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+<title>Freehold Land Societies, by J. Ewing Ritchie</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Freehold Land Societies, by J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Freehold Land Societies
+ Their History, Present Position, and Claims
+
+
+Author: J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+
+Release Date: June 14, 2010 [eBook #32807]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FREEHOLD LAND SOCIETIES***
+</pre>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1853 William Tweedie pamphlet by David
+Price, email ccx074@pglaf.&nbsp; Many thanks to Birmingham
+Central Library, England, for allowing their copy to be used for
+this transcription.</p>
+<h1>FREEHOLD LAND SOCIETIES:<br />
+<span class="smcap">their history</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">present position</span>, <span
+class="smcap">and claims</span>.</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">J. EWING RITCHIE.</p>
+<div class="gapmediumline">&nbsp;</div>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;The laws of this country recognise nothing
+more sacred than the Forty-shilling Freehold Franchise; and a
+vote for the county obtained by these means is both
+constitutional and laudable.&rdquo;&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Lord Chief-Justice Tindal</span>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What he had heard from hon. members told him nothing
+more than this, that the working population could easily, under
+the old system, acquire the right of voting; and that every man
+who owned forty shillings a-year could entitle himself to
+vote.&nbsp; Were they to be told that the people of England were
+so degraded, so besotted, so dead to all sense of their true
+interests, that they could make no efforts to possess themselves
+of the franchise?&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Mr.
+Disraeli</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div class="gapmediumline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">LONDON:<br />
+WILLIAM TWEEDIE, 337, STRAND.</p>
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">price
+twopence</span>.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 2--><a name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+2</span>ADVERTISEMENT.</h2>
+<p>The following pages are reprinted from the &ldquo;<span
+class="smcap">Weekly News and Chronicle</span>&rdquo;&mdash;the
+only Paper that aims to be the organ of the Freehold Land
+Movement.&nbsp; They are now published in the hope that they may
+win for that movement a wider support and a heartier sympathy
+than it has already secured.&nbsp; It is a child&mdash;it will be
+a giant ere long.</p>
+<p>3, Clifford&rsquo;s Inn.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; April 1853.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 3--><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+3</span>FREEHOLD LAND SOCIETIES:<br />
+<span class="smcap">their history</span>, <span
+class="smcap">present position</span>, <span class="smcap">and
+claims</span>.</h2>
+<p>The Freehold Land Movement is the great fact of the age.&nbsp;
+We propose to consider it in its origin, its present position as
+a means of investment for the middle and working-classes, and in
+its political and social and moral bearings.&nbsp; We propose to
+tell what it has done, and what it seeks to do.&nbsp; Born of a
+working-man, it especially aims at the elevation of
+working-men.&nbsp; It comes to them, and offers them
+independence, wealth, and political power.&nbsp; Conceived in a
+provincial town, its ramifications now extend through the
+land.&nbsp; It demands no mean place in the consideration of the
+influences now at work for realising a future brighter and better
+than the past.&nbsp; The philosopher, the political economist,
+and the philanthropist must alike, then, deem it worthy of
+serious regard.&nbsp; On the part of a people, the absence of
+recklessness and waste is a great good; but the formation of
+industrial and economical habits is a still greater good.&nbsp;
+From such plain, unpoetical traits of national character are born
+the arts and the graces, and all that is civilised and refined in
+life.&nbsp; A rich people is not less virtuous, and is certainly
+far happier, than a poor one.&nbsp; Therefore we say, let the
+Freehold Movement have wide support, for it is a schoolmaster,
+teaching the path leading the people of this country to wealth,
+and to the power and independence which wealth alone can
+give.&nbsp; Thus much by way of introduction.&nbsp; That our
+readers may fully understand the subject, we shall begin at the
+beginning, and explain.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 4--><a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+4</span>I.&mdash;THE CONSTITUTION OF A FREEHOLD LAND
+SOCIETY.</h3>
+<p>Some time back the <i>Times</i> asked scornfully, as Pilate of
+old did concerning truth, what was a Freehold Land Society.&nbsp;
+We reply, viewed in a business light, it is simply a society for
+the purchase of land.&nbsp; It involves two commercial principles
+well understood&mdash;that purchasers should buy in the cheapest
+market, and that societies can do what individuals cannot.&nbsp;
+Till the movement originated, the purchaser of a small plot of
+ground had to pay in lawyer&rsquo;s expenses connected with the
+purchase frequently as much as he paid for the plot itself.&nbsp;
+A society buys a large piece of ground.&nbsp; They make roads
+through it; they drain it; they turn it into valuable
+building-land; they thus raise its value; and they divide it
+amongst their members, not at the price at which each allotment
+is worth, but at the price which each allotment has cost.&nbsp;
+Being also registered under the Friendly Societies Act, the
+conveyance costs the purchaser generally from 25s. to 30s.; and
+thus a plot worth &pound;50 is often put into the fortunate
+allottee&rsquo;s hands for half that sum.&nbsp; Of course,
+different societies have different rules, but they all aim at the
+same end, and effect that end in pretty nearly a similar
+manner.&nbsp; Thus a member generally, if he subscribes for a
+share of &pound;30, pays a shilling a-week, and a trifling sum
+a-quarter for expenses.&nbsp; With the money thus raised an
+estate is purchased.&nbsp; It is then cut up into allotments, and
+balloted for.&nbsp; If the subscriber has paid up, he, of course,
+takes the land, and there is an end of the matter.&nbsp; If he
+has not, the society gives him his allotment, but saddled with a
+mortgage.&nbsp; In some societies the members are served by
+rotation, and &ldquo;first come&rdquo; are &ldquo;first
+served.&rdquo;&nbsp; The more generally-adopted plan, however, is
+division by ballot.&nbsp; There has been some doubt as to the
+legality of the ballot; the Conservative Society have taken the
+opinion of eminent counsel upon this matter, and their opinion
+is, that the ballot is perfectly legal.&nbsp; The rotation
+societies offer no inducements to new members to join them; so
+division by ballot <!-- page 5--><a name="page5"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 5</span>has come to be almost the universal
+rule.&nbsp; In the National, for instance, there was a ballot
+daily for all subscribers of three months&rsquo; standing.&nbsp;
+This has recently been altered.&nbsp; A ballot takes place every
+day, to which all are eligible whose subscriptions are paid
+up.&nbsp; If you join the National, you may go to the ballot
+immediately.</p>
+<p>As the National is the largest of the existing Freehold Land
+Societies&mdash;last year its receipts being
+&pound;190,070&mdash;we will briefly allude to its prospectus as
+a still further illustration of what a Freehold Land Society
+is.&nbsp; The especial objects of this Society are described as
+&ldquo;to facilitate the acquisition of freehold land, and the
+erection of houses thereon; to enable such of its members as are
+eligible to obtain the county franchise, and to afford to all of
+them a secure and profitable investment for money.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In the National, all the expenses are defrayed out of a common
+fund; consequently, there are no extra charges, and the net
+profits, after payment of interest on subscriptions in advance
+and on completed shares, are annually divided amongst the holders
+of uncompleted shares.&nbsp; In this way last year the National
+divided &pound;3,161. 19s. 3d., and the directors credited each
+unadvanced share with profit at the rate of &pound;10. 16s. 8d.
+per cent. per annum.&nbsp; We only add, as a still further
+explanation of the societies in general, that they are all
+conducted on the most perfectly democratic principles.&nbsp; Vote
+by ballot and universal suffrage are the rule with them.&nbsp;
+The members elect their own officers.&nbsp; In all the societies,
+also, provision is made for casualties, such as sickness or
+death.&nbsp; In case of death, the subscriber&rsquo;s widow or
+heirs take his place.&nbsp; If he be unable, from sickness or
+poverty, to continue his subscription, he is not fined, but is
+allowed to wait for better times.&nbsp; If he wishes his money
+back, he can have it returned, with a slight reduction for the
+working expenses of the Society.&nbsp; Juniors may be
+members.&nbsp; Actually these societies so far practically admit
+woman&rsquo;s rights as to offer to the ladies the same desirable
+investments they offer to the sterner sex.&nbsp; In short, the
+Freehold Land Movement appeals to all <!-- page 6--><a
+name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>ranks and
+conditions of the community.&nbsp; It may be said of a Freehold
+Land Society what has often been said of the London Tavern, that
+it is open to all&mdash;who can pay.</p>
+<h3>II.&nbsp; ORIGIN AND PRESENT POSITION OF THE MOVEMENT.</h3>
+<p>Primarily the movement was political, and was established for
+the purpose of giving the people of this country the political
+power which they at present lack.&nbsp; Originally the
+forty-shilling freehold was established to put down universal
+suffrage.&nbsp; As a part and parcel of the British constitution
+it has been religiously preserved to the present time, and
+threatens to be an excellent substitute for what it was
+originally intended to destroy.&nbsp; During the Anti-Corn-Law
+agitation Mr. Cobden had put the free-traders up to the idea of
+purchasing forty-shilling freeholds, but it was reserved to Mr.
+James Taylor, of Birmingham, to give to the idea of Mr. Cobden a
+universality of which the latter never dreamed; Mr. Taylor had
+been a purchaser of land more than once, and with the purchase he
+got an abstract, a legal document, which when he came to
+understand it, showed him that he had paid to the vendor much
+more than it cost him.&nbsp; The idea then struck him that as the
+wholesale price of land was much greater than the retail, if the
+working men could be got to subscribe together a large sum for
+the purchase of land, they could thus have, at a wholesale price,
+a stake in the country and a vote, and when the general election
+came and excitement was created, Mr. Taylor felt that the time
+for action was arrived.&nbsp; Accordingly, when he went to tender
+his vote, he said to a friend who accompanied him,
+&ldquo;here&rsquo;s a lot of fellows, and all that they can do is
+to grin and yawn when I go in to poll; I have a strong notion
+that I can get them into the booth.&rdquo;&nbsp; This friend
+said, &ldquo;How?&rdquo;&nbsp; The answer was, &ldquo;Meet me to
+night in the Temperance Hotel.&rdquo;&nbsp; That same evening Mr.
+Taylor and his friend drew up an advertisement, stating that
+&ldquo;it is expedient that a Freehold Land Society be formed for
+the purpose of obtaining freehold property at a most reasonable
+cost to, and to <!-- page 7--><a name="page7"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 7</span>get country votes for, the working
+men.&rdquo;&nbsp; Simultaneously with the advertisement in the
+local paper appeared a leader from the editor, recognising the
+immense importance of the movement thus commenced.&nbsp; Thus
+pledged to go on, Mr. Taylor threw his heart and soul into the
+cause.&nbsp; Within a week a committee was formed, and the
+support of the principal men in the town secured.&nbsp; December,
+1849 is the legal date of the Freehold Land Movement, although
+the Birmingham Society had been in existence nearly two years
+previous.&nbsp; In that month the rules of the society were
+certified, and the glorious idea of Mr. Taylor had a legal
+habitation and a name.&nbsp; At the end of the first year the
+Birmingham society reported that it had established six
+independent societies, in which more than two thousand members
+had subscribed for three thousand shares; that in Birmingham
+alone the subscriptions amounted to &pound;500 per month, and
+that it had already given allotments to nearly two hundred of its
+members.&nbsp; Before the termination of the second year a great
+conference was held in Birmingham in order to organise a plan of
+general union and co-operation amongst the various
+societies.&nbsp; Delegates from all parts of the country were
+present.&nbsp; In Birmingham it appeared &pound;13,000 had been
+subscribed and four estates purchased, two thousand five hundred
+shares being taken up by one thousand eight hundred
+subscribers.&nbsp; Wolverhampton, Leicester, Stourbridge, had all
+co-operated zealously in the movement.&nbsp; Nor was the
+metropolis behind.&nbsp; The National had started with seven
+hundred and fifty members subscribing for one thousand five
+hundred shares, and already had &pound;1,900 paid up.&nbsp; In
+Marylebone eight hundred shares had been taken since the previous
+July.&nbsp; This conference was attended by Messrs. Cobden,
+Bright, G. Thompson, Scholefield, Bass, and Sir Joshua
+Walmsley.&nbsp; This conference, of course, attracted the notice
+of the press.&nbsp; The coldly, critical <i>Spectator</i> termed
+it a &ldquo;middle-class movement.&rdquo;&nbsp; <i>Tait</i> so
+far forgot himself as to characterise it as &ldquo;political
+swindling.&rdquo;&nbsp; The <i>Times</i> said the working-classes
+were being deluded by <!-- page 8--><a name="page8"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 8</span>it.&nbsp; For once the <i>Standard</i>
+agreed with the <i>Times</i> and said ditto.&nbsp; However the
+conference did its work, and started the <i>Freeholder</i>, which
+appeared on the 1st of January, 1850.&nbsp; A second conference
+was held at Birmingham in November, 1850.&nbsp; The report, as
+usual, was encouraging.&nbsp; Eighty societies, many of them with
+branches, were reported as existing.&nbsp; The number of members
+was thirty thousand subscribing for forty thousand shares.&nbsp;
+The amount of paid-up contributions was &pound;170,000.&nbsp; A
+third conference was held in London in November, 1851.&nbsp; The
+report then stated there were one hundred societies with
+forty-five thousand members subscribing for sixty-five thousand
+shares.&nbsp; One hundred and fifty estates had been purchased,
+twelve thousand allotments made, &pound;400,000 had actually been
+received, and two millions of pounds sterling was actually being
+subscribed for.&nbsp; At the fourth conference, held in 1852, it
+appeared still greater progress had been made.&nbsp; One hundred
+and thirty societies, with eighty-five thousand members
+subscribing for a hundred and twenty thousand shares, were in
+existence, three hundred and ten estates had been purchased,
+nineteen thousand five hundred allotments had been made, and
+&pound;790,000 had been received.&nbsp; Estimating the shares at
+the average of &pound;30 per share, the total amount subscribed
+for was three millions six hundred thousand pounds.&nbsp; Such,
+then, is the movement at the present time.&nbsp; It has been
+obscured by no cloud.&nbsp; Its progress has been
+unchecked.&nbsp; No disappointment has retarded its onward
+way.&nbsp; Forward to victory has been its march.&nbsp; All
+classes and sects have railed round it.&nbsp; For churchmen there
+exists a Church of England Society.&nbsp; The Conservatives have
+formed a large and flourishing society for the manufacture of
+Conservative votes.&nbsp; The movement sneered at, derided,
+misrepresented, declared unconstitutional, a swindle like a
+celebrated land scheme popular with the Chartists, has now come
+to be admitted by all as the greatest fact of the age: to aid it,
+grave and reverend churchmen, statesmen of all shades of
+political options, combine; even coronetted lords now <!-- page
+9--><a name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>rejoice
+to lend it their sanction, and the weight of their illustrious
+names.&nbsp; Truly the mustard seed has branched out into a giant
+oak.&nbsp; A little leaven has leavened the whole lump.</p>
+<h3>III.&mdash;OF ITS FOUNDER.</h3>
+<p>We must tell our readers something of the founder of this
+movement.&nbsp; James Taylor, junior, of Birmingham, deserves a
+passing notice at our hands.&nbsp; He was born in that town in
+1814, and is consequently now in the prime of his life, rather
+young considering the greatness he has already achieved.&nbsp;
+His father is a tradesman of the same town, where he has acquired
+a limited competency by his honest industry, and where he still
+carries on business for the benefit of the younger branches of
+his family.&nbsp; Like all other Birmingham boys James was put to
+work at an early age, and became an apprentice in one of the
+fancy trades for which Birmingham is so well known.&nbsp; There
+his industrious habits soon acquired for him the approbation of
+his master, who gave up Taylor his indentures in consequence of
+his retiring from business before the latter was of age.&nbsp;
+About this time Taylor, earning good wages, and not having the
+fear of Malthus before his eyes, got married, and lived happily
+till troubles came and the demon of strong drink cast its fatal
+spell upon his domestic hearth.&nbsp; After years of utter misery
+and degradation Taylor, in a happy hour for himself and society,
+signed the Temperance pledge, and became a new man, and to the
+pledge, fortunately, he remained faithful, in spite of ridicule
+and reproach from the boon companions with whom he had
+thoughtlessly squandered so much of happiness, and health, and
+money, and time.&nbsp; No temptation ever led him back.&nbsp; Nor
+was he satisfied with his own reform alone.&nbsp; He was anxious
+that others should be rescued from degradation as he had already
+been.&nbsp; For this purpose he identified himself with the
+Temperance cause, and was Honorary Secretary to the Birmingham
+Temperance Society till he became the Apostle of the Freehold
+Land Movement.&nbsp; Since then his life and labours have become
+public.&nbsp; No <!-- page 10--><a name="page10"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 10</span>man has worked harder than Mr.
+Taylor.&nbsp; Our readers would be astonished if they knew the
+number of miles Mr. Taylor travels, and of public meetings he
+attends in the course of the year connected with the movement;
+sometimes the exertion has been too great, and his health has
+given way for a time.&nbsp; Those who have heard him once will
+never forget him.&nbsp; Those who have not heard him, if such
+there be, have indeed a treat in store.&nbsp; With but few or no
+adventitious aids&mdash;without even &ldquo;little Latin and less
+Greek&rdquo;&mdash;an unassuming plain working man, in spite of
+all this, so fascinating is his unadorned eloquence that no one
+can listen to him without admiring his earnestness and moral
+worth&mdash;without feeling that England has no worthier son than
+the originator of the Freehold Land Movement&mdash;without
+feeling that time alone can tell what he has done for the
+political, and social, and moral emancipation of her toiling
+race.&nbsp; We may also add here that Mr. Taylor has been at
+times a contributor to the press as well as a platform
+orator&mdash;that he has been twice married&mdash;that he resides
+at Temperance Cottage, Birmingham, in the enjoyment of a domestic
+felicity which we trust will attend him to a green old age.&nbsp;
+It may be said of Taylor what has been said of many infinitely
+less useful men, that&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;He is a man, take him for all in all,<br />
+We ne&rsquo;er shall look upon his like again.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This feeling has become common wherever Mr. Taylor has been
+known.&nbsp; From far and near have reached him testimonials of
+respect and esteem.&nbsp; At an early stage of its existence the
+Wolverhampton Society acknowledged its sense of Mr.
+Taylor&rsquo;s services by presenting him with a valuable gold
+watch; and at the last Annual Conference of the friends of the
+Movement, held in December, 1852, it was unanimously resolved
+that &ldquo;as it appeared that various sums of money have been
+from time to time subscribed with a view of offering some
+suitable recognition of the valuable and disinterested services
+of Mr. James Taylor, it is desirable that a committee be
+appointed to suggest the most suitable testimonial to <!-- page
+11--><a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>that
+gentleman, and to take such steps as may seem to them most
+desirable in furtherance of the object.&rdquo;&nbsp; In pursuance
+of this resolution a committee was formed to receive
+subscriptions, of which Mr. Scholefield, M.P. for Birmingham, is
+Treasurer.&nbsp; This committee consists of most of the gentlemen
+connected with the London societies, and it is to be hoped that
+they are giving the subject the importance it really
+deserves.&nbsp; A prophet should be honoured in his own age and
+country.&nbsp; In their lifetime the world&rsquo;s benefactors
+should reap their reward.</p>
+<p>Having thus explained the nature of Freehold Land Societies,
+and detailed their rise and progress and present position, we
+propose to consider their effects.&nbsp; For this purpose we
+shall examine the Movement as offering</p>
+<h3>IV.&mdash;AN INVESTMENT FOR THE MIDDLE AND WORKING
+CLASSES.</h3>
+<p>This, of course, is the principal point of view.&nbsp; By
+their merits as investments alone must Freehold Land Societies
+stand or fall.&nbsp; If they pay, they will flourish; if they do
+not, they cannot exist, whatever may be the social, and moral,
+and political arguments advanced in their favour.&nbsp; Now, let
+us just see what means of investment are within the reach of the
+Working man.&nbsp; There is the savings bank&mdash;not always
+safe, as recent examples have shown, and offering so small a rate
+of interest as to be but little inducement to the classes to whom
+it appeals, to save.&nbsp; Then there are the benefit societies,
+which hold out such fine promises, which thus have won a support
+to which they have no claim, and have excited hopes which they
+can never realise.&nbsp; Of two thousand of these societies, the
+accounts of which were submitted to one gentleman in Liverpool a
+few years ago, <i>all</i> were insolvent.&nbsp; Much of the money
+belonging to them is wasted in drink, in foolish show and
+mummery; but the societies are based upon wrong principles, and
+can never become right.&nbsp; Two radical defects taint them
+all&mdash;the contributions have been much too small in
+proportion to the proposed benefits, and an <!-- page 12--><a
+name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>almost
+indiscriminate regard to diversities in age has caused persons
+differing as widely as from eighteen to thirty-five, forty,
+forty-five, and even fifty years of age, to be admitted upon
+equal, or nearly equal, terms.&nbsp; One of the chief of these
+friendly societies is that known as the Manchester Unity.&nbsp;
+In 1848 there was an inquiry into the subject before the House of
+Lords, when it was stated by Mr. Neison, the eminent actuary,
+&ldquo;that it would take <i>three millions of money</i> to bring
+the Manchester Unity of Odd Fellows out of their present
+difficulties; and if they went on at their present rates of
+contribution, no less than <i>ten millions</i> would be required
+to fulfil all their engagements.&rdquo;&nbsp; So much for
+friendly societies, which are, indeed, a delusion and a snare,
+and have always failed when the hour of trial has come.&nbsp;
+What the savings banks are we have already seen; yet, actually,
+till the Freehold Land Movement originated, these were the only
+investments within the reach of the working man.&nbsp; A Select
+Committee of the House of Commons has twice reported &ldquo;that
+the great change in the social position of multitudes, arising
+from the growth of large towns and crowded districts, renders it
+more necessary that corresponding changes in the law should take
+place, both to improve their condition and contentment, and to
+give additional facilities to investments of the capital which
+their industry and enterprise are constantly creating and
+augmenting;&rdquo; and &ldquo;that they doubt not ultimate
+benefit will ensue from any measures which the Legislature may be
+enabled to devise for simplifying the operation of the law and
+unfettering the energies of trade.&rdquo; But at present nothing
+has been done, and the Laws of Partnership fetter the working man
+who would usefully employ what little capital he has.&nbsp;
+Clearly, then, the Freehold Land Movement offers him an eligible
+means of investment.&nbsp; Land cannot run away.&nbsp; So long as
+England exists, it will always be worth its price.&nbsp; Nay, it
+will become more valuable every year, for by no effort of human
+ingenuity can it be increased.</p>
+<p>At Birmingham several of the allotments have <!-- page 13--><a
+name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>realised
+premiums as high as &pound;20 or &pound;30.&nbsp; On the East
+Moulsey estate of the Westminster Society allotments, costing
+&pound;23, have been let at a chief rent of &pound;3 and
+&pound;3. 10s. per annum.&nbsp; The Ross Society, in one of its
+annual reports, stated that, out of thirty allotments made by the
+Society during the past year, ten exchanged hands at premiums
+varying from &pound;3. 10s. to &pound;5., and ten working men
+each received &pound;10 premium.&nbsp; At Ledbury several
+allotments, costing &pound;25 each had realised premiums of
+&pound;15 each.&nbsp; On the Stoke Newington estate, belonging to
+the National, premiums of &pound;30 and even of &pound;40 have
+been realised.&nbsp; At the Gospel Oak estate, belonging to the
+St. Pancras Society, allotments which cost &pound;20 each have
+been let off on building leases of 50s. per annum each.&nbsp;
+Greater sums have been made&mdash;but we would rather understate
+than overstate our case.</p>
+<p>We have inspected returns from one hundred and twenty
+societies, and in every case the allotments have realised a
+handsome premium.&nbsp; Yet, in the face of all this, articles
+have recently appeared in <i>Chambers&rsquo;s Journal</i> and the
+<i>Edinburgh Review</i>, deprecating these societies as
+investments.&nbsp; The Edinburgh Reviewer
+says:&mdash;&ldquo;Notwithstanding this rapid popularity however;
+notwithstanding, also, the high authorities which have pronounced
+in their behalf, we cannot look upon these associations with
+unmixed favour; and we shall be surprised if any long time
+elapses without well-grounded disappointment and discontent
+arising among their members.&nbsp; However it may be desirable
+for a peasant or an artisan to be possessor of the garden which
+he cultivates, and of the house he dwells in&mdash;however clear
+and great the gain to him in this case&mdash;it is by no means
+equally certain that he can derive any adequate pecuniary
+advantages from the possession of a plot of ground which is too
+far from his daily work for him either to erect a dwelling on it,
+or to cultivate it as an allotment, and which, from its
+diminutive size, he will find it very difficult for him to let
+for any sufficient remuneration.&nbsp; In many cases a barren
+site will be his only reward for &pound;50 of savings; and
+however he may value this in times of excitement, <!-- page
+14--><a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>it
+will, in three elections out of four, be of little real interest
+or moment to him.&rdquo;&nbsp; Of course we do not affirm that a
+badly-conducted society will pay in spite of mismanagement.&nbsp;
+We believe it will do nothing of the kind, and that discontent
+will arise; but facts show that the reviewer is wrong; that the
+allotments cost less than he supposes; that thus they offer a
+better return for his money than the allottee can get in any
+other way.&nbsp; Numerous as these societies are, multitudinous
+as are their members, extensive as have been their
+dealings&mdash;no one yet has found fault with them as a means of
+investment.&nbsp; Indeed, every day they have come to be more and
+more regarded in this light alone.&nbsp; Where, we ask, can a man
+make more by his shilling a-week than by putting it in a Freehold
+Land Society?&nbsp; This is the question which every man should
+ask himself; and if he does this, we can await with satisfaction
+the result.&nbsp; It is easy to imagine difficulties, but we turn
+to the testimony of facts.&nbsp; That is unanimously in its
+favour.&nbsp; The present time is void of all political
+interest.&nbsp; There are no great struggles, and no great hopes
+and aims.&nbsp; England seems satisfied with coalitions.&nbsp;
+Yet this precisely is the time when the Freehold Land Movement
+finds most favour with the public.&nbsp; The reason is
+obvious.&nbsp; The times are good.&nbsp; The public has money to
+invest, and the public finds no such desirable investments as
+those offered by the Movement; hence it is the societies
+flourish; hence it is they gain the hearty support of all who can
+only spare a little, but who would put a little by against a
+rainy day.</p>
+<h3>V.&mdash;MOVEMENT CONSIDERED POLITICALLY.</h3>
+<p>But we may be told, politically the movement has been a
+failure.&nbsp; Our answer is, it has been nothing of the
+kind.&nbsp; It is true, and we state the fact more in sorrow than
+in anger, that Messrs. Newdegate and Spooner still represent
+North Warwickshire; but it is also clear that whilst at the
+election previous to the last Mr. Spooner had, in the Birmingham
+district, a majority of 196, at the last election, in consequence
+<!-- page 15--><a name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+15</span>of the operation of the Freehold Land Societies of that
+district, he was actually in a minority of 395.&nbsp; But let us
+look nearer home.&nbsp; At the recent election for Middlesex,
+Bernal Osborne was returned, after a severe struggle, by a
+majority of 195.&nbsp; Now, when we recollect that the National
+alone has purchased 152 acres in Middlesex, and that each acre is
+capable, on an average, on subdivision, of making five
+votes&mdash;when we also remember that the remaining London
+societies have purchased between them another hundred acres in
+the same county&mdash;it is impossible not to feel, even
+supposing all the allotments have not been taken up, that out of
+the 250 acres thus cut up into allotments came the majority which
+returned Bernal Osborne as the champion of Liberalism and Free
+Trade.&nbsp; We repeat, it is impossible not to feel that if it
+had not been for the Freehold Land Societies, to the disgrace and
+shame of the county, Lord Maidstone would have misrepresented
+Middlesex.&nbsp; Then we remember that Mr. Locke King was but 400
+ahead of Mr. Antrobus at the Surrey election last summer&mdash;we
+must also feel that that gentleman has some reason for
+thankfulness to Freehold Land Societies.&nbsp; If we pass to
+Herts, we shall feel that it sadly failed in its duty by
+returning three pledged Protectionists; but when we recollect
+that the National has purchased 300 acres in that county, we
+cannot but be persuaded that there is &ldquo;a good time
+coming&rdquo; for our friend Mr. Lattimore and the Herts
+Reformers.&nbsp; At the last election, the lowest of the
+Protectionist candidates&mdash;the quondam Reformer, Sir Bulwer
+Lytton&mdash;had 2,190 votes: the highest of the Liberals had
+2,043.&nbsp; It is thus as clear as anything can be that a very
+little effort will make Hertfordshire for ever safe.&nbsp; It is
+in the power of any two hundred persons desirous of a good
+investment to do so at once.&nbsp; Essex, the home of Sir J.
+Tyrrel and the delight of W. B., we regret to write, is not so
+easily liberalised.&nbsp; North Essex at present is
+impregnable.&nbsp; Its squires, as Barry Cornwall ironically
+writes,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;With
+brains made clear<br />
+By the irresistible strength of beer,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page 16--><a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+16</span>are beyond salvation: there is no hope for this
+generation of them.&nbsp; But South Essex is not so hopelessly
+lost to the people&rsquo;s cause.&nbsp; It is true that last
+summer it did unseat Sir E. N. Buxton, and return Sir W. B.
+Smijth by a majority of 600; but the National has purchased 242
+acres in that county, and out of that number can create 1,210
+electors.&nbsp; Evidently, then, there is hope for Essex
+yet.&nbsp; But we need not continue this scrutiny.&nbsp; The
+people have placed within their hands the very privilege they so
+much desire.&nbsp; They need not wait for Government to
+emancipate them; they can emancipate themselves.&nbsp; For
+instance, the National will put any person desirous of the same
+in possession of a county qualification for North or South Essex,
+East or West Kent, Hertfordshire, West Sussex, North Hants, North
+Lancashire, or Middlesex.&nbsp; If, as some of the knowing ones
+maintain, we shall soon have a general election, of course the
+sooner one is put on the register the better.&nbsp; If not, the
+purchaser can take no harm: he will have his <i>quid pro quo</i>;
+he will have placed his money in that best of all banks, the
+land, and will have become one of that important class appealed
+to on certain occasions as the &ldquo;Electors of the United
+Kingdom.&rdquo;&nbsp; Heaven helps those who help
+themselves.&nbsp; Instead of the people waiting for Government to
+extend the franchise, they can boldly help themselves.&nbsp; No
+man deserves the electoral privilege who cannot purchase it by
+his own industry and self-denial.&nbsp; At the present time, when
+provisions are cheap, when work is abundant, when wages are high
+and labour scarce, there is not a man in our streets who may not
+win the franchise if he has the will.&nbsp; Half the men who
+brawled in low pot-houses, while their wives and children were
+starving, over their beer, for the Charter, and nothing but the
+Charter, if they had stopped at home, and worked and saved their
+money, might, by this time, have realised the manhood suffrage of
+which they so idly dreamed; and if, at the next election, the men
+of progress are beaten, and the friends of class legislation and
+injustice prevail, it will be because the people were not true to
+themselves&mdash;<!-- page 17--><a name="page17"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 17</span>because they had not enough of
+self-denial, enough of earnestness and independence, to avail
+themselves of the advantages offered by the Freehold Land
+Movement, and thus to have a representation that shall be real,
+and not a sham.&nbsp; By means of the Freehold Land Movement,
+every county in England may be won.&nbsp; To the very natural
+suggestion that that is a game that two can play at, the answer
+is very obvious.&nbsp; In such a contest numbers will tell.&nbsp;
+A qualification that may be had for &pound;30 will fall into very
+different hands to what it would were its price
+&pound;1,000.&nbsp; For one aristocratic voter thus made, the
+people will have ten.&nbsp; An appeal to the masses can have but
+one result.&nbsp; Human nature must be changed before it can be
+otherwise.&nbsp; Be this as it may, the political result is
+undoubtedly good&mdash;the emancipation of all who have the wit,
+and will, and worth to win the franchise for themselves.</p>
+<h3>VI.&nbsp; THE MORAL AND SOCIAL ADVANTAGES OF THE
+MOVEMENT.</h3>
+<p>Anything offering a man inducement to save must be attended
+with beneficial results.&nbsp; As society is constituted, a
+spendthrift is a nuisance and a curse; the charge hitherto
+against the working classes of this country has been, that they
+have been reckless and improvident&mdash;that they are beggars
+one day and spendthrifts the next&mdash;that the money gained
+with such difficulty is squandered away with a wicked
+wastefulness, such as can be paralleled in no other part of the
+world.&nbsp; The English lower orders have always been thus
+improvident.&nbsp; During the late war the sailors, when on
+shore, would resort to every absurdity to get rid of their
+money.&nbsp; Colonel Landman tells us of one who had just
+received prize money to the amount of &pound;500, and, being
+allowed only one week in which to get rid of it, had, to do so
+more effectually, hired a carriage and four for himself, another
+for his hat, and another for his cudgel, in which style he
+travelled to London.&nbsp; A common sight at Plymouth was that of
+sailors sitting on the ground breaking watches to pieces for a
+glass of grog, for <!-- page 18--><a name="page18"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 18</span>which they had previously paid
+&pound;5 each; one hard-hearted captain having refused leave to a
+sailor to go on shore, the man, in the bitterness of his
+disappointment, filled a pint pot with guineas and threw them
+overboard, as he could not immediately derive enjoyment from
+their use.&nbsp; It is true a great change has been effected in
+this respect, and society has reaped the benefit.&nbsp; A man who
+saves money is not a drain upon his friend; is not a dissipated
+man; costs society less, and does more for it than another
+man.&nbsp; The self-imposed taxation of the working classes has
+been set down by Mr. Porter at fifty millions a-year.&nbsp; In
+reality it is much more: there is loss of time&mdash;there is
+sickness induced by intemperance&mdash;there are the gaols, and
+police-stations, and police, which would be much less expensive
+were the intemperance of the country less.&nbsp; Thus, if you
+change a nation of spendthrifts into a nation of economical men,
+you bring about a great and glorious result.&nbsp; Such a nation
+never can be poor.&nbsp; It will always have capital, and capital
+is the fund out of which labour is maintained, out of which the
+arts that humanise and bless mankind spring&mdash;out of which
+the soft humanities of life arise.&nbsp; Thus, then, the Freehold
+Land Movement is attended with great moral and social good.&nbsp;
+Viewed politically, also, it must be considered to have had the
+same result.&nbsp; It is something to have made a man an
+independent voter&mdash;to have made him feel that he has won his
+political rights for himself&mdash;that he has no need to cringe
+and beg&mdash;to have taught him that&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Man who man would be<br />
+Must rule the empire of himself.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Such a man will infuse fresh blood into the
+constituency.&nbsp; He will not give a vote like a browbeaten
+tradesman or a dependent tenant-farmer.&nbsp; His landlord will
+not be able to drive him to the polling-booth like a sheep.&nbsp;
+On the contrary, he will go there erect and free&mdash;a man, and
+not a slave.&nbsp; In every point of view, indeed, the benefits
+of the movement are immense.&nbsp; In the neighbourhood of all
+our large towns estates are being built on, where the members of
+the <!-- page 19--><a name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+19</span>different societies living on their own freeholds enjoy
+the blessings of pure air, and light, and water, of which
+otherwise they would have been deprived.&nbsp; In Birmingham the
+mortality amongst children has been already lessened 2&frac12;
+per cent. in consequence of this very fact.&nbsp; If it be true
+that we cannot get the healthy mind without the healthy body,
+this is something gained; but when we further remember that the
+money thus profitably invested would most of it have been
+squandered in reckless enjoyment&mdash;in body and soul
+destroying drink&mdash;it is clear nothing more need be
+said.&nbsp; It was calculated that out of &pound;25,000 received
+by the Birmingham Society, &pound;20,000 have been saved from
+those sinks of poison, the dram-shop and the beer-house.&nbsp;
+Mr. James Taylor tells us, &ldquo;Our working men are beginning
+to ponder the often-quoted saying that every time they swallow a
+glass of ale they swallow a portion of land.&nbsp; From
+calculations which have been made, it appears that the average
+price of land is 5&frac12;d. per yard, and therefore every time a
+man drinks a quart of ale he engulphs at the same time a yard of
+solid earth.&rdquo;&nbsp; Nor is Mr. Taylor alone in his
+testimony.&nbsp; A correspondent of the <i>Freeholder</i> at
+Leominster stated, that instead of money being spent in drink it
+was devoted to the society there.&nbsp; In a late report of the
+Committee of the Coventry Society we read that &ldquo;one of the
+most pleasing results of the society&rsquo;s operations is the
+improved moral habits of many of its members.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+North and East Riding Society also reported &ldquo;The
+society&rsquo;s operations produce the best effects on the habits
+of its poorer members by encouraging them to save money from the
+public house.&rdquo;&nbsp; Similar testimony was also borne by
+the Newcastle Committee, and at Darlington we learn that the
+society has been the means of converting many of its members into
+steady members of society, and instead of finding them at the
+ale-bench, wrote a correspondent, a few months since, &ldquo;you
+may now see them at our Mechanics&rsquo; Institution, gaining all
+the information they can.&rdquo;&nbsp; Thus, then, the Freehold
+Movement is creating everywhere a great moral revolution.&nbsp;
+It <!-- page 20--><a name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+20</span>teaches the drunkard to be sober and the spendthrift to
+save.&nbsp; It comes to man in his degradation and strikes away
+the chain and sets him free.&nbsp; To the cause of Temperance it
+has been a most invaluable ally.&nbsp; For the money saved from
+the public-house it has been the most suitable investment.&nbsp;
+No wonder, then, that most of the leading men connected with the
+movement are also connected with the Temperance societies, or
+that it originated with them.&nbsp; It was born in a Temperance
+Hotel.&nbsp; Its founder was the Secretary of a Temperance
+society.&nbsp; Did the Temperance societies effect no other good,
+for this one fact alone would they deserve lasting honour in the
+land.</p>
+<h3>VII.&mdash;HINTS FOR THE FORMATION OF FREEHOLD LAND
+SOCIETIES.</h3>
+<p>There are many counties yet to which the movement has not
+extended.&nbsp; For the sake of those who may wish to extend it
+to them, we state that the first step to be taken is to procure a
+copy of the rules of some society already in operation.&nbsp; For
+this purpose, the Birmingham, the National and the Westminster
+Societies&rsquo; rules, which have been prepared with care, and
+under the management of practical men, should be procured.&nbsp;
+They are virtually the same as the rules of an ordinary building
+society, and are certified by Mr. Tidd Pratt.&nbsp; The next step
+is the appointment of trustees, directors, solicitor and
+secretary.&nbsp; This is very important.&nbsp; The greater part
+of the failures which take place in working men&rsquo;s
+associations arise from the incapacity or dishonesty of the
+directors or their officers.&nbsp; Men of character and substance
+should be chosen for trustees, and for directors men experienced
+in business, of persevering habits, and of unquestionable
+integrity.&nbsp; The solicitor and secretary ought to be
+favourably disposed to the objects of the society.&nbsp; The
+offices for business ought in no case to be connected either with
+a public-house or a Temperance coffee-house.&nbsp; Eating and
+drinking are bad adjuncts to business.&nbsp; As every society
+must incur expenses, it is not desirable to form societies in
+<!-- page 21--><a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+21</span>small towns or villages, but to connect them with a
+large society.&nbsp; The National, for instance, has agents to
+receive subscriptions in every part of the country.&nbsp; Indeed,
+many of the local societies have become merged in it.&nbsp; In
+consequence of its excellent business arrangements, and of its
+immense capital it can do what local societies cannot.&nbsp;
+Already the Herts and Beds Society, the Bristol Society and the
+Cardiff Society, have become incorporated with it, and the
+arrangement has been found satisfactory to all parties concerned,
+the National having the power to purchase an estate, when a local
+society with its limited funds would be utterly unable to do
+so.&nbsp; The same can be said of the Conservative and other
+larger societies.&nbsp; Local societies have, however, this in
+their favour.&nbsp; The managers are well known men.&nbsp;
+Confidence is felt in them; they appeal to local sympathies, and
+they will have local support.</p>
+<h3>VIII.&mdash;A LIST OF EXISTING SOCIETIES.</h3>
+<p>It has been suggested that we give a list of the societies at
+present in operation.&nbsp; We do so here, though aware that the
+list is necessarily very imperfect.&nbsp; The <i>Freeholder</i>
+aimed to give a list, but it never could give a correct
+one.&nbsp; We see Mr. Brooks in his Building Societies Directory
+has also made a similar attempt, and in an equally unsuccessful
+manner.&nbsp; The societies are so numerous that it is impossible
+to do more than chronicle the existence of the more active
+ones.&nbsp; These are:&mdash;1. The Arundel, 38, Arundel-street,
+Strand; Manager, Mr. J. Carpenter.&nbsp; 2. The Birkbeck,
+Mechanics&rsquo; Institution, Southampton-buildings,
+Chancery-lane; Secretary, Mr. F. Ravenscroft.&nbsp; 3. The
+British, 3, Ivy-lane; Secretary, Mr. H. Brooks.&nbsp; 4. The
+Britannia; Secretary, Mr. D. W. Ruffy, 1a, Great George-street,
+New-road.&nbsp; 4. The Church of England, 22, John-street,
+Adelphi; Secretary, Mr. Campbell.&nbsp; 5. The Conservative, 33,
+Norfolk-street, Strand; Secretary, Mr. Gruneisen.&nbsp; 6. The
+Chelsea, Cheyne-row.&nbsp; 7. The Finsbury,
+Featherstone-buildings; Secretary, Mr. Scott.&nbsp; 8. The Home
+Counties, Chatham-place, Blackfriars-bridge; <!-- page 22--><a
+name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 22</span>Secretary,
+Mr. Knight.&nbsp; 9. The Lambeth, 90 Blackman-street, Borough;
+Secretary, Mr. W. Banks.&nbsp; 10. London District, 10,
+Leadenhall-street; Secretary, Mr. F. Redfern.&nbsp; 11. The
+London and Suburban; Secretary, Mr. Weale.&nbsp; 12. The
+Metropolitan, 24, East-cheap; Secretary, Mr. D. R. White.&nbsp;
+13. The Marylebone, Great Portland-street; Secretary, Mr. J. W.
+Knight.&nbsp; 14. The Middle Class, Peele&rsquo;s Coffee House,
+Fleet-street; Secretary, Mr. W. Peacock.&nbsp; 15. The National,
+14, Moorgate-street; Secretary, Mr. Whittingham.&nbsp; 16. The
+North London, British School Room, Denmark-terrace, Pentonville;
+Secretary, Mr. Bernard.&nbsp; 17. The St. Pancras; Secretary, Mr.
+Spring.&nbsp; 18. The Union.&nbsp; 19. The Westminster, 4,
+Beaufort-buildings, Strand; Secretary, Mr. G. Hugget.&nbsp; Most
+of these societies are in full operation, and have purchased
+valuable estates.&nbsp; The probable number of Freehold Land
+Societies in the country is 130.&nbsp; In some parts societies
+have not flourished, in consequence of their being confounded
+with O&rsquo;Connor&rsquo;s Land Scheme; in others, more
+especially in the North, there has been an utter impossibility in
+the way of getting freehold property; in others, the management
+has been languid, and the societies have decayed.&nbsp; But the
+number is, we believe, that which we have stated; or at any rate
+is as near the truth as it is possible for us to be.</p>
+<h3>IX.&mdash;CONCLUSION.</h3>
+<p>We have thus gone through our self-appointed task.&nbsp; We
+have considered the Freehold Land Movement in its origin and
+effects.&nbsp; We have shown them to be good.&nbsp; We have shown
+the movement itself to be well worthy the support of every
+philanthropic man.&nbsp; It has now grown, and become
+strong.&nbsp; It is now doing what Parliament dare not, providing
+for the political emancipation of the people.&nbsp; It has put
+the franchise in the hands of honest men.&nbsp; It has given a
+new character to political agitation.&nbsp; It has shown how,
+without resorting to intimidation, or without the frantic appeal
+of the demagogue, the working men of England may enfranchise
+themselves.&nbsp; Parliament <!-- page 23--><a
+name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>may refuse to
+legislate on the matter&mdash;one Reform Bill after another may
+be prepared, and then thrown by&mdash;one party combination after
+another may be driven from the Treasury benches, but the movement
+is gradually working its way, which is to reform Parliament, to
+put down W. B. and his man Frail&mdash;to root out the
+demoralisation of which St. Albans is a type, and to give to the
+people a perfect representation in the peopled house.&nbsp; It is
+time the present state of things was altered.&nbsp; For this
+purpose, the Freehold Land Movement exists.</p>
+<p>We thus make our appeal to the friends of political
+progress.&nbsp; We aim at the advocacy of the movement which has
+for its end what you profess to desire.&nbsp; That movement we
+believe destined to be the salvation of our country, and we ask
+you to rally round it.&nbsp; It is true Free-trade is not in
+danger, but Parliamentary Reform is.&nbsp; A large party headed
+by Lord Derby take their stand by the Bill of &rsquo;31, and
+maintain that concession has reached its limits&mdash;that class
+legislation is still to prevail&mdash;that the people are still
+to be ignored&mdash;that inside the constitution are still to be
+the privileged few, and outside of it the unprivileged
+many.&nbsp; Against this mockery we ask England&rsquo;s manhood
+to protest&mdash;not by crowded assemblies or inflammatory
+harangues, but in the constitutional manner pointed out by
+Freehold Land Societies.&nbsp; We want not voices but
+votes.&nbsp; In the House of Commons, the thoughts that breathe
+and words that burn avail not, but votes are omnipotent.&nbsp; No
+member can disregard or despise his constituents; their will to
+him must be law.</p>
+<p>But we stop not here.&nbsp; We seek a still wider
+support.&nbsp; The Freehold Land Movement has done wonders, it
+has removed the reproach cast upon the working man, that he is
+reckless and improvident.&nbsp; It has shown that he can save
+when a proper object is offered.&nbsp; In a speech a year or two
+since, in the House of Commons, by Mr. Sotheron, M.P. for
+Wiltshire, it was stated that the total number of friendly
+societies was not less than 33,232, and the aggregate of the
+members which they included amounted to 3,032,000.&nbsp; The
+annual revenue <!-- page 24--><a name="page24"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 24</span>of these societies was
+&pound;4,980,000, and the accumulated capital from the savings of
+these poor persons was no less a sum than
+&pound;11,360,000.&nbsp; Faulty as most of these societies were,
+so desirous of saving was the working man, that he had actually
+entrusted them with the enormous sum we have just named.&nbsp; If
+these things were done by Friendly Societies, what will not be
+done when the advantages of Freehold Land Societies are well and
+widely understood?&nbsp; At this time there is much maudlin
+sympathy expressed on behalf of the working classes.&nbsp; They
+need it not.&nbsp; They are stout enough and strong enough to
+take care of themselves.&nbsp; The Freehold Land Movement has
+given them an investment, and they have become saving men.&nbsp;
+The money that would formerly have been spent in the public-house
+has given many a man a freehold and a stake in the country, such
+as even a revising barrister must admit.&nbsp; The present system
+of revision of votes by barristers is bad.&nbsp; Members of
+Freehold Land Societies have been much wronged in
+consequence.&nbsp; One worthy disfranchised several claimants
+last summer, on the ground that the forty-shilling franchise, in
+all cases, should cost &pound;50.&nbsp; It ought to be in the
+power of no man to arrive at such a decision.&nbsp; The question
+should be left to a jury&mdash;not to a barrister, eager of
+promotion, and for that purpose desirous to please the powers
+that be.&nbsp; But still a man may thus obtain wealth and a
+vote.&nbsp; And the man thus taught self-denial and providence
+will not be contented with remaining merely a freeholder; he
+cannot make himself that without becoming intellectually and
+morally a better man.&nbsp; He will be a better father of a
+family, a better citizen, better in his public and private
+life.&nbsp; Workmen of England, Ireland and Wales, we call upon
+you to rally round the Freehold Land Societies.&nbsp; They exist
+for your benefit alone.&nbsp; They will give you all that you
+require&mdash;desirable investments for your savings&mdash;habits
+of economy and political influence.&nbsp; You have no need to
+cringe and beg.&nbsp; All that you want, you have it in your
+power to obtain.&nbsp; Never was there a more favourable time for
+you to avail yourselves of <!-- page 25--><a
+name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>the Freehold
+Land Societies now springing up in your midst.&nbsp; You have now
+money you can put by.&nbsp; When the Corn Laws cursed the land,
+it would have been mockery to have asked you to do so then.&nbsp;
+Now the case is altered, and you must each one of you seek to
+elevate yourselves.&nbsp; As Mr. Cobden aptly remarked, half the
+money annually spent in gin would give the people the entire
+county representation, and thus also provide desirable
+investments for the money that you are morally bound to lay by
+against a rainy day.&nbsp; The man who refuses to make provision
+for the future cannot expect to prosper.&nbsp; Not to do so when
+a man can is a folly and a crime.&nbsp; Now then is the time to
+support the Freehold Land Societies.&nbsp; Thus when sickness or
+old age or bad times come, you will have something you can call
+your own.&nbsp; Habits of economy will thus grow and strengthen,
+and the reward will be sure.&nbsp; Of all luxuries, that of
+independence is the sweetest, and that these societies put within
+your reach.&nbsp; Their failure is impossible.&nbsp; They are the
+societies for the age: they will parcel out the English ground
+amongst English men: their triumph will be the emancipation of
+the working man from the misery and wrongs and degradation of the
+past.</p>
+<p>We appeal also to men who aim at the moral reformation of our
+race&mdash;who care little about politics&mdash;who believe that
+in a world of knaves it is difficult to get a good government at
+all, and we claim their support.&nbsp; The mission of the
+Freehold Land Movement is the same with theirs.&nbsp; The
+philanthropist labouring to remove the degradation, which compels
+to a life little better than that of the beasts that perish, men
+made in the image of their Maker&mdash;the advocate of Temperance
+aiming at the destruction of a vice which has slain its
+thousands, and which, like a destroying pestilence, still walks
+the land&mdash;the Christian seeking to permeate our age with a
+living faith&mdash;all these we claim as co-workers.&nbsp; The
+movement, besides its direct bearings, tends to bring about the
+results they desire.&nbsp; Not merely has political emancipation
+been the result of the movement&mdash;moral emancipation has
+invariably followed in its train.</p>
+<p><!-- page 26--><a name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+26</span>We thus make our appeal for the support of the cause
+which is yet in its infancy, and which has a thousand trophies
+yet in store.&nbsp; Peacefully does it conduct the people to
+power, and give practical utterance to the spirit of the
+age.&nbsp; The doom of whatever keeps man in subjection to
+another has long been sealed.&nbsp; The proud patrician of
+Imperial Rome&mdash;the feudal baron of the Middle Ages, have
+passed away.&nbsp; Even Oxford abandons the faith at one time it
+armed to defend, and no longer acknowledges the</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Right divine of kings to govern
+wrong.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Onward to victory is the people&rsquo;s march.&nbsp; The
+decree has gone forth, they must be free.&nbsp; For this
+consummation we have ever hoped and striven.&nbsp; From the
+contentions of party we have ever turned to advocate whatever
+gives to the people moral dignity and political power; to others
+we leave the cause of the privileged classes&mdash;the advocacy
+of existing wrongs&mdash;the preservation of existing
+abuses.&nbsp; We plead the cause of the unenfranchised, but of
+the unenfranchised who have faith and energy and self-denial
+enough to win the franchise for themselves.&nbsp; We conjure them
+to bestir themselves, to give their support to the Freehold Land
+Movement, to quit themselves like men.&nbsp; We need at the
+polling booths independent voters, not men who can be bullied or
+bribed&mdash;to make such is our aim, for such England needs,
+aye, and needs more than ever now.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">the
+end</span>.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<div class="gapmediumline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">Woodfall and Kinder, Printers,
+Angel-court, Skinner-street.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FREEHOLD LAND SOCIETIES***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
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