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Alcott House

Coordinates:51°26′11″N0°18′21″W / 51.436457°N 0.305813°W /51.436457; -0.305813
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Spiritual community

Not to be confused withThoreau–Alcott House.
Alcott House from theWilderspin papers

Alcott House inHam, Surrey (now in theLondon Borough of Richmond upon Thames), was the home of autopian spiritual community and progressive school which lasted from 1838 to 1848.[1][2] Supporters of Alcott House, or theConcordium, were a key group involved in the formation of theVegetarian Society in 1847.[3]

History and ideology

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The prime mover behind the community was "sacred socialist" and mysticJames Pierrepont Greaves, who was influenced by AmericantranscendentalistAmos Bronson Alcott, and Swiss educational reformerJohann Heinrich Pestalozzi.[4] Together with his followers, who includedCharles Lane – and with the help of wealthy sponsors, Sophia and Georgiana Chichester – he founded Alcott House onHam Common in Surrey in 1838. The Ham Common Concordium, as it came to be known, consisted of a working mixedcooperative community and a progressive school for children. The headmaster of Alcott House was Henry Gardiner Wright.[5]

The community was dedicated to a regime of spiritual development and purification – in the words of Greaves, aiming to produce the "most loveful, intelligent and efficient conditions for divine progress in humanity". To this end the members submitted to an austere regime of early rising,strict vegetarianism (usually raw food), no stimulants,celibacy, andsimple living, and experimented with various practices such asastrology,hydrotherapy,mesmerism andphrenology.[6] The men grew their hair and beards long and wore loose-fitting clothes, while the women defied convention by not wearing the traditional, restrictivecorset.

The community at Alcott House promoted a strict vegan diet, all meals were served cold apart from hot potatoes.[7] Alcott House rejected allanimal source foods including meat, butter, cheese, eggs and all stimulants such as chocolate, coffee, tea as well as mustard, salt, vinegar and spices.[7]

Alcott House school was open to children from both inside and outside the community – the latter usually from radical parents who sympathised with its progressive educational stance. The curriculum emphasised moral education and the development of the child's innate spiritual gifts, teaching practical skills such as gardening and cookery as well as book learning. Punishment was frowned upon and education aimed to produce "integral men and women", able to live in a truly cooperative society and not simply playing traditional roles.

In 1848, the community came to an end and the house was purchased in 1849 byJohn Minter Morgan to provide an orphanage for 70 children, the National Orphan Home for Girls,[8] though still run along vegetarian lines.

South Lodge

In 1856 the foundation stone was laid for the present building,South Lodge, opened in 1862, which could accommodate 200 children. The orphanage closed in 1924.[9] South Lodge has been converted to flats and the grounds have been developed as Bishops Close.

British and Foreign Society for the Promotion of Humanity and Abstinence from Animal Food

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The British and Foreign Society for the Promotion of Humanity and Abstinence from Animal Food was formed at Alcott House by a group of vegetarians in 1843.[10] Unlike other organisations during this time, the Society had an open membership for women and let them hold office.[11] The Society has been described as the world's first vegetarian organisation, and as a forerunner to theVegetarian Society.[12][13] Its president wasSophia Chichester.[10]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Latham, J.E.M. Search for a New Eden etc". (Review of J. E. M. Latham's book at findarticles.com)
  2. ^Twigg, Julia (1981).The vegetarian movement in England, 1847–1981: A study in the structure of its ideology (PhD thesis).LSE. Retrieved6 July 2020.
  3. ^Davis, John (28 July 2011).The Origins of the 'Vegetarians'.International Vegetarian Union. Retrieved6 July 2020.
  4. ^Silver-Isenstadt, Jean L. (2002).Shameless: The Visionary Life of Mary Gove Nichols. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 63.ISBN 9780801868481
  5. ^Francis, Richard. (2018).Transcendental Utopias: Individual and Community at Brook Farm, Fruitlands, and Walden. Cornell University Press. pp. 201-202.ISBN 9781501724190
  6. ^"The Vegetarian Movement in England 1847-1981".ivu.org. Retrieved2 January 2022.
  7. ^abLatham, J. E. M. (1999).Search for a New Eden: James Pierrepont Greaves (1777-1842), the Sacred Socialist and His Followers. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. pp. 171-172.ISBN 9780838638095
  8. ^Green, James; Greenwood, Silvia (1980).Ham and Petersham As It Was. Hendon Publishing.ISBN 0860670570.OCLC 16604168. Retrieved6 July 2020. (number 18)
  9. ^Higginbotham, Peter."The National Orphan Home for girls, Richmond, Surrey".Children's Homes. Retrieved4 July 2023.
  10. ^abAxon, William E. A. (December 1893). "A Forerunner of the Vegetarian Society".The Vegetarian Messenger. Manchester, England:453–455 – viaInternational Vegetarian Union.
  11. ^Gleadle, Kathryn; Richardson, Sarah. (2000).Women in British Politics, 1780-1860: The Power of the Petticoat. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 139.ISBN 9781349629893
  12. ^Emel, Jody; Neo, Harvey, eds. (2015).Political Ecologies of Meat.Taylor & Francis. p. 237.ISBN 978-1-317-81641-6.
  13. ^Shurtleff, William;Aoyagi, Akiko, eds. (7 March 2022).History of Vegetarianism and Veganism Worldwide (1430 BCE to 1969): Extensively Annotated Bibliography and Sourcebook(PDF). Lafayette, California: Soyinfo Center. p. 9.ISBN 978-1-948436-73-1.

Sources

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Further reading

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51°26′11″N0°18′21″W / 51.436457°N 0.305813°W /51.436457; -0.305813

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