Career
His first career was as a publisher, but he soon moved on to creating homeopathic medicines in the early 1890s. He employed a staff of chemists and physicians, one of them Doctor Hawley Harvey Crippen. Munyon was found guilty of fraud several times due to unsubstantiated claims for his medicines.
Many of his medicines are said to have consisted mostly of sugar and alcohol.
His most famous one was named "Doctor Munyon"s Paw-Paw Elixir" and its main ingredient was fermented papaya juice. lieutenant was served at his resort, Hotel Hygeia, on Munyon Island.
At the time his cures were highly regarded with the Philadelphia Times writing that "Professor Munyon is to medicine what Professor Edison is to electricity."
In 1900, he donated two million dollars to establish an industrial school for fatherless girls in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, donating some of the land near his house. The school provided practical training and its operations were funded by Munyon.
His policy was to give at least ten percent of his profit to charity.
He bought what is now known as Munyon Island in 1901 and completed construction of a hotel in 1903. The hotel was named Hotel Hygeia after the Greek goddess of health and it catered to wealthy northerners who spent the winters in Palm Beach, Florida. The five-story hotel had twenty-one rooms and eight baths.
The hotel burned to the ground in 1917.
Munyon also owned land in Palm Beach, Florida in an area known as the Styx. He rented out properties there mostly to African-Americans.
He used sanitation as a cause to evict all of his 150 tenants in 1906 and later sold the land to Edward R. Bradley. She was also active in the Merion, Pennsylvania chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
In 1913 she filed for divorce and returned to her career as an actress.
He had two sons.