Name
Larson, Sandra (Interviewee)
Rowe, Martin (Interviewer)
Title
Oral history interview with Sandra Larson 1999
Other Titles
Reminiscences of Sandra Larson: oral history, 1999; Oral history of Sandra Larson, 1999
Abstract
In this one session interview, Sandra Rae Larson discusses the development of her interest in animal advocacy from her childhood through adult life and professional career. This interview contains Larson's reflections on working as a large animal veterinarian in Arkansas, a microbiologist in Arizona, and her burgeoning spirit of activism while working for the Joslin Diabetes Foundation in Massachus etts. The discussion on CEASE details strategies used by the organization to stop the use of pound animals in medical experimentation in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. The transcript includes Larson's reminiscences of the differences between both organizations and the continuation and extension of the marketing campaign she spearheaded to end use of pound dogs. Additionally, Larson discusses the transformation of NEAVS into a more activist organization that addressed animal cruelty from a programmatic perspective, and leadership transition. The latter years covered in the interview focus on her work through education programs she developed including the LivingEarth Learning Project (LELP); and the Ethical Science and Education Coalition (ESEC).
Collection Name
Animal Advocates Oral History Collection
Subjects
Animal shelters; Animal welfare; Laboratory animals; Animal industry--Moral and ethical aspects; Animal rights; Animal rights movement; Animal rights activists; Larson, Sandra; New England Anti-Vivisection Society
Format
oral histories
Genre
Interviews
Date
1999
Physical Description
35 pages
Note (Biographical)
Sandra Rae Larson (1950-), was an animal activist with a background in education and scientific research. Larson's interest in animals began as a child rescuing and caring for stray animals in Los Angeles. She attended college with the goal of majorin g in biology and becoming a veterinarian. Upon completion of college, Larson was employed professionally as a veterinarian and as a microbiologist before becoming an animal activist in the late 1970s and 1980s. Larson also worked as a Senior Research Assistant at the Joslin Diabetes Institute in Massachusetts and where she became active in fighting against use of pound dogs for research purposes. Larson served on the Board of Directors for New England Anti-Vivisection Society's (NEAVS) and was also active with Coalition to End Animal Suffering in Experimentation (CEASE) while in Massachusetts. She created education programs for children including the Students Think about Animal Rights (STAR), later renamed the Living Earth Learning Project (LELP); and the Ethical Science and Education Coalition (ESEC) in the 1990s. At the time of the interview, Larson who operated an animal sanctuary in Connecticut.
Note
Interviewed by Martin Rowe on December 3, 1999.
Note (Provenance)
Recording Animal Advocacy, Inc. Gift 2001 2001.2002.M055
Carmen Lee Gift 2015
Language
English
Library Location
Columbia Center for Oral History, Columbia University
Browse Location’s Digital Content
Catalog Record
11377154
Also In
Oral History Archives at Columbia
Time-Based Media
Time-Based Media
Persistent URL
https://dx.doi.org/10.7916/d8-w2ws-m622
Related URLs
Available digital content for this interview.