Henry Hetherington - Organisations With Which Hetherington Was Involved

Organisations With Which Hetherington Was Involved

  • London Co-operative and Economical Society (1821)
  • London Mechanics' Institution (now Birkbeck, University of London) (1823-) (Hetherington was on the Committee in 1824)
  • First London Co-operative Trading Association (1824–29) (Became BAPCK)
  • Civil and Religious Liberty Association (1827/28-29) (Became RRA)
  • British Association for Promoting Co-operative Knowledge (May 1829-30)
  • Radical Reform Association (1829) (Hetherington was Secretary of the Association)
  • First Middlesex Society (1930)
  • Metropolitan Political Union (1830)
  • London Working Men's Association (1830-)
  • National Union of the Working Classes (Late 1830-)
  • Metropolitan Trades Union (March 1831)
  • Marylebone Radical Association (1834–36)
  • Society for the Protection of Booksellers (April 1834)
  • Association of Working Men to Procure a Cheap and Honest Press (April 1836)
  • Working Men's Association (July 1836-39)
  • Universal Suffrage Club (September 1836)
  • Metropolitan Charter Union (March 1840)
  • Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Manchester Unity (1840)
  • National Charter Association (November 1841-46)
  • Metropolitan Parliamentary Reform Association (May 1842-49)
  • Literary and Scientific Institution, at John Street, Fitzroy Square, Branch a1 (Mid/Late 1840s)
  • Anti-Persecution Union (September 1843-44)
  • Democratic Committee for Poland's Regeneration (March 1846)
  • People's International League (April 1847)
  • Democratic Committee of Observation on the French Revolution (Early 1848)
  • People's Charter Union (March 1848)
  • League of Social Progress (November 1848)
  • Newspaper Stamp Abolition Committee (March 1849-)

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    No man is an island entire of itself; every man is a piece of the Continent, a part of the main.... Any man’s death diminishes me because I am involved in Mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.
    John Donne (c. 1572–1631)