4
INTRODUCTION.
under the poor law, until they become
actually chargeable to the parish («).
4. By an Act of the 26th June, 1795 (35 Geo. 3,
c. Ill), the provisions for securing the funds of
a society were extended to “benevolent and
charitable institutions, for relieving by voluntary
subscriptions and benefactions, widows, orphans,
and families of the clergy, and others in distressed
circumstances.'’'’
5. By an Act of the 20th June, 1809 (49 Geo. 3,
c. 125), power was given to justices to enforce the
observance of the rules, and to compel payment
by a member of arrears due to a society by means
of distress and sale.
6. On the 12tli July, 1819, an Act was passed
(59 Geo. 3, c. 128) “for the further Protection
and Encouragement of Friendly Societies, and for
preventing Frauds and abuses therein/-’ It recited
that the “ habitual reliance of poor persons upon
parochial relief, rather than upon their own
industry, tends to the moral deterioration of the
people and to the accumulation of heavy burthens
upon parishes; and it is desirable, with a view as
well to the reduction of the assessment made for
the relief of the poor as to the improvement of
the habits of the people, that encouragement
should be afforded to persons desirous of making
(a) The great number of Friendly Societies that must
have been in existence in 1793, when this first Act to
encourage them was passed, is shown by the fact that in
1879 there were still in operation as many as fifty-nine
societies more than 100 years old, having been founded
between 1687 and 1778.