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Moves to ban the baiting of animals had been going on for many years
before the Protection of Animals Act 1835 finally banned the practice
of "running baiting or fighting any bull, bear, badger, dog or other
animal (whether domestic or wild) or for cock-fighting". However,
it is with Henry Salt and the Humanitarian League that the move to ban
hunting with dogs really begins.
Salt
was born in 1851, attending Eton and Cambridge, before returning to Eton
as a master. However, from about 1880 largely through his brother-in-law
and fellow Eton master J.L. Joynes, he was introduced to the leading social
reformers of the day including Henry George, William Morris and Edward
Carpenter; and the then unknown George Bernard Shaw. Also, by gradual
degrees he was beginning to question his diet and developing an interest
in vegetarianism. By 1884 the conviction grew on him that Eton masters
"were but cannibals in cap and gown - almost literally cannibals,
as devouring the flesh and blood of animals
and indirectly cannibals,
as living by the sweat and toil of the classes that do the hard work of
the world".
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Simplification
Aside
from Socialism, another, movement in the 1880s gaining ground was 'simplification',
and he became impressed by the writings of Rousseau, Thoreau's Walden
and Edward Carpenter's essays, and started recognising the connection
that "luxury on the part of one man would involve drudgery on the
part of another". In 1884 he despensed with servants, left his teaching
post and moved to a labourer's cottage in Tilford, Surrey, determined
to take up a new life of writing and humanitarian causes in what he would
call "an emigration, a romance, a strange new life in some remote
antipodes." Here he began writing for Justice, the journal
of the Social Democratic Federation and working as a literary critic in
socialist journals.
Humanitarian League
In 1891 he joined up with a small group of like-minded
folk to draw up a manifesto and launch the Humanitarian League. The idea
was to proclaim a general principle of humaness underlying the efforts
of those societies (SPCA (now Royal), vegetarian and anti-vivisection
societies, anti-war groups, Howard Association for Penal Reform, etc)
which aimed at humanising public opinion; and the consequence being that
it would show that while the various efforts were disconnected, they were
inspired by a single bond of fellowship and universal sympathy. In its
manifesto it was asserted "that much good will be done by the mere
placing on record of a systematic and consistent protest against the numerous
barbarisms of civilisation - the cruelties inflicted by men, in the name
of law, authority, and traditional habit, and the still more atrocious
treatment of the lower animals, for the purpose of 'sport', 'science',
'fashion',' and the gratification of an appetite for unnatural food".
Animal Rights
In
1892, Salt wrote a seminal, scholarly book called Animals' Rights Considered
in Relation to Social Progress. Peter Singer describes this book as
the best of the 18th and 19th century works on the subject. Salt's wise
words include: "The emancipation of men from cruelty and injustice
will bring with it, in due course, the emancipation of animals also, the
two reforms are inseparable, and neither can be fully realised alone".
And in a chapter on "Sport or Amateur Butchery," he wrote:
"The sports of hunting and coursing are a
brutality which could not be tolerated for a day in a state which possessed
anything more than the mere name of justice, freedom and enlightenment".
Salt edited two journals for the Humanitarian
League, Humanity, later renamed The Humanitarian (1895-1919),
and The Humane Review (1900-1910). He also appointed special departments
to deal with cruel sports, criminal law and prison reform, humane diet,
education of children and opposition to war.
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Blood-sports
In Salt's much later autobiography, Seventy
Years Among Savages there is an interesting account of how the Humanitarian
League brought the very word 'blood-sports' into common parlance. He describes
how a Mr John Macdonald first used the word in an article in the Echo,
and the League borrowing the word from him, and finding that it "went
home," made a point of using it on every possible occasion.
Carry The War Into The Enemies' Camp
Other tricks of the League included carrying the
war into the enemies' camp - to hoist them with their own petard by means
of the reductio ad adsurdum, a pretended defence of the very practices
they were attacking. In this they published The Brutalitarian,
a "Journal for the Sane and Strong", and The Beagler Boy
(the latter eulogising the Eton Beagles). Salt knew the absurdity of the
articles would be apparent to the general reader but "would escape
the limited intelligence of schoolboys and the sporting press" and
indeed, the Horse and Hound and The Sportsman welcomed and
praised the articles!
The Eton Beagles and the Royal Buckhounds were
the League's two most cherished 'pegs', upon which they did much to hang
the exposure of the cruelty of hare and stag-hunting. With the Buckhounds
they petitioned Queen Victoria and after her death exposed correspondence
from her expressing her "strong opposition to stag hunting for many
years past," and this finally sealed its fate. They also drafted
a "Spurious Sports Bill" with the purpose of "prohibiting
the hunting of carted stags, the coursing of bagged rabbits, and the shooting
of birds released from traps". However, with a reminder of the present
day, the Bill was consistently "talked out".
In 1914 the League published a volume of essays
on Killing for Sport with a preface by Mr Bernard Shaw: the book
forming a summary of the League's arraignment of blood-sports.
Criminal Reform
Salt also enlisted many able people to carry out
reform of criminal law and prison reform. Dr W. Douglas Morrison, a criminologist,
led the League's agitation which helped bring about the Prision's Act
of 1898, and W.S. Monck (Lex) worked for the establishment of a Court
of Criminal Appeal and the revision of imprisonment for Debt Law.
Mahatma Gandhi
Salt,
who was very much a man of letters, wrote nearly 40 books during his lifetime
including biographical studies of Shelley, Thoreau, De Quincey, James
Thompson ("B.V.") and several others. He was also a great amateur
botanist, specialising in wild flowers. One of the books that gave him
greatest satisfaction was A Plea for Vegetarianism (1886) because
of its effect on Gandhi who, during his student days in London (1888-91)
had read Salt's book. At the meeting of the Vegetarian Society of 20th
November 1931, Salt was honoured by Gandhi's opening remarks: "It
was Mr Salt's book A Plea for Vegetarianism which showed me why,
apart from a hereditary habit, and apart from a vow administered to me
by my mother, it was right to be vegetarian
He showed me why it
was a moral duty incumbent upon vegetarians not to live upon fellow-animals".
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Creed Of Kinship
Salt's essential philosophy is summed up in his
book, Creed Of Kinship, 1935; here he explains how he "thoroughly
disagreed with the present established religions," but had a firm
religious belief of his own which he called a Creed Of Kinship. Founded
on rationalism and underpinned by unselfish deeds, it simply demanded
a recognition of the biological and evolutionary affinity between man
and man and human and sub-human. Salt was prepared to "hold a truce
between those who sought similar reforms but from a different religious
foundation, but ultimately he felt his Creed would "outlive and outlast
all the complicated doctrines theology has thrown up."
League Against Cruel Sports
The demise of the Humanitarian League came about
as a result of the first world war and in 1919 it disbanded. However,
as Salt wrote in 1930: "Its long effort to ameliorate certain sports
was not in reality wasted and has now been made evident by the success
of a later League for the Prohibition of Cruel Sports". This League,
now known as the League Against Cruel Sports was founded in 1924 by Mr
H.B. Amos and Mr George Bell. For Salt who recognised that the Humanitarian
League in its day was largely a forlorn hope but with far reaching effects,
there would have been satisfaction in knowing that we are now so close
to "taking a stronghold of the enemy" with the impending ban
on hunting with dogs.
To Find Out More About Salt
The
Saviour of Salt - A Henry Salt Anthology
(in Hardback)
Edited by George Hendrick and Willene Hendrick
For a limited period this book can be
purchased for just £5 (rrp £12.95). Simply contact:
Simon Wild, West
Sussex Wildlife Protection, 1 Sutton Close, Felpham, Bognor Regis, PO22
8EY or e-mail Simon.
Running at over 200 pages, it includes important
extracts from his best works.
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