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Article Masonic Obituary. ← Page 3 of 3 Article PROVINCIAL. Page 1 of 14 →
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Masonic Obituary.
secretary at war in Ireland , and afterwards served as bri gadier-general in Gibraltar , Minorca , and Malta . He volunteered his services to Egypt , and accompanied General Hutchinson ( the late Earl of Donoughmore ) in the expedition against Grand Cairo . His services here received the thanks of Parliament , ancl he was in 1804 appointed lieutenant
-governor of Guernsey ; created a baronet in 1805 , with liberty to have supporters to his arms and an additional crest . In April , 1808 , he was appointed lieutenant-general ; in 1812 , K . B . ; in 1815 K . G . G of the Bath ( a vacancy , in which order is caused by his death ) : and in August , 1819 , the brevet of general . It will be only necessary to enumerate the distinctions borne on the colours of Sir John ' iment to
s reg show the nature and extent of his service— « Barossa , Tarifa , Vittoria Nivelle , Orthes , Toulouse , Peninsula , Ava . " By Sir John ' s death the colonelcy of the regiment he so long commanded becomes vacant , as well as the governorshi p of Charlemont Fort . Sir John Doyle was in his seventy-ei ghth year , having been born in 1756 .
Provincial.
PROVINCIAL .
DEWSBURY , June 23 rd . —A very eloquent sermon was this day preached , in the parish church of Dewsbury , before the society of Free and Accepted Masons , by the R . W . G . P . C . the Rev . Dr . Naylor , of Wakefield , from 1 Cor . xiii . 13 : on occasion of the removal of a Lodge from Thornhill to that place . The reverend gentleman very clearly developed the principles upon which the science is founded , and recommendedin the most
, impressive manner , the cultivation of that beautiful code of morals which runs like a rich vein through the entire system of Freemasonry . Upwards of a hundred of the Brethren afterwards dined together , at the White Lion Inn , and spent the afternoon with that harmony and satisfaction which characterizes the fraternity . They separated at an early hour , fully bent on the extension and practice of
the virtues of loyalty , morality , brotherl y love , and benevolence which have ever been the great objects of masonry to inculcate , and of ' its laws to enforce . BIRMINGHAM , June 2 ith . ~ The Brethren of St . Paul ' s Lod-e No SI , held their ANNUAL FESTIVAL , at their Lod ge room , Pump Tavern ' Bull Ring , Birmingham . '
The business of the Lod ge commenced at two o ' clock , and at half-past three , the Brethren , in full masonic costume , partook of an excellent dinner , served up with Mrs . Evans ' s usual skill and good taste , which received , as it deserved , the unqualified approval of every one present
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Masonic Obituary.
secretary at war in Ireland , and afterwards served as bri gadier-general in Gibraltar , Minorca , and Malta . He volunteered his services to Egypt , and accompanied General Hutchinson ( the late Earl of Donoughmore ) in the expedition against Grand Cairo . His services here received the thanks of Parliament , ancl he was in 1804 appointed lieutenant
-governor of Guernsey ; created a baronet in 1805 , with liberty to have supporters to his arms and an additional crest . In April , 1808 , he was appointed lieutenant-general ; in 1812 , K . B . ; in 1815 K . G . G of the Bath ( a vacancy , in which order is caused by his death ) : and in August , 1819 , the brevet of general . It will be only necessary to enumerate the distinctions borne on the colours of Sir John ' iment to
s reg show the nature and extent of his service— « Barossa , Tarifa , Vittoria Nivelle , Orthes , Toulouse , Peninsula , Ava . " By Sir John ' s death the colonelcy of the regiment he so long commanded becomes vacant , as well as the governorshi p of Charlemont Fort . Sir John Doyle was in his seventy-ei ghth year , having been born in 1756 .
Provincial.
PROVINCIAL .
DEWSBURY , June 23 rd . —A very eloquent sermon was this day preached , in the parish church of Dewsbury , before the society of Free and Accepted Masons , by the R . W . G . P . C . the Rev . Dr . Naylor , of Wakefield , from 1 Cor . xiii . 13 : on occasion of the removal of a Lodge from Thornhill to that place . The reverend gentleman very clearly developed the principles upon which the science is founded , and recommendedin the most
, impressive manner , the cultivation of that beautiful code of morals which runs like a rich vein through the entire system of Freemasonry . Upwards of a hundred of the Brethren afterwards dined together , at the White Lion Inn , and spent the afternoon with that harmony and satisfaction which characterizes the fraternity . They separated at an early hour , fully bent on the extension and practice of
the virtues of loyalty , morality , brotherl y love , and benevolence which have ever been the great objects of masonry to inculcate , and of ' its laws to enforce . BIRMINGHAM , June 2 ith . ~ The Brethren of St . Paul ' s Lod-e No SI , held their ANNUAL FESTIVAL , at their Lod ge room , Pump Tavern ' Bull Ring , Birmingham . '
The business of the Lod ge commenced at two o ' clock , and at half-past three , the Brethren , in full masonic costume , partook of an excellent dinner , served up with Mrs . Evans ' s usual skill and good taste , which received , as it deserved , the unqualified approval of every one present