Although industry was only weakly developed, a socialist club was founded in 1848.
A huge crowd had been turned out by the trade unions and socialist clubs.
In the street, another socialist club was marching along from First Avenue.
Out of resentment from this situation grew radical and socialist political clubs and newspapers.
Melik was ordered to work only with the known anti-socialists, and to sack all those suspected of having affiliated with the socialist clubs.
Beginning in 1881, he and Maiorescu spoke out against the emergence of socialist clubs in Moldavia.
The Manhood Suffrage League was a nineteenth-century ultra-radical and, later, socialist club.
In his anti-Sturdza campaign, Fleva approached the country's breakaway socialist clubs.
In 1903, Kilbom moved to Sandviken where he joined a socialist club.
He gave lectures sponsored by this anti-communist socialist club, and was its nominal leader.