Henry Stephens Salt
| Henry Stephens Salt | |
|---|---|
| Born | Henry Shakespear Stephens Salt 20 September 1851 | 
| Died | 19 April 1939 (aged 87) Brighton, England | 
| Citizenship | British | 
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| Notable work | Animals' Rights: Considered in Relation to Social Progress (1892) | 
| Spouses | Catherine (Kate) Leigh Joynes  (m. 1879; died 1919) Catherine Mandeville  (m. 1927) | 
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Henry Shakespear Stephens Salt (/sɔːlt, sɒlt/; 20 September 1851 – 19 April 1939) was a British writer and social reformer. He campaigned for social reform in the fields of prisons, schools, economic institutions, and the treatment of animals. He was a noted ethical vegetarian, anti-vivisectionist, socialist, and pacifist, and was well known as a literary critic, biographer, classical scholar and naturalist. It was Salt who introduced Mohandas Gandhi to the works of Henry David Thoreau, and influenced Gandhi's study of vegetarianism. Salt is considered, by some, to be the "father of animal rights", having been one of the first writers to argue explicitly in favour of animal rights, rather than just improvements to animal welfare, in his book Animals' Rights: Considered in Relation to Social Progress (1892).