Joseph Wallace
Portrait from Fifty Years of Food Reform (1898)
Bornc.1821
Ireland
Died29 April 1910(1910-04-29) (aged 88–89)
London, England
NationalityIrish
Occupation(s)Activist for vegetarianism, food reform and against vaccination
Spouse
(m. 1878)
Children7

Joseph Wallace (born c.1821 – 29 April 1910) was an Irish activist for vegetarianism, food reform and against vaccination.

Biography

Wallace originally worked in the business of malting and distilling.[1] He was the creator of the "Wallace system", a method for the cure and eradication of disease.[1][2] The system included a vegetarian diet, free from fermented foods; its followers were known as "Wallaceites".[3] Wallace patented, prepared and sold several medicines, while also providing consultations.[4]

In 1878 he married Chandos Leigh Hunt,[5] his former patient and pupil.[6] In 1885, with his wife, he co-wrote Physianthropy: Or, the Home Cure and Eradication of Disease, writing under the pseudonym "Lex et Lux".[2] In October 1905, a meeting was held at Congregational Memorial Hall, London, for octogenarian vegetarians; those in attendance included Wallace (then aged 84), C. P. Newcombe, John E. B. Mayor and Isaac Pitman.[7]

Wallace and his wife were included in Charles W. Forward's Fifty Years of Food Reform: A History of the Vegetarian Movement in England (1898).[1] Rollo Russell cited Wallace's dietary recommendations in the "Medical Testimony" section of his 1906 book Strength and Diet.[8]

Wallace died in London on 29 April 1910.[9] C. P. Newcombe's The Manifesto of Vegetarianism (1911) contains a memorial dedication to Wallace.[10]

Publications

  • Physianthropy: Or, the Home Cure and Eradication of Disease (with C. Leigh Hunt Wallace; 1885)
  • Wallace's Complete Series of Twelve Specific Remedies for the Absolute Eradication of All Diseases, etc. (1885)
  • Fermentation: The Primary Cause of Disease in Man and Animals[11]
  • Cholera: Its Prevention and Home Cure[11]
  • The Necessity of Smallpox as an Eradicator of Organic Disease[11]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Forward, Charles Walter (1898). Fifty Years of Food Reform: A History of the Vegetarian Movement in England. London, Manchester: The Ideal Publishing Union, The Vegetarian Society. pp. 132–134.
  2. 1 2 Korshelt, Oskar (1890). The Wallace System of Cure (PDF). Glasgow, London: H. Nisbet & Co. p. 5.
  3. "Vegetarianism Spreading among the Upper Ten in London". The Phrenological Journal and Science of Health. 119 (1). January 1906.
  4. Davis, Sally (16 October 2019). "Isabel De Steiger's Art Works Alphabetical by Title". Roger Wright & Sally Davis. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  5. Owen, Alex (2004). The Darkened Room: Women, Power, and Spiritualism in Late Victorian England. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 134. ISBN 0-226-64205-4. OCLC 53434582.
  6. Elsley, Susan Jennifer (April 2012). Images of the witch in nineteenth-century culture (PDF) (PhD thesis). University of Liverpool.
  7. "Diet and Longevity" (PDF). Herald of the Golden Age. 10 (4): 75. October 1905.
  8. Russell, Francis Albert Rollo (1906). Strength and Diet: A Practical Treatise with Special Regard to the Life of Nations. London: Longmans, Green. pp. 390.
  9. Ancestry.com. England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1995 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010.
  10. "The manifesto of vegetarianism / by C.P. Newcombe". Wellcome Collection. Retrieved 22 February 2021.
  11. 1 2 3 Florence, Daniel (1917). The Healthy Life Cook Book. London: C. W. Daniel. p. 121.
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