Rev. William Metcalfe

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Reverend William Metcalfe

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Orton, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom
Death: October 16, 1862 (74)
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
Place of Burial: Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Jonathan Metcalfe and Elizabeth Graham
Husband of Susanna Wright
Father of Joseph Metcalfe; Isabella Metcalfe and Susanna Metcalf
Brother of Isabel Metcalfe; Barbara Metcalfe; Robert Metcalfe; Elizabeth Metcalfe and Jonathan Metcalfe

Occupation: Minister
Managed by: Private
Last Updated:

About Rev. William Metcalfe

Bible-Christians: Plucky veg-evangelists of the 19th century By Karen Iacobbo (this article first appeared in the VivaVine, from vivavegie.org, March/April, 2000)

The current and increasingly publicized debate over the vegetarianism of Jesus Christ, brought to the mainstream largely by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, has a history in the United States. In 18th-century America various Christian sects practiced ascetism that included the "self-denial" of vegetarianism. However, it wasn't until the 19th century (as far as this historian has thus far been able to discern) that vegetarians took their contention about Jesus and vegetarianism public. It began in 1817, when Reverend William Metcalfe of England brought a small group of Bible-Christians, members of a church established a decade before by the Swedenborgian Reverend William Cowherd, to Pennsylvania.

Once settled in America, Metcalfe and his wife, Susanne, tried to teach their neighbors in Philadelphia about pacifism, temperance, abolitionism and vegetarianism--major tenets of their religion. His church did not enjoy widespread success, but what it lacked in size it gained in loyalty.

Metcalfe's little group of loyal vegetarians and their leader not only abstained from meat, they believed that Jesus had been a vegetarian. On account of teaching such a belief, Reverend Metcalfe, a congenial, pious and well-liked man, was unable to build a large congregation and sometimes suffered the slings of opposition to vegetarianism. Metcalfe's wisdom as a preacher and a person was attacked in the newspapers, and he was called "Infidel."

As a result, Metcalfe constantly had to struggle to keep the church financially stable. When he wasn't preaching, he was busy teaching in the church's tiny school, or writing and publishing two newspapers that reported on issues such as slavery, temperance and, it can be assumed, vegetarianism. Metcalfe's legacy of vegetarianism doesn't end at the church gate, for he was a force that brought together two other determined and courageous vegetarians. Those two individuals were Sylvester Graham and William Alcott, M.D. Together, Metcalfe and the two renowned vegetarian advocates formed the first national vegetarian organisation in America.

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Rev. William Metcalfe's Timeline

1788
March 11, 1788
Orton, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom
March 24, 1788
Orton, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom
1810
October 16, 1810
England, United Kingdom
1824
June 11, 1824
1862
October 16, 1862
Age 74
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
October 22, 1862
Age 74
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
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