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INTRODUCTION.
the Industrial and Provident Societies Act; 1876
with notes and forms, is entirely new.
2. Before proceeding to state the effect of the
present Friendly Societies Acts, it may he useful
briefly to trace the course of past legislation with
respect to such associations.
The first Act “For the Encouragement and
Relief of Friendly Societies” (33 Geo. 3, c. 54),
passed on the 21st June, 1793, defined them to
be “ societies for raising, by voluntary subscrip
tions of the members, separate funds for their
mutual relief and maintenance in sickness, old
age, and infirmity/’ The preamble affirmed that
the protection and encouragement of such societies
would be likely to be attended with very beneficial
effects, by promoting the happiness of indivi
duals and at the same time diminishing the public
burthens (a).
The enacting part of this statute designates the
objects it proposed to encourage as “ societies of
good fellowship,” and authorized them to make
proper and wholesome rules, orders, and regula
tions, so as not to be repugnant to the laws of the
realm, nor to any of the express provisions of the
Act. That it might be ascertained whether such
rules were conformable to the Act, they were
to be exhibited in writing to the justices in
(a) It is interesting to see the usefulness of Friendly
Societies in diminishing the public burthens placed so pro
minently forward from the very first. A recent writer has
boon so much impressed with this that he has eloquently
advocated the establishment of a National Friendly Society,
to which every one should be compelled to subscribe.