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Article THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. ← Page 3 of 9 →
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review.
the first time brought before the attention of the Masonic public—Dr . Oliver , the historian of the order , became a contributor in this volume and has uninterruptedly written at least one article in every succeeding publication ; the expressed approbation of our labours by so distinguished a Brother is , in our opinion , the brightest jewel in the editorial diadem—The centenary of the Strong Man Lodge , 53 . took place this year—Henry O'Brien , the author of " The Round Towers of Ireland , " became a Mason ; his biograph y appeared as Thurlog h the Milesian—JTlie Masters and Past Masters' Club established—Mr . Piper ' s abuse of Freemasonry exposed .
1835 . The Broadfoot Festival held on the 5 th of March , a most interesting meeting—Motion , by Dr . Crucefix , for the addition of Past Masters to the Boards of General Purposes and Finance , carried by a large majority—The Earl of Durham appointed Deputy Grand Master on the promotion of the Earl of Zetland , as Pro-Grand Master-Tlie Rev . Bro . II . R . Slade enlisted as a contributor—Scenes in America by a native—A most important leading article in relation to the position thlGralKl Master
XT L and the Craft—Article on the Divarication of the JNew lestament—The defence of Socrates—The Dionysian Artificers-Curious Letter from Mr . Pi per—Re-organization of the working of the Royal Arch-Public letters of the M . E . Z . —The Asylum prospers—± iro . Jerrold s address , spoken at the English Opera , by Bro . John Wilson—I he Earl of Durham , Bros . Prescott and Crucefix , trustees : this arrangement altered on account of the objection of the Grand Masterliro . Hogg , the Ettrick Shepherd , initiated-Death of Henry O'Brien —Centenary of the Grand Stewards' Lodge—Treaty of Union—Alliance and Masonic confederation .
1836 . Bro . Husenbeth s lecture—Reply of the late Marquis of Hastings—The last circular of the Masonic Kni ghts Templars of England —Successful removal of the cataracts by Mr . Alexander , and restoration of vision to the Grand Master-Freemasonry in ParliamentrhTw ^ T % by 'J ^ H- R- Slade > commenced and constM % lr 4 ? r £ U , T'al Oration delivered h y Bro - G - W - Turner-L * eDuke of Sussex-Lord John Churchill
nlfni n ; V r ap-?« n \ f y , ^ d Master ' consequence of the Earl of Durham ron"ft / i P SS 5 n E , , 0 a < , "' 1 'y t 0 the Coort of Kussia-Dangerous 2 ° f le , Glrls Sc 10 ° 1 House-Progress of the Asylum-Grand meetings at Colchester , Lincoln , and Northampton-Grand Ball in
ZrTfai , 1 'eaM C , ? l the Grand Master in Grand Lodge-Connexion between speculative and operative Masonry-Envy-Visit of Imn ? nv P y Gra " dMaster ° f Ireland to the Master ' Masons' Lodge of dkns TT m , n 6 S \ 1 Val ° f the Asylum-Captivity among the Indians- flie Black Ball-Masonic Offering to the Grand Master .
sonrl i ' n ^ i 'P f , 1 " 1 ^ , " Poetical Benevolence of Freema-Chrennlni 1 & ^ V "m-Female prejudices and antipathies-VarinnJ fn accounttf the Girls School-De re Non-Masonica-Geneia ^ F **? , ° « ^ Master on his restoration to si ght-Centeni-v nf ^ l r ^ H "" 1 / 1 Mastei-Lord Ramsay ' s address at the Churchlf P '" I h ° ^ % ° lScotland-Installation of Lord Joh n W tLtJ r , maal GnUUl Master for Oxfordshire-The Freema-~ 'keAlu yRUmeW rec ° r mled » y the Grand Lodge of Scotland -WW 8 USP ° r ? l b , \ e Lod ^ es at thc Ca P ° * Good Hope ivmg William the Fourth ; his death-Masonic Biography-Bro
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
The Freemasons' Quarterly Review.
the first time brought before the attention of the Masonic public—Dr . Oliver , the historian of the order , became a contributor in this volume and has uninterruptedly written at least one article in every succeeding publication ; the expressed approbation of our labours by so distinguished a Brother is , in our opinion , the brightest jewel in the editorial diadem—The centenary of the Strong Man Lodge , 53 . took place this year—Henry O'Brien , the author of " The Round Towers of Ireland , " became a Mason ; his biograph y appeared as Thurlog h the Milesian—JTlie Masters and Past Masters' Club established—Mr . Piper ' s abuse of Freemasonry exposed .
1835 . The Broadfoot Festival held on the 5 th of March , a most interesting meeting—Motion , by Dr . Crucefix , for the addition of Past Masters to the Boards of General Purposes and Finance , carried by a large majority—The Earl of Durham appointed Deputy Grand Master on the promotion of the Earl of Zetland , as Pro-Grand Master-Tlie Rev . Bro . II . R . Slade enlisted as a contributor—Scenes in America by a native—A most important leading article in relation to the position thlGralKl Master
XT L and the Craft—Article on the Divarication of the JNew lestament—The defence of Socrates—The Dionysian Artificers-Curious Letter from Mr . Pi per—Re-organization of the working of the Royal Arch-Public letters of the M . E . Z . —The Asylum prospers—± iro . Jerrold s address , spoken at the English Opera , by Bro . John Wilson—I he Earl of Durham , Bros . Prescott and Crucefix , trustees : this arrangement altered on account of the objection of the Grand Masterliro . Hogg , the Ettrick Shepherd , initiated-Death of Henry O'Brien —Centenary of the Grand Stewards' Lodge—Treaty of Union—Alliance and Masonic confederation .
1836 . Bro . Husenbeth s lecture—Reply of the late Marquis of Hastings—The last circular of the Masonic Kni ghts Templars of England —Successful removal of the cataracts by Mr . Alexander , and restoration of vision to the Grand Master-Freemasonry in ParliamentrhTw ^ T % by 'J ^ H- R- Slade > commenced and constM % lr 4 ? r £ U , T'al Oration delivered h y Bro - G - W - Turner-L * eDuke of Sussex-Lord John Churchill
nlfni n ; V r ap-?« n \ f y , ^ d Master ' consequence of the Earl of Durham ron"ft / i P SS 5 n E , , 0 a < , "' 1 'y t 0 the Coort of Kussia-Dangerous 2 ° f le , Glrls Sc 10 ° 1 House-Progress of the Asylum-Grand meetings at Colchester , Lincoln , and Northampton-Grand Ball in
ZrTfai , 1 'eaM C , ? l the Grand Master in Grand Lodge-Connexion between speculative and operative Masonry-Envy-Visit of Imn ? nv P y Gra " dMaster ° f Ireland to the Master ' Masons' Lodge of dkns TT m , n 6 S \ 1 Val ° f the Asylum-Captivity among the Indians- flie Black Ball-Masonic Offering to the Grand Master .
sonrl i ' n ^ i 'P f , 1 " 1 ^ , " Poetical Benevolence of Freema-Chrennlni 1 & ^ V "m-Female prejudices and antipathies-VarinnJ fn accounttf the Girls School-De re Non-Masonica-Geneia ^ F **? , ° « ^ Master on his restoration to si ght-Centeni-v nf ^ l r ^ H "" 1 / 1 Mastei-Lord Ramsay ' s address at the Churchlf P '" I h ° ^ % ° lScotland-Installation of Lord Joh n W tLtJ r , maal GnUUl Master for Oxfordshire-The Freema-~ 'keAlu yRUmeW rec ° r mled » y the Grand Lodge of Scotland -WW 8 USP ° r ? l b , \ e Lod ^ es at thc Ca P ° * Good Hope ivmg William the Fourth ; his death-Masonic Biography-Bro