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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1795
  • Page 65
  • MONTHLY CHRONICLE.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Dec. 1, 1795: Page 65

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    Article MONTHLY CHRONICLE. ← Page 3 of 6 →
Page 65

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Monthly Chronicle.

A dreadful fire broke out in the ioft of Mr . Douglas , sail-maker , in Southsidestreet , Plymouth , on Wednesday last , which communicating to the houses of two other sail-makers , raged with such fury as to have consumed property to the amount of 30 , 000 ! . before it was extinguished . 'Mr . Bessel , who was Assistant Commissary of Stores in the Duke of York ' s army , after being mulcted in different fines . of which he had defrauded Government , is sentenced , that from his scandalous ancl infamous conduct he is unworthy to

remain in his Majesty ' s service , ancl is therefore to be cashiered with every mark of ignominy and disgrace . The metropolis is going to be improved by two of the most magnificent bridges in the world ; the one near the Savoy , in the Strand ; the . other the re-building of London bridge : they are in length to be the whole of the original water-way , with large arches , and much wider on the surface than Westminster bridge . The Editor of the new Manchester paper informs us , that a Thinking Club ( or . true constitutional principles J is established in that townthe president cf which is

, deaf and dumb . For every monosyllable spoken , a penny is forfeited by the offender ; and for a polysyllable , two-pence . OFFICIAL MISTAKE . —Dispatches intended for Genera ! Doyle were sent to Col . Craig ; ancl the dispatches intended for Colonel Craig , to General Doyle 1 By this mistake , Colonel Craig was ordered to evacuate the Cape of Good Hope , and General Doyle is ordered to strengthen himself by every possible means in Isle

Dieu . VEGETATION . —Three hundred and thirty potatoes were dug up in a garden of Mr . Hazard , in the upper road near Bath , the produce of one single reel-nosed kidney potatoe . A single turnip , weighing twenty-seven pounds , without the top or root , was dug up in the garden of Thomas Kemp , Esq . of Coneyboroagh , near Lewes . At a meeting of the Bath Agricultural Society two potatoes were produced , weighing 51 b . 3 qrs . They were from shoots

Captain Manners , in the merchant service , residing at Ratcliffe-cvoss , brought an action against Dr . Pitcairn for criminal conversation with his wife , Mrs . Manners . The cause was tried on Friday before Lord Keiiyon , when it appearing that the Captain had a view rather to the Doctor ' s purse , than the reparation of his own honour , a verdict went for the defendant . Next day , in the same ; Court , and before the same Judge , Mr . Houldilch , coachmakcr , of Long-Acre , obtained a verdict , with one thousand pounds damages , against Mr . Goodhew , the distillerof Deptfordfor criminal conversation with Mrs . Houlditcb .

, , To the relation of these immoralities , as destructive to the parties themselves as pernicious examples to society , we have to acid another instance likely soon to come before the Judges of the Ecclesiastical Court . The gallant is the son of an eminent coachmaker ; the frail fair one mother of four children , and wife of a respectable man of business , who was a particular friend and school-fellow . of the seducer . In consequence of the discovery , the spark has taken a Continental ' trip , but did not lead her with him .

NAVAL COURAGE . Extract of a tetter from an Officer 0 : 1 board the BRITANNIA , Admiral Hatbam's Jag-ship , ir . the Mediterranean . " The spirited and gallant conduct of Lieutenant W . Walker , who command * the Rose hired armed cutter , attached to this fleet , has for some time been the subject of general commendation . He was making his passage from Leghorn to Bastia with money on boardwhenin the morning of the ' 28 th of Septemberat

; , , half past four o'clock , befell in with three small Republican cruisers , fitted out on purpose to intercept him . Finding himself in the midst of them , he , with a . promptitude and resolution that do him high credit , bore clown on the largest ami most leeward , ran the cutters bowsprit against her mizen-mast , and carried i " away , with part of the stern , raking her ' as he passed ; then shot a-head and tacked , in doing which the cutter ' s main boom carried away the enemy ' s fore-yard , and her broad-side set her fore-sail and mizen on fire ; she then got under her

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-12-01, Page 65” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01121795/page/65/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON : Article 1
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 4
WITH A PORTRAIT. Article 5
Untitled Article 5
COVETOUSNESS; A VISION. Article 6
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 11
TO THE EDITOR. Article 17
Untitled Article 17
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC, Article 18
ACCOUNT OF THE SYBARITES. FROM ATHENAEUS. Article 19
COTYS. Article 19
ALCIBIADES. Article 20
FROM THE SAME. Article 22
ON THE ORIGIN OF COCK-FIGHTING. Article 22
FROM THE SAME. Article 22
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 24
A BILL OF FARE FOR FIFTY PEOPLE OF THE COMPANY OF SALTERS, A. D. 1506. Article 24
APOPLEXY. Article 24
THE STAGE. Article 25
ACCOUNT OF THE STOCKS OR PUBLIC FUNDS OF THIS KINGDOM. Article 26
BAD EFFECTS OF SPIRITOUS LIQUORS, ESPECIALLY AMONG THE LOWER RANKS. Article 29
TO THE EDITOR. ON THE EFFECTS OF TRAGEDY. Article 31
AN EXPLANATION OF THE FACULTYE OF ABRAC. Article 34
DETACHED SENTIMENTS. Article 35
CHARACTER OF GAVIN WILSON, WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF HIS INVENTIONS, Article 36
THOUGHTS ON QUACKS OF ALL DENOMINATIONS. Article 41
REFLECTIONS ON THE UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION OF TALENTS TO MANKIND. Article 43
ANECOTE OF SIR ROBERT WALPOLE. Article 45
OPINION OF THE THE GREAT JUDGE COKE, UPON THE ACT AGAINST FREEMASONS. Article 46
THE OPINION. Article 46
A FRAGMENT. Article 47
ANOTHER. Article 47
REMARKS ON THE IMITATIVE POWER OF INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC. Article 48
SKETCH OF THE CHARACTER OF Dr. ADAM SMITH. Article 50
ANECDOTE OF THE LATE EARL OF LAUDERDALE. Article 52
POETRY. Article 53
IMPOSSIBILITIES. Article 54
SIR PHILIP SYDNEY'S EPITAPH. Article 54
EPITAPH under Dr. JOHNSON's STATUE in St. PAUL's. Article 54
ON PLUCKING A ROSE INTENDED FOR A YOUNG LADY. Article 55
THE SOLDIER's PARTING; OR, JEMMY AND LUCY, A SONG. Article 56
EPITAPH on Dr. SACHEVEREL, and SALLY SALISBURY. Article 56
DESCRIPTION OF A PARISH WORKHOUSE. Article 57
TO MY LOVELY FRIEND. Article 57
Untitled Article 58
Untitled Article 58
LOVE WITHOUT SPIRIT. Article 58
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 59
EPILOGUE Article 59
THE ARTS. Article 60
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 61
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 62
UNTO THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY, Article 63
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 63
PROMOTIONS. Article 69
BANKRUPTS. Article 70
INDEX TO THE FIFTH VOLUME. Article 71
Untitled Article 74
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Page 65

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

Monthly Chronicle.

A dreadful fire broke out in the ioft of Mr . Douglas , sail-maker , in Southsidestreet , Plymouth , on Wednesday last , which communicating to the houses of two other sail-makers , raged with such fury as to have consumed property to the amount of 30 , 000 ! . before it was extinguished . 'Mr . Bessel , who was Assistant Commissary of Stores in the Duke of York ' s army , after being mulcted in different fines . of which he had defrauded Government , is sentenced , that from his scandalous ancl infamous conduct he is unworthy to

remain in his Majesty ' s service , ancl is therefore to be cashiered with every mark of ignominy and disgrace . The metropolis is going to be improved by two of the most magnificent bridges in the world ; the one near the Savoy , in the Strand ; the . other the re-building of London bridge : they are in length to be the whole of the original water-way , with large arches , and much wider on the surface than Westminster bridge . The Editor of the new Manchester paper informs us , that a Thinking Club ( or . true constitutional principles J is established in that townthe president cf which is

, deaf and dumb . For every monosyllable spoken , a penny is forfeited by the offender ; and for a polysyllable , two-pence . OFFICIAL MISTAKE . —Dispatches intended for Genera ! Doyle were sent to Col . Craig ; ancl the dispatches intended for Colonel Craig , to General Doyle 1 By this mistake , Colonel Craig was ordered to evacuate the Cape of Good Hope , and General Doyle is ordered to strengthen himself by every possible means in Isle

Dieu . VEGETATION . —Three hundred and thirty potatoes were dug up in a garden of Mr . Hazard , in the upper road near Bath , the produce of one single reel-nosed kidney potatoe . A single turnip , weighing twenty-seven pounds , without the top or root , was dug up in the garden of Thomas Kemp , Esq . of Coneyboroagh , near Lewes . At a meeting of the Bath Agricultural Society two potatoes were produced , weighing 51 b . 3 qrs . They were from shoots

Captain Manners , in the merchant service , residing at Ratcliffe-cvoss , brought an action against Dr . Pitcairn for criminal conversation with his wife , Mrs . Manners . The cause was tried on Friday before Lord Keiiyon , when it appearing that the Captain had a view rather to the Doctor ' s purse , than the reparation of his own honour , a verdict went for the defendant . Next day , in the same ; Court , and before the same Judge , Mr . Houldilch , coachmakcr , of Long-Acre , obtained a verdict , with one thousand pounds damages , against Mr . Goodhew , the distillerof Deptfordfor criminal conversation with Mrs . Houlditcb .

, , To the relation of these immoralities , as destructive to the parties themselves as pernicious examples to society , we have to acid another instance likely soon to come before the Judges of the Ecclesiastical Court . The gallant is the son of an eminent coachmaker ; the frail fair one mother of four children , and wife of a respectable man of business , who was a particular friend and school-fellow . of the seducer . In consequence of the discovery , the spark has taken a Continental ' trip , but did not lead her with him .

NAVAL COURAGE . Extract of a tetter from an Officer 0 : 1 board the BRITANNIA , Admiral Hatbam's Jag-ship , ir . the Mediterranean . " The spirited and gallant conduct of Lieutenant W . Walker , who command * the Rose hired armed cutter , attached to this fleet , has for some time been the subject of general commendation . He was making his passage from Leghorn to Bastia with money on boardwhenin the morning of the ' 28 th of Septemberat

; , , half past four o'clock , befell in with three small Republican cruisers , fitted out on purpose to intercept him . Finding himself in the midst of them , he , with a . promptitude and resolution that do him high credit , bore clown on the largest ami most leeward , ran the cutters bowsprit against her mizen-mast , and carried i " away , with part of the stern , raking her ' as he passed ; then shot a-head and tacked , in doing which the cutter ' s main boom carried away the enemy ' s fore-yard , and her broad-side set her fore-sail and mizen on fire ; she then got under her

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