The Spencean Society or Society of Spencean Philanthropists was founded in 1801 by Thomas Spence and his friends. Much of their activity was clandestine, and following the mass meetings on the Spa Fields in November and December 1816, the Seditious Meetings Act made use of the name Spencean or creation of any society with similar aims a criminal offence. The Act lapsed in July 1818, after which the Spencean Philanthropists immediately met again. The revised Seditious Meetings Act of December 1819 did not name the Spenceans but made all political meetings virtually impossible.
- Founding Meeting, London, March 1st 1801
- Spence's songs [1807?]. The songs are by Spence, Evans, and other Spenceans.
- Essay on Printing, by a Spencean Philanthropist. [Date unknown]. Includes a version of Spence's plan presumably not by Spence himself.
- The Address and Regulations of the Society of Spencean Philanthropists, with an abstract of Spence's Plan, Lonon 1815, Printer Seale and Bates
- The People's Farm [December 1816]
- Christian Policy, the Salvation of the Empire, by Thomas Evans, Librarian to the Society of Spencean Philanthropists, 2nd Ed. [1816]
- Address of the Society of Spencean Philanthropists to All Mankind, [1817?]
- Suppression [March 1817]
- Anniversary meeting [July 1818]
- Christian Policy; or Spence's Plan in Prose and Verse, by a Spencean Philanthropist, London 1818, Printer R. Wedderburn
- A Brief Sketch of the Life of Mr. Thomas Spence, Author of the Spencean System, by Thomas Evans, formerly Librarian to the Spencean Society, Manchester, May 1821