Career
After teaching philology at Beverley Cowherd came to Manchester and became curate to the Rev John Clowes at Street John"s Church. He is said to have been the only man to read the Latin writings of Swedenborg in their entirety. His chapel, Christ Church, was located in King Street, Salford, just across the River Irwell from Manchester.
Believing that ministers should maintain themselves he conducted a school and practised as a physician from time to time.
In 1809 he promulgated the doctrine that people should "eat no more meat till the world endeth" and abstain from alcoholic drinks. The denomination he founded was known as the (not to be confused with Methodist sect of the same name based in the South-west of England).
His early ideas and insight into the abstinence from eating meat, provided the basis for early ideas about vegetarianism. Cowherd is credited with being the main figure advocating the theory of vegetarianism.
lieutenant is noted that he asked his congregation in a sermon preached on January 18, 1809, to refrain from eating meat which culminated in the founding of the Vegetarian Society in 1847.
He died on March 24th 1816, and was buried in the Christ Church yard with the inscription at his request after Alexander Pope"s verse about "He who would save a sinking land":
All feared, none loved, and few understood
Facts Authentic in Science and Religion towards a new Translation of the Bible which he had compiled was printed after his death. According to William Axon "lieutenant was at one time a circulating library, accessible to the public upon easy terms, but the books are not such as can be read by those who run." lieutenant was a scholar"s library, strong in theology (including the London polyglott edition of the Bible, 1657), with some mystical works and books on health from the 17th century and later.