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In 1887 the Vegetarian Society, based in Manchester in the North West
of England, celebrated its 40th anniversary. During that time it had built
up several local branches and affiliated societies around Britain.
In 1888 the London branch broke away to become the London Vegetarian
Society (LVS) and quickly attracted its own local affiliates, mostly in
the London Boroughs and around South East England. The Society was dominated
by Mr. Arnold F. Hills, a wealthy, and deeply religious, man who was the
director of the Thames Iron Works, a shipbuilding yard in East London.
In 1889 the LVS proposed that instead of the system of local affiliates,
all known vegetarian societies throughout the world should form a Union,
with each Society having votes according to the number of its own members.
The intention was that LVS would be just one of the member societies.
The Union was formed, Mr. Hills was elected Chairman, and even the original
Vegetarian Society joined, but it never worked out quite as Mr. Hills
had planned . . .
Meanwhile there were a couple of other attempts at bringing Societies together:
- The International Aspect of Vegetarianism - a paper at the 1885 Annual Meeting of the British Vegetarian Society - includes a specific plea for the formation of an 'International Vegetarian Union', though intended to be a union of individuals rather than societies. Nothing seems to have come from it.
- The International Union for a Humane Mode of Life, 1889- a similar attempt at an international union of individual members, this time from Germany. Nothing further was heard of it.
The following commentary is based on reports in The Vegetarian (London,
from 1888) and The Vegetarian Messenger (Manchester, from 1848), courtesy
of the library of The Vegetarian Society UK, Manchester, England.

Mr. Arnold F. Hills, from The Vegetarian, December 21, 1889 |
- Preliminary LVS Committe meeting and Draft
Constitution of 'The Vegetarian Union' - July 1889
- 1st International Congress
- Cologne, Germany, September 1889
- Innaugural meeting and Constitution of
the 'Vegetarian Federal Union' - London, October 1,1889
- 2nd VFU meeting, Manchester, October 21, 1889
- The Vegetarian Federal Union, its possibilities
and its policy - by Mr Hills, The Vegetarian, December 21,
1889
- 3rd VFU Meeting, London, January 7, 1890
- attended by all-English delegates as on the previous meetings.
- The Work in Australia - from The
Vegetarian, January 25, 1890. Based on extract from the Australian
Society's magazine, but they were not members of VFU until the following
year, 1891.
- Report of the innaugural meeting
of the Irish Vegetarian Union - they joined VFU later in the year,
see below.
- The Vegetarian Movement in Germany - article
by Dr. Paul Förster in the April 26, 1890, issue of The Vegetarian.
There was clearly communication between England and Germany, but the
article makes no mention of VFU.
- 4th VFU Meeting, Norwich, May 20, 1890
- Another view of the same meeting - from
the Vegetarian Society, Manchester.
- the records indicate that all the Member Societies were in England.
Several issues arose where the London and Manchester Societies differed,
were deferred to a later meeting but were never fully resolved. The
responsibilty for the planned International Congress was handed back
to the London Society.
- 5th VFU Meeting, London, September 10, 1890
- at this meeting applications for membership from three more local
groups in England were accepted, plus those from the American Vegetarian
Society (their President was Henry Clubb, an Englishman who had migrated
to the US in 1853) and the Irish Vegetarian Union (all of Ireland was
still under British rule at that time).
- 2nd International Congess
- London, England, September 11-13, 1890 - two Geman Societies
asked to be affiliated to VFU during this Congress.
During 1890 The Vegetarian, which was a weekly newspaper published
in London by Mr. Hills, independently of any Society, started giving regular
space to the VFU Secretary for reports on the activities of members, and
notices of 'VFU Coming Events'. All of these reports were about local
societies in England and Ireland. There was no mention of any groups from
other countries. At the same time The Vegetarian, rather confusingly,
carried many other items about local societies without making any reference
to VFU. At the meeting in September Mr. O'Callaghan had resigned as Secretary
of LVS in order to work as 'permanent secretary' for VFU.
He spent a lot of time travelling and visiting most of the local societies
in England and wrote about this in his reports. For the next few months
the VFU section of 'Coming Events' in The Vegetarian consisted
entirely of details of lectures by Mr. O'Callaghan in various parts of
the country.
- VFU Annual meeting, Portsmouth, May 5th,
1891 - notable for the presence of a young Indian law student -
M. K. Gandhi - who was now on the LVS Committee.
- VFU Secretary's Report read at the Portsmouth
meeting - from this it becomes apparent that Mr. O'Callaghan was
in receipt of a 'guaranteed salary' as Secretary, the only possible
source of this guarantee was Mr. Hills. The report also says ".
. . There are twenty-three societies affiliated with the Union and two
more ask for affiliation, viz., The Vegetarian Society of Australia,
and the Bristol Vegetarian Society. . . . "
- Proposed 3rd International
Congress, Brussels, Belgium, September 1891 (cancelled)
- Notes from Australia, October 1891
At this point it is apparent that there were very blurred distinctions
between the Vegetarian Federal Union (Chairman Mr.A.F. Hills), the London
Vegetarian Society (President Mr.A.F. Hills), and the independent weekly
newspaper The Vegetarian (proprietor Mr.A.F.Hills). Reading the
originals of the above items it is obvious that some were written to the
editor of the newspaper, and some to the Secretary of LVS. Nevertheless
they all appeared on the VFU page of the newspaper because they were from
overseas. Dr. Josiah Oldfield was Treasurer of both LVS/VFU as well as
editor of The Vegetarian and Mr. O'Callaghan was Secretary of VFU
(with his salary paid by Mr. Hills) and, until recently, had been Secretary
of LVS.
- VFU half yearly meeting, Cambidge, October
8th, 1891
- VFU Annual Meeting, London, May 26, 1892
- the report, written in the style of Mr. Hills claimed that VFU represented
". . . the consensus of world-wide ideas and records gathered from
the uttermost ends of the earth . . ." Despite which, the attendees
were, as usual, all British.
In June 1892, the two main Vegetarian Societies in Germany met in Leipzig,
and ageed to form the Deutscher Vegetarier-Bund (German Vegetarian
Federation), and 12 other German speaking societies, including two in
Switzerland, joined within a year. This event was not reported in The
Vegetarian.
At the above annual meeting there was discussion of a VFU 'Political
Programme' which caused some controversy as it contained a lot issues
not directly related to Vegetarianism. At a special meeting on July 23rd,
this programme was dropped, mainly at the instigation of the Manchester
Society, and Mr. Hills offered his resignation (obviously not accepted
as he was still in the chair for the meeting below).
The front page of The Vegetarian, August 27, 1892, stated: "The
Autumn Congress of the Vegetarian Federal Union will be held this year
in Birmingham in October . . . There seems every prospect that year by
year this Congress will become more and more important. . ." It was
cancelled and replaced by:
This meeting recorded the attendance of a Miss Wilson as a representative
of the American Vegetarian Society, presumably in conjuction with the
planned Congress in Chicago. However, there was a new system of people
who were present being able to act as delegates for societies which were
not otherwise present (e.g. Mr. Doremus was the official delegate for
Brighton, Exeter and Sheffield) so it is not clear whether Miss Wilson
was actually American - no special mention was made of her presence.
By this time it was increasingly evident that members and readers of
VFU/LVS/The Vegetarian were becoming very confused about the relative
roles of the three. The regular VFU pages in The Vegetarian had
gone and local groups were sending reports to the editor which were printed
without any reference to VFU. The organising of the Chicago Congress was
clearly being done by LVS in the name of VFU (as was the London Congress
in 1890). VFU was still holding six-monthly meetings, now all at the LVS
offices.
In the September 9, 1893, issue of The Vegetarian, Mr. O'Callaghan
returned to reporting on his tours of the VFU member societies around
England. Now as the VFU 'agent'. There was one further report in a later
issue sub-titled the 'Southern Province' - ie the south of England.
- VFU Executive Committee meeting - September
15, 1893, London
- VFU Autumn Congress - October 24, 1893, Bolton
- the Chicago trip seems to have inspired new activity in VFU during
1893. Apart from all the above meetings they now launched their own
quarterly journal 'The Vegetarian Review'. It not currently known
whether any copies have survived.
- VFU Annual Meeting - January 18, 1894, London
- now being routinely combined with the LVS AGM. The Vegetarian
made no further mention of VFU for 11 months, possibly because of the
separate journal.
- VFU Autumn Congress - November 21, 1894,
Brighton - several international papers read, but the writers do
not appear to have been present in person.
- VFU Annual Meeting and Congress - January
17, 1895, London - spread over 3 days. Several papers and reports
from overseas, but only Britsh delegates as usual.
- VFU Executive and Editorial Committees -
March 11 & 15, 1895, London - VFU now appears to have editorial
control of The Vegetarian and there were a large number of reports
about local meeting of VFU members throughout 1895. Both these committees
were meeting monthly in London making it impossible for non-Londoners
to attend in person, though Societies could delegate a local representative.
- VFU Semi-annual meeting - July 19, 1895,
London - notable for acitve involement from Holland and Germany.
- VFU Autumn Congress - November 21, 1895,
Birmingham
During 1895, further confusion was caused by the creation of the 'London
Vegetarian Association' - this was a 'local union' of the societies in
the various London districts (which were all members of VFU as well).
The initial suggestion was to close the London Vegetarian Society completely,
but it appears to have been assigned a smaller area, presumably central
London and districts not covered by local societies, though this was never
clearly reported in The Vegetarian. Naturally the new association
was based in the same offices, with the same president, as all the others.
The members and readers were by now so confused that clarifications were
needed at meetings, and one letter to the editor referred to the 'London
Vegetarian Federal Union' - a rather Freudian slip which even the editor
failed to correct.
On February 15, 1896, The Vegetarian published a letter from Rev. H.
S. Clubb, president of the American Vegetarian Society, thanking them
for the reports of the above meeting but noting ". . .to appoint
Miss Yates, Mr. Hanson or others as delegates does not, I think, accomplish
anything, as they cannot really represent us or our views unless they
were with us." - this was a recurring issue, even for those parts
of England further from London. It never seems to have been resolved as
all the annual and semi-annual meetings continued to be held in London.
Even the International Congress for 1897 was proposed for London.
- VFU Semi-annual meeting - July 24, 1896,
London
- Our Jubilee - by A. F. Hills. VFU fund
for the coming 50th anniversary of the Vegetarian Society in 1897.
- VFU Committee Meeting - September 16, 1896,
London
- VFU Autumn Congress - November 5th, 1896,
Bristol
- VFU Commitee Meeting - November 20, 1896,
London.
- VFU Meetings and reports from 1897
- 4th International Congress,
London, September 1897
- 8th Annual Report of VFU, covering 1897,
published in 1898
- VFU Meetings and reports from 1898
- National Congress, London, and further
meetings, 1898
- Notes about VFU from 1899
- VFU Annual and Committee meetings, January - March
1900
- Two VFU leaflets from 1900: "A Plan
of Campaign" (about VFU) and "How to Form a Local Society"
- VFU Committe and pre-congress notes, May/June
1900
- 5th International Vegetarian
Congress, Paris, France
- VFU Commitee minutes July-December 1900
- Notes from VFU, 1901
- Notes from VFU, 1902
- Notes from VFU, 1903
- Congress in St. Louis, USA,
1904 (reported in Feb 1905 magazine, all 1903 issues missing)
- 1905 - VFU held an 'International' Congress in June, but with very
little non-British input and combined with the annual dinner of the
London Vegetarian Association..
- 1906/07 - all issues of The Vegetarian missing.
- 1908 - the 'annual meeting' of the VFU (no longer being described
as 'international') took place in June. An entirely British, mostly
London, affair. The VFU annual report makes no mention of anything outside
of Britain except:
'The Manchester Society have now a movement on foot, entitled "International
Federation of Vegetarian Societies," when it is proposed to hold
the first Conference of representatives of Vegetarian Societies at Dresden
from August 16th to 23rd, and we hope to attend and bring about what
we have always desired - united effort.
We have to thank many friends for a great deal of kindly assistance
and hospitality, especially Mr. A. Broadbent, who has on many occasions
put in a word for our work or placed our name on various publications.'
The first Congress in Dresden agreed on the name 'International Vegetarian
Union'. The VFU and LVA were unable to send a delegate but did send
a letter of support. The Vegetarian (London) gave no reports
of the proceedings.
- 1909 - The Vegetarian continued to be published as 'The Organ
of the Vegetarian Federal Union'. The annual congress in June was all
British as usual. The report of the annual meeting included:
'Mrs. McDouall, in a brief speech, offered a suggestion respecting the
future of the V.F.U., which the meeting was not prepared to accept.
The Chairman, in his closing remarks, justified his rejection of the
idea by affirming that the Union was in a more healthy condition than
it had ever been before.'
The Vegetarian reported on the 62nd Anniversary of the Vegetarian
Society (Manchester), including talks given by 'foreign delegates' -
but made no mention at all of the 2nd IVU Congress which was being held
at the same time in Manchester.
- 1910 -1913 - all issues of The Vegetarian missing.
- 1914 - The Vegetarian now published as 'Organ of the London
Vegetarian Association'. The January issue refers to 'The
Hague International Congress' (1913) but no specific mention of
IVU organising it. There is no mention of VFU, which appear to have
closed, the Manchester publication mentions VFU up to 1911.
- Any further issues of The Vegetarian, after Dec. 1914, are
lost. In 1921 the London Vegetarian Society began a new publication
'Vegetarian News'. It appears that the 'London Vegetarian Association'
(a Federation of groups in the London area) had also closed in the meantime.
In order to understand more about the origins of the VFU, and how it
eventually related to IVU, it is necessary to understand the background
of the London Vegetarian Society (1888-1969) and
how that related to the original Vegetarian Society in Manchester.
The VFU continued holding annual 'Congresses' until at least 1911, possibly
later, but they had long since become just a local gathering in London.
In 1908 the IVU had been launched in Dresden, Germany, with the Manchester
based Vegetarian Society taking the initiative in contacting vegetarian
societies around the world, and in creating a genuinely democratic and
international organisation. IVU is still coordinating International Congresses
today.
In 1969 the London Vegetarian Society merged with the Manchester based
Vegetarian Society to form The Vegetarian Society of the UK. That National
society now has a 'Local Network'
with a very large number of local affiliates.
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