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Order of the Golden Age

Order of the Golden Age
AbbreviationOGA
Formation1895 (1895)
FoundersHenry John Williams
Dissolved1959 (1959)
PurposePromotion of animal rights
Region
Worldwide

The Order of the Golden Age (OGA) was an international animal rights society with a Christian, theosophical and vegetarian emphasis, which existed between 1895 and 1959.

History

The Order of the Golden Age (OGA) was conceptualised in 1881 by Rev. Henry John Williams (younger brother of Howard Williams) and formally established a year later.[1][2] The OGA was first known as the Order of the Companions of the Golden Age and was dedicated to the memory of James the Less.[3] The first general meeting was held on 8 September 1881 at Brympton in Somerset.[4] Henry John Williams was president, R. Bailey Walker was vice-president and Frederick L. Catcheside was treasurer.[3][4] A shortage of funds prevented its growth[1] until Sidney Hartnoll Beard re-established the OGA in 1895.[2][5][6]

The renewed OGA's headquarters were located at Beard's residence in Ilfracombe.[6] The Order promoted psychical research, spiritualism and vegetarianism.[2] In 1904, the OGA's new headquarters were located at Barcombe Hall in Paignton.[2][6] Beard was the editor of the Herald of the Golden Age (1896–1918), the official journal for the OGA.[5][7] The aim of the journal was to promote the "fruitarian[a] system of living, and to teach its advantages."[7] The journal promoted vegetarianism from a Christian perspective.[8] According to an advertisement of the journal, it "challenges the morality of Carnivorous Customs and advocates Practical Christianity, Hygienic Common Sense, Social Reform, Philanthropy and Universal Benevolence. It is opposed to War, Slaughter, Cruelty and Oppression, and is designed to promote Goodness, but not goody goodyism, and Orthodoxy of Heart, rather than Orthodoxy of Creed."[9] Josiah Oldfield, the noted British lawyer, physician and promoter of fruitarianism, was a member of the OGA.[10]

In 1896, Rev. Gideon Jasper Richard Ouseley founder of the Order of the Golden Age and United Templary was involved in a dispute with Beard and complained that the organization was being confused with his own.[4] In 1904, the OGA was reconstituted and declared to be "founded in 1895 by Sidney H. Beard" with the consent of Henry John Williams.[4]

By 1909, the OGA was active in 47 countries, and its headquarters transferred to London.[1] The OGA organised successful concerts at the Royal Albert Hall.[11] The OGA even claimed to have converted Pope Pius X to the vegetarian diet during 1907.[12] In 1938, the Order decamped to South Africa upon the death of their official Founder and President, Sidney Hartnoll Beard, to become forgotten about by the vegetarian movement until the 21st century.

Position on fish eating

The OGA did not oppose consumption of fish.[13] In 1902, the OGA stated that "the eating of fish caught in a net has never been forbidden to members of The Order, and the original rule still remains in force... The Order stands on the basis of its original foundation, and this foundation declared that the eating of net-caught fish should not exclude from membership".[13]

The OGA had two classes in its membership, companions and associates. The companions were vegetarians who abstained from fish, poultry and red meat, whilst the associates abstained from only poultry and red meat. Both were considered members of The Order.[14]

OGA's position on fish eating was criticized in an article in The British Medical Journal which questioned "is not a fish as much deserving of consideration on 'humanitarian grounds' as a sheep?".[15]

Legacy

A commemorative website was created in 2006 and the OGA was mentioned in a modern published history of the vegetarian movement a year later.[2][1] A large collection of volumes of The Herald of the Golden Age were digitised by the Internet Archive in 2008.

Council Members

Notable council members include:[16]

1897–1913 Sidney H. Beard (also president)
1897–1897 Edmund J. Baillie
1897–1905 Frances L. Boult
1897–1899 Albert Broadbent
1897–1897 Charles W. Forward
1897–1898 J. Isaac Pengelly
1897–1903 Harold W. Whiston
1897–1913 Henry John Williams
1898–1898 James Christopher Street
1898–1913 Alfred Mansfield Mitchell
1899–1904 Walter Walsh
1900–1902, 1905–1913 Josiah Oldfield
1901–1904 Robert H. Perks
1902–1904 Charles A. Hall
1902–1904 John Todd Ferrier
1902–1907 Eustace H. Miles
1907–1908 James Edge Partington
1907–1909 Ernest Newlandsmith
1907–1913 Robert Bell
1910–1911 Otto Abramowski

See also

Notes

  1. ^ At the time, the term 'fruitarian' was used with a variety of meanings, see e.g. "Oldfield's type of 'fruitarian dietary' was not a strict type of fruitarianism".

References

  1. ^ a b c d Gilheany, John M. "The Order of the Golden Age: An Overview". The Order of the Golden Age. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e Gregory, James. (2007). Of Victorians and Vegetarians: The Vegetarian Movement in Nineteenth-Century Britain. Tauris Academic Studies. p. 109. ISBN 978-1-84511-379-7
  3. ^ a b Gregory, James Richard Thomas Elliott (2002). The Vegetarian Movement in Britain c.1840–1901: A Study of Its Development, Personnel and Wider Connections (PDF). Vol. 2. University of Southampton. p. 331.
  4. ^ a b c d Gilheany, John M. (2019). "OGA Notes". Order of the Golden Age. Archived from the original on 12 July 2023.
  5. ^ a b Anonymous. (1978). Who Was Who Among English and European Authors, 1931-1949. Volume 1. Gale Research Company. p. 114. Open Library Ref: OL21034929M; ISBN 0810304007 ISBN 978-0810304000
  6. ^ a b c "Sidney Hartnoll Beard (1862-1938) - The Order of the Golden Age". www.ordergoldenage.co.uk. 23 September 2019. Retrieved 7 December 2024.
  7. ^ a b Kuhn, Philip. (2017). Psychoanalysis in Britain, 1893–1913: Histories and Historiography. Lexington Books. pp. 73-74. ISBN 978-1498505222
  8. ^ Stark, James F. (2018). Replace them by Salads and Vegetables: Dietary Innovation, Youthfulness, and Authority, 1900–1939. Global Food History 4 (2): 130-151. Accessed 28 December 2019
  9. ^ Kuhn, Philip. (2017). Psychoanalysis in Britain, 1893–1913: Histories and Historiography. Lexington Books. p. 93. ISBN 978-1498505222
  10. ^ Bates, A. W. H. (2017). Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-137-55696-7
  11. ^ The Times, Tuesday, Nov 01, 1910; p. 16; Issue 39418.
  12. ^ The Herald of the Golden Age, July 1907, p. 132.
  13. ^ a b "Fish-Eating". Herald of the Golden Age. 7 (5): 56. 1902.
  14. ^ "Companions and Associates". Herald of the Golden Age. 7 (5): 56. 1902.
  15. ^ "Moderate Vegetarians". The British Medical Journal. 2 (2182): 1359–1360. 1902. JSTOR 20274045.
  16. ^ Dates taken from issues of The Herald of the Golden Age published online at iapsop.com.

Further reading

  • Gilheany, John M. (2010). Familiar Strangers: The Church and the Vegetarian Movement in Britain (1809-2009). Cardiff: Ascendant Press. ISBN 978-0-9552945-1-8.
  • Calvert, Samantha Jane (2013). Eden's diet: Christianity and vegetarianism 1809 – 2009 (PhD thesis). University of Birmingham.
  • Bates, A. W. H. (2017), Bates, A.W.H. (ed.), "A New Age for a New Century: Anti-Vivisection, Vegetarianism, and the Order of the Golden Age", Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History, The Palgrave Macmillan Animal Ethics Series, London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp. 69–98, doi:10.1057/978-1-137-55697-4_4, ISBN 978-1-137-55697-4

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