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| birth_date = {{Birth date|1863|02|28|df=yes}}
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1863|02|28|df=yes}}
| birth_place = [[Shrewsbury]], England
| birth_place = [[Shrewsbury]], England
| death_date = {{d-da|2 February 1953|28 February 1863}}
| death_date = {{death-date and age|2 February 1953|28 February 1863}}
| death_place = [[Doddington, Kent]], England
| death_place = [[Doddington, Kent]], England
| occupation = Physician, writer
| occupation = Physician, writer
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| children = 2
| children = 2
}}
}}
'''Josiah Oldfield''' {{postnominals|country=GBR|TD|MRCS|LRCP}} (23February 1863 – 2 February 1953) was an English[[lawyer]],[[physician]]and promoter of [[fruitarianism]]. He became a versatile author, a prolific writer of popular books on dietary and health topics.<ref name= "ODNB" >{{cite ODNB|id=40999|first=Virginia|last=Smith|title=Oldfield, Josiah (1863–1953)}}</ref>
'''Josiah Oldfield''' {{postnominals|country=GBR|TD|MRCS|LRCP}} (28February 1863 – 2 February 1953) was an English lawyer, physician and promoterof his own variantof [[fruitarianism]] which was virtually indistinguishable from [[lacto-ovo vegetarianism]]. He became a versatile author, a prolific writer of popular books on dietary and health topics.<ref name= "ODNB" >{{cite ODNB|id=40999|first=Virginia|last=Smith|title=Oldfield, Josiah (1863–1953)}}</ref>


==Early life==
==Early life==


The son of David Oldfield of [[Ryton, Shropshire]], he was born on 28 February 1863 in [[Shrewsbury]].<ref name= "BMJ" >Josiah Oldfield, D.C.L., M.R.C.S.” ''The British Medical Journal'', vol. 1, no. 4806, 1953, pp. 407–407.</ref><ref name= "alox" >{{alox2|title=Oldfield, Josiah}}</ref>Hewaseducatedat[[NewportGrammarSchool]].<refname= "Gissing"/>Hethentaughtasanassistantmasterat[[ChippingCampdenSchool]].<refname= "IWM">{{citeweb|title=Life story: Josiah Oldfield,Lives of the First World War|url=https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/lifestory/3324482|website=livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk}}</ref><ref>[https://www.chippingcampdenschool.org.uk/content/explore-the-archive/staff/teaching-staff/rev-josiah-oldfield-founder-campdonian-magazineDr.JosiahOldfield,Founderof 'The Campdonian' Magazine]. Chipping Campden School. Retrieved 8 January 2020.</ref>
The son of David Oldfield of [[Great Ryton|Ryton, Shropshire]],a provision dealer, and his wife Margaret Bates,he was born on 28 February 1863 in [[Shrewsbury]].<ref name= "ODNB" /><ref name= "BMJ" >Josiah Oldfield, D.C.L., M.R.C.S.” ''The British Medical Journal'', vol. 1, no. 4806, 1953, pp. 407–407.</ref><ref name= "alox" >{{alox2|title=Oldfield, Josiah}}</ref>Hisfather,whodiedin1903,wasachurchorganistinnearby[[Condover]]fromaroundthetimeofJosiah'sbirth.<ref>{{citenews|title=Ryton,Dorrington|url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000405/19030502/205/0011|work=Wellington Journal |date=2 May 1903|page=11}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Doddington: Death of Miss Oldfield |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0004231/19431203/063/0004|work=FavershamNews|date=3December1943|page=4}}</ref>


Oldfield was educated at [[Newport Grammar School]].<ref name= "Gissing" >[http://victorian-studies.net/gissing/newsletter-journal/journal-43-1.pdf ''The Gissing Journal, Volume XLIII'']. (January 2007). pp. 29–30</ref> He then taught as an assistant master at [[Chipping Campden School]].<ref name= "IWM" >{{Lives of WWI |id= 3324482 | name= Josiah Oldfield }}</ref><ref>[https://www.chippingcampdenschool.org.uk/content/explore-the-archive/staff/teaching-staff/rev-josiah-oldfield-founder-campdonian-magazine Dr. Josiah Oldfield, Founder of 'The Campdonian' Magazine]. Chipping Campden School. Retrieved 8 January 2020.</ref>
Matriculating in 1882 at the [[University of Oxford]] as a non-collegiate student, Oldfield graduated B.A. in 1885, with second-class honours in civil law and theology.<ref name= "BMJ" /><ref name= "alox" /> While there, he became a vegetarian and concluded meat-eating was unnecessary;<ref name= "BMJ" /> and befriended [[Mahatma Gandhi]].<ref name= "Gissing" >[http://victorian-studies.net/gissing/newsletter-journal/journal-43-1.pdf ''The Gissing Journal, Volume XLIII'']. (January 2007). pp. 29–30</ref>


Oldfield was [[called to the bar]] by [[Lincoln's Inn]], and practised as a barrister on the Oxford court circuit.<ref name= "BMJ" /> He then studied medicine at [[St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical School|St. Bartholomew's Hospital Medical School]] and qualified in 1897.<ref name= "BMJ" />
Matriculating in 1882 at the [[University of Oxford]] as a non-collegiate student,Oldfieldgraduated B.A. in 1885, with second-class honours in civil law and theology.<ref name= "BMJ" /><ref name= "alox" /> While there, he became a vegetarian and concluded meat-eating was unnecessary.<ref name= "BMJ" /> Hewas [[called to the bar]] by [[Lincoln's Inn]], and practised as a barrister on the Oxford court circuit.<ref name= "BMJ" /> He then studied medicine at [[St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical School|St. Bartholomew's Hospital Medical School]] and qualified in 1897.<ref name= "BMJ" />


==Oldfield and vegetarianism==
==Oldfield and vegetarianism==
Oldfield wasPresidentoftheWestLondonFood ReformSociety,avegetariangroupbasedin[[Bayswater]],foundedin 1891.<ref name= "Wolpert2001">Wolpert,Stanley.(2001).''Gandhi'sPassion:TheLifeandLegacyofMahatma Gandhi''.OxfordUniversityPress.p.22.{{ISBN|0-19-513060-X}}</ref>[[EdwinArnold]]wasvice-PresidentandGandhiwasSecretary.<ref>Gandhi,Rajmohan.(2008).''Gandhi:TheMan,His People,andtheEmpire''. UniversityofCaliforniaPress.p.42. {{ISBN|978-0-520-25570-8}}</ref> Hewas associated with the [[London Vegetarian Society]] (LVS) and editor for their publication, ''The Vegetarian''. Oldfieldwas also the secretary of the [[Vegetarian Federal Union]].<ref name= ":12" >{{Cite journal|last=Weinbren|first=Dan|date=1994|title=Against All Cruelty: The Humanitarian League, 1891-1919|journal=History Workshop|issue=38|pages=86–105|issn=0309-2984|jstor=4289320}}</ref> He was a member of the [[Order of the Golden Age]] and the [[Humanitarian League]].<ref name= ":12" /><ref>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}}</ref>


Oldfield was President of the West London Food Reform Society, a vegetarian group based in [[Bayswater]], founded in 1891.<ref name= "Wolpert 2001" >Wolpert, Stanley. (2001). ''Gandhi's Passion: The Life and Legacy of Mahatma Gandhi''. Oxford University Press. p. 22. {{ISBN|0-19-513060-X}}</ref> [[Edwin Arnold]] was vice-president and [[Mohandas Gandhi]] was Secretary.<ref>Gandhi, Rajmohan. (2008). ''Gandhi: The Man, His People, and the Empire''. University of California Press. p. 42. {{ISBN|978-0-520-25570-8}}</ref> Oldfield met Gandhi through [[Pranjivan Mehta]], in 1890, and the two became friends, sharing rooms in Bayswater for some months in 1891.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Gandhi |first1=Rajmohan |title=Gandhi: The Man, His People, and the Empire |date=10 March 2008 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-25570-8 |page=38 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FauJL7LKXmkC&pg=PA38 |language=en}}</ref>
In 1895, Oldfield searched for alternatives to [[leather]] for boots, experimenting with boots made from [[India rubber]], gutta-percha, and [[asbestos]]. He found faults with all of those substances, but expressed optimism about a "vegetarian" boot.<ref>Oldfield, Josiah. (1895). ''Is There Nothing Like Leather? Some Experiments with Vegetarian Boots''. ''Vegetarian Review''. pp. 401-403.</ref> That year he submitted a paper on vegetarian boots to the autumn congress of the[[Vegetarian Federal Union]]held in Birmingham.<ref>[http://www.ivu.org/history/vfu/meeting18.html "Vegetarian Federal Union 1889-1911" ]. International Vegetarian Union. Retrieved 20 August 2021.</ref>


Further,Oldfield wasassociatedwiththe[[LondonVegetarianSociety]](LVS)andeditorfortheirpublication,''TheVegetarian''.<ref name= "Gregory2002">{{Citebook|last=Gregory|first=JamesRichard Thomas Elliott |url=https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/467032/2/886115_v.2.pdf|title=TheVegetarianMovementinBritainc.1840–1901:AStudyofItsDevelopment,PersonnelandWiderConnections|publisher=UniversityofSouthampton|year=2002|volume=2|language=en|chapter=BiographicalIndexofBritishVegetariansandFoodreformersoftheVictorianEra|access-date=2022-10-02}}</ref> He was also the secretary of the [[Vegetarian Federal Union]].<ref name= ":12" >{{Cite journal|last=Weinbren|first=Dan|date=1994|title=Against All Cruelty: The Humanitarian League, 1891-1919|journal=History Workshop|issue=38|pages=86–105|issn=0309-2984|jstor=4289320}}</ref> He was a member of the [[Order of the Golden Age]] and the [[Humanitarian League]].<ref name= ":12" /><ref>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}}</ref>
The entry "Vegetarianism" in the ''[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]'' (11th edition, 1911) was written by Oldfield; but he did not identify as a vegetarian. He stated that "I object absolutely to vegetarianism, because the word smacks of onions and cabbage. It gives people the idea that you live on watercress and browse on odds and ends of garbage." <ref name= "OGA" >[https://www.ordergoldenage.co.uk/fruitarian-society/feature/ "Fruitarian Society Feature" ]. The Order of the Golden Age. Retrieved 8 January 2020.</ref>

In 1895, Oldfield searched for alternatives to [[leather]] for boots, experimenting with boots made from [[India rubber]], gutta-percha, and [[asbestos]]. He found faults with all of those substances, but expressed optimism about a "vegetarian" boot.<ref>Oldfield, Josiah. (1895). ''Is There Nothing Like Leather? Some Experiments with Vegetarian Boots''. ''Vegetarian Review''. pp. 401-403.</ref> That year he submitted a paper on vegetarian boots to the autumn congress of the Vegetarian Federal Union held in Birmingham.<ref>[http://www.ivu.org/history/vfu/meeting18.html "Vegetarian Federal Union 1889-1911" ]. International Vegetarian Union. Retrieved 20 August 2021.</ref>

In the early 1900s, Oldfield became disillusioned with the term vegetarianism. In 1907, he commented that "some people imagine that I am a vegetarian and that my opinion, therefore, on the question of food is warped by a certain faddism. Now, this is untrue. I am not a vegetarian and have no connection with any vegetarian society." <ref>[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/74851032 "The Value of Fruit as Food" ]. trove.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 4 November 2023.</ref>

The entry "Vegetarianism" in the ''[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]'' (11th edition, 1911) was written by Oldfield; but he did not identify as a vegetarian. He stated that "I object absolutely to vegetarianism, because the word smacks of onions and cabbage. It gives people the idea that you live on watercress and browse on odds and ends of garbage." <ref name= "OGA" >[https://www.ordergoldenage.co.uk/fruitarian-society/feature/ "Fruitarian Society Feature" ]. The Order of the Golden Age. Retrieved 8 January 2020.</ref> He identified himself as Aristophagist, which he described as "eaters of the best - men and women who refuse to eat the common garbage of the undeveloped." <ref>{{Cite web |last=Oldfield |first=Josiah |title=The Herald of the Golden Age |url=https://www.ordergoldenage.co.uk/assets/uploads/oga-aristophagy-oldfield.pdf |website=Ordergoldenage.co.uk}}</ref>


===Fruitarianism===
===Fruitarianism===
Oldfield advocated for [[fruitarianism]], putting him at odds with the [[Vegetarian Society]].<ref name= "OGA" /> His "fruitarianism" was close to [[ovo-lacto vegetarianism]]. He opposed [[slaughterhouse]]s and [[vivisection]].<ref name= "AS" >{{cite book |last1=Preece |first1=Rod |title=Animal Sensibility and Inclusive Justice in the Age of Bernard Shaw |date=25 October 2011 |publisher=UBC Press |isbn=978-0-7748-2112-4 |page=189 |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=brZ5o35aiaUC&pg=PA189 |language=en}}</ref> He was a member of the Fruitarian Society, whose members lived on "the produce of harvest field, garden, forest and orchard, with milk, butter, cheese, eggs and honey".<ref name= "Gissing" /> This type of fruitarian diet was not a strict type of fruitarianism. A reviewer in 1909, noted that "as fruitarian dietary includes milk, butter, eggs, cheese, and honey, along with fruits, nuts, and vegetables, healthy existence is quite possible for Dr Oldfield and his followers." <ref>{{cite book |title=Chambers's Journal |date=1909 |publisher=W. & R. Chambers |page=514 |language=en}}</ref> A recipe of his "Margaret Plum Pudding" was included in [[Cecilia Maria de Candia]]'s cookbook, ''The Kitchen Garden and the Cook'' (1913).<ref>De Candia, Cecilia Maria. (1913). [https://archive.org/details/cu31924000677249/page/n245 ''The Kitchen Garden and the Cook'']. London. p. 235</ref>


Oldfield was not a [[vegan]].Herecommended a daily diet of dandelion leaves, eggs, grapes, honey, lettuce, milk, salad, and watercress.<ref>[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.d0006645220&view=1up&seq=174 ''Dandelions for Health'']. ''The Popular Science Monthly'', 1920.</ref>In1931,hecommentedthat"IamproudtosaythattheonlypointonwhichweoftheFruitarianSocietydisagreewithMr.Gandhiisthat Mr. Gandhi will not eateggs, because they contain Life. "<ref>[http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,742553,00.html"Foreign News: Royal Tea" ]. ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]''. Retrieved 8 January 2020.</ref>
Oldfieldadvocated for [[fruitarianism]], putting him at odds with the [[Vegetarian Society]].<ref name= "OGA" /> He was a member of the [[Fruitarian Society]], whose members lived on "the produce of harvest field, garden, forest and orchard, with milk, butter, cheese, eggs and honey".<ref name= "Gissing" /> His own "fruitarianism" was close to [[ovo-lacto vegetarianism]]. Hewas not a [[vegan]]:herecommended a daily diet of dandelion leaves, eggs, grapes, honey, lettuce, milk, salad, and watercress.<ref>[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.d0006645220&view=1up&seq=174 ''Dandelions for Health'']. ''The Popular Science Monthly'', 1920.</ref>Heopposed[[slaughterhouse]]sand[[vivisection]].<refname="AS ">{{citebook|last1=Preece|first1=Rod|title=AnimalSensibilityandInclusiveJusticeintheAgeofBernardShaw|date=25October2011|publisher=UBCPress|isbn=978-0-7748-2112-4|page=189|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=brZ5o35aiaUC&pg=PA189|language=en}}</ref>

A reviewer in 1909 noted that "as fruitarian dietary includes milk, butter, eggs, cheese, and honey, along with fruits, nuts, and vegetables, healthy existence is quite possible for Dr Oldfield and his followers." <ref>{{cite book |title=Chambers's Journal |date=1909 |publisher=W. & R. Chambers |page=514 |language=en}}</ref> A recipe of his "Margaret Plum Pudding" was included in [[Cecilia Maria de Candia]]'s cookbook, ''The Kitchen Garden and the Cook'' (1913).<ref>De Candia, Cecilia Maria. (1913). [https://archive.org/details/cu31924000677249/page/n245 ''The Kitchen Garden and the Cook'']. London. p. 235</ref> In 1931, Oldfield commented that "I am proud to say that the only point on which we of the Fruitarian Society disagree with Mr. Gandhi is that Mr. Gandhi will not eat eggs, because they contain Life." <ref>[http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,742553,00.html "Foreign News: Royal Tea" ]. ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]''. Retrieved 8 January 2020.</ref>


==Hospital founder==
==Hospital founder==
While he was a medical student, Oldfield was involved with the Oriolet Hospital, founded in 1895 in [[Loughton]], Essex. It required vegetarianism of its patients.<ref>{{cite news |title=A Vegetarian Hospital |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000174/18970920/017/0002 |work=Morning Post |date=20 September 1897|page=2}}</ref> The hospital was endorsed by the Order of the Golden Age, and partly funded by [[Arnold Hills]]. Oldfield admitted patients there, initially employed with title Warden, supported by a medical officer.<ref name= "IWM" /><ref>{{cite book |last1=Bates |first1=A. W. H. |title=Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History |date=24 July 2017 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-137-55697-4 |pages=73-74|url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=HxsuDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA73 |language=en}}</ref> Gertrude Hick, the nurse whom Oldfied later married, was trained in London and appointed sister in charge at the hospital in early 1895.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Reflections from a Board-Room Mirror |journal=The Nursing Record and Hospital World |date=6 April 1895 |volume=14 |page=223 |url=https://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/volumes/14/Volume%2014%20Page%20223}}</ref> By 1904 it had become the Oriolet Hygienic Home of Rest and Open Air Cottage Hospital, run by [[Florence Booth]] for the [[Salvation Army]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Burdett |first1=Sir Henry C. |title=Burdett's Hospitals and Charities: Being the Year Book of Philanthropy |date=1904 |publisher=Scientific Press |page=660 |language=en}}</ref>
While he was a medical student, Oldfield was involved with the Oriolet Hospital, founded in 1895 in [[Loughton]], Essex. It required vegetarianism of its patients.<ref>{{cite news |title=A Vegetarian Hospital |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000174/18970920/017/0002 |work=Morning Post |date=20 September 1897|page=2}}</ref> The hospital was endorsed by the Order of the Golden Age, and partly funded by [[Arnold Hills]]. Oldfield admitted patients there, initially employed with title Warden, supported by a medical officer.<ref name= "IWM" /><ref>{{cite book |last1=Bates |first1=A. W. H. |title=Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History |date=24 July 2017 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-137-55697-4 |pages=73–74|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HxsuDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA73 |language=en}}</ref> Gertrude Hick, the nurse whom Oldfied later married, was trained in London and appointed sister in charge at the hospital in early 1895.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Reflections from a Board-Room Mirror |journal=The Nursing Record and Hospital World |date=6 April 1895 |volume=14 |page=223 |url=https://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/volumes/14/Volume%2014%20Page%20223}}</ref> By 1904 it had become the Oriolet Hygienic Home of Rest and Open Air Cottage Hospital, run by [[Florence Booth]] for the [[Salvation Army]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Burdett |first1=Sir Henry C. |title=Burdett's Hospitals and Charities: Being the Year Book of Philanthropy |date=1904 |publisher=Scientific Press |page=660 |language=en}}</ref>


In 1897 Oldfield announced the foundation of the Hospital of St Francis in South London, on anti-vivisection principles. It had up to a dozen beds, in a converted town house on [[New Kent Road]], and gave out-patient care. It closed around 1904, its funding being transferred to [[Battersea General Hospital]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bates |first1=A. W. H. |title=Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History |date=24 July 2017 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-137-55697-4 |pages=75–80 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HxsuDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA75 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Kean |first1=Hilda |title=Animal Rights: Political and Social Change in Britain Since 1800 |date=August 1998 |publisher=Reaktion Books |isbn=978-1-86189-014-6 |page=248 note 87 |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=x5fQoTL4NTEC&pg=RA4-PA248 |language=en}}</ref> Oldfield was senior physician to the Lady Margaret Fruitarian Hospital in [[Bromley]], which he founded in 1903.<ref name= "BMJ" /><ref name= "Archives" >[https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/add17b0d-ec8f-441a-9b22-5628c8033b48 "Oldfield, Dr Josiah (case 20178) Warden of Oriolet Hospital, Loughton, Essex (vegetarian): document file and key file" ]. The National Archives. Retrieved 8 January 2020.</ref>
In 1897 Oldfield announced the foundation of the Hospital of St Francis in South London, on anti-vivisection principles. It had up to a dozen beds, in a converted town house on [[New Kent Road]], and gave out-patient care. It closed around 1904, its funding being transferred to [[Battersea General Hospital]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bates |first1=A. W. H. |title=Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History |date=24 July 2017 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-137-55697-4 |pages=75–80 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HxsuDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA75 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Kean |first1=Hilda |title=Animal Rights: Political and Social Change in Britain Since 1800 |date=August 1998 |publisher=Reaktion Books |isbn=978-1-86189-014-6 |page=248 note 87 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=x5fQoTL4NTEC&pg=RA4-PA248 |language=en}}</ref> Oldfield was senior physician to the Lady Margaret Fruitarian Hospital in [[Bromley]], which he founded in 1903.<ref name= "BMJ" /><ref name= "Archives" >[https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/add17b0d-ec8f-441a-9b22-5628c8033b48 "Oldfield, Dr Josiah (case 20178) Warden of Oriolet Hospital, Loughton, Essex (vegetarian): document file and key file" ]. The National Archives. Retrieved 8 January 2020.</ref>


Oldfield also founded the fruitarian Margaret Manor hospital in [[Doddington, Kent]].<ref name= "Archives" /><ref>[http://www.doddington-kent.org.uk/history/history_assets/doddington_buildings/13_LadyMargaret_Manor.html "No.13 Lady Margaret Manor" ]. Doddington Historic Buildings. Retrieved 8 January 2020.</ref> No alcohol, fish or meat was permitted at theHospital;the food was cooked in [[coconut oil]].<ref>Guha, Ramachandra. (2013). ''[[Gandhi Before India]]''. Penguin India. p. 38</ref>
Oldfield also founded the fruitarian Margaret Manor hospital in [[Doddington, Kent]].<ref name= "Archives" /><ref>[http://www.doddington-kent.org.uk/history/history_assets/doddington_buildings/13_LadyMargaret_Manor.html "No.13 Lady Margaret Manor" ]. Doddington Historic Buildings. Retrieved 8 January 2020.</ref> No alcohol, fish or meat was permitted at thehospital;the food was cooked in [[coconut oil]].<ref>Guha, Ramachandra. (2013). ''[[Gandhi Before India]]''. Penguin India. p. 38</ref>


==Army surgeon==
==Army surgeon==
Oldfield shared the [[pacifist]] views of the Order of the Golden Age.<ref name= "Bates88" >{{cite book |last1=Bates |first1=A. W. H. |title=Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History |date=24 July 2017 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-137-55697-4 |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=HxsuDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA88 |language=en}}</ref> In 1898, he joined the [[Essex Regiment]], 1st Volunteer Battalion as an Army Surgeon with rank of Lieutenant, serving to 1901.<ref name= "IWM" /> He later in 1913, with rank of Major, criticised the absence of standard training for Regimental Medical Officers of the [[Territorial Army (United Kingdom)|Territorial Army]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Whitehead |first1=Ian R. |title=Doctors in the Great War |date=14 November 2013 |publisher=Pen and Sword |isbn=978-1-78346-174-5 |page=155 |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3ZZICgAAQBAJ&pg=PA155 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Medicine and Modern Warfare |date=29 August 2016 |publisher=Brill |isbn=978-90-04-33327-7 |page=166 |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=pd0eEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA166 |language=en}}</ref> During [[World War I]], he held a commission as Lieutenant-Colonel of the 3rd East Anglian Field Ambulance Corps, a Territorial in the [[Royal Army Medical Corps]]. His service came to an end in 1918, when he was thrown from a horse. He was awarded the [[Territorial Decoration]].<ref name= "BMJ" /><ref name= "Bates88" /><ref>{{cite web |last1=Twigg |first1=Julia |title=The Vegetarian Movement in England 1847-1981 |url=https://ivu.org/history/thesis/ww1.html |website=ivu.org}}</ref>
Oldfield shared the [[pacifist]] views of the Order of the Golden Age.<ref name= "Bates88" >{{cite book |last1=Bates |first1=A. W. H. |title=Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History |date=24 July 2017 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-137-55697-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HxsuDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA88 |language=en}}</ref> In 1898, he joined the [[Essex Regiment]], 1st Volunteer Battalion as an Army Surgeon with rank of Lieutenant, serving to 1901.<ref name= "IWM" /> He later in 1913, with rank of Major, criticised the absence of standard training for Regimental Medical Officers of the [[Territorial Army (United Kingdom)|Territorial Army]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Whitehead |first1=Ian R. |title=Doctors in the Great War |date=14 November 2013 |publisher=Pen and Sword |isbn=978-1-78346-174-5 |page=155 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3ZZICgAAQBAJ&pg=PA155 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Medicine and Modern Warfare |date=29 August 2016 |publisher=Brill |isbn=978-90-04-33327-7 |page=166 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pd0eEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA166 |language=en}}</ref> During [[World War I]], he held a commission as Lieutenant-Colonel of the 3rd East Anglian Field Ambulance Corps, a Territorial in the [[Royal Army Medical Corps]].,<ref name= "BMJ" /> raising and commanding a [[casualty clearing station]] that served at the [[Western Front (World War I)|Western Front]], for which he was mentioned in despatches.<ref name= "ODNB" />His service came to an end in 1918, when he was thrown from a horse. He was awarded the [[Territorial Decoration]].<ref name= "BMJ" /><ref name= "Bates88" /><ref>{{cite web |last1=Twigg |first1=Julia |title=The Vegetarian Movement in England 1847-1981 |url=https://ivu.org/history/thesis/ww1.html |website=ivu.org}}</ref>


==Legal reformer==
==Legal reformer==
In 1901, the University of Oxford awarded Oldfield a doctorate in civil law for his thesis on [[capital punishment]].<ref name= "BMJ" /> ''The Penalty of Death'', it combined criminological, legal and sociological arguments to call for abolition of the death penalty.<ref>Pittard, Christopher. (2019). [https://researchportal.port.ac.uk/portal/files/12833466/Pittard_final_TC.pdf ''Grant Allen's “Jerry Stokes”: Detective Fiction, the Death Penalty, and the Scene of Writing'']. ''Victorian Periodicals Review'' 52 (2): 235–254.</ref> He founded the Society for the Abolition of Capital Punishment in the same year.<ref name= "BMJ" /> He became chairman of the Romilly Society, a pressure group for [[penal reform]] founded in 1897, in 1910.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Garland |first1=David |title=Punishment and Welfare: A History of Penal Strategies |date=30 January 2018 |publisher=Quid Pro Books |isbn=978-1-61027-378-7 |page=149 |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=l7lJDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT149 |language=en}}</ref><ref name= "ODNB" />
In 1901, the University of Oxford awarded Oldfield a doctorate in civil law for his thesis on [[capital punishment]].<ref name= "BMJ" /> ''The Penalty of Death'', it combined criminological, legal and sociological arguments to call for abolition of the death penalty.<ref>Pittard, Christopher. (2019). [https://researchportal.port.ac.uk/portal/files/12833466/Pittard_final_TC.pdf ''Grant Allen's “Jerry Stokes”: Detective Fiction, the Death Penalty, and the Scene of Writing'']. ''Victorian Periodicals Review'' 52 (2): 235–254.</ref> He founded the Society for the Abolition of Capital Punishment in the same year.<ref name= "BMJ" /> He became chairman of the Romilly Society, a pressure group for [[penal reform]] founded in 1897, in 1910.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Garland |first1=David |title=Punishment and Welfare: A History of Penal Strategies |date=30 January 2018 |publisher=Quid Pro Books |isbn=978-1-61027-378-7 |page=149 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=l7lJDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT149 |language=en}}</ref><ref name= "ODNB" />


==India==
==India==
Oldfield subscribed to [[Catherine Impey]]'s periodical ''Anti-Caste''.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bressey |first1=Caroline |title=Reporting oppression: mapping racial prejudice in Anti-Caste and Fraternity, 1888–1895 |journal=Journal of Historical Geography |date=October 2012 |volume=38 |issue=4 |page=408 |doi=10.1016/j.jhg.2012.04.001|doi-access=free }}</ref> He made an investigative visit to India in 1901.<ref name= "ODNB" /> His personal connections to India included contacts in [[Kathiawar]]. This was the home area of his friend Gandhi, born at [[Porbandar]];<ref>{{cite book |last1=Majmudar |first1=Uma |title=Gandhi's Pilgrimage of Faith: From Darkness to Light |date=1 February 2012 |publisher=SUNY Press |isbn=978-0-7914-8351-0 |page=25 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3XombmM30kAC&pg=PA25 |language=en}}</ref> and best man at his wedding in 1899 was Trimbakrai Jadavrai Desai, then a law student at [[Gray's Inn]] in London, from [[Limbdi State]] of the [[Kathiawar Agency]].<ref>{{cite news |title=A Wakefield Wedding|url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000181/18990930/036/0009 |work=Sheffield Independent |date=30 September 1899 |page=9}}</ref> His experiences formed the material of a series of articles in ''[[The Leisure Hour]]''. One of them related to [[Bhavnagar State]] in eastern Kathiawar, and a visit where he was accompanied by [[Prabhashankar Pattani]].<ref>{{cite book |title=The Leisure Hour|volume=51 |date=July 1902 |publisher=Open Court Publishing Co |pages=778–781 |url=https://archive.org/details/sim_leisure-hour-an-illustrated-magazine-for-home-reading_1902-07_51/page/778 |language=English}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Shaw |first1=Albert |title=The Review of Reviews|volume=26, July - December 1902 |date=1902 |page=54 |url=https://archive.org/details/TheReviewOfReviewsV26/page/54/mode/1up}}</ref> In April 1903 Oldfield published in the ''[[Hibbert Journal]]'' an article "The Failure of Christian Missions in India".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Rolleston |first1=Thomas William Hazen |title=Parallel Paths: A Study in Biology, Ethics, and Art |date=1934 |publisher=Library of Alexandria |isbn=978-1-61310-877-2 |page=201 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tNpxFjLXEWkC&pg=PT201 |language=en}}</ref>
Oldfield subscribed to [[Catherine Impey]]'s periodical ''Anti-Caste''.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bressey |first1=Caroline |title=Reporting oppression: mapping racial prejudice in Anti-Caste and Fraternity, 1888–1895 |journal=Journal of Historical Geography |date=October 2012 |volume=38 |issue=4 |page=408 |doi=10.1016/j.jhg.2012.04.001}}</ref> He made an investigative visit to India in 1901.<ref name= "ODNB" />


==Later life==
==Later life==
Line 60: Line 66:


Oldfield concluded that a "wider conception of God" was needed.<ref name= "Courtney 1905" /> He is listed in ''[[List of names in A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists|A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists]]'' as a [[Theism|theist]] with mystic ideas about the soul.<ref>McCabe, Joseph. (1920). [https://archive.org/stream/modernrati00mccauoft#page/285/mode/1up ''A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists'']. London: Watts & Co. p. 566</ref> He was a proponent of evolution conceived as based on cooperation rather than competition.<ref name= "AS" />
Oldfield concluded that a "wider conception of God" was needed.<ref name= "Courtney 1905" /> He is listed in ''[[List of names in A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists|A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists]]'' as a [[Theism|theist]] with mystic ideas about the soul.<ref>McCabe, Joseph. (1920). [https://archive.org/stream/modernrati00mccauoft#page/285/mode/1up ''A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists'']. London: Watts & Co. p. 566</ref> He was a proponent of evolution conceived as based on cooperation rather than competition.<ref name= "AS" />

Oldfield argued that meat was a main cause of disease.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=rgFTAAAAIBAJ&pg=PA2 ''Doctor Claims Right Diet is Need of World'']. ''The Morning Leader'' (February 26, 1921). p. 2</ref> He was not a [[Teetotalism|teetotaller]] as he promoted home-brewed ale.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20240302233218/https://www.newspapers.com/article/fall-river-globe/40420107/ ''Hanley's Peerless Ale'']. ''Fall River Globe'' (May 19, 1906). p. 7</ref> He argued that the vitamins in the barley of home-brewed ale are responsible for the stamina of the English people.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=sKQtAAAAIBAJ&pg=PA16 ''Doctor Calls Home Brew Essential to Long Life'']. ''Reading Eagle'' (May 17, 1923). p. 16</ref> In 1945, Oldfield commented that there "is no reason at all from the medical point of view" why a man should not get drunk once a month.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=1ipkAAAAIBAJ&pg=PA14 ''Sees No Harm in Man Getting Roaring Drunk'']. ''The Calgary Herald'' (April 5, 1945). p. 12</ref>


==Selected publications==
==Selected publications==
Line 85: Line 93:
==Quotes==
==Quotes==


{{quote|Flesh is an unnatural food and, therefore, tends to create functional disturbance. As it is taken in modern civilization, it is affected with such terrible diseases (readily communicable to man), as cancer, consumption, fever, intestinal worms etc., to an enormous extent. There is little need to wonder that flesh-eating is one of the most serious causes of the diseases that carry off ninety-nine out of every hundred people that are born.|||Josiah Oldfieldin 1902<ref>{{cite journal|year=1902|title=The Vegetarian and Our Fellow Creatures|journal=The Vegetarian Magazine|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015074774616&view=1up&seq=15|volume=6|issue=8|pages=181}}</ref>}}
{{blockquote|text=Flesh is an unnatural food and, therefore, tends to create functional disturbance. As it is taken in modern civilization, it is affected with such terrible diseases (readily communicable to man), as cancer, consumption, fever, intestinal worms etc., to an enormous extent. There is little need to wonder that flesh-eating is one of the most serious causes of the diseases that carry off ninety-nine out of every hundred people that are born.|author=Josiah Oldfield|source=in 1902<ref>{{cite journal|year=1902|title=The Vegetarian and Our Fellow Creatures|journal=The Vegetarian Magazine|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015074774616&view=1up&seq=15|volume=6|issue=8|pages=181}}</ref>}}


==Family==
==Family==
Oldfield married Gertrude Hick on 29 September 1899 at [[Wakefield Cathedral]]; she was the daughter of Matthew Bussey Hick of [[Wakefield]], and sister of the doctor Henry Hick. They had twin daughters in 1902; but their marriage was not successful and they separated.<ref name= "Gissing" /><ref>{{cite book |last1=Coustillas |first1=Pierre |title=The Heroic Life of George Gissing, Part I: 1857–1888 |date=30 September 2015 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-317-30409-8 |page=17 |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=SlGkCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA17 |language=en}}</ref> He had two daughters named Josie: Josie Margaret Oldfield, with Irene Doreen Oldfield one of the twins; and Josie Magdalen Oldfield, born 1906 and identified in the 1911 census.<ref name= "IWM" /> The latter, a cradle fruitarian, was qualified medically from 1933.<ref>{{cite news |title=n/a |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001062/19330204/174/0012 |work=Fife Free Press, & Kirkcaldy Guardian |date=4 February 1933|page=12}}</ref>
Oldfield married Gertrude Hick on 29 September 1899 at [[Wakefield Cathedral]]; she was the daughter of Matthew Bussey Hick of [[Wakefield]], and sister of the doctor Henry Hick. They had twin daughters in 1902; but their marriage was not successful and they separated.<ref name= "Gissing" /><ref>{{cite book |last1=Coustillas |first1=Pierre |title=The Heroic Life of George Gissing, Part I: 1857–1888 |date=30 September 2015 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-317-30409-8 |page=17 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SlGkCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA17 |language=en}}</ref> He had two daughters named Josie: Josie Margaret Oldfield, with Irene Doreen Oldfield one of the twins; and Josie Magdalen Oldfield, born 1906 and identified in the 1911 census.<ref name= "IWM" /> The latter, a cradle fruitarian, was qualified medically from 1933.<ref>{{cite news |title=n/a |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001062/19330204/174/0012 |work=Fife Free Press, & Kirkcaldy Guardian |date=4 February 1933|page=12}}</ref> Dr. Josie M. Oldfield survived him.<ref name= "BMJ" />


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:Alumni of the Medical College of St Bartholomew's Hospital]]
[[Category:Alumni of the Medical College of St Bartholomew's Hospital]]
[[Category:Alumni of the University of Oxford]]
[[Category:Alumni of the University of Oxford]]
[[Category:Anti-vivisectionists]]
[[Category:British anti–death penalty activists]]
[[Category:British anti–death penalty activists]]
[[Category:English anti-vivisectionists]]
[[Category:English vegetarianismactivists]]
[[Category:English animal rights scholars]]
[[Category:English food writers]]
[[Category:English food writers]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal College of Physicians]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal College of Physicians]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal College of Surgeons]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal College of Surgeonsof England]]
[[Category:Medical doctors from Shrewsbury]]
[[Category:Members of Lincoln's Inn]]
[[Category:Members of Lincoln's Inn]]
[[Category:People associated with the Order of the Golden Age]]
[[Category:People associated with the Order of the Golden Age]]
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[[Category:People educated at Newport Free Grammar School]]
[[Category:People educated at Newport Free Grammar School]]
[[Category:People from Doddington, Kent]]
[[Category:People from Doddington, Kent]]
[[Category:Peoplefrom Shrewsbury]]
[[Category:Writersfrom Shrewsbury]]
[[Category:Royal Army Medical Corps officers]]
[[Category:Royal Army Medical Corps officers]]
[[Category:Vegetarian cookbook writers]]
[[Category:Vegetarian cookbook writers]]
[[Category:Vegetarianismactivists]]

Latest revision as of 02:07, 27 August 2024

Josiah Oldfield
Born(1863-02-28)28 February 1863
Shrewsbury,England
Died2 February 1953(1953-02-03)(aged 89)
Occupation(s)Physician, writer
Spouse
Gertrude Hick
(m.1899, separated)
Children2

Josiah OldfieldTDMRCSLRCP(28 February 1863 – 2 February 1953) was an English lawyer, physician and promoter of his own variant offruitarianismwhich was virtually indistinguishable fromlacto-ovo vegetarianism.He became a versatile author, a prolific writer of popular books on dietary and health topics.[1]

Early life

[edit]

The son of David Oldfield ofRyton, Shropshire,a provision dealer, and his wife Margaret Bates, he was born on 28 February 1863 inShrewsbury.[1][2][3]His father, who died in 1903, was a church organist in nearbyCondoverfrom around the time of Josiah's birth.[4][5]

Oldfield was educated atNewport Grammar School.[6]He then taught as an assistant master atChipping Campden School.[7][8]

Matriculating in 1882 at theUniversity of Oxfordas a non-collegiate student, Oldfield graduated B.A. in 1885, with second-class honours in civil law and theology.[2][3]While there, he became a vegetarian and concluded meat-eating was unnecessary.[2]He wascalled to the barbyLincoln's Inn,and practised as a barrister on the Oxford court circuit.[2]He then studied medicine atSt. Bartholomew's Hospital Medical Schooland qualified in 1897.[2]

Oldfield and vegetarianism

[edit]

Oldfield was President of the West London Food Reform Society, a vegetarian group based inBayswater,founded in 1891.[9]Edwin Arnoldwas vice-president andMohandas Gandhiwas Secretary.[10]Oldfield met Gandhi throughPranjivan Mehta,in 1890, and the two became friends, sharing rooms in Bayswater for some months in 1891.[11]

Further, Oldfield was associated with theLondon Vegetarian Society(LVS) and editor for their publication,The Vegetarian.[12]He was also the secretary of theVegetarian Federal Union.[13]He was a member of theOrder of the Golden Ageand theHumanitarian League.[13][14]

In 1895, Oldfield searched for alternatives toleatherfor boots, experimenting with boots made fromIndia rubber,gutta-percha, andasbestos.He found faults with all of those substances, but expressed optimism about a "vegetarian" boot.[15]That year he submitted a paper on vegetarian boots to the autumn congress of the Vegetarian Federal Union held in Birmingham.[16]

In the early 1900s, Oldfield became disillusioned with the term vegetarianism. In 1907, he commented that "some people imagine that I am a vegetarian and that my opinion, therefore, on the question of food is warped by a certain faddism. Now, this is untrue. I am not a vegetarian and have no connection with any vegetarian society."[17]

The entry "Vegetarianism" in theEncyclopædia Britannica(11th edition, 1911) was written by Oldfield; but he did not identify as a vegetarian. He stated that "I object absolutely to vegetarianism, because the word smacks of onions and cabbage. It gives people the idea that you live on watercress and browse on odds and ends of garbage."[18]He identified himself as Aristophagist, which he described as "eaters of the best - men and women who refuse to eat the common garbage of the undeveloped."[19]

Fruitarianism

[edit]

Oldfield advocated forfruitarianism,putting him at odds with theVegetarian Society.[18]He was a member of theFruitarian Society,whose members lived on "the produce of harvest field, garden, forest and orchard, with milk, butter, cheese, eggs and honey".[6]His own "fruitarianism" was close toovo-lacto vegetarianism.He was not avegan:he recommended a daily diet of dandelion leaves, eggs, grapes, honey, lettuce, milk, salad, and watercress.[20]He opposedslaughterhousesandvivisection.[21]

A reviewer in 1909 noted that "as fruitarian dietary includes milk, butter, eggs, cheese, and honey, along with fruits, nuts, and vegetables, healthy existence is quite possible for Dr Oldfield and his followers."[22]A recipe of his "Margaret Plum Pudding" was included inCecilia Maria de Candia's cookbook,The Kitchen Garden and the Cook(1913).[23]In 1931, Oldfield commented that "I am proud to say that the only point on which we of the Fruitarian Society disagree with Mr. Gandhi is that Mr. Gandhi will not eat eggs, because they contain Life."[24]

Hospital founder

[edit]

While he was a medical student, Oldfield was involved with the Oriolet Hospital, founded in 1895 inLoughton,Essex. It required vegetarianism of its patients.[25]The hospital was endorsed by the Order of the Golden Age, and partly funded byArnold Hills.Oldfield admitted patients there, initially employed with title Warden, supported by a medical officer.[7][26]Gertrude Hick, the nurse whom Oldfied later married, was trained in London and appointed sister in charge at the hospital in early 1895.[27]By 1904 it had become the Oriolet Hygienic Home of Rest and Open Air Cottage Hospital, run byFlorence Boothfor theSalvation Army.[28]

In 1897 Oldfield announced the foundation of the Hospital of St Francis in South London, on anti-vivisection principles. It had up to a dozen beds, in a converted town house onNew Kent Road,and gave out-patient care. It closed around 1904, its funding being transferred toBattersea General Hospital.[29][30]Oldfield was senior physician to the Lady Margaret Fruitarian Hospital inBromley,which he founded in 1903.[2][31]

Oldfield also founded the fruitarian Margaret Manor hospital inDoddington, Kent.[31][32]No alcohol, fish or meat was permitted at the hospital; the food was cooked incoconut oil.[33]

Army surgeon

[edit]

Oldfield shared thepacifistviews of the Order of the Golden Age.[34]In 1898, he joined theEssex Regiment,1st Volunteer Battalion as an Army Surgeon with rank of Lieutenant, serving to 1901.[7]He later in 1913, with rank of Major, criticised the absence of standard training for Regimental Medical Officers of theTerritorial Army.[35][36]DuringWorld War I,he held a commission as Lieutenant-Colonel of the 3rd East Anglian Field Ambulance Corps, a Territorial in theRoyal Army Medical Corps.,[2]raising and commanding acasualty clearing stationthat served at theWestern Front,for which he was mentioned in despatches.[1]His service came to an end in 1918, when he was thrown from a horse. He was awarded theTerritorial Decoration.[2][34][37]

[edit]

In 1901, the University of Oxford awarded Oldfield a doctorate in civil law for his thesis oncapital punishment.[2]The Penalty of Death,it combined criminological, legal and sociological arguments to call for abolition of the death penalty.[38]He founded the Society for the Abolition of Capital Punishment in the same year.[2]He became chairman of the Romilly Society, a pressure group forpenal reformfounded in 1897, in 1910.[39][1]

India

[edit]

Oldfield subscribed toCatherine Impey's periodicalAnti-Caste.[40]He made an investigative visit to India in 1901.[1]His personal connections to India included contacts inKathiawar.This was the home area of his friend Gandhi, born atPorbandar;[41]and best man at his wedding in 1899 was Trimbakrai Jadavrai Desai, then a law student atGray's Innin London, fromLimbdi Stateof theKathiawar Agency.[42]His experiences formed the material of a series of articles inThe Leisure Hour.One of them related toBhavnagar Statein eastern Kathiawar, and a visit where he was accompanied byPrabhashankar Pattani.[43][44]In April 1903 Oldfield published in theHibbert Journalan article "The Failure of Christian Missions in India".[45]

Later life

[edit]

Oldfield became a fellow of theRoyal Society of Medicinein 1920.[1]He died in 1953 at the age of 89, inDoddington, Kent.[6]

Oldfield in 1938

Views

[edit]

In 1891, Oldfield attempted to convert Gandhi toAnglicanism,urging him to read the Bible.[9]By the 20th century he had changed his own views. In 1904, he commented that "as a medical man, seeing much of pain and suffering and dying, my experience does not lead me to think that it is the profession of the Christian creed which is by any means the sole method of securing happiness of soul in this world, or which removes the fear of passing on to the next."[46]

Oldfield concluded that a "wider conception of God" was needed.[46]He is listed inA Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalistsas atheistwith mystic ideas about the soul.[47]He was a proponent of evolution conceived as based on cooperation rather than competition.[21]

Oldfield argued that meat was a main cause of disease.[48]He was not ateetotalleras he promoted home-brewed ale.[49]He argued that the vitamins in the barley of home-brewed ale are responsible for the stamina of the English people.[50]In 1945, Oldfield commented that there "is no reason at all from the medical point of view" why a man should not get drunk once a month.[51]

Selected publications

[edit]
  • Tuberculosis: Or Flesh Eating a Cause of Consumption(1897)
  • The Penalty of Death: Or, the Problem of Capital Punishment(1901)
  • Essays of the Golden Age(1902)
  • The Penny Guide to Fruitarian Diet and Cookery(1902)
  • Myrrh and Amaranth(1905)
  • The Value of Fruit as Food(1906)
  • "Vegetarianism".Encyclopædia Britannica.Vol. 27 (11th ed.). 1911.
  • The Raisin Cure(1923)
  • Fasting for Health and Life(1924)
  • The Dry Diet Cure(1925)
  • Get Well and Keep Well(1926)
  • Eat and Get Well(1927)
  • Eat and Keep Young(1928)
  • Eat and Be Happy(1929)
  • Healing and the Conquest of Pain(1944)
  • The Mystery of Birth(1949)
  • My Friend Gandhi(Reminiscences of Gandhiji,1951)
  • The Mystery of Death(1951)
  • A Popular Guide to Fruitarian Diet and Cookery(1952)

Quotes

[edit]

Flesh is an unnatural food and, therefore, tends to create functional disturbance. As it is taken in modern civilization, it is affected with such terrible diseases (readily communicable to man), as cancer, consumption, fever, intestinal worms etc., to an enormous extent. There is little need to wonder that flesh-eating is one of the most serious causes of the diseases that carry off ninety-nine out of every hundred people that are born.

— Josiah Oldfield, in 1902[52]

Family

[edit]

Oldfield married Gertrude Hick on 29 September 1899 atWakefield Cathedral;she was the daughter of Matthew Bussey Hick ofWakefield,and sister of the doctor Henry Hick. They had twin daughters in 1902; but their marriage was not successful and they separated.[6][53]He had two daughters named Josie: Josie Margaret Oldfield, with Irene Doreen Oldfield one of the twins; and Josie Magdalen Oldfield, born 1906 and identified in the 1911 census.[7]The latter, a cradle fruitarian, was qualified medically from 1933.[54]Dr. Josie M. Oldfield survived him.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefSmith, Virginia. "Oldfield, Josiah (1863–1953)".Oxford Dictionary of National Biography(online ed.). Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/40999.(Subscription orUK public library membershiprequired.)
  2. ^abcdefghijkJosiah Oldfield, D.C.L., M.R.C.S.”The British Medical Journal,vol. 1, no. 4806, 1953, pp. 407–407.
  3. ^abFoster, Joseph(1888–1892)."Oldfield, Josiah".Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715–1886.Oxford: Parker and Co – viaWikisource.
  4. ^"Ryton, Dorrington".Wellington Journal.2 May 1903. p. 11.
  5. ^"Doddington: Death of Miss Oldfield".Faversham News.3 December 1943. p. 4.
  6. ^abcdThe Gissing Journal, Volume XLIII.(January 2007). pp. 29–30
  7. ^abcdJosiah OldfieldonLives of the First World War
  8. ^Dr. Josiah Oldfield, Founder of 'The Campdonian' Magazine.Chipping Campden School. Retrieved 8 January 2020.
  9. ^abWolpert, Stanley. (2001).Gandhi's Passion: The Life and Legacy of Mahatma Gandhi.Oxford University Press. p. 22.ISBN0-19-513060-X
  10. ^Gandhi, Rajmohan. (2008).Gandhi: The Man, His People, and the Empire.University of California Press. p. 42.ISBN978-0-520-25570-8
  11. ^Gandhi, Rajmohan (10 March 2008).Gandhi: The Man, His People, and the Empire.University of California Press. p. 38.ISBN978-0-520-25570-8.
  12. ^Gregory, James Richard Thomas Elliott (2002). "Biographical Index of British Vegetarians and Food reformers of the Victorian Era".The Vegetarian Movement in Britain c.1840–1901: A Study of Its Development, Personnel and Wider Connections(PDF).Vol. 2. University of Southampton.Retrieved2 October2022.
  13. ^abWeinbren, Dan (1994). "Against All Cruelty: The Humanitarian League, 1891-1919".History Workshop(38): 86–105.ISSN0309-2984.JSTOR4289320.
  14. ^Bates, A. W. H. (2017).Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History.Palgrave Macmillan. p. 72.ISBN978-1-137-55696-7
  15. ^Oldfield, Josiah. (1895).Is There Nothing Like Leather? Some Experiments with Vegetarian Boots.Vegetarian Review.pp. 401-403.
  16. ^"Vegetarian Federal Union 1889-1911".International Vegetarian Union. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  17. ^"The Value of Fruit as Food".trove.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  18. ^ab"Fruitarian Society Feature".The Order of the Golden Age. Retrieved 8 January 2020.
  19. ^Oldfield, Josiah."The Herald of the Golden Age"(PDF).Ordergoldenage.co.uk.
  20. ^Dandelions for Health.The Popular Science Monthly,1920.
  21. ^abPreece, Rod (25 October 2011).Animal Sensibility and Inclusive Justice in the Age of Bernard Shaw.UBC Press. p. 189.ISBN978-0-7748-2112-4.
  22. ^Chambers's Journal.W. & R. Chambers. 1909. p. 514.
  23. ^De Candia, Cecilia Maria. (1913).The Kitchen Garden and the Cook.London. p. 235
  24. ^"Foreign News: Royal Tea".Time.Retrieved 8 January 2020.
  25. ^"A Vegetarian Hospital".Morning Post.20 September 1897. p. 2.
  26. ^Bates, A. W. H. (24 July 2017).Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History.Springer. pp. 73–74.ISBN978-1-137-55697-4.
  27. ^"Reflections from a Board-Room Mirror".The Nursing Record and Hospital World.14:223. 6 April 1895.
  28. ^Burdett, Sir Henry C. (1904).Burdett's Hospitals and Charities: Being the Year Book of Philanthropy.Scientific Press. p. 660.
  29. ^Bates, A. W. H. (24 July 2017).Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History.Springer. pp. 75–80.ISBN978-1-137-55697-4.
  30. ^Kean, Hilda (August 1998).Animal Rights: Political and Social Change in Britain Since 1800.Reaktion Books. p. 248 note 87.ISBN978-1-86189-014-6.
  31. ^ab"Oldfield, Dr Josiah (case 20178) Warden of Oriolet Hospital, Loughton, Essex (vegetarian): document file and key file".The National Archives. Retrieved 8 January 2020.
  32. ^"No.13 Lady Margaret Manor".Doddington Historic Buildings. Retrieved 8 January 2020.
  33. ^Guha, Ramachandra. (2013).Gandhi Before India.Penguin India. p. 38
  34. ^abBates, A. W. H. (24 July 2017).Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History.Springer.ISBN978-1-137-55697-4.
  35. ^Whitehead, Ian R. (14 November 2013).Doctors in the Great War.Pen and Sword. p. 155.ISBN978-1-78346-174-5.
  36. ^Medicine and Modern Warfare.Brill. 29 August 2016. p. 166.ISBN978-90-04-33327-7.
  37. ^Twigg, Julia."The Vegetarian Movement in England 1847-1981".ivu.org.
  38. ^Pittard, Christopher. (2019).Grant Allen's “Jerry Stokes”: Detective Fiction, the Death Penalty, and the Scene of Writing.Victorian Periodicals Review52 (2): 235–254.
  39. ^Garland, David (30 January 2018).Punishment and Welfare: A History of Penal Strategies.Quid Pro Books. p. 149.ISBN978-1-61027-378-7.
  40. ^Bressey, Caroline (October 2012)."Reporting oppression: mapping racial prejudice in Anti-Caste and Fraternity, 1888–1895".Journal of Historical Geography.38(4): 408.doi:10.1016/j.jhg.2012.04.001.
  41. ^Majmudar, Uma (1 February 2012).Gandhi's Pilgrimage of Faith: From Darkness to Light.SUNY Press. p. 25.ISBN978-0-7914-8351-0.
  42. ^"A Wakefield Wedding".Sheffield Independent.30 September 1899. p. 9.
  43. ^The Leisure Hour.Vol. 51. Open Court Publishing Co. July 1902. pp. 778–781.
  44. ^Shaw, Albert (1902).The Review of Reviews.Vol. 26, July - December 1902. p. 54.
  45. ^Rolleston, Thomas William Hazen (1934).Parallel Paths: A Study in Biology, Ethics, and Art.Library of Alexandria. p. 201.ISBN978-1-61310-877-2.
  46. ^abCourtney, William Leonard. (1905).Do We Believe? A Record of a Great Correspondence in "The Daily Telegraph: October, November, December, 1904.London: Hodder and Stoughton.
  47. ^McCabe, Joseph. (1920).A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists.London: Watts & Co. p. 566
  48. ^Doctor Claims Right Diet is Need of World.The Morning Leader(February 26, 1921). p. 2
  49. ^Hanley's Peerless Ale.Fall River Globe(May 19, 1906). p. 7
  50. ^Doctor Calls Home Brew Essential to Long Life.Reading Eagle(May 17, 1923). p. 16
  51. ^Sees No Harm in Man Getting Roaring Drunk.The Calgary Herald(April 5, 1945). p. 12
  52. ^"The Vegetarian and Our Fellow Creatures".The Vegetarian Magazine.6(8): 181. 1902.
  53. ^Coustillas, Pierre (30 September 2015).The Heroic Life of George Gissing, Part I: 1857–1888.Routledge. p. 17.ISBN978-1-317-30409-8.
  54. ^"n/a".Fife Free Press, & Kirkcaldy Guardian.4 February 1933. p. 12.
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