Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • April 10, 1875
  • Page 5
  • GREAT QUEEN STREET.
Current:

The Freemason's Chronicle, April 10, 1875: Page 5

  • Back to The Freemason's Chronicle, April 10, 1875
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article GREAT QUEEN STREET. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article GREAT QUEEN STREET. Page 2 of 2
    Article CAGLIOSTRO. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 5

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

Great Queen Street.

were finished from , it is said , the designs of Inigo Jones and his pupil Webbe . According to an authority quoted by the author of " Haunted London , " we are told , " Inigo Jones built Queen Street , at the cost of the Jesuits , designing it for a Square , and leaving in the middle , a niche for

the Statue of Queen Henrietta . ' The stately and magnificent houses' begun on the north side , near Little Queen Street , were not continued . There were flenrs-de-lnce placed on the walls in honour of the Queen . " In the time of the Stuarts it was , according to Leigh Hunt , " one of the

grandest and most fashionable parts of the town . The famous Lord Herbert of Cherbury died there . Lord Bristol had a house in it , as also did Lord Chancellor Finch , and the Conway and Paulet families . " Mr . Parton tells us in his " History of St . Giles , " " the appropriation of each

house to its respective inhabitant is , however , a matter of uncertainty , no cine whatever being to be found among our parish records , nor , indeed , any mention made of them to guide our inquiries . " Evelyn speaks of George Digby , second Earl of Bristol , as having lived in the Street ,

and among other occupants are included the Duke of Buckingham and the Earl of Lauderdale—two of tbe five members of the celebrated "Cabal" ministry—Waller the poet , Colonel Titus , author of "Killing no Murder " which so disturbed the stout heart of Cromwell .

The Earl of Rochford lived in it in 1733 , and about the same time Lady Dinely Goodyer and Mrs . Kitty Clive , the actress . Sir Martin Ffolkes , the first President of the Royal Society of Antiquaries , was born in it in 1690 . The Gordon riots in 1780 may be said to have had their rise

here , the first meeting in support of Lord George Gordon ' s petition to Parliament having been held in Coachmakers ' Hall on 29 th May of that year . On 6 th June the house of Mr . Justice Cox in Great Queen-street was burnt by the mob . No . 51 is now the office of Messrs . Kelly and Co .

the well-known printers and publishers of the London Directory . At No . 52 lived Sir Robert Strange , the eminent historical engraver and adherent of the young pretender , and here he died in 1792 . John Opie , the Academician , also resided here , as did James Hoole , the

translator of Tasso , at No . 56 , where he died 1813 ; Sheridan , and Worlidge , an artist of ability . On 1 st May 1775 , the foundation stone of Freemasons' Hall—the first money expended on which was raised by a Tontine—was laid by

the Grand Master , Lord Petre , the Architect being Thomas Sandby , one of the original members of the Royal Academy . On a plate deposited within the foundation stone is the following inscription . — -See Smith ' s Use and Abuse of Freemasonry , or Preston ' s Illustrations of Masonry .

ANNO REGNI GEOKGII TEETH QUINDECDIO , SATJUTIS HUMAN . * : MDCCLXXV . MENSIS MAII DIE PRIMO . HUNC PRIMUM LAPIDEM AUL . U LATOMORUM ( ANGLICE , FKEE AND ACCEPTED MASONS ) POSUIT HoNOKAttssna-s Eon . EDV . DOM . PETRE , BAUD PETRE DE WHITTLE ,

SUMMUS LATOMORUM ANGLI . I : MAGISTER ; ASSIDENTIBUS VIRO ORNATISSIMO , ROWLANDO HOLT , ARMIGERO , SUMMI MAGISTRI DEPUTATO ; VIRIS O RNATISSIMIS JOII . HATCH ET HEN . DAGGB

SUnilS GUBERNATORlBUS J PLENOQUE CORAM FRATRUM CONCURSV . QUO ETIAM TEMPORE EEGUM , PRINCTPUMQUE FAVORE STUDIOQUE SUSTENTATUM MAXIJIOS PER EUKOPAM IIONORES OCCUPAVEHAT

NOMEN LATOMORUM . Cur INSUPEK NOMINI SUMMUM ANGLLE CONVENTUM PR . EESSE FECERAT UN 1 VEUSA FRATRUM PER 0 R 1 SEM MULTITUDO . E C ( ELO DESCENDIT

Gnothi Seauton . THO . SANDBY , ARM . ARCIUTECTUR . E PROF . E . A . A . ARCHITECTUS . On the 23 rd May of the following year , this Hall was dedicated by the same Grand Master , Lord Petre , in the

presence of a vast concourse of brethren . Freemasons Tavern , known for the number and importance of the public meetings held within it , was built in 1786 , by William Ty ler . Considerable alterations and enlargements have been made since this period , but into these we need

hardly enter . On or near the spot now occupied by the Wesleyan Chapel , east of the Tavern , David Garrick was married , by his friend the celebrated Dr . Franklin , to " Eva

Maria Violette , ot ot . James s , Westminster , a celebrated dancer . " Among theatrical celebrities living in this street , may be mentioned Miss Pope and Lewis the comedian , while at No , 74 , now part of Messrs . Wyman and Sops

Great Queen Street.

Printing Office , died , in 1826 , Edward Prescott Holdway Knight , the comedian , commonly called " Little Knight . " About this time , at Messrs . Wyman ' s establishment ( then Messrs . Cox and Co . ' s ) , Leman Blanchard was a printer ' s reader , working side by side with Douglas Jerrold , tbe

Editor of La Belle Assemblee . The press at which Franklin worked , as a journeyman pressman , in London , in the years 1723-6 , formerly stood in Messrs . Wyman ' s office for many

years . It is now in America , having first passed into the hands of Messrs . Harrild and Sons , who parted with it to a Mr . J . V . Murray of New York , on condition that he would secure for them in return a donation to the Printers '

Pension Society of London . The condition was so liberally fulfilled that the Committee of the Printers ' Pension Society were able to initiate the " Franklin Pension , " worth ten guineas per annum . At Messrs . Wyman ' s was done all the printing relating to our possessions in the East , for the East India Company .

Thus much as regards the past history of this thoroughfare , in which are situated the Hall of the Grand Lodge of England , and the Head Quarters of our various Masonic Charities .

Cagliostro.

CAGLIOSTRO .

APROPOS of a recent article of ours , a frequent correspondent has forwarded the following translation of part of a correspondence between the rank impostor Cagliostro , as Grand Master of the Egyptian Rite , and the Lodge of Triumpbant Wisdom , at Lyons , constituted by

him , of the one part , and the Fraternal Convention , summoned at Paris 15 th February 1785 by the Philaletheans , of the other . The whole correspondence is , as we are aware , far too long to be reproduced in these columns . We give ,

therefore , only the letters written by Cagliostro himself and the Lodge of Triumphant Wisdom . Those of our readers who are curious as to the history of this man will find the original in Acta Latomorum , Vol . II ., pp . 92-127 .

MANIFESTO or CAGLIOSTRO , 1 st oi ? THE YEAR 5555 . ( 1 st MARCH 1785 ) . The unknown Grand Master of the true Freemasonry hath turned his regards on the Philaletheans , and the two invitations they have

issued amongst the body of their Craft . Touched with their piety , profoundly moved by the sincere avowal of their wishes , he deigns to extend the hand of fellowship towards them , and is prepared to shed a ray of light on the darkness of their Temple . The existence of an

only God , who forms tho groundwork of their faith , tho native dignity of man , his power and his destiny , —in a word , everything which they believe , the unknown Grand Master is willing to make manifest to them . It will be by acts and deeds , and the evidence of

their senses , that they will know God , man , and the spiritual intermediaries created between the one and the other—a knowledge , of which the true Masonry offers the symbols , and to the attainment of which it indicates the path . Let , then , tho Philaletheans embrace

the dogmas of this true Masonry ; let them submit themselves to the guidance of its supreme chief , and adopt its constitutions . But first , the sanctuary must be purified , and the Philaletheans must learn that

light can descend only into the Temple of Faith , not into the Temple of Doubt . Let them devote to the flames that useless mass of archives they have accumulated . It is only on the ruins of the tower of shame that the Temple of Truth will arise .

LETTER FROM THE LODGE or TRIUMPHANT WISDOM , DATED 6 rn APRIL 1785 . To the glory of the Great God . In the name and by the power of the Grand Master of the Order . The Lodge of Triumphant Wisdom ,

Mother-Lodge of the Egyptian ltite , Orient of Lyons , to the Lodge of United Friends , Orient of Paris , greeting , strength , and happiness . Very dear Brethren , —There arc Masons , on whom you have never cast your eyes , whose fraternal voice dares to say to you , " Search no

more . " Wo have seen unchangeable truth seated amidst the rnins of doubt and of systems . You will see it , very dear Brethren , descend iuto your Lodge the instant you abandon to the fool who builds on the sand those numerous materials which possess no value , except

iu the motive which induced yon to collect them . Ah ! happy Philaletheans , bless the day yon attracted the kindly notice of our Master , when he addressed to you tho words of joy and comfort contained in tho writing herewith we send yon in his behalf . Ilia

goodness opens to yon the road that leads to knowledge . To-day men full of hopes and desires ; to-morrow you will have become men of knowledge , and satisfied . Do you , dear Brethren , conform to the ruly . s . which the unknown chief of tho true Masonry has ordaiued for

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1875-04-10, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_10041875/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE INSTALLATION OF H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES. Article 1
THE GIRLS' AND BOYS' SCHOOLS. Article 1
TYPES OF MASONIC CHARACTER. Article 2
EAST, WEST AND SOUTH. Article 3
GREAT QUEEN STREET. Article 4
CAGLIOSTRO. Article 5
SONG. Article 6
REVIEWS. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
HONOUR ITS OWN REWARD. Article 7
THE THEATRES, &c. Article 8
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 8
OUR WEEKLY INTELLIGENCE. Article 8
MONEY MARKET AND CITY NEWS. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 12
THE DRAMA. Article 14
RAILWAY TRAFFIC RETURNS. 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 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
Untitled Ad 16
Page 1

Page 1

3 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

3 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

3 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

3 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

3 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

3 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

3 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

7 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

2 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

2 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

3 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

3 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

2 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

4 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

7 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

19 Articles
Page 5

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

Great Queen Street.

were finished from , it is said , the designs of Inigo Jones and his pupil Webbe . According to an authority quoted by the author of " Haunted London , " we are told , " Inigo Jones built Queen Street , at the cost of the Jesuits , designing it for a Square , and leaving in the middle , a niche for

the Statue of Queen Henrietta . ' The stately and magnificent houses' begun on the north side , near Little Queen Street , were not continued . There were flenrs-de-lnce placed on the walls in honour of the Queen . " In the time of the Stuarts it was , according to Leigh Hunt , " one of the

grandest and most fashionable parts of the town . The famous Lord Herbert of Cherbury died there . Lord Bristol had a house in it , as also did Lord Chancellor Finch , and the Conway and Paulet families . " Mr . Parton tells us in his " History of St . Giles , " " the appropriation of each

house to its respective inhabitant is , however , a matter of uncertainty , no cine whatever being to be found among our parish records , nor , indeed , any mention made of them to guide our inquiries . " Evelyn speaks of George Digby , second Earl of Bristol , as having lived in the Street ,

and among other occupants are included the Duke of Buckingham and the Earl of Lauderdale—two of tbe five members of the celebrated "Cabal" ministry—Waller the poet , Colonel Titus , author of "Killing no Murder " which so disturbed the stout heart of Cromwell .

The Earl of Rochford lived in it in 1733 , and about the same time Lady Dinely Goodyer and Mrs . Kitty Clive , the actress . Sir Martin Ffolkes , the first President of the Royal Society of Antiquaries , was born in it in 1690 . The Gordon riots in 1780 may be said to have had their rise

here , the first meeting in support of Lord George Gordon ' s petition to Parliament having been held in Coachmakers ' Hall on 29 th May of that year . On 6 th June the house of Mr . Justice Cox in Great Queen-street was burnt by the mob . No . 51 is now the office of Messrs . Kelly and Co .

the well-known printers and publishers of the London Directory . At No . 52 lived Sir Robert Strange , the eminent historical engraver and adherent of the young pretender , and here he died in 1792 . John Opie , the Academician , also resided here , as did James Hoole , the

translator of Tasso , at No . 56 , where he died 1813 ; Sheridan , and Worlidge , an artist of ability . On 1 st May 1775 , the foundation stone of Freemasons' Hall—the first money expended on which was raised by a Tontine—was laid by

the Grand Master , Lord Petre , the Architect being Thomas Sandby , one of the original members of the Royal Academy . On a plate deposited within the foundation stone is the following inscription . — -See Smith ' s Use and Abuse of Freemasonry , or Preston ' s Illustrations of Masonry .

ANNO REGNI GEOKGII TEETH QUINDECDIO , SATJUTIS HUMAN . * : MDCCLXXV . MENSIS MAII DIE PRIMO . HUNC PRIMUM LAPIDEM AUL . U LATOMORUM ( ANGLICE , FKEE AND ACCEPTED MASONS ) POSUIT HoNOKAttssna-s Eon . EDV . DOM . PETRE , BAUD PETRE DE WHITTLE ,

SUMMUS LATOMORUM ANGLI . I : MAGISTER ; ASSIDENTIBUS VIRO ORNATISSIMO , ROWLANDO HOLT , ARMIGERO , SUMMI MAGISTRI DEPUTATO ; VIRIS O RNATISSIMIS JOII . HATCH ET HEN . DAGGB

SUnilS GUBERNATORlBUS J PLENOQUE CORAM FRATRUM CONCURSV . QUO ETIAM TEMPORE EEGUM , PRINCTPUMQUE FAVORE STUDIOQUE SUSTENTATUM MAXIJIOS PER EUKOPAM IIONORES OCCUPAVEHAT

NOMEN LATOMORUM . Cur INSUPEK NOMINI SUMMUM ANGLLE CONVENTUM PR . EESSE FECERAT UN 1 VEUSA FRATRUM PER 0 R 1 SEM MULTITUDO . E C ( ELO DESCENDIT

Gnothi Seauton . THO . SANDBY , ARM . ARCIUTECTUR . E PROF . E . A . A . ARCHITECTUS . On the 23 rd May of the following year , this Hall was dedicated by the same Grand Master , Lord Petre , in the

presence of a vast concourse of brethren . Freemasons Tavern , known for the number and importance of the public meetings held within it , was built in 1786 , by William Ty ler . Considerable alterations and enlargements have been made since this period , but into these we need

hardly enter . On or near the spot now occupied by the Wesleyan Chapel , east of the Tavern , David Garrick was married , by his friend the celebrated Dr . Franklin , to " Eva

Maria Violette , ot ot . James s , Westminster , a celebrated dancer . " Among theatrical celebrities living in this street , may be mentioned Miss Pope and Lewis the comedian , while at No , 74 , now part of Messrs . Wyman and Sops

Great Queen Street.

Printing Office , died , in 1826 , Edward Prescott Holdway Knight , the comedian , commonly called " Little Knight . " About this time , at Messrs . Wyman ' s establishment ( then Messrs . Cox and Co . ' s ) , Leman Blanchard was a printer ' s reader , working side by side with Douglas Jerrold , tbe

Editor of La Belle Assemblee . The press at which Franklin worked , as a journeyman pressman , in London , in the years 1723-6 , formerly stood in Messrs . Wyman ' s office for many

years . It is now in America , having first passed into the hands of Messrs . Harrild and Sons , who parted with it to a Mr . J . V . Murray of New York , on condition that he would secure for them in return a donation to the Printers '

Pension Society of London . The condition was so liberally fulfilled that the Committee of the Printers ' Pension Society were able to initiate the " Franklin Pension , " worth ten guineas per annum . At Messrs . Wyman ' s was done all the printing relating to our possessions in the East , for the East India Company .

Thus much as regards the past history of this thoroughfare , in which are situated the Hall of the Grand Lodge of England , and the Head Quarters of our various Masonic Charities .

Cagliostro.

CAGLIOSTRO .

APROPOS of a recent article of ours , a frequent correspondent has forwarded the following translation of part of a correspondence between the rank impostor Cagliostro , as Grand Master of the Egyptian Rite , and the Lodge of Triumpbant Wisdom , at Lyons , constituted by

him , of the one part , and the Fraternal Convention , summoned at Paris 15 th February 1785 by the Philaletheans , of the other . The whole correspondence is , as we are aware , far too long to be reproduced in these columns . We give ,

therefore , only the letters written by Cagliostro himself and the Lodge of Triumphant Wisdom . Those of our readers who are curious as to the history of this man will find the original in Acta Latomorum , Vol . II ., pp . 92-127 .

MANIFESTO or CAGLIOSTRO , 1 st oi ? THE YEAR 5555 . ( 1 st MARCH 1785 ) . The unknown Grand Master of the true Freemasonry hath turned his regards on the Philaletheans , and the two invitations they have

issued amongst the body of their Craft . Touched with their piety , profoundly moved by the sincere avowal of their wishes , he deigns to extend the hand of fellowship towards them , and is prepared to shed a ray of light on the darkness of their Temple . The existence of an

only God , who forms tho groundwork of their faith , tho native dignity of man , his power and his destiny , —in a word , everything which they believe , the unknown Grand Master is willing to make manifest to them . It will be by acts and deeds , and the evidence of

their senses , that they will know God , man , and the spiritual intermediaries created between the one and the other—a knowledge , of which the true Masonry offers the symbols , and to the attainment of which it indicates the path . Let , then , tho Philaletheans embrace

the dogmas of this true Masonry ; let them submit themselves to the guidance of its supreme chief , and adopt its constitutions . But first , the sanctuary must be purified , and the Philaletheans must learn that

light can descend only into the Temple of Faith , not into the Temple of Doubt . Let them devote to the flames that useless mass of archives they have accumulated . It is only on the ruins of the tower of shame that the Temple of Truth will arise .

LETTER FROM THE LODGE or TRIUMPHANT WISDOM , DATED 6 rn APRIL 1785 . To the glory of the Great God . In the name and by the power of the Grand Master of the Order . The Lodge of Triumphant Wisdom ,

Mother-Lodge of the Egyptian ltite , Orient of Lyons , to the Lodge of United Friends , Orient of Paris , greeting , strength , and happiness . Very dear Brethren , —There arc Masons , on whom you have never cast your eyes , whose fraternal voice dares to say to you , " Search no

more . " Wo have seen unchangeable truth seated amidst the rnins of doubt and of systems . You will see it , very dear Brethren , descend iuto your Lodge the instant you abandon to the fool who builds on the sand those numerous materials which possess no value , except

iu the motive which induced yon to collect them . Ah ! happy Philaletheans , bless the day yon attracted the kindly notice of our Master , when he addressed to you tho words of joy and comfort contained in tho writing herewith we send yon in his behalf . Ilia

goodness opens to yon the road that leads to knowledge . To-day men full of hopes and desires ; to-morrow you will have become men of knowledge , and satisfied . Do you , dear Brethren , conform to the ruly . s . which the unknown chief of tho true Masonry has ordaiued for

  • 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