Centre Daily Times (Sunday)

‘Our Kindred Creatures’ looks at historic bonds of animals and humans

- BY HAMILTON CAIN Star Tribune

A 19th-century pet cemetery in Westcheste­r County, New York, with poignant epitaphs: “Born a dog/Lived like a gentleman/Died beloved.” A metropolis adjacent to a metropolis, with teeming Chicago stockyards next to a luxurious hotel. Manhattan’s equine ambulance, which preceded the city’s first human ambulance by a couple of years.

These are among the delectable anecdotes in Bill Wasik and Monica Murphy’s “Our Kindred Creatures,” a revelatory, beautifull­y crafted account of the rise of animal-rights activism in the United States. Born in the immediate aftermath of the Civil War, the movement evolved rapidly, reflecting a tenuously reunited country weary of agony and distress. Wasik, an editor at the New York Times magazine, and Murphy, a veterinari­an, paint a vibrant portrait of the movement’s thinkers and doers, animated by a

By Bill Wasik and Monica Murphy; Knopf, 450 pages, $35 fiery thesis: “To believe that animals can suffer, and that that suffering is worthy of moral considerat­ion, is to understand that not just depraved assaults on them but their everyday treatment must become a matter of urgent human attention.”

At the center were three remarkable figures: Henry Bergh, a patrician repulsed by Spanish bullfights, who leveraged his affluence to shape laws; CarolineWh­ite of Philadelph­ia, a brilliant organizer who elevated women to the front ranks; and Boston’s George Angell, whose modest origins and lengthy career left an indelible stamp, a meld of Horace Greeley and Henry Ward Beecher: “Henry Bergh had a knack for dudgeon and an impulse for attention-getting, but

Angell was something more – a gifted rhetoricia­n who channeled both the slashing moralism of a newspaperm­an and the celestial fire of a preacher.”

Together, they cobbled the ASPCA, modeled on similar groups in Britain, and within six years chapters thrived in eight of America’s 10 largest cities.

Wasik and Murphy rightly connect the ASPCA to reformist currents, from the struggle over racial segregatio­n to women’s suffrage to improved housing and sanitation standards. Angell and his colleagues initially trained their efforts to make husbandry humane. Bergh coined “cruelism” to depict brutal whippings of horses and dogs, yet the term expanded to cover slaughterh­ouses and vivisectio­ns of squirming rabbits, widening its safety net to include game birds and circus elephants and paving the way for veterinary hospitals already in vogue across the Atlantic. Popular awareness of these issues spread like a prairie fire, despite entrenched resistance from

‘Our Kindred Creatures’

capitalist­s such as Philip Armour, patriarch of the meatpackin­g dynasty.

Angell emerges as the book’s colossus, straddling continents and decades to gather the world’s species into his care, a modernday Noah. “Our Kindred Creatures” pivots from his death in 1909 to his legacy: the vectors of ASPCA principles into the culture and the persistenc­e of coarse rationaliz­ations for beef consumptio­n. (Trust me: After reading the stockyard sections you’ll pass on hamburgers for a while.)

The authors remind us that for all the strides we’ve made to alleviate pain, we must do better: “What would it take to inaugurate a new new type of goodness, one that convinced Americans to take seriously their responsibi­lity to the nation’s food animals?”

Elegant, meticulous and urgent, “Our Kindred Creatures” is social history at its finest.

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Knopf/TNS

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