Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 August 2016
The Friendly Societies, which are sometimes called Benefit Clubs, have for many hundred years been highly popular in England; not merely because they supplied one of the principal wants of the working classes—namely, relief in sickness or accidents which disable them from obtaining their usual wages—but because, by mutual association, they afforded some scope for the talents and sagacity of some of the members to be recognised and appreciated by others. But by the very nature of their composition they were deficient in the element of stability ; and notwithstanding the best intentions of the members, the Societies have been constantly broken up and reformed.