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John Harvey Kellogg (February 26, 1852 – December 14, 1943) was an American businessman, inventor, physician, [1] and advocate of the Progressive Movement. [2] He was the director of the Battle Creek Sanitarium in Battle Creek, Michigan, founded by members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
John Harvey Kellogg (born February 26, 1852, Tyrone, Michigan, U.S.—died December 14, 1943, Battle Creek, Michigan) was an American physician and health-food pioneer whose development of dry breakfast cereals was largely responsible for the creation of the flaked-cereal industry.
John Kellogg (June 3, 1916 – February 22, 2000) was an American actor in film, stage and television. Some sources, including ancestry.com, state that his given name was Giles Vernon Kellogg, Jr.
John Harvey Kellogg, who invented the cereal with his brother, was a sort of prophet of hygiene in 20th-century America. But although he championed nutrition and a holistic approach to the overall health of the average American, Kellogg was also a staunch eugenicist and launched a violent anti-masturbation campaign that saw the genitals of ...
John Harvey Kellogg is widely credited with inventing corn flakes, the prepared breakfast cereal, but he holds a contentious place in history for the motivations behind this breakfast staple.
As a progenitor of the cereal product that would eventually be eaten by millions, Dr. John Kellogg’s granola was originally served as a medicinal food at his Battle Creek Sanitarium ...
John Harvey Kellogg was an American doctor, health activist, inventor and businessman best known as the co-inventor of breakfast cereal corn flakes. Born and raised in Tyrone, Michigan, John wanted to become a teacher as a teenager.
Instead, it became a world-renowned destination of health and healing thanks to the charismatic ministering of its director, John Harvey Kellogg, MD.
John Harvey Kellogg was an American physician who revolutionized the concept of health and wellness. He was born on February 26, 1852, in Tyrone, Michigan, to John Preston Kellogg and Ann Janette Stanley.
But Dr. John Harvey Kellogg, the inventor of corn flakes, did not care about profits. For him, cereal was not just a health food because it would improve Americans digestion.