Cruel Sports magazine readily employed this strategy. The recent exposure in Devonshire, where a master of otter hounds was sentenced to imprisonment. In 1929, there was a picture of a middle-aged woman and a teenage girl being blooded by the Joint Masters of the Wye Valley Otter Hounds in front of a crowd of smiling spectators. 12. As with the Barnstaple cat-worrying case of 1905, attention was redirected from the actual killing to the animal in question. The League for the Prohibition of Cruel Sports publicised its views in much the same way as the Humanitarian League and from January 1927 they started producing a monthly journal Cruel Sports.Footnote A true man would kill fierce animals with as little pain as possible, while those he destroys for food, or raiment, he will destroy mercifully. A key criticism was of the voyeurism of watching the otter die. In August 1935 Cruel Sports reported that a group of women from the Leeds branch had protested against the Kendal and District Otter Hounds in July. A part of this pamphlet, which included this quotation, was reprinted in Cruel Sports magazine in 1929. With no sportsmen involved, the incident gained universal condemnation from otter hunters, members of the League for the Prohibition of Cruel Sports and the general public. 35. George Greenwood, Chapter 1: The Cruelty of Sport, in Henry Salt, ed., Killing for Sport (1914), p. 6. Sir Edwin Landseer, The Otter Speared, Portrait of the Earl of Aberdeen's Otterhounds, or the Otter Hunt, 1844; Laing Gallery, Newcastle http://www.twmuseums.org.uk/laing-art-gallery/collections.html. The Daily Mail, for instance, received several telegrams from masters of otter hounds opposing Coleridge's criticism and justifying their sport. Otter-Hunting, Cruel Sports, August 1939, 58. He also pointed out that Geoffrey Hill of Hawkstone had killed 544 otters between 1870 and 1884, and that William Collier of Culmstock had also accounted for 144 between 1879 and 1884. . Which of the following observations would provide the strongest 52. 77. 66. This meant the League had far fewer opportunities to criticise otter hunting and by 1918 it recognised that it was the extravagance of spending vast sums of money on hunting and shooting, rather than the cruelty of blood sports, which aroused public resentment.Footnote The 1911 pamphlet attempted to shed light on the overall death roll of otter hunting. 57. Cruel Sports illustrated this incident with a photograph headed Burning the Truth! According to the League's Report for 1931, the demonstration at Colchester resulted in a local ban being placed on the hounds.Footnote 62 young and thoughtful. During the 82nd Anniversary Meeting of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals on 21st May, Stephen Coleridge tapped into this public feeling, and unexpectedly proposed that the committee should prepare a bill to make otter hunting illegal. 39. . To reinforce this point Bates goes on to outline the enjoyable aspects of the sport. . Coulson later complained that clergy, more generally, did little to criticise otter hunting: Seldom do we hear from the pulpit any protests against acts of cowardice and cruelty that would shame savages. The sport became increasingly popular in the late nineteenth century and the Edwardian period. Throughout the period campaigners repeatedly pointed to this subject as proof of the inconsistency and heartlessnessFootnote WebThe otters were then protected by the international fur seal treaty, which banned sea otter hunting. Afterwards everyone who took part in the orgy was probably ashamed of himself. Inside there is a six page pictorial feature, Hunting the Otter, written by Douglas Macdonald Hastings. 48. The national profile of otter hunting was raised in July 1905 when the press reported an incident that became known as the Barnstaple cat-worrying case. When Oregon and the federal government removed families from the area more than 150 years ago, Peter Hatch said, sea otters were still present. The following year, the Fur Seal Treaty was signed and although the . F. Pamphlet Series. He is astonished that the law of this country still allows this rotten and most bloody exhibition of behaviour and that such repugnant bloodiness survives in a so-called civilised age and country.Footnote with exception of the three spurious sports of carted-stag hunting, rabbit coursing and shooting pigeons from traps.Footnote Figure 5. An anonymous informant writing in The Humanitarian in August 1908, for instance, questioned the unwomanly conduct of the ladies in the field: The conduct of the women is beyond me to describe. Smith, Virginia, Bell, Ernest (18511933), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [online]Google Scholar. 79. Kean, Hilda, Animal Rights (London, 1998)Google Scholar; The League established a special department to deal with Sports in 1895. In recent years, sea otters have expanded into the upper reaches of Glacier Bay including Scidmore Bay, Russell Walter Cheesman and Mildred Cheesman, Diaries of the Crowhurst Otter Hounds, 1904, Unpublished, East Sussex Record Office, Reference AMS5788/3/1, p. 3. He sat on the governing bodies of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, the National Canine Defence League, the Cat's Protection League, the Pit-Ponies Protection Society, and the Animals Friend Society.Footnote . Throughout the essay he applies the term to a number of situations to discredit the idea that animals are killed for public safety, natural history, protection of farmers or sporting exercise.Footnote 59. In 1965, sea otters were translocated from Amchitka Island (Aleutian Islands) to the outer coast of southeastern Alaska and by the early 1990's, small numbers of sea otters were documented at the mouth of Glacier Bay. At its centre an exhausted hunter holds an otter aloft over a pack of baying otterhounds. Render date: 2023-05-01T08:20:46.153Z But what matter? Demonstration at a Meet of the Bucks Otter Hounds, Cruel Sports, June 1931. By enlisting the opinion of H. E. Bates, the National Society for the Abolition of Cruel Sports hoped this sentiment would not only reach a more popular readership, but also move such people into joining the campaign against otter hunting. Otter hunting was a minor field sport in Britain but in the early years of the twentieth century a lively campaign to ban it was orchestrated by several individuals and anti-hunting societies. In the Daily Sketch, Mr Harding Matthews, an individual with no declared interest, wrote: Are we to believe that Workington breeds people so utterly spineless as to allow, in public and in broad daylight, the brutal murder of an inoffensive, wild creature? Johnston condemned otter hunting and urged the government to give the mammal legal protection in his 1903 publication British Mammals. A selection of letters was then published under the title, Should Otters Be Hunted? The first letter, by Reverend Joseph Stratton, argued that men were judged in relation to their treatment of animals.
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