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8 Fun Facts You Should Know About The Worlds First Vegan Museum – Green Queen Media

Posted: October 14, 2020 at 9:58 am

Last month, the National Vegetarian Museum in Chicagochanged its name to The Vegan Museum to better reflect the organisations mission to promote vegan lifestyles for health, the environment and all animals. It represents the only institution of its kind, dedicated to documenting the deep and rich history of the vegetarian movement in the U.S. with travelling exhibitions and events displayed across the Chicago metropolitan area. Now, if youre wondering what you might learn strolling through the halls of the museum, here are 8 fun facts about the museum and things you should know about the history of vegans.

Paul Obis began selling his magazine The Vegetarian Times off his bike when he first founded it. After many years, it grew into a major publication providing the public with a news source for the vegan and vegetarian scene. And the first ever edition of the magazine is displayed at The Vegan Museum, containing many articles written by Obis himself!

While other museums may include vegetarianism or veganism as part of their exhibitions, The Vegan Museum is the only one dedicated to preserving specifically the history of the topic and educating visitors about the multitude of benefits that come with living a vegan lifestyle, from saving all animals from exploitation to our own health, and the planets too.

Kay Stepkin started the museum after realising that she did not open the first vegetarian eatery in Chicago. After learning that Bread Shop wasnt the first meatless business in the region (it holds the title of being the first modern vegetarian eatery), she found out that Chicago in fact possesses a rich history of vegetarianism that dated as far back as 1893. It inspired her to create the museum to educate more people about the vegan movement.

The National Vegetarian Museum changed its name to The Vegan Museum on September 2, what would have been Donald Watsons 110th birthday. Watson, founder of the Vegan Society, coined the term veganism and the museum decided it was the perfect timing to honour his work and more accurately reflect the organisations mission.

The interactive story map shows viewers Illinois history in vegetarianism and veganism, from an old advertisement for Chicagos first vegetarian restaurants to vegetarianism appearing at the famous fair, the Worlds Columbian Exposition in 1893. A companion story map is now being compiled to chronicle the development of the plant-based movement across the entire U.S.

Called Protose and known as vegetable meat, it was one of the first commercially available meat substitutes to appear in the U.S. and was developed in the Midwest by J. H. Kellogg. It primarily contained peanuts and wheat gluten, and the museum says that recipes are still available today!

Among the facts that youll learn at The Vegan Museum is that Pythagoras, the Greek philosopher famous for the Pythagorass theorem and other mathematical and musical developments, was a vegetarian. And it was known that anyone who wished to study with him had to adhere to his diet.

As a travelling museum, the organisation hosts different speaker events, documentary screenings, food demonstrations and more! Theyve even held a childrens book reading by international author Hlne Defossez. Among some of the speakers featured at the museum include author Victoria Moran, chef and educator Jill Keb, and Robert Grillo, an animal welfare activist and director of nonprofit Free From Harm.

Lead image courtesy of Markus Spiske / Unsplash.

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8 Fun Facts You Should Know About The Worlds First Vegan Museum - Green Queen Media

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