


In 1922, the initiative reached the new medium of radio.įamous quotes containing the words daily, dozen, exercise and/or regimen:

Starting in 1921 with the Musical Health Builder record sets, Camp began offering morning setting-up exercises to a wider market. During the 1920s, a number of newspapers and magazines used the term "Daily Dozen" to refer to exercise in general. A prolific writer, Camp wrote a book explaining the exercises and extolling their benefits. As the name indicates, there were twelve exercises, and they could be completed in about eight minutes. The names of the exercises in the original Daily Dozen, as the whole set became known, were hands, grind, crawl, wave, hips, grate, curl, weave, head, grasp, crouch, and wing. It is called the "daily dozen set-up," meaning thereby twelve very simple exercises.īoth the Army and the Navy used Camp's methods. Walter Camp has just developed for the Naval Commission on Training Camp Activities a "short hand" system of setting up exercises that seems to fill the bill a system designed to give a man a running jump start for the serious work of the day. While working as an adviser to the United States military during World War I, he devised a program to help servicemen become more physically fit. Camp was a proponent of exercise, and not just for the athletes he coached.
