his feebleness, which produced a son, so he gave special instructions to men on how to strengthen themselves. Key factors: potatoes, stay away from women, and flush those testicles daily!
To sum up Mr. McElrath's approach to gender determination: Avoid women, both before and after conception. They are mythical creatures constantly trembling on the edge of orgasm, able to control their ovulatory system at will. Also, don't forget to masturbate. That way, if you're lucky, you'll only have to have sex once to ensure the propagation of the glory of manhood.
It's important to remember that, for the most part, these people weren't idiots. They were ambitious and tried to figure out something they didn't understand with the little information they could collect. In 100 years, our great-great-grandchildren will no doubt be raising eyebrows at us, and how we had no clue most diseases are caused by a chemical secreted by house cats when they get their feelings hurt.
More from Mental Floss:
Therese O'Neill lives in Oregon and writes for The Atlantic, Mental Floss, Jezebel, and more. She is the author of New York Times bestseller Unmentionable: The Victorian Ladies Guide to Sex, Marriage and Manners. Meet her at writerthereseoneill.com.
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