Beach Cure

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A01=Meghan Crnic
American healthcare
Atlantic City
Author_Meghan Crnic
beach as remedy
beach history
Category=NHK
children's history
coastal tourism
Coney Island
East Coast
environmental health
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
germ theory
health havens
history of healthcare
history of medicine
Marine medication
medical history
seaside town

Product details

  • ISBN 9780295753959
  • Weight: 327g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Aug 2025
  • Publisher: University of Washington Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How sun and sea air were prescribed as medicine on America's eastern coast

For centuries, the ocean was seen as a place of danger and work, but by the late nineteenth century, northeastern shores of the United States became therapeutic destinations for the sick and weary. Doctors in Philadelphia, New York, Boston, and other cities began prescribing time at the beach as a remedy for ailments such as tuberculosis, rickets, and exhaustion. In the decades that followed, seaside towns became health havens complete with hospitals that served urban families and children.

Meghan Crnic’s The Beach Cure explores how physicians, tourists, and families transformed the coastline into a medical and cultural landscape. Crnic traces how beliefs in “marine medication”—the healing power of the sun, sea air, and saltwater—shaped the development of northeastern coastal tourist destinations and health institutions in Atlantic City, Coney Island, and beyond. Despite advances in germ theory and the rise of laboratory science, the conviction that nature can restore health and well-being persisted and continues to resonate with beachgoers today.

This book uncovers the profound ways in which Americans tied health to place, showing how the underlying belief in nature’s therapeutic powers brought people to the seashore as a precursor to the beach becoming a destination for leisure and recreation. The Beach Cure offers fresh insight into the history of environmental health, urging readers to reflect on how landscapes shape well-being.

Meghan Crnic is associate director of the Edward D. Viner Center for Humanism at Cooper Medical School of Rowan University and assistant professor of family medicine at Cooper University Health Care.

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