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Since TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) was founded in 1948, we
have made some significant achievements and grown both as an
organization and as a family. We're looking forward and planning
for the future, but we always want to remember our past!
The
idea of meeting with other dieters for mutual encouragement
occurred to Esther S. Manz as she awaited the arrival of her
fifth child. While participating in group sessions designed to
prepare women for childbirth, she witnessed the power of mutual
support in helping the women stay within their doctors'
guidelines for pregnancy. She discussed the idea with her
personal physician who encouraged her to carry it out.
TOPS was born around a kitchen table
(wouldn't you know it!) in 1948 when Mrs. Manz and two friends
gathered with others at the Beulah
Brinton
Recreation
Center in Milwaukee. Their desire was to support each
other to thinner figures and better health.
After
the Milwaukee
Journal published an article about the new group,
Esther recalled, "So many people showed up that we could hardly
get through the crowd to our meeting room!"
From the very beginning, TOPS decided that anyone who succeeded
in losing a lot of weight deserved royal treatment. Within a
year, TOPS crowned its first queen. Queens have been crowned in
every year since then—and kings, too—since 1957.
By the end of TOPS' second year, Esther
Manz was riding the bus to TOPS chapters all over town, carrying
the TOPS scale and records in a shopping bag. "No wonder I lost
weight!" she said. To help keep all these new members informed,
she started publishing a modest mimeographed paper called
TOPS News.
Soon TOPS was earning headlines
everywhere and receiving letters from as far away as England.
On
April 9, 1951, Esther's story appeared in
LIFE magazine. By
then, TOPS had grown to about 2,500 members in
Wisconsin,
Michigan, California,
Massachusetts, Illinois
and South Dakota.
Esther's telephone rang constantly from 6 in the morning until
11 at night. That disrupted the party line, and TOPS had to get
its first business phone. TOPS ended the year with chapters in
every state and a total membership of over 6,000. In 1952, TOPS
was incorporated.
Celebrating its sixth anniversary in 1955,
TOPS held its first national convention (the forerunner of
today's International Recognition Days) in Chicago at the American Medical Association's
headquarters. From the very beginning, the AMA had helped TOPS
establish the sound medical ties that made it so different from
commercial weight-loss organizations. The first KOPS (Keep Off
Pounds Sensibly) graduation was held at this 1955 convention.
In 1955, TOPS' first Canadian chapter was
chartered in Hamilton,
Ontario.
In 1962, TOPS moved into a building on South 27th Street in Milwaukee—but within two years, TOPS had
outgrown that structure. A new TOPS headquarters was constructed
at 4575 South Fifth Street,
and dedicated in 1965. The bricks for the building were
purchased by the members. With several additions, it now
comprises 48,000 square feet and is the home TOPS occupies
today.
Esther S. Manz had long dreamed of a research
program to help find causes and remedies for the problems of
overweight. In 1966, thanks to members' contributions, this
dream came true with the establishment of the TOPS Club, Inc.
Obesity and Metabolic Research Program. By 1971, more than 200
TOPS members had participated in its short-term inpatient
studies in
Milwaukee. These studies have expanded
and continue to this day.
Another longtime dream came true
in 1975, when 59 women gathered for the first TOPS retreat.
Esther saw retreat as a time for members to receive motivation
in their battle with overweight.
In 1980, TOPS
published a monograph on nutrition based on a dietary food
exchange system. That year, TOPS' first 25-year KOPS were
honored. Today it is not uncommon to honor KOPS of 40 years and
more.
In
1991, Esther S. Manz retired as president after 43 years of
dedicated service. Betty Domenoe assumed TOPS' presidency at
that time. That same year, Dr. Ahmed Kissebah, a recognized
expert in obesity, was named as the new director of TOPS'
Obesity and Metabolic Research Program. He succeeded Dr. Ronald
Kalkhoff, who had recently passed away.
In 1994, the Medical College of Wisconsin
dedicated the
TOPS
Center for Obesity and
Metabolic Research to recognize the $4.5 million that TOPS Club,
Inc. had donated for medical research. The center includes the
Esther S. Manz Laboratory and the Dr. Ronald K. Kalkhoff
Library. Current donations to obesity research exceed $6.5
million.
Mrs. Domenoe retired in 2002 and was
succeeded by LaNeida Herrick, who helped streamline TOPS to
complete its entry into the 21st Century. During her
leadership, the printing of
TOPS News was totally automated and printed in full color,
TOPS massive data base was computerized and made available for
Field Staff to serve members more completely and quickly, and
the first TOPS Retreat Cruise was offered. She retired in 2004.
Though her years of service were not many, her contribution to
the future of TOPS is substantial.
TOPS’ current president is Barbara Cady, who
was elected in 2005 after LaNeida retired. Still proudly
nonprofit, still incredibly affordable for all people, the
organization continues to be innovative and creative while
remaining true to the original principles and philosophy
established more than six decades ago. Outreach has extended to
the Internet, and more support is available than ever before—and
that support is here for you 24/7. With the support of TOPS, and
Dr. Kissebah’s groundbreaking research in the study of the
genetics of obesity, the promise for a safe, scientific way to
prevent, manage and treat obesity glows brightly.
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