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  • Nov. 3, 1894
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  • PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF JERSEY.
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Provincial Grand Lodge Of Jersey.

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF JERSEY .

A meeting of the Grand Lodge of this province was held at the Masonic Temple , St . Heliers , on Thursday the 25 th ult ., under the auspices of Lodge La Cesarec , No . 590 . There was a full attendance , every lodge in the

island being well represented . Punctually at 6 . 30 p . m . Grand Lodge was opened by the Prov . G . Master , Bro . Colonel E . C . Malet de Carteret , attended by his Deputy , Bro . Dr . Le Cronier , and almost all the Provincial Grand Officers for the year .

After the usual preliminary business the PROV . G . MASTER gave a short but very succinct review of the progress of Masonry in the island . He regretted deeply to have to record such a long list of removals by ihe hand of death from their roll of members . He' desired to pay a passing tribute of respect to all of them , but more especially to that of Bro . Du

Jardin , an old and devoted Mason , a distinguished citizen , and a just and upright magistrate , and last , but by no means least , to that of Bro . Rogers , for many years the custodian of the Temple and Prov . G . Tyler . The Prov . G . Master concluded his most interesting report by again urging upon the Masters of lodges , the necessity of care and caution in the selection of

candidates for admission into their lodges . It was quality not quantity that was desirable . Nothing was more fatal to the prosperity of a lodge than the admission to the list of its members of men who were unable to or incapable of holding a fairly well-to-do and reputable position . Some notices of motion having been satisfactorily disposed of , the

following brethren were appointed officers for the ensuing year and duly invested , and in doing this the Prov . G . Master took occasion to dwell particularly on the pleasure it gave him to appoint and invest Bro . Baudains , P . M ., a citizen so distinguished and held in such high estimation by his countrymen that he had been elected , for five successive triennial periods , Mayor of St . Heliers :

Bro . Ph . Baudains ... ... ... Prov . S . G . W . „ Major F . Godfray , R . J . A . ... ... Prov . J . G . W . „ Rev . R . Peek ... ... ... Prov . G . Chap . „ J . O . Le Sueur , P . P . S . G . W . ... ... Prov . G . Treas . „ P . G . Hamilton , P . P . S . G . D . ... ... Prov . G . Reg . „ Dr . A . C . Godfray , ... ... ... Prov . G . Sec . „ Capt . Barette ... ... ... Prov . S . G . D . „ Dr . M . Le Cronier ... ... ... Prov . J . G . D . „ J . Caton ... ... ... ... Prov . G . S . of W . „ H . C . Brodhurst ... ... ... Prov . G . D . C . „ J . de la Perrelle ... ... ... Prov . A . G . D . C . „ C . E . Malet de Carteret ... ... Prov . G . S . B . „ R . Kynaston ... ... ... Prov . G . Std . Br . „ J . L . deFaye ... ... ... Prov . G . Org . „ F . Gicquel ... ... ... ... Prov . G . Purst . „ W . H . Dickson , 244 ... „ J . R . Sinnatt , 245 " T V ^^ T ^' , t Prov . G . Stwds . „ J . E . Cosbard , 49 r „ J . V . Harper , 100 3

,, C . Dumaretq , 590 „ H . Hambly ... ... ... ... Prov . G . Tyler . The P . G . Sec , Bro . Dr . A . C . GODFRAY , now rose and stated that the province had considered it most desirable to mark the 25 th anniversary of the appointments of the P . G . M . and D . P . G . M . by some special act or

« remony . An influential Committee was at once formed , and their deliberations resulted in the determination to celebrate that very interesting occasion by presenting to Prov . G . Lodge the portraits of those two distinguished brethren . These portraits had been painted by their talented countryman , Bro . J . H . Lander , a very rising artist , and a student of the Royal

Academy . Knowing well the warm personal friendship existing between . 'heir P . G . Master and 13 . P . G . Master and the Prov . G . Master of Guernsey a nd Alderney , a formal request was sent to Dr . Balfour Cockburn to come 0 v er and make the presentation . Dr . Balfour Cockburn had most willingly

deeded to their wishes , and not only was he present now for that purpose , uu t he was accompanied by Bro . E . C . Ozanne , D . P . G . M ., and Bro . Smythson , P . G . Sec , and no doubt had it not been for the terrible weather , n ° w visiting them , several other of the Guernsey brethren would have c ° me over . He now called on Bro . Dr . Balfour Cockburn to make the

Pre sentation . The two magnificent portraits , 56 in by 44 m in half lengths , placed temporaril y on the East wall , were now unveiled , and the P . G . MASTER of

"lernsey and Alderney , rising , expressed great pleasure on being called P ° n to take so important a part in a ceremony which at all times was a ° st pleasing one , but which on this occasion was , from attendant circum-Wnces , of a peculiarly interesting character . The presentation of portraits

Provincial Grand Lodge Of Jersey.

was a form of testimonial or memento that commended itself especially to the Masonic Brotherhood , it pleased everybody , there was no black cloud about it , it was all silver lining . That Province of Jersey had the honour of being ruled over by very nearly the senior Provincial Grand Master of England . Col . Malet de Carteret was as widely known in Grand Lodge and in the

provinces of England as a wise , enlightened , and successful ruler as here in his own island . Dr . Le Cronier was a Deputy who rind served years in that rank under another regime . During a long i ^ teregnn-n he had acted as Provincial Grand Master , and now for 25 years continuously ha hai served under the present Provincial Grand M ister . Thu was a record few could

beat . Especially addressing Bro . Col . de Carteret , he felt th it it would be unbecoming on his part to venture on a critical or detailed history of the Masonic career of one who , for a quarter of a century , hud held such distinguished and exalted Masonic rank . It would be absurd to suppose tha during that long period the work of Freemasonry had been carried on in a

profound calm . Theirs was after all a human institution , and he ventured to assert—without fear of contradiction—that no province existed that could produce an unblemished record of unruffled existence for 25 years . Drawing a simile from the wild storms that periodically visit those happy islands , during which , however , they were always kept in touch with the mother

country by the gallant , fearless , and skilful conduct of those brave seamen who commanded the mail boats , some of whom were their countrymen and many brethren in the Craft—the Allix , the Renouf , the Le Feuvre , not forgetting the dear old Lainson and others—so the Province of Jersey rejoiced in one who was ever ready and able to throw oil on troubled waters , and to

guide and steer his province into the haven of the waters of content ; to flourish again more vigorously than ever under the blue sky and bright sunshine of peace and quietness . Somewhat paraphrasing the ritual , Bro . Col . Malet de Carteret might regard that portrait then hanging on those walls like the Fellow Craftsman of old—not simply , however , without scruple and

without diffidence , but with pride and satisfaction—knowing full well , and resting assured that it was the just and legitimate outcome of a good work well done ; of high and important duties faithfully and thoroughly discharged . Speaking more directly to Bro . Dr . Le Cronier , he did not hesitate to draw largely from the ritual , addressing as he was a most ' accomplished

ritualista talent which , he was glad to observe , was hereditary . The loyal and devoted services of the D . P . G . M . had crowned the superstructure which had been raised on the foundation so truly and firmly laid by the P . G . M . He had good reason to be very proud of that spontaneous exhibition of the appreciation of his labours in the field of Masonry , and if anything could

have enhanced the pleasure he felt that night , it was that he had even on that occasion not been separated from the Master with whom he had cooperated so long and so happily . The P . G . M . of Guernsey and Alderney then congratulated the brethren on the excellence of the portraits , the likeness of each was speaking , and the deta'ds of the Masonic clothing

faultless . Jersey might well be proud of having been the birthplace and early home of two of the most celebrated portrait painters of the day—Sir John Millais acid Mc . Oaless—that enviable reputation was likely to be sustained in the person of Bro . Lander . He would draw his remarks to a cl ise , but he could not do so without making some allusion to that which he

saw in the lodge before him , and which gave an additional , almost a romantic , charm to the evening ' s proceedings . They all knew that the young may die , the old must die , no one could hope to escape from the common doom of man . There were two young men in the room that night whose lives were full of promise , doubtless they had profited by the bright

examples so constantly bsfore their eyes ; he did not desire to assume any prophetic office , but he could foresee—and all there could equally do so—that if it pleased the G . A . O . T . U . to permit their elders to pass first into the Grand Lodge above , the time might certainly come when those now elderly possibly old men would recall the proceedings of that night , and , repeating

the story to a younger generation of Masons—to Masons yet unborn—would point to those portraits as footprints on the sands of time , which had and would still encourage many a forlorn and shipwrecked brother to take hear again , and they would respectively exclaim with exultan , bat just and

honourable pride , of these great men who remind us we can make our lives sublime—that was my Father , Colonel Malet de Carteret , Provincial Grand Master of Jersey , and Seigneur of St . Otven ' s , and that was my Father , Dr . Le Cronier , his Deputy .

The P . G . M . of Jersey , Bro . Col . MALET DE CARTERET , stated he was quit 1 ; unprepared to respond in fitting terms to the graceful and eloquent speech which Bro . Dr . Balfour Cockburn had concluded in such a feeling and . touching manner : he thanked him for the all tco flattering remarks he ha expressed ; it was too true , for 25 years he had now occupied the position Q

“The Freemason: 1894-11-03, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 19 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_03111894/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF JERSEY. Article 1
SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER. Article 2
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF DORSET. Article 2
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF SOMERSETSHIRE. Article 2
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF DEVONSHIRE. Article 3
THE ST. ANDREW'S CHAPTER, BOSTON, U.S.A. Article 3
A CATHOLICK'S CRITICISM OF THE CRAFT. Article 4
CONSECRATION OF LODGE DHARWAR, No. 2527. Article 4
ENTERTAINMENT AT THE ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 5
ST. OSWALD LODGE, No. 910. Article 5
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Masonic Notes. Article 7
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 8
Scotland. Article 8
Craft Masonry. Article 8
PROVINCIAL MEETINGS. Article 9
Royal Arch. Article 12
Mark Masonry. Article 12
Lodges and Chapters of Instruction. Article 12
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 13
Royal Ark Mariners. Article 13
ANNIVERSARY OF THE STAR LODGE OF INSTRUCTION, No. 1275. Article 13
Our Portrait Gallery of Worshipful Masters. Article 13
Scotland. Article 13
Ireland. Article 13
Obituary. Article 13
Deaths. Article 13
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 14
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Provincial Grand Lodge Of Jersey.

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF JERSEY .

A meeting of the Grand Lodge of this province was held at the Masonic Temple , St . Heliers , on Thursday the 25 th ult ., under the auspices of Lodge La Cesarec , No . 590 . There was a full attendance , every lodge in the

island being well represented . Punctually at 6 . 30 p . m . Grand Lodge was opened by the Prov . G . Master , Bro . Colonel E . C . Malet de Carteret , attended by his Deputy , Bro . Dr . Le Cronier , and almost all the Provincial Grand Officers for the year .

After the usual preliminary business the PROV . G . MASTER gave a short but very succinct review of the progress of Masonry in the island . He regretted deeply to have to record such a long list of removals by ihe hand of death from their roll of members . He' desired to pay a passing tribute of respect to all of them , but more especially to that of Bro . Du

Jardin , an old and devoted Mason , a distinguished citizen , and a just and upright magistrate , and last , but by no means least , to that of Bro . Rogers , for many years the custodian of the Temple and Prov . G . Tyler . The Prov . G . Master concluded his most interesting report by again urging upon the Masters of lodges , the necessity of care and caution in the selection of

candidates for admission into their lodges . It was quality not quantity that was desirable . Nothing was more fatal to the prosperity of a lodge than the admission to the list of its members of men who were unable to or incapable of holding a fairly well-to-do and reputable position . Some notices of motion having been satisfactorily disposed of , the

following brethren were appointed officers for the ensuing year and duly invested , and in doing this the Prov . G . Master took occasion to dwell particularly on the pleasure it gave him to appoint and invest Bro . Baudains , P . M ., a citizen so distinguished and held in such high estimation by his countrymen that he had been elected , for five successive triennial periods , Mayor of St . Heliers :

Bro . Ph . Baudains ... ... ... Prov . S . G . W . „ Major F . Godfray , R . J . A . ... ... Prov . J . G . W . „ Rev . R . Peek ... ... ... Prov . G . Chap . „ J . O . Le Sueur , P . P . S . G . W . ... ... Prov . G . Treas . „ P . G . Hamilton , P . P . S . G . D . ... ... Prov . G . Reg . „ Dr . A . C . Godfray , ... ... ... Prov . G . Sec . „ Capt . Barette ... ... ... Prov . S . G . D . „ Dr . M . Le Cronier ... ... ... Prov . J . G . D . „ J . Caton ... ... ... ... Prov . G . S . of W . „ H . C . Brodhurst ... ... ... Prov . G . D . C . „ J . de la Perrelle ... ... ... Prov . A . G . D . C . „ C . E . Malet de Carteret ... ... Prov . G . S . B . „ R . Kynaston ... ... ... Prov . G . Std . Br . „ J . L . deFaye ... ... ... Prov . G . Org . „ F . Gicquel ... ... ... ... Prov . G . Purst . „ W . H . Dickson , 244 ... „ J . R . Sinnatt , 245 " T V ^^ T ^' , t Prov . G . Stwds . „ J . E . Cosbard , 49 r „ J . V . Harper , 100 3

,, C . Dumaretq , 590 „ H . Hambly ... ... ... ... Prov . G . Tyler . The P . G . Sec , Bro . Dr . A . C . GODFRAY , now rose and stated that the province had considered it most desirable to mark the 25 th anniversary of the appointments of the P . G . M . and D . P . G . M . by some special act or

« remony . An influential Committee was at once formed , and their deliberations resulted in the determination to celebrate that very interesting occasion by presenting to Prov . G . Lodge the portraits of those two distinguished brethren . These portraits had been painted by their talented countryman , Bro . J . H . Lander , a very rising artist , and a student of the Royal

Academy . Knowing well the warm personal friendship existing between . 'heir P . G . Master and 13 . P . G . Master and the Prov . G . Master of Guernsey a nd Alderney , a formal request was sent to Dr . Balfour Cockburn to come 0 v er and make the presentation . Dr . Balfour Cockburn had most willingly

deeded to their wishes , and not only was he present now for that purpose , uu t he was accompanied by Bro . E . C . Ozanne , D . P . G . M ., and Bro . Smythson , P . G . Sec , and no doubt had it not been for the terrible weather , n ° w visiting them , several other of the Guernsey brethren would have c ° me over . He now called on Bro . Dr . Balfour Cockburn to make the

Pre sentation . The two magnificent portraits , 56 in by 44 m in half lengths , placed temporaril y on the East wall , were now unveiled , and the P . G . MASTER of

"lernsey and Alderney , rising , expressed great pleasure on being called P ° n to take so important a part in a ceremony which at all times was a ° st pleasing one , but which on this occasion was , from attendant circum-Wnces , of a peculiarly interesting character . The presentation of portraits

Provincial Grand Lodge Of Jersey.

was a form of testimonial or memento that commended itself especially to the Masonic Brotherhood , it pleased everybody , there was no black cloud about it , it was all silver lining . That Province of Jersey had the honour of being ruled over by very nearly the senior Provincial Grand Master of England . Col . Malet de Carteret was as widely known in Grand Lodge and in the

provinces of England as a wise , enlightened , and successful ruler as here in his own island . Dr . Le Cronier was a Deputy who rind served years in that rank under another regime . During a long i ^ teregnn-n he had acted as Provincial Grand Master , and now for 25 years continuously ha hai served under the present Provincial Grand M ister . Thu was a record few could

beat . Especially addressing Bro . Col . de Carteret , he felt th it it would be unbecoming on his part to venture on a critical or detailed history of the Masonic career of one who , for a quarter of a century , hud held such distinguished and exalted Masonic rank . It would be absurd to suppose tha during that long period the work of Freemasonry had been carried on in a

profound calm . Theirs was after all a human institution , and he ventured to assert—without fear of contradiction—that no province existed that could produce an unblemished record of unruffled existence for 25 years . Drawing a simile from the wild storms that periodically visit those happy islands , during which , however , they were always kept in touch with the mother

country by the gallant , fearless , and skilful conduct of those brave seamen who commanded the mail boats , some of whom were their countrymen and many brethren in the Craft—the Allix , the Renouf , the Le Feuvre , not forgetting the dear old Lainson and others—so the Province of Jersey rejoiced in one who was ever ready and able to throw oil on troubled waters , and to

guide and steer his province into the haven of the waters of content ; to flourish again more vigorously than ever under the blue sky and bright sunshine of peace and quietness . Somewhat paraphrasing the ritual , Bro . Col . Malet de Carteret might regard that portrait then hanging on those walls like the Fellow Craftsman of old—not simply , however , without scruple and

without diffidence , but with pride and satisfaction—knowing full well , and resting assured that it was the just and legitimate outcome of a good work well done ; of high and important duties faithfully and thoroughly discharged . Speaking more directly to Bro . Dr . Le Cronier , he did not hesitate to draw largely from the ritual , addressing as he was a most ' accomplished

ritualista talent which , he was glad to observe , was hereditary . The loyal and devoted services of the D . P . G . M . had crowned the superstructure which had been raised on the foundation so truly and firmly laid by the P . G . M . He had good reason to be very proud of that spontaneous exhibition of the appreciation of his labours in the field of Masonry , and if anything could

have enhanced the pleasure he felt that night , it was that he had even on that occasion not been separated from the Master with whom he had cooperated so long and so happily . The P . G . M . of Guernsey and Alderney then congratulated the brethren on the excellence of the portraits , the likeness of each was speaking , and the deta'ds of the Masonic clothing

faultless . Jersey might well be proud of having been the birthplace and early home of two of the most celebrated portrait painters of the day—Sir John Millais acid Mc . Oaless—that enviable reputation was likely to be sustained in the person of Bro . Lander . He would draw his remarks to a cl ise , but he could not do so without making some allusion to that which he

saw in the lodge before him , and which gave an additional , almost a romantic , charm to the evening ' s proceedings . They all knew that the young may die , the old must die , no one could hope to escape from the common doom of man . There were two young men in the room that night whose lives were full of promise , doubtless they had profited by the bright

examples so constantly bsfore their eyes ; he did not desire to assume any prophetic office , but he could foresee—and all there could equally do so—that if it pleased the G . A . O . T . U . to permit their elders to pass first into the Grand Lodge above , the time might certainly come when those now elderly possibly old men would recall the proceedings of that night , and , repeating

the story to a younger generation of Masons—to Masons yet unborn—would point to those portraits as footprints on the sands of time , which had and would still encourage many a forlorn and shipwrecked brother to take hear again , and they would respectively exclaim with exultan , bat just and

honourable pride , of these great men who remind us we can make our lives sublime—that was my Father , Colonel Malet de Carteret , Provincial Grand Master of Jersey , and Seigneur of St . Otven ' s , and that was my Father , Dr . Le Cronier , his Deputy .

The P . G . M . of Jersey , Bro . Col . MALET DE CARTERET , stated he was quit 1 ; unprepared to respond in fitting terms to the graceful and eloquent speech which Bro . Dr . Balfour Cockburn had concluded in such a feeling and . touching manner : he thanked him for the all tco flattering remarks he ha expressed ; it was too true , for 25 years he had now occupied the position Q

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