World Veganism: Veganism From 1806

Author:  Image of John DavisJohn Davis
Published: 21.10.2012
Updated: 30.07.2015

May 25, 2011 (updated November 2011)

This is a brief summary of a talk I gave at the. International Vegan Festival in Malaga, Spain, June 4-12, 2011, and at the Midlands Vegan Festival, Wolverhampton UK, October 29, 2011

1806
Dr. William Lambe FRCP, in London, England, changed his diet at the age of 40 - and gave us an unambiguous statement: "My reason for objecting to every species of matter to be used as food, except the direct produce of the earth, is founded on the broad ground that no other matter is suited to the organs of man. This applies then with the same force to eggs, milk, cheese, and fish, as to flesh meat."

 

1811
John Frank Newton, a patient of Dr. Lambe, in his book 'Return to Nature' expanded Lambe's medical ideas to include ethical values towards all animals. 

1813
Percy Bysshe Shelley, poet, joined a Vegan commune' which alternated  between Newton family homes in London 0j and Bracknell.

1830s
Sylvester Graham, in Boston USA, had been promoting the Vegetable diet' - generally 'with or without' eggs/dairy. In 1837 he exchanged letters with Dr. Lambe, and his 1839 book clearly claimed that 'without' was more effective for health.

1830s
Dr John Snow, was 'vegan' since reading Newton's book when he was 17. Moved to London in 1838 and eventually achieved fame for discovering the way in cholera was spread. In 2003 British doctors voted him the greatest physician of all time.

 

1838
James Pierrepont Greaves opened 'Alcott House Academy', a school near London run entirely consistent with the ideas proposed by Lambe and Newton. It ran for the next ten years.

 

1842, April
the first confirmed use of the word 'vegetarian' in the Alcott House journal. All other early uses were by people close to Alcott House, and all using it for what we now call 'vegan'.

1842 June
Bronson Alcott (left), from Boston USA, already veg*n thanks to Sylvester Graham, visited Alcott House, named in honor of him and his earlier school in Boston. In 1843,with new English friends, he ran the short-lived ‘Fruitlands’ near Harvard, MA - again run on totally ethical ‘vegan’ principles.

1845-6
Henry David Thoreau (right) lived by Walden Pond, near Concord MA, living solely on plant foods plus some fishing - but wrote about how much he regretted the fish…

1846
William Horsell moved the hydrotherapy institute from Alcott House to Northwood Villa, in Ramsgate, Kent, England. This again followed Dr. Lambe's principles of plant food plus purified water.

 

1847
The Vegetarian Society was founded at a meeting in Ramsgate, launched jointly by Alcott House and the (ovo-lacto) Bible Christian Church from Salford near Manchester. The compromise was to set the objective as merely 'abstaining from the flesh of animals' - and the confusion over everything else has continued ever since.

1874
Dr. Russell Trall had been running a hydrotherapy institute in New York City since 1850. This changed to exclusively plant food plus water in 1862 - and in 1874 produced the first known 'vegan' cookbook.

1887
John Harvey Kellogg privately removed eggs/dairy from his diet, though his books and sanitarium, in Battle Creek, Michigan, continued to use them. 40 years later he returned to using yogurt - but then discovered soy milk...

 

1910
Rupert Wheldon in England, published 'Wo Animal Food', the first British 'vegan' cookbook. This was reprinted by Dr. Elmer Lee in New York. A 1910 article about Lee in the NY Times included the first known use of the phrase ^plant foods'.

 

1909-14
The Vegetarian Messenger, journal of The Vegetarian Society, carried much discussion about the use of eggs/dairy. There seemed to be a possibility of significant change, but all momentum was destroyed by the First World War.

1931
Mahatma Gandhi spoke at a meeting of the London Vegetarian Society (left), making it clear that he objected to the use of milk and milk products. Such high profile support must have emboldened the minority who called themselves 'non-dairy vegetarians'.

 
1944
Donald Watson and friends coined the word 'vegan' and founded The Vegan Society - the first issue of their journal was subtitled 'the journal of the non-dairy vegetarians' - and made it clear that they had not wanted to separate from The Vegetarian Society, they just wanted a distinct section within it. Most retained their memberships of both societies, as many do today.
1947
Watson was a speaker at the IVU World Veg Congress (he is front-middle right) - The Vegan Society had joined IVU soon after being founded, and has been a member ever since.
 

1957
The first Indian Vegan Society joined IVU. We don't know how long it lasted, but the new society is also prominent member.

 
1960
The American Vegan Society was founded, joining IVU from the outset. This included a smaller group started in California as far back as 1948.
 

1960-90s
many new vegan organizations were formed, and the word gradually spread.

 
1995
records of printed media show a significant increase in the use of the word 'vegan' - this appears to have come from the rapid expansion of vegan websites, leading to a market for vegan books, especially recipes.
 
1997
The IVU website started a recipe collection - agreed to be entirely vegan from the outset. We now have over 3,000 in English with more in other languages.
  1998
IVU agreed that all food at IVU Congresses would in future be completely vegan.
 

21st Century
most veg organizations around the world now promote veganism as the ideal, regardless of whether they are called 'vegetarian' or 'vegan'.

  • by 2009 more books had 'vegan' in the title than 'vegetarian'.
  • 2009/10 surveys in the USA showed that 66% of vegetarians exclude eggs/dairy
  • by 2011 there were as many Google searches for Wegan' as for ^vegetarian'
  • 22 organizations with 'vegan' in their title are now members of IVU

Will all vegetarians eventually be vegan? We have no way of knowing, but the continuing trend seems inevitable

 

Footnotes, added a couple of days after the blog was posted:

  • it will be seen from above that there has been a significant change towards veganism within IVU over the last 15 years. This is mostly due to the work of The Vegan Society (the original one in the UK). Such changes inevitably take time, and TVS deserves credit and respect for the manner in which they have promoted their cause - and they won't give up...
  • the day after the blog was posted, I went back to the 'Truth Tester journals edited by William Horsell at the Ramsgate Hydrotherapy Institute. The winter 1846/47 issues contain a recipe for 'Sago Pudding' - normally made with some animal products - this one ended by proudly proclaiming what can be done 'without milk, eggs or butter'. So far this is the earliest deliberately vegan recipe that I've found, and in a vegan journal. There were plenty of earlier recipes that didn't happen to need animal products, but none I've seen that deliberately substituted them.

  • the question of the lack of women above was raised. There must have been some, but the men of the time didn't bother to write about them, so we don't have any details. If anything comes to light another update will be posted.
  • alongside the vegan Dr. Lambe above, the founder of the ovo-lacto Bible Christian Church in 1809 was the Rev. William Cowherd... honest! Hollywood couldn't have named them better:-)
Sources
  • Check source for updates from time to time

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