Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • Aug. 3, 1878
  • Page 5
  • LODGE VICTORIA IN BURMAH.
Current:

The Freemason's Chronicle, Aug. 3, 1878: Page 5

  • Back to The Freemason's Chronicle, Aug. 3, 1878
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER OF ROYAL ARCH MASONS OF ENGLAND. Page 1 of 1
    Article CONSECRATION OF THE WEST SMITHFIELD MARK LODGE, No. 223. Page 1 of 1
    Article CORRESPONDENCE. Page 1 of 1
    Article LODGE VICTORIA IN BURMAH. Page 1 of 1
    Article SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN'S CONNECTION WITH FREEMASONRY. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 5

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Supreme Grand Chapter Of Royal Arch Masons Of England.

SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER OF ROYAL ARCH MASONS OF ENGLAND .

A QUARTERLY Convocation of tho Supremo Grand Chapter will bo hold at Freemasons' Hall , London , on Wednesday , the 7 th of August , at seven o'clock in tho evening . The Minutes of the last Quarterly Convocation will be read , and tho report of the Committee of General Purposes ( as follows ) will be submitted to tho Supremo Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Masons of England .

The Committee of General Purposes beg to report that thoy have examined the accounts from tho 16 th April to the 16 th July 1878 , both inclusive , which thoy find to be as follows : —

£ s d £ s d Balance Grand Chapter 204 13 10 Disbursements during „ Unappropriated the quarter - - - 194 19 0 Account - - 219 15 11 Balance 452 1 4 Subsequent Receipts - 425 16 0 „ in Unappropriated Account - - -203 5 5 £ 850 5 9 £ 850 5 9

of which balances there is in the hands of the Grand Treasurer a sum of £ 388 17 s 4 d , and iu tho London and Westminster Bank £ 266 9 s 5 d . . Tho Committeo havo likewise to report that they havo received tho following petitions : —

1 st . From Companions Southwell Georgo Theobald Bourko as Z ., Henry William Townsend as H ., John Lind as J ., and six others for a Chapter to be attached to the United Servico Lodge , No . 1428 , Portsmouth , to bo called "Tho United Servico Chapter , " and to meet at the Freemasons' Hall , Highbury-street , Portsmouth , in the County of Hants .

2 nd . From Companions George Benjamin Wolseley as Z ., Daniel Charles Grose as H ., Jamea Gibbons Smyth as J ., and six others for a Chapter to be attached to tho Rock of Gwalior Lodge , No . 1066 , Morar , Bengal , to bo called " The Star of Gwalior Chapter , " and to meet at Morar , Bengal , in the East Indies .

3 rd . From Companions Thomas Blakeman Brown as Z ., Houry Williams aa H ., James Long as J ., and seven others for a Chapter to be attached to the Marlborough Lodge , No . 1399 , Woodstock , to be called " Tho Marlborough Chapter , " and to meet at the Lodge room , Woodstock , County of Oxford .

4 th . From Companions Charles William Gray aa Z ., Henry Robert Jones as II ., George Phythian as J ., and seven others for a Chapter to be attached to the Wandsworth Lodgo , No . 1014 , Wandsworth , to be called " The Mid-Surrey Chapter , " and to meet at the Surrey Masonio Hall , Camberwell , in the County of Surrey .

5 th . From Companions Robert George Glutton aa Z ., William Alexander Barrett as H ., Herbert Thomas Steward aa J ., and six others for a Chapter to be attached to the St . Peter , Westminster , Lodge , No . 1537 , London , to be called " The St . Peter , Westminster , Chapter , " and to meet at the Freemasons' Hall , Great Queen-street , London .

6 th . From Companions Henry Charles Levander as Z ., George Arthur Rooka as H ., Jamea William Lambert aa J ., and nine othera for a Chapter to be attached to tho St . Thomas ' s Lodge , No . 142 , London , to be called " The St . Thomas ' s Chapter , " and to meet at the City Terminus Hotel , Cannon . street , in the City of London .

The foregoing petitions being in all respects regular , the Committee recommend that the prayers thereof be respectively granted . ( Signed ) JOHN CREATON , President . Freemasona' Hall , London , W . C . 17 th July 1878 .

Consecration Of The West Smithfield Mark Lodge, No. 223.

CONSECRATION OF THE WEST SMITHFIELD MARK LODGE , No . 223 .

ON Friday , the 26 th nit ., this new Mark Lodge was consecrated by Bro . Frederick Binckea , Grand Secretary , assisted by the following brethren , namely , Bros . James Stevens S . W ., S . C . Dibdin as J . W ., and D . M . Dewar aa D . C . Having solemnly consecrated the Lodge , Bro . Binckes made a brief address to those present on the importance of the work which had been that day achieved , and then proceeded

to iustal tho W . M . designate , Bro . Edward Gilbert , in the chair of the Lodge . This done , Bro . Gilbert appointed and invested Bro . Adams as Senior Warden , the appointment of the rest of tho Officers being postponed till the next meeting . Tho W . M . then rose , and in a brief speech , proposed that a vote of thanks be passed to Bro . Bineke . " for the kind and valuable services he had rendered as Consecrating

Officer , and to Bros . Stevens , Dibdin and Dewar for the assistance they had given on tho occasion , and to this was added the further proposition that the thanks bo supplemented by a vote of honorary membershi p . The motion having been carried unanimously , was cordially acknowledged by Bro . Binckes and his worthy coadjutors , and after tho remaining business , including sundry propositions loi

joining , & c , had been disposed of , tho Lodge was closed , and the brethren sat down : to banquet . The usual toasts followed , the most prominent among them being that of the Consecrating Officers , propoaud by the W . M ., and most warmly responded to by Bro . Binckes , and that of the W . M ., Bro . Gilbert , proposed by Bro . Binckes , to Which Bro . Gilbert replied in suitable terms ,

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

We do iioi 7 iold ourselves responsible / or the opinions 0 / our Cor . respondents . We cannot undertake to return rejected communications . All Letters must hear the name and address of the Writer , not necessarily for publication , hut as a guarantee of good faith .

THE LATE CONTEST FOR THE SECRETARYSHIP R . M . I . G .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON s CHRONICLE . DEAR SIK AND BROTHER , — 1 havo gono through the published List of Governors , & o ., of tho Girls' School and the rough estimate you havo given of tho number of voters , though accurate iu the case of Provincial brethren and Lodges , is somewhat in excess in the case

of the London brethren and Lodges . An erroneous estimate , as you very properly remark , in no wise affects tho justice of your argu . mont ; still , thero aro many well-disposed but weak-minded critics , persons who think that criticism and mere senseless fault-finding aro ono aud tho same thine—that an estimate which is not withiu

a score or two of tho right number ia of little or no account . I there , fore send you the numbers of London and Provincial voters respectively , in tho hopo that it may strengthen the cause you are advocating , namely , the substitution of proxy for personal voting . Errors excepted , tho number of London voters—individuals aud Lodges , & c , included—is between 2 , 000 and 2 , 100 ; that of

Provincial ditto 1 , 500 , a few more or less . Hence the former stand to tho latter in the ratio of 4 to 3 ( about ) and about two-fifths of tho former actually polled their votes , and but one-sixth of tho latter . Or to put the matter in another and a stronger light , the total number of voter 3 being between 3 , 500 and 3 , 600 , 30 por cent , of them voted , and of thoso 30 per cent ., between 23 and 23

per cent , wero London , and between 7 and 8 per ceut . Provincial . It may be regarded as a certainty that had tho proxy system of voting been in force , the number of votes polled would havo been largely in exceas of what it was , and though it is in the power of no one to say that . tho result would have been different , seeing that proxy voting ia beneficial in an equal degree to all candidates , still the successful candidate would have been the choice of a majority

of the elective body . I beg it may bo understood that I am not questioning the re 3 u . lt of the recent election . I congratulate Bro . Hedgea on his success , and havo every confidence that his future career will juatify in every respect tho choice of the olectora . My object in writing these few lines ia simply to confirm , aud , if possible , strengthen your views on the superiority of proxy over personal voting . Fraternally yours , COMMUNITY or INTEREST " .

Lodge Victoria In Burmah.

LODGE VICTORIA IN BURMAH .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE , DEAR SIK AND BROTHER , —It ia no doubt a painful duty to censure , as yon havo done so vigorously and with so much justice , any members of the Masonio body , but a duty must none tho less bo fulfilled , because it is painful . For my part , I do not see how it ia

possible for the Master of this distant Lodge , to offer a satisfactory apology for the disobedience , of which he haa been guilty . He has deliberately , though it may be owing to entire ignorance of his dutiea , set at naught the authority of Grand Lodge . He has , ao to speak , been guilty of that most heinous of all offences—contempt of court ,

and in order to be quit of the inevitable consequences of such outrageou 3 conduct , he must yield at once and unhesitatingly to the behests of Grand Lodge . If he refuse to make this , the only reparation in his power , then I say the Board of General Purposes will fail in their duty if they do not exclude him from all further enjoyment of hia Masonio rights and privileges . Fraternally yours , COMMON SENSE ,

Sir Christopher Wren's Connection With Freemasonry.

SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN'S CONNECTION WITH FREEMASONRY .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —May I ask your worthy correspondent , Bro . Jacob Norton , apropos of his letter which appeared in your columns last week , what object can bo gained by running his bead against the assertions and assumptions of early Masonic writers ? Oui bono ? Whom will it advantage , or in what respect and Lo VI-DP 1-

-extent ? The unenlightened Mason may take for " gospel tinth" tho I ' ancies and assertions of tho erudite Dr . Anderson , but there are few brethren of understanding who are not perfeetly well awaro that the Modern and Speculative system of Freemasonry pure and simple dates from 1717 . For some fourscore years and moro pronous to that date , it was partly Operative and partly Speculative , or it least non-Operative , as is shown by the admission into the Lodge of

Edinburgh , JNo . 1 , St . Mary ' s Chapel , of Lord Alexauder , Sir Antony Alexander , and others in 1634 , and that of Elias Ashmole aud Colonel Mainwaring into the Lodge at Warrington , Lancashire , in 1616 . Prior to these dates , we may take it that Freemasonry was wholly Operative . Of course , at this distance of time it is impossible co say what Anderson really meant ' when he wrote his History of the Craft , and furnished a long and circumstantial list of thoso . who

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1878-08-03, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_03081878/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE HOLIDAY SEASON. Article 1
VISIT OF AMERICAN MASONIC PILGRIMS. Article 1
SOC: ROSICR: in Anglia. YORKSHIRE COLLEGE. " ON ELEMENTAL MATTER." Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WEST YORKSHIRE. Article 4
SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER OF ROYAL ARCH MASONS OF ENGLAND. Article 5
CONSECRATION OF THE WEST SMITHFIELD MARK LODGE, No. 223. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 5
LODGE VICTORIA IN BURMAH. Article 5
SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN'S CONNECTION WITH FREEMASONRY. Article 5
A PUZZLE SOLVED. Article 6
REVIEWS. Article 6
UNSEEN. Article 7
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 8
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 10
ROYAL AND SELECT MASTERS. Article 10
BOMBAY. Article 10
BADGE OF A MASON. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
Untitled Article 12
NEW ZEALAND. Article 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Article 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Page 1

Page 1

3 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

2 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

3 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

3 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

5 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

4 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

3 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

6 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

2 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

4 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

2 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

3 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

2 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

6 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

14 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

18 Articles
Page 5

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Supreme Grand Chapter Of Royal Arch Masons Of England.

SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER OF ROYAL ARCH MASONS OF ENGLAND .

A QUARTERLY Convocation of tho Supremo Grand Chapter will bo hold at Freemasons' Hall , London , on Wednesday , the 7 th of August , at seven o'clock in tho evening . The Minutes of the last Quarterly Convocation will be read , and tho report of the Committee of General Purposes ( as follows ) will be submitted to tho Supremo Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Masons of England .

The Committee of General Purposes beg to report that thoy have examined the accounts from tho 16 th April to the 16 th July 1878 , both inclusive , which thoy find to be as follows : —

£ s d £ s d Balance Grand Chapter 204 13 10 Disbursements during „ Unappropriated the quarter - - - 194 19 0 Account - - 219 15 11 Balance 452 1 4 Subsequent Receipts - 425 16 0 „ in Unappropriated Account - - -203 5 5 £ 850 5 9 £ 850 5 9

of which balances there is in the hands of the Grand Treasurer a sum of £ 388 17 s 4 d , and iu tho London and Westminster Bank £ 266 9 s 5 d . . Tho Committeo havo likewise to report that they havo received tho following petitions : —

1 st . From Companions Southwell Georgo Theobald Bourko as Z ., Henry William Townsend as H ., John Lind as J ., and six others for a Chapter to be attached to the United Servico Lodge , No . 1428 , Portsmouth , to bo called "Tho United Servico Chapter , " and to meet at the Freemasons' Hall , Highbury-street , Portsmouth , in the County of Hants .

2 nd . From Companions George Benjamin Wolseley as Z ., Daniel Charles Grose as H ., Jamea Gibbons Smyth as J ., and six others for a Chapter to be attached to tho Rock of Gwalior Lodge , No . 1066 , Morar , Bengal , to bo called " The Star of Gwalior Chapter , " and to meet at Morar , Bengal , in the East Indies .

3 rd . From Companions Thomas Blakeman Brown as Z ., Houry Williams aa H ., James Long as J ., and seven others for a Chapter to be attached to the Marlborough Lodge , No . 1399 , Woodstock , to be called " Tho Marlborough Chapter , " and to meet at the Lodge room , Woodstock , County of Oxford .

4 th . From Companions Charles William Gray aa Z ., Henry Robert Jones as II ., George Phythian as J ., and seven others for a Chapter to be attached to the Wandsworth Lodgo , No . 1014 , Wandsworth , to be called " The Mid-Surrey Chapter , " and to meet at the Surrey Masonio Hall , Camberwell , in the County of Surrey .

5 th . From Companions Robert George Glutton aa Z ., William Alexander Barrett as H ., Herbert Thomas Steward aa J ., and six others for a Chapter to be attached to the St . Peter , Westminster , Lodge , No . 1537 , London , to be called " The St . Peter , Westminster , Chapter , " and to meet at the Freemasons' Hall , Great Queen-street , London .

6 th . From Companions Henry Charles Levander as Z ., George Arthur Rooka as H ., Jamea William Lambert aa J ., and nine othera for a Chapter to be attached to tho St . Thomas ' s Lodge , No . 142 , London , to be called " The St . Thomas ' s Chapter , " and to meet at the City Terminus Hotel , Cannon . street , in the City of London .

The foregoing petitions being in all respects regular , the Committee recommend that the prayers thereof be respectively granted . ( Signed ) JOHN CREATON , President . Freemasona' Hall , London , W . C . 17 th July 1878 .

Consecration Of The West Smithfield Mark Lodge, No. 223.

CONSECRATION OF THE WEST SMITHFIELD MARK LODGE , No . 223 .

ON Friday , the 26 th nit ., this new Mark Lodge was consecrated by Bro . Frederick Binckea , Grand Secretary , assisted by the following brethren , namely , Bros . James Stevens S . W ., S . C . Dibdin as J . W ., and D . M . Dewar aa D . C . Having solemnly consecrated the Lodge , Bro . Binckes made a brief address to those present on the importance of the work which had been that day achieved , and then proceeded

to iustal tho W . M . designate , Bro . Edward Gilbert , in the chair of the Lodge . This done , Bro . Gilbert appointed and invested Bro . Adams as Senior Warden , the appointment of the rest of tho Officers being postponed till the next meeting . Tho W . M . then rose , and in a brief speech , proposed that a vote of thanks be passed to Bro . Bineke . " for the kind and valuable services he had rendered as Consecrating

Officer , and to Bros . Stevens , Dibdin and Dewar for the assistance they had given on tho occasion , and to this was added the further proposition that the thanks bo supplemented by a vote of honorary membershi p . The motion having been carried unanimously , was cordially acknowledged by Bro . Binckes and his worthy coadjutors , and after tho remaining business , including sundry propositions loi

joining , & c , had been disposed of , tho Lodge was closed , and the brethren sat down : to banquet . The usual toasts followed , the most prominent among them being that of the Consecrating Officers , propoaud by the W . M ., and most warmly responded to by Bro . Binckes , and that of the W . M ., Bro . Gilbert , proposed by Bro . Binckes , to Which Bro . Gilbert replied in suitable terms ,

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

We do iioi 7 iold ourselves responsible / or the opinions 0 / our Cor . respondents . We cannot undertake to return rejected communications . All Letters must hear the name and address of the Writer , not necessarily for publication , hut as a guarantee of good faith .

THE LATE CONTEST FOR THE SECRETARYSHIP R . M . I . G .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON s CHRONICLE . DEAR SIK AND BROTHER , — 1 havo gono through the published List of Governors , & o ., of tho Girls' School and the rough estimate you havo given of tho number of voters , though accurate iu the case of Provincial brethren and Lodges , is somewhat in excess in the case

of the London brethren and Lodges . An erroneous estimate , as you very properly remark , in no wise affects tho justice of your argu . mont ; still , thero aro many well-disposed but weak-minded critics , persons who think that criticism and mere senseless fault-finding aro ono aud tho same thine—that an estimate which is not withiu

a score or two of tho right number ia of little or no account . I there , fore send you the numbers of London and Provincial voters respectively , in tho hopo that it may strengthen the cause you are advocating , namely , the substitution of proxy for personal voting . Errors excepted , tho number of London voters—individuals aud Lodges , & c , included—is between 2 , 000 and 2 , 100 ; that of

Provincial ditto 1 , 500 , a few more or less . Hence the former stand to tho latter in the ratio of 4 to 3 ( about ) and about two-fifths of tho former actually polled their votes , and but one-sixth of tho latter . Or to put the matter in another and a stronger light , the total number of voter 3 being between 3 , 500 and 3 , 600 , 30 por cent , of them voted , and of thoso 30 per cent ., between 23 and 23

per cent , wero London , and between 7 and 8 per ceut . Provincial . It may be regarded as a certainty that had tho proxy system of voting been in force , the number of votes polled would havo been largely in exceas of what it was , and though it is in the power of no one to say that . tho result would have been different , seeing that proxy voting ia beneficial in an equal degree to all candidates , still the successful candidate would have been the choice of a majority

of the elective body . I beg it may bo understood that I am not questioning the re 3 u . lt of the recent election . I congratulate Bro . Hedgea on his success , and havo every confidence that his future career will juatify in every respect tho choice of the olectora . My object in writing these few lines ia simply to confirm , aud , if possible , strengthen your views on the superiority of proxy over personal voting . Fraternally yours , COMMUNITY or INTEREST " .

Lodge Victoria In Burmah.

LODGE VICTORIA IN BURMAH .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE , DEAR SIK AND BROTHER , —It ia no doubt a painful duty to censure , as yon havo done so vigorously and with so much justice , any members of the Masonio body , but a duty must none tho less bo fulfilled , because it is painful . For my part , I do not see how it ia

possible for the Master of this distant Lodge , to offer a satisfactory apology for the disobedience , of which he haa been guilty . He has deliberately , though it may be owing to entire ignorance of his dutiea , set at naught the authority of Grand Lodge . He has , ao to speak , been guilty of that most heinous of all offences—contempt of court ,

and in order to be quit of the inevitable consequences of such outrageou 3 conduct , he must yield at once and unhesitatingly to the behests of Grand Lodge . If he refuse to make this , the only reparation in his power , then I say the Board of General Purposes will fail in their duty if they do not exclude him from all further enjoyment of hia Masonio rights and privileges . Fraternally yours , COMMON SENSE ,

Sir Christopher Wren's Connection With Freemasonry.

SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN'S CONNECTION WITH FREEMASONRY .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —May I ask your worthy correspondent , Bro . Jacob Norton , apropos of his letter which appeared in your columns last week , what object can bo gained by running his bead against the assertions and assumptions of early Masonic writers ? Oui bono ? Whom will it advantage , or in what respect and Lo VI-DP 1-

-extent ? The unenlightened Mason may take for " gospel tinth" tho I ' ancies and assertions of tho erudite Dr . Anderson , but there are few brethren of understanding who are not perfeetly well awaro that the Modern and Speculative system of Freemasonry pure and simple dates from 1717 . For some fourscore years and moro pronous to that date , it was partly Operative and partly Speculative , or it least non-Operative , as is shown by the admission into the Lodge of

Edinburgh , JNo . 1 , St . Mary ' s Chapel , of Lord Alexauder , Sir Antony Alexander , and others in 1634 , and that of Elias Ashmole aud Colonel Mainwaring into the Lodge at Warrington , Lancashire , in 1616 . Prior to these dates , we may take it that Freemasonry was wholly Operative . Of course , at this distance of time it is impossible co say what Anderson really meant ' when he wrote his History of the Craft , and furnished a long and circumstantial list of thoso . who

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 4
  • You're on page5
  • 6
  • 16
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy