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Henry
Bergh (August 29, 1811-March 12, 1888) was the founder of the
American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) and was instrumental in the founding of the American Society for
the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. He was the first to successfully
challenge the prevailing view that both animals and children were
property with no rights of their own. Because of him, it is now
accepted that abuse of animals and children is an offense to both
human sensibility and established law.
Henry was born
to wealth in New York City. His parents were Elizabeth Ivers
and Christian Bergh, a ship builder who was for a time employed
by the government. He attended Columbia College in New York,
but did not complete a degree. Instead he traveled to Europe,
1831-36, where he dabbled in the arts and attempted a career
in writing. In 1836 he married Catherine Matilda (née
Taylor). Henry and his brother, Christian Jr., took over the
family business upon the retirement of their father. After his
father's death in 1843, Henry cashed in his inheritance, became
a man of privileged leisure, and moved with his wife to Europe,
where he wrote several unsuccessful plays. In 1863 President Abraham Lincoln appointed him to the American
Legation at the court of Czar Alexander II in Russia. While in
Russia, Bergh witnessed commonplace abuse of animals. His experience
in Russia, and related incidents in other European countries, heightened
Bergh's sensitivity and compassion. In 1865, en route back to the
United States, Bergh stopped in London to consult with the Earl
of Harrowby, president of the Royal Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals. Animals were routinely abused and neglected in America at the
time. Horses, a major source of conveyance, were starved, denied
regular watering, beaten, and no concessions were made them for
extremes of weather. Mules and horses were typically released into
the streets to starve after judged no longer fit for service. Domestic
animals were often not given regular food or shelter and were subject
to physical abuse. Dogfights, cockfights, and bear-baiting were
common forms of entertainment. Bergh used his wealth and prestige to raise public awareness of
the suffering of animals and to enlist support from powerful New
York businessmen, politicians, and religious leaders in the founding
of the ASPCA. Among these was his minister, Henry
Whitney Bellows of the First Congregational Church of New York
City (now the Unitarian Church of All Souls). In 1866 Bergh gave
a lecture at Clinton Hall in New York citing statistics and examples
relating to animal abuse. This was the inception of the American
Society. Laws granting a charter for the society and punishing
cruelty to animals were passed by the State of New York two months
later. When asked about the founding of the ASPCA, Bergh commented, "This
is a matter purely of conscience; it has no perplexing side issues.
It is a moral question in all its aspects." Bergh, realizing that the ASPCA could not be run as a solely male
organization, asked Bellows to provide names of women as potential
patrons. This increased Unitarian support for his work. On the
other hand, because of the mistreatment and mishandling of animals
in P.
T. Barnum's circus acts, Bergh initially had an adversarial
relationship with the Universalist showman. Nevertheless Bergh
eventually won Barnum over to the cause. President of
the ASPCA from 1866 until his death, Bergh daily intervened on
behalf of mistreated animals on the streets of New York. Wearing
a special badge, he arrested and prosecuted violators of the
state anti-cruelty laws. An early entry in the ASPCA annals: "New
York City, April 1866: The driver of a cart laden with coal is
whipping his horse. Passersby . . . stop to gawk not so much at
the weak, emaciated equine, but at the tall man, elegant in top
hat and spats, who is explaining to the driver that it is now against
the law to beat one's animal. Thus, America first encounters 'The
Great Meddler.'" With the help of his legal counsel, Elbridge Gerry, Bergh got
the federal government to ban cruelty to animals used for interstate
transportation. He also made lecture tours outside New York State,
which inspired the foundation of a number of local anti-cruelty
societies. Bergh once
noted that "Mercy to animals means mercy to mankind." This
idea led him to work for better conditions for humans as well.
Through the intervention of Methodist mission worker, Etta Angell
Wheeler, he was introduced to the suffering of a child, Mary Ellen
Wilson. Mary Ellen had endured extreme physical and mental abuse
in her foster home. Friends of Wheeler suggested that she seek
Bergh's assistance and support. Claiming at the court hearing that
his advocacy was "that of a human citizen," he was instrumental
removing Wilson from her abusive home. In New York City in 1875
he and Gerry co-founded the American Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Children. After long
years of witness and action against cruelty, Bergh died in 1888.
He is buried in Green Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York. In extending
concern for all living beings, Bergh anticipated the Seventh
Principle of the Unitarian Universalist Association: "Respect
for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part."
Bergh's correspondence can be found at the New York Historical Society
and in the archives of the ASPCA in New York City. There are some
papers bearing on Bergh in the archives of All Souls Unitarian Church
in New York City. There is a recent bography, Mildred Mastin Pace, Friend
of Animals: The Story of Henry Bergh (1995). For Bergh's connection
with Unitarianism, see Walter Donald Kring, Henry Whitney Bellows (1979).
There are web articles on Bergh at sites sponsored by various humane
societies: "ASPCA History: 'Regarding Henry'" at www.aspca.org; "The
Real Story of Mary Ellen Wilson" at www.americanhumane.org";
and "Our History and Henry Bergh" at www.wihumane.org.
There is an entry by Elizabeth Pleck in American National Biography (1999).
Article by Mark
Ferguson |