Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T20:42:38.538Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The friendly planet: ‘Oddfellows’, networks, and the ‘British World’ c.1840–1914*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2012

Arthur Downing*
Affiliation:
All Souls College, Oxford, OX1 4AL, UK E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

British clubs and societies spread around the English-speaking world in the long nineteenth century. This article focuses on one particularly large friendly society, the Manchester Unity Independent Order of Oddfellows (MU), which by 1913 had more than a thousand lodges around the world, especially concentrated in Australia and New Zealand. The MU spread so widely because of micro-social and macro-social forces, both of which this article investigates. It also examines the transfer of members, funds, and information between different districts of the society, and argues that such transfers may have smoothed internal and long-distance migration.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

Special thanks go to Deborah Oxley, Lawrence Goldman, Avner Offer, Jane Humphries, Melanie Nolan, and Donald MacRalid for support and advice. Versions of this article were presented at Northumbria University and Oxford University, and I thank the audiences for their insights. I thank the editors of this journal and two anonymous reviewers for their valuable suggestions. The archivists at the Noel Butlin Library were extremely helpful during a research trip to the Australian National University.

References

1 Magee, G. B. and Thompson, A. S., Empire and globalisation: networks of people, goods and capital in the British world, c.1850–1914, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010, p. 136Google Scholar

2 Harland-Jacobs, J., Builders of empire: freemasons and British imperialism, 1717–1927, Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2007, p. 11Google Scholar

3 Bueltmann, T., Scottish ethnicity and the making of New Zealand society, 1850–1930, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2011, pp. 64123Google Scholar

Kyle Hughes ‘ “We Scotsmen by the banks o’ the Lagan”: the Belfast Benevolent Society of St Andrew, 1867–1917’, Irish Economic and Social History, 37, 2010, pp. 2425Google Scholar

4 Donald MacRaild, ‘Networks, communication and the Irish Protestant diaspora in northern England, c.1860–1914’, Immigrants & Minorities, 23, 2–3, 2005, pp. 323327Google Scholar

E. Delaney and D. M. MacRalid, ‘Irish migration, networks and ethnic identities since 1750: an introduction’, Immigrants & Minorities, 23, no. 2–3, 2005, pp. 127142Google Scholar

Bueltemann, T. and MacRalid, D. M., ‘Globalizing St George: English associations in the Anglo-world to the 1930s’, Journal of Global History, 7, 1, 2012, pp. 79105CrossRefGoogle Scholar

5 Harland-Jacobs, J., ‘ “Hands across the sea”: the masonic network, British imperialism and the North Atlantic world’, Geographical Review, 89, 2, 1999, p. 239Google Scholar

6 Cordery, Simon, British friendly societies, 1750–1914, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003, p. 13Google Scholar

7 Oddfellows Online Archives (henceforth OOA), http://www.oddfellows.co.uk/Site/Content/Archives.aspx (consulted 1 August 2012), ‘Independent Order of Oddfellows, Manchester Unity, quarterly report, April 1900’, Manchester, 1900, p. 76 (henceforth, MU quarterly reports are ‘MUQR’).

8 Emery, Herbert, ‘Risky business? Nonactuarial pricing practices and the financial viability of fraternal sickness insurers’, Explorations in Economic History, 33, 2, 1996, p. 197Google Scholar

9 Mitchell Library, Sydney (henceforth ML), Q319 2/V, ‘Statistical register of the Colony of Victoria, 1900’, p. 681; ML, Q334.7N, ‘Eighteenth annual report by the Registrar of Friendly Societies in New Zealand, 1895’, p. 4.

10 Clark, Peter, British clubs and societies, 1580–1800: the origins of an associational world, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000, pp. 350387CrossRefGoogle Scholar

11 Gosden, P. H. J. H., Self-help: voluntary associations in the 19th century, London: B.T. Batsford, 1973Google Scholar

12 James, B. and Weinbren, D., ‘Getting a grip: the roles of friendly societies in Australia and Britain reappraised’, Labour History, 88, 2005, pp. 87104Google Scholar

13 Harland-Jacobs, J., ‘Worlds of brothers’, Journal for Research into Freemasonry and Fraternalism, 2, 1, 2011, pp. 1037Google Scholar

J. Belich Replenishing the earth: the settler revolution and the rise of the Anglo-world, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003Google Scholar

14 Magee and Thompson, Empire and Globalisation, pp. 85–97Google Scholar

15 Tony Ballantyne, ‘Rereading the archive and opening up the nation-state: colonial knowledge in South Asia (and beyond)’, in A. Burton (ed.), After the imperial turn: thinking with and through the nation, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2003, p. 104Google Scholar

Lester, A., Imperial networks: creating identities in nineteenth-century South Africa and Britain, London: Routledge, 2001Google Scholar

Potter, Simon, ‘Webs, networks, and systems: globalization and the mass media in the nineteenth- and twentieth-century British empire’, Journal of British Studies, 46, 3, 2007, pp. 621646Google Scholar

Griffiths, J., ‘Were there municipal networks in the British World c. 1890–1939?’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 37, 4, 2009, pp. 575597Google Scholar

16 OOA, ‘IOOF, MU, Grand Annual Moveable Committee, 12th–16th June 1905’, Manchester, 1905, p. 28.

17 Portes, A., Guarnizo, L. E., and Landolt., P., ‘The study of transnationalism: pitfalls and promise of an emergent research field’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 22, 2, 1999, pp. 217221Google Scholar

18 Southall, H., ‘British artisan unions in the New World’, Journal of Historical Geography, 15, 2, 1989, pp. 163182Google Scholar

19 Noel Bultin Archives, Canberra (henceforth NBA), collection numbers Z227, Z262, Z190, Z193, and Z87.

20 James Burn, An historical sketch of the Independent Order of Oddfellows M.U., Manchester: A. Heywood, 1845, p. 146Google Scholar

21 Weinbren, Daniel, The Oddfellows, 1810–2010: two hundred years of making friends and helping people, Lancaster: Carnegie Publishing, 2010, pp. 1115Google Scholar

22 Emery, George and Emery, Herbert, A young man's benefit: the independent Order of Odd Fellows and sickness insurance in the United States and Canada, 1860–1929, Montreal: McGill–Queen's University Press, 1999, p. 19CrossRefGoogle Scholar

23 Horrell, Sara and Oxley, Deborah, ‘Work and prudence: household responses to income variation in nineteenth-century Britain’, European Review of Economic History, 4, 1, 2000, p. 27CrossRefGoogle Scholar

24 Harris, Bernard and Brigden, Paul, Supporting self-help: charity, mutuality and reciprocity in nineteenth-century Britain, New York: Routledge, 2007Google Scholar

25 Thompson, E. P., The making of the English working class, London: Victor Gollancz, 1963, p. 419Google Scholar

Johnson, Paul, Saving and spending: the working-class economy in Britain, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985, pp. 8586Google Scholar

26 Johnson, Saving and spending, pp. 9Google Scholar

Offer, Avner, ‘Between the gift and the market: the economy of regard’, Economic History Review, 50, 3, 1997, pp. 450476Google Scholar

27 ML, 334.7/P, ‘Articles and regulations of the Parramatta Friendly Society, July 24th 1839’, Sydney, 1840, p. 5.

28 See ML, Q319 2/V, successive volumes of ‘The statistical registers for the Colony of Victoria, 1875–1900’.

29 Gosden, Self-help, pp. 40–50Google Scholar

30 Glenn, Brian, ‘The rhetoric of fraternalism: its influence on the development of the welfare state, 1900–1935’, Studies in American Political Development, 15, 2, 2001, p. 221Google Scholar

Clawson, Mary Ann, ‘Fraternal orders and class formation in the nineteenth-century United States’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 27, 4, 1985, p. 689Google Scholar

Gorsky, Martin, ‘The growth and distribution of English friendly societies in the early nineteenth century’, Economic History Review, 51, 3, 1998, p. 507Google Scholar

31 Morgan, Susan, Land settlement in early Tasmania: creating an Antipodean England, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003, p. 48Google Scholar

32 OOA, ‘A list of the lodges composing the Independent Order of Oddfellows, Manchester Unity’, Manchester, 1846.

33 OOA, ‘A list of the lodges composing the Independent Order of Oddfellows, Manchester Unity’, Manchester, 1859.

34 OOA, ‘A list of the lodges composing the Independent Order of Oddfellows, Manchester Unity’, Manchester, 1867; OOA, ‘A list of the lodges composing the Independent Order of Oddfellows, Manchester Unity’, Manchester, 1878.

35 OOA, ‘A list of the lodges composing the Independent Order of Oddfellows, Manchester Unity’, Manchester, 1888; OOA, ‘A list of the lodges composing the Independent Order of Oddfellows, Manchester Unity’, Manchester, 1896.

36 OOA, ‘A list of the lodges composing the Independent Order of Oddfellows, Manchester Unity’, Manchester, 1920, pp. 192–6.

37 Belich, Replenishing the earth, p. 165Google Scholar

38 Olssen, E., ‘Friendly societies in New Zealand, 1840–1990’, in Marcel van der Linden, ed., Social security mutualism: the comparative history of mutual benefit societies, Bern: Peter Lang, 1996, p. 177Google Scholar

39 NBA, Z262, Box 310, Dispensation for the Melbourne Lodge, 1845; NBA, Z262, Box 308, Dispensation for the Loyal Yackandallah Lodge, 1863; NBA, Z262, Box 30, Dispensation for the Loyal Britannia Lodge 1851.

40 For example, NBA, Z262, Box 374, ‘The proceedings of the Port Phillip District Annual Moveable Committee, 7th–12th December 1870’, Melbourne, 1871, p. 20; OOA, ‘MUQR’, April 1882, p. 72.

41 NBA, Z262, Box 373, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, proceedings of the Grand Annual Moveable Committee, 13th–15th March 1877’, Melbourne, 1877, p. 4.

42 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, August 1898, p. 2.

43 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, August 1903, p. 400.

44 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, April 1901, p. 111.

45 NBA, Z262, Box 373, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, proceedings of the Grand Annual Moveable Committee, 14th–16th March 1882’, Melbourne, 1882, p. 10.

46 Emery, ‘Risky business?’, p. 221Google Scholar

47 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, October 1901, p. 394.

48 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, December 1903, p. 526.

49 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, October 1901, p. 391.

50 NBA, Z227, Box 430, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, proceedings of the Grand Annual Moveable Committee, 15th–18th March 1898’, Melbourne, 1898, p. 5.

51 ML, 334/706.2, ‘Report of the Quarterly Committee of the NSW IOOF MU’, 1903, p. 11.

52 Moya, Jose, Cousins and strangers: Spanish immigrants in Buenos Aires, 1850–1930, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1998, pp. 277278Google Scholar

53 Gorsky, ‘Growth and distribution’, p. 507Google Scholar

54 Moya, Jose, ‘Immigrants and associations: a global and historical perspective’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 31, 5, 2005, pp. 833864Google Scholar

55 Thistlethwaite, Frank, ‘Migration from Europe overseas in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries’, in Rudolph Vecoli and Suzanne Sinke, eds., A century of European migration, 1830–1930, Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1991, pp. 3031Google Scholar

56 Veracini, Lorenzo, Settler colonialism: a theoretical overview, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010, pp. 24Google Scholar

57 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, June 1914, p. 18.

58 Murphy, John, ‘The other welfare state: non-government agencies and the mixed economy of welfare in Australia’, History Australia, 3, 2, 2006, p. 444Google Scholar

Dickey, Brian, ‘Why were there no poor laws in Australia?’, Journal of Policy History, 4, 2, 1992, pp. 112118CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Mendelsohn, Ronald, The condition of the people: social welfare in Australia, 1900–1975, Sydney: G. Allen & Unwin, 1979, p. 86Google Scholar

59 Thomson, David, A world without welfare: New Zealand's colonial experiment, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1998, p. 18Google Scholar

60 Rutman, Leonard, ‘J. J. Kelso and the development of child welfare’, in A. Moscovitch and A. Jim, eds., The ‘benevolent’ state: the growth of welfare in Canada, Toronto: Garamond Press, pp. 68–76Google Scholar

61 Murphy, ‘The other welfare state’, p. 445Google Scholar

Murphy, John, A decent provision: Australian welfare policy, 1870 to 1949, Farnham: Ashgate, 2011, pp. 727Google Scholar

62 Inglis, James, Our Australian cousins, London: Macmillan, 1880, p. 178Google Scholar

Blainey, Geoffrey, A history of Victoria, Melbourne: Cambridge University Press, 2006, pp. 54Google Scholar

63 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, December 1899, p. 423.

64 Gosden, P. H. J. H., The friendly societies in England, 1815–1875, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1961, p. 9Google Scholar

Gosden, Self-help, p. 2Google Scholar

65 Markey, R., ‘The history of mutual benefit societies in Australia’, in van der Linden, Social security mutualism, pp. 152–155Google Scholar

Green, David G. and Cromwell, Lawrence G., Mutual aid or welfare state: Australia's friendly societies, Sydney: G. Allen & Unwin, 1984, pp. 1314Google Scholar

66 Neave, D., ‘Friendly societies in Great Britain’, in van der Linden, Social security mutualism, p. 53Google Scholar

67 Olssen, ‘Friendly societies in New Zealand’, p. 197Google Scholar

68 Anne Sigbym ‘Making a medical living: the economics of medical practice in the Cape, c. 1860–1910’, in Harriet Deacon and Howard Phillips, eds., The Cape doctor in the nineteenth century: a social history, Amsterdam: Editions Rodolpi B.V., 2004, p. 264Google Scholar

69 James Orr and Scott McNall ‘Fraternal orders and working-class formation in nineteenth-century Kansas’, in Scott McNall, Rhonda Levine, and Rick Fantasia, eds., Bringing class back in: contemporary and historical perspectives, Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1991, p. 102Google Scholar

70 Emery and Emery, A young man's benefit, pp. 31–39Google Scholar

71 Neave, David, Mutual aid in the Victorian countryside: friendly societies, Hull: Hull University Press, 1991, pp. 6672Google Scholar

72 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, August 1900, p. 305.

73 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, October 1913, p. 658.

74 Olssen, ‘Friendly societies in New Zealand’, p. 179Google Scholar

75 NBA, Z227, Box 430, ‘Grand Annual Moveable Committee, Victoria, March 20th–22nd 1894’, Melbourne, 1894, p. 7.

76 Ibid. See also NBA, Z227, Box 430, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, proceedings of the Grand Annual Moveable Committee 17th–20th March 1896’, Melbourne, 1896 p. 8.

77 Andrew Thompson ‘The power and privilege of association: co-ethnic networks and the economic life of the British imperial world’, South African Historical Journal, 56,1, 2006, p. 46Google Scholar

Magee and Thompson, Empire and Globalisation, p. 58Google Scholar

78 Magee and Thompson, Empire and Globalisation, p. 58Google Scholar

79 Cordery, British friendly societies, pp. 87Google Scholar

80 Ibid., p. 146.

81 OOA, MUQR, April 1886, pp. 45–6.

82 An act to consolidate and amend the Law relation to Friendly Society … Statutes of New Zealand …, Wellington, 1877, pp. 24–53, cited by Olssen, ‘Friendly societies in New Zealand’, p. 181.

83 OOA, ‘IOOF, MU, Grand Annual Moveable Committee, 3rd–7th June 1879’, p. 31.

84 Gourlay, H. W., Oddfellowship in New Zealand: a century of progress, Christchurch: Andrew, Baty & Co, 1942, p. 110Google Scholar

85 NBA, Z190, Box 128, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, report of the Quarterly Board Meeting, October 7th and 8th 1868’, Melbourne, 1868, pp. 22–3.

86 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, February 1911, p. 58.

87 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, October 1904, p. 447.

88 Johnson, Saving and spending, pp. 10Google Scholar

89 ML, 178.106/2, Robert Highet, ‘Rechabite history: a record of the origin, rise and progress of the Independent Order of Rechabites (Salford Unity)’, Manchester, 1936, pp. 84–5.

90 NBA, Z227, Box 430, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, Proceedings of the Grand Annual Moveable Committee, 20th–22nd March 1894’, Melbourne, 1894, p. 10.

91 Green and Cromwell, Mutual aid, p. 43Google Scholar

92 Cited in Weinbren, Oddfellows, p. 69.

93 Chase, Malcolm, Early Trade Unionism: Fraternity, Skill and the Politics of Labour, Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000, p. 62Google Scholar

Hobsbawn, E.J., ‘The Tramping Artisan’, The Economic History Review, 3, 3,1951, pp. 299–320Google Scholar

94 Neison, Francis, ‘Some statistics of the Affiliated Orders of Friendly Societies (Oddfellows and Foresters)’, Journal of the Statistical Society of London, 40, 1, 1877, pp. 4289Google Scholar

Gosden, Self-help, p. 48Google Scholar

95 ML, 334/706.2, ‘Report of the Quarterly Committee of the Victoria IOOF, MU, 14th–16th March 1882’, Melbourne, 1882, p. 11.

96 Weinbren, Oddfellows, p. 70Google Scholar

97 Green and Cromwell, Mutual aid, p. 44Google Scholar

98 Gosden, Friendly societies, p. 101Google Scholar

99 OOA, MUQR, October 1859, p. 29.

100 See Reuben Watson's scales in NBA, Z227, Box 430, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, Proceedings of the Grand Annual Moveable Committee March 11th–14th 1890’, Melbourne, 1890, p. 74.

101 NBA, Z262, Box 373, ‘MUIOOF, Quarterly Board Meeting, 7th and 8th January 1874, p. 3.

102 Cain, Peter, ‘Economics and empire’, in Andrew Porter, ed., The Oxford history of the British empire: the nineteenth century, vol. 3, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999, pp. 3152Google Scholar

103 OOA, ‘IOOF, MU, Letter on the 30th March 1879’.

104 Emery, ‘Risky business?’, p. 199Google Scholar

105 NBA, Z227, Box 430, ‘Questions and answers taken from the Boards of the Grand Masters and the Board directors, MUIOOF, from July 1866–July 1874’, Melbourne, 1874, p. 13.

106 OOA, ‘MUQR’, April 1853, pp. 20–1.

107 For example, OOA, ‘MUQR, July 1882’, p. 36; ‘MUQR, April 1892’, pp. 56–7; ‘MUQR, April 1890’, p. 38; ‘MUQR, October 1880’, p. 23; ‘MUQR, February 1885’, p. 77–8; ‘MUQR, July 1886’, p. 35; ‘MUQR, July 1893’, p. 51.

108 OOA, ‘MUQR, April 1853’, p. 21.

109 Green and Cromwell, Mutual aid, p. 48Google Scholar

110 OOA, ‘MUQR, July 1876’, p. 10.

111 OOA, ‘MUQR, July 1876’, p. 10; ‘MUQR, February 1877’, p. 22; ‘MUQR, July 1872’, p. 13; ‘MUQR, April 1871’, p. 19; ‘MUQR, October 1875’, p. 122.

112 MacRaild, ‘Networks’, p. 321Google Scholar

113 Buckley, Ken, ‘Emigration and the engineers, 1851–87’, Labour History, 15, 1968, p. 32Google Scholar

Horn, Pamela, ‘Agricultural trade unionism and emigration, 1872–1881’, Historical Journal, 15, 1, 1972, pp. 87102Google Scholar

MacDonald, John S. and MacDonald, Leatrice D., ‘Chain migration ethnic neighborhood formation and social networks’, Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly, 42, 1, 1964, p. 82Google Scholar

Delaney and MacRaild, ‘Irish migration’, pp. 129–133Google Scholar

114 Quoted in Gosden, Friendly societies, p. 223.

115 OOA, ‘The quarterly report of the Executive Committee, Nottingham Ancient IOOF, February 1911’, p. 18.

116 OOA, ‘The quarterly report of the Executive Committee, Nottingham Ancient IOOF, September 1901’, p. 84.

117 Thompson, ‘Power and privilege’, p. 43Google Scholar

118 Green and Cromwell, Mutual aid, pp. 43–44Google Scholar

119 Blainey, Odd fellows, p. 47Google Scholar

120 OOA, ‘MUQR, February 1877’, p. 37.

121 OOA, ‘MUQR, June 1878’, p. 40.

122 OOA, ‘MUQR, June 1859’, pp. 48–9.

123 OOA, ‘MUQR, July 1893’, p. 51; ‘MUQR, April 1890’, p. 38–9; ‘MUQR, February 1885’, p. 77–8.

124 OOA, ‘MUQR, April, 1853’, p. 21.

125 OOA, ‘MUQR, February 1904’, p. 275.

126 The Corresponding Secretary of the Victoria districts also simply asked cleared members what their benefits and contributions were: OOA, ‘MUQR, February 1905’, p. 104–5.

127 OOA, ‘A list of the lodges composing the Independent Order of Oddfellows, Manchester Unity, Manchester, 1887’.

128 OOA, ‘The quarterly report of the Executive Committee, MUIOOF, February 1909’, p. 175.

129 OOA, ‘MUQR, April 1886’, p. 46; ‘MUQR, April 1889’, p. 67; ‘MUQR, February 1890’, p. 44; ‘MUQR, February 1884’, p. 45; ‘MUQR, July 1888’, p. 59; ‘MUQR, July 1893’, p. 51.

130 OOA, ‘MUQR, April 1853’, p. 66.

131 NBA, Z227, Box 430, ‘Reports and proceedings of the AMC and the Board meetings, March 11th–14th 1890’, Melbourne, 1890, p. 10.

132 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, November 1887, p. 326.

133 NBA, Z190, Box 128, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, report of the Quarterly Board Meeting, 1st–2nd April 1863’, Melbourne, 1863, p. 5.

134 OOA, ‘IOOF, MU, Grand Annual Moveable Committee, 12th–16th June 1905’, Manchester, 1905, pp. 27–9.

135 See, for example, OOA, ‘MUQR, April 1889’, p. 49; ‘Oddfellowship in the Colonies’, Oddfellows’ Magazine, May 1903, p. 157; ‘Friendly societies in America’, Oddfellows’ Magazine, September 1904, p. 446; ‘A voice from NSW’, Oddfellows’ Magazine, September 1903, p. 431; ‘Oddfellowship beyond the seas’, Oddfellows’ Magazine, January 1903, p. 24.

136 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, October 1899, p. 365.

137 MacRaild, ‘Networks’, p. 312Google Scholar

Harris, Jose, Private lives, public spirit: a social history of Britain, 1870–1914, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993, pp. 34Google Scholar

138 OOA, Oddfellows’ Magazine, October 1904, p. 446.

139 NBA, Z227, Box 430, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, proceedings of the Grand Annual Moveable Committee, 15th–18th March, 1898’, Melbourne, 1898, p. 9.

140 Gosden, Friendly societies, p. 219Google Scholar

141 NBA, Z227, Box430, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, proceedings of the Grand Annual Moveable Committee 20th–22nd March 1894’, Melbourne, 1896, pp. 8–9.

142 OOA, ‘MUQR, January 1867’, p. 11.

143 OOA, ‘MUQR, January 1879’, p. 23.

144 Cordery, Simon, ‘Fraternal orders in the US’, in van der Linden, Social security mutualism, p. 85Google Scholar

145 Blainey, Geoffrey, Odd fellows: a history of IOOF in Australia, Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1991, pp. 1031Google Scholar

146 Southall, ‘British artisan unions’, pp. 163–182Google Scholar

147 Ibid., p. 167–9.

148 Cordery, British friendly societies, p. 104Google Scholar

149 Weinbren, Oddfellows, p. 31Google Scholar

150 Southall, ‘British artisan unions’, p. 176Google Scholar

151 Gosden, Self-help, pp. 44–45Google Scholar

152 OOA, ‘IOOF, MU, Grand Annual Moveable Committee, 1st–5th June, 1903’, Manchester, 1903, pp. 2–21.

153 OOA, ‘IOOF, MU, Grand Annual Moveable Committee 10th–15th June 1878’, Manchester, 1878, p. 40.

154 NBA, Z262, Box 373, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, report of the Quarterly Board Meeting 27th March 1861’, Melbourne, 1861, p. 3.

155 NBA, Z262, Box 373, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, report of the Quarterly Board Meeting 14th–16h March 1882, Melbourne, 1882, p. 8.

156 OOA, ‘IOOF, MU, Grand Annual Moveable Committee, 3rd–7th June 1879’, p. 38, letter from Edwin Bamuder, Corresponding Secretary of the Wellington District, 28 December 1878.

157 Ibid.

158 NBA, Z190, Box 128, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, report of the Quarterly Board Meeting, 2nd–3rd January 1867’, Melbourne, 1867, p. 5.

159 NBA, Z262, Box 373, ‘MUIOOF in Victoria, proceedings of the Grand Annual Moveable Committee, March 15th–17th 1877’, Melbourne, 1877, p. 10.

160 OOA, ‘MUQR, July 1902’, p. 79.

161 NBA, Z262, Box 373, ‘Report of the Quarterly Committee of the Victoria IOOF, MU, 2nd July 1890’, Melbourne, 1890, p. 17.

162 Belich, Replenishing the earth, pp. 548–560Google Scholar

163 Beito, David T., ‘“This enormous army”: the mutual aid tradition of American fraternal societies before the twentieth century’, Social Philosophy and Policy, 14, 2, 1997, p. 21Google Scholar

164 Ibid., pp. 34–5.

165 Emery, J. C. H., ‘From defining characteristic to vitiation of principle’, Social Science History, 30, 4, pp. 491492Google Scholar

166 Nicholas Broten, ‘From sickness to death: the financial viability of the English friendly societies and coming of the Old Age Pensions Act, 1875–1908’, London School of Economics and Political Science, Economic History Working Papers, 135/10, 2010, pp. 20–4; Arthur Downing, ‘“The Friendly Planet”: friendly societies in the English-speaking world and Australia in the long nineteenth century’, MPhil thesis, University of Oxford, 2012, pp. 89–94.

167 OOA, ‘IOOF, MU, Grand Annual Moveable Committee, 12th–16th June 1905’, Manchester, 1905, p. 28.