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Bands of Mercy


Bands of Mercy were formal, locally-led organizations that brought people—especially children and adolescents—together to learn about kindness to non-human animals. The Bands would also work to help animals and prevent cruelty in their area through humane education.

Modelled after the Band of Hope of the temperance movement, the first Bands of Mercy were created in 1875 by Catherine Smithies in Britain. In 1882, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) assumed responsibility for organizing and promoting Bands of Mercy and its publications.

Following the British model, George T. Angell, founder and first president of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (MSPCA), and the Rev. Thomas Timmins began the formation of Bands of Mercy in the United States in 1882. Many locally-run Bands of Mercy were created across North America in the subsequent decades. By the early part of the 20th century, more than 260,000 children—about 3% of the children aged 5 – 9 years old in 1900—were active members in over 27,000 local Bands of Mercy across North America.

Angell said that the goals of the Bands of Mercy were to “teach and lead every child and older person to seize every opportunity to say a kind word or do a kind act that will make some other human being or some dumb [i.e., that cannot speak] creature happier.”

Bands of Mercy were locally-organized and run, even though they often used materials that were created and distributed nationally by the MSPCA and later the ASPCA. Consequently, there were many local variations to the activities of the Bands. In general, though, Bands of Mercy would hold regular meetings that began with the members pledging: “I will try to be kind to all living creatures, and try to protect them from cruel usage.” Adults would often then conduct lessons to promote kindness towards and concern for all animals. These lessons often involved reading stories and singing songs.

Membership was not limited to children and adolescents; adults would hold officer positions and would use the Bands as a forum to discuss animal cruelty issues and how to handle them. A July 18, 1899, article in the San Francisco Call about their local Band of Mercy, for example, mentions members reporting on the number of animal cruelty cases that had been reported in the last year (2,379) along with the resulting numbers of prosecutions (195) and convictions (129).


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