Reddie Mallett Explained

Reddie Mallett
Birth Date:18 February 1864
Birth Place:Shoreditch
Death Place:Dunsford
Occupation:Naturopath, writer

Josiah Reddie Martin Mallett (18 February 1864 – 7 September 1938), known as Reddie Mallett, was an English freethinker, naturopath, poet and writer.

Biography

Mallett was born on 18 February 1864 in London.[1] He was educated at Mill Hill Grammar School and as a young man took interest in literature and poetry. He authored books and pamphlets on natural health that were published by Watts & Co.[2] His most popular book Nature's Way: A Means of Health Without Medicine sold well in the United Kingdom. By 1926 it was in its 18th edition and had sold 185,000 copies.[3] It also sold well in Australia and was reprinted as How to Get Well: According to Nature's Way.[4] A revised edition was edited by George Ryley Scott in 1948.[5]

Mallett gave special importance to diet for attaining health without medicine.[6] He promoted natural remedies and the consumption of fruit and vegetable juices. He opposed the use of drugs and had no faith in physicians and surgeons.[7] His 1926 Book of Health promoted a diet of fruit juice and to cure all ailments by lemon juice and olive oil. Mallett stated that lemon juice is a marvellous disinfectant that is unrecognized by medical science and can cure many diseases including cancer.[7] The book was criticized in 1931 as statements in the book contravened the Venereal Diseases Act of 1917.[8] The British Social Hygiene Council and the Ministry for Health were concerned about its harmful advice regarding self-treatment of syphilis. The book was withdrawn by the publisher.[8] This was the only book Mallett authored that was withdrawn by Watts & Co. He continued to author many other books for them on naturopathy that were published in the 1930s.

In 1935, Mallett stated that he could "live quite well" on a diet of fruit juices and he was walking over a hundred miles each month.[9]

Mallett died at Dunsford on 7 September 1938. His estate valued at £1,933 was granted to his widow Mrs. Clara Mallett.[10]

Notes and References

  1. Wright, W. H. K. (1896). West-Country Poets: Their Lives and Works. London: Elliot Stock. p. 319
  2. Cooke, Bill. (2004). The Gathering of Infidels: A Hundred Years of the Rationalist Press Association. Prometheus Books. pp. 284-286.
  3. Unprecedented Success of a Wonderful Health Book. Weekly Dispatch (October 17, 1926). p. 10
  4. Martyr, Philippa. (2002). Paradise of Quacks: An Alternative History of Medicine in Australia. Macleay Press. p. 229.
  5. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/776932616 "Nature's Way Edited and Revised by George Ryley Scott"
  6. Stark, James F. (2020). The Cult of Youth: Anti-Ageing in Modern Britain. Cambridge University Press. p. 75.
  7. Reviewed Works: How To Conquer Consumption by David Masters; The Book Of Health by Reddie Mallett; Cancer In Native Races by Frederick L. Hoffman; San Francisco Cancer Survey by Frederick L. Hoffman. The British Medical Journal. 1. 3457. 669–670.
  8. Kearney, Patrick J; Boothroyd, David. (2013). Notes Towards a Catalogue of the British Library's S.S. Collection. London & Santa Rosa. pp. 167-168
  9. Dietetic Discrepancies. Daily Mirror (January 15, 1935). p. 11
  10. Mr. J. R. M. Mallett, Dunsford. Western Morning News (December 28, 1938). p. 9