The Greenfield Co-operative Society. (original) (raw)

FORWORD.

THE accompanying sketch of our Society makes no attempt to record all its doings. Many things are left unrecorded which some of our friends may think ought to have found a place in these pages; and, doubtless, some things are included which others will think might have been left out. The writer�s difficulty has not been to find material, but rather to select what seemed most appropriate. His aim has been to perpetuate in particular the memory of those early workers who gave so freely of their best thought and effort to establish our Society on a firm and lasting basis. How long and arduously they toiled he has tried to portray; how well they succeeded is proved by the Society's existence and position to-day.

Co-operation is a unifying force in a community. Under its beneficent sway all the usual dividing lines of creed and party seem to disappear, and men of all creeds and parties, and of no creed or party in particular, are drawn together by a common interest and work together for the common good.

This truth is well exemplified in the following pages, as those who know personally the leading characters herein portrayed will readily see at a glance themselves.

One of the minute books is lost, and several of the books extant contain but a broken and imperfect record of the doings of the Committee during the periods they are supposed to cover.

It was soon discovered that no complete tables of sales and membership, or lists of Committee-men and officials were possible. Those given at the end of this sketch are as near to fact as patient and careful research can make them. Not every Society is fortunate enough to have eleven of its originators alive at its Jubilee. What a contrast the Greenfield of to-day must be to the Greenfield of 1856 as it lives in their memories! Let us be thankful to the Great Giver of all good for all the blessings that have come to the dwellers in our "Beautiful Greenfield" through our Society and other beneficent agencies, and turn our faces hopefully to the future, confident that a movement that has accomplished so much in the past will accomplish much more in the near future for the uplifting of our fellow-men.

The writer�s thanks are due to Mr. Dan Holden, Manager, Mr. Thomas Worth, and members of the General and Educational Committees for willing help in various ways in the work of compiling these pages; also to Mr. W. S. Hallsworth, the Jubilee Secretary, and to my son, Mr. Edwin Lawton, for assistance in preparing copy for the press, and in revision of proofs.

Special thanks are also tendered to the families of our notable friends who have readily responded to our requests for photos, and supplied other matter of great use to the writer in his work.

DAVID LAWTON.

Spring Grove, May, 1906.

Our President Mr. Sydney Smith