Job Caudwell | |
---|---|
Born | Drayton Manor, Abingdon, England | 8 December 1820
Died | 5 June 1908 Wandsworth, Middlesex, England | (aged 87)
Occupation(s) | Publisher, bookseller, editor, activist |
Spouses | Eliza Cooper Braine
(m. 1860; died 1887)Eliza Harvey (m. 1901) |
Children | 4 |
Job Caudwell FRSL FRGS (8 December 1820 – 5 June 1908) was an English publisher, bookseller, editor, and activist. He edited temperance and reform literature and advocated for temperance, vegetarianism, and against vaccination. Caudwell also published and edited multiple temperance periodicals and authored a vegetarian cookbook.
Caudwell was born at Drayton Manor in Abingdon, the youngest of 21 siblings in the ancient Caudwell family of Berkshire. Raised in rural Berkshire, he developed a passion for botany and antiquarian research and devoted his life to addressing social issues. He played significant roles in the London Vegetarian Association and the Anti-Compulsory Vaccination League. Caudwell was a prolific editor and publisher, contributing to periodicals such as the Temperance Star and Temperance Spectator, and publishing the Journal of Health and Vegetarian Cookery for the Million. He ran a homeopathic institute from his publishing office. Elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and the Royal Geographical Society, he was also a member of the Victoria Institute.
Job Caudwell was born on 8 December 1820, at Drayton Manor in Abingdon.[1] He was the seventh and youngest son, of William Caudwell (1779–1854) and his wife Hannah (née Lousley; 1782–1849).[2] Coming from a large family, Caudwell had 20 siblings. His family belonged to the ancient, armigerous Caudwell lineage in Berkshire, which had settled in Abingdon in 1790.[3]: 23–24
Raised in rural Berkshire, Caudwell later embarked on extensive travels. His academic interests centred on botany, and he also engaged in antiquarian research. Caudwell dedicated his life to tackling the root causes of social issues, particularly those related to alcohol consumption.[3]: 23–24
Caudwell was actively involved with the London Vegetarian Association (later the Vegetarian Society) and the Anti-Compulsory Vaccination League (later the National Anti-Vaccination League).[3]: 23–24 Between 1857 and 1876, he significantly contributed to the periodical Temperance Star as a publisher and editor, and from 1859 to 1867, he edited the Temperance Spectator. Additionally, he published the Journal of Health and authored the vegetarian cookbook Vegetarian Cookery for the Million in 1864. Caudwell also advocated for homeopathy and hydropathy.[4]
In July 1859, he entered a publishing partnership with fellow activist William Horsell at 335 The Strand, which lasted until September 1860.[5]: 11 Caudwell's publishing office also doubled as a homeopathic institute, where Caudwell dispensed his unique brand of homeopathic cocoa.[3]: 59 He also sold unadulterated flour there.[3]: 23–24 Caudwell’s publications in the 1860s included temperance dictionaries, health manuals, and studies of Mormonism. He also published Southcottian works and studies of the American Civil War.[5]: 29
Caudwell was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1863,[1] and in 1879, he attained fellowship with the Royal Geographical Society.[6] Later, in 1891, he became a member of the Victoria Institute.[7]
In February 1865, a memoir and portrait of Caudwell was published in The Illustrated News of the World,[3]: 23–24 where he served as editor.[1] In 1881, he laid the cornerstone of Putney Methodist Church.[8]
Caudwell died on 5 June 1908 in Wandsworth, Middlesex.[9]
A committed teetotaler, Caudwell became a vegetarian through reading and adorned his home with vegetarian mottos.[5]: 22 He was also an avid outdoorsman, known for successfully summiting Ben Nevis as a vegetarian.[3]
Caudwell married Eliza Cooper Braine in 1860 and together they had four sons. Following her death in 1887, he married Eliza Harvey in 1901.[1]