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  • Dec. 7, 1895
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  • CRAFT MASONRY.
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Craft Masonry.

MASONIC LITERATURE . In this branch of Masonic work , the year which is now approaching

its close has been a particularly hrilliaut one . In the first place , there have been issued second editions of two valuable works comp iled by two of our most eminent writers , which had long been out of print . It is not necessary we should refer to them here at any length . We have already , to the best of our humble judgment ,

expressed with no uncertain voice the very high opinion we entertain of their surpassing merit . It will be sufficient , therefore , if we say we are alluding , firstly , to Bro . John Lane ' s "Masonic Records , " the copyright of which he presented last , year to Grand Lodge , and the second edition of which , with corrections and additions to the present date , was published by Grand Lodge during the past summer . The other work is the Second Edition of the " Old Charges of British

freemasons , by Bro . W . J . Hughan , P . G . D . The first edition was issued as far back as 1 S 72 , and as in the interval that has since elapsed there have been discovered many new MSS . and printed versions of the " Old Charges , " our readers will have no difficulty in picturing to themselves that the now work , though it has been compiled on the lines of the earlier one , contains a far greater amount

of information . In fact , though other MSS . may be—indeed , have alread y been—discovered , it is hardly likely that , among them will be found one which will differ materially from those which he has described and classified with so much ability . As Bro . Watson of West-Yorkshire very justly remarked in these columns only a fewweeks since , had this been the only work that had emanated from the

pen of Bro . Hughan , it would be still difficult to estimate the extent of the services he had rendered to Masonic literature by its publication , and the corresponding extent of our indebtedness to him for his labonr . There is yet a third work which , as it deals with the earl y history of Freemasonry in the British Islands , deserves that it should be mentioned here , though as it has been compiled by an

Irish Grand Officer and treats strictl y of early Irish Masonic history , it would be more appropriate if we mentioned it in our review of " Ireland . " The work we alluded to is Part I . of the " Caunentaria Hibernica , " for which we are indebted to Bro . Cbetwode Crawley , LL . D ., S . G . Deacon of Ireland . Of this , likewise , we have expressed our opinion in former articles , and therefore it is unnecessary to say

more now than that the more we study it the more are we convinced of its great merit as a compilation , and its exceptional value us a basis for some fnture history of the Craft in Ireland . But these lire very far from being the full tale of Masonic works which have been published during the present year . To Bro . J . Rainsden Riley , author of the " Yorkshire Lodges , " than whom there is no greater

authority on "Masonic Certificates , has issued , under the auspices of Lodge Quatnor Corovnvti , No . 2076 , a work on the subject which eontains a rare amount of information which we have not previously seen brought together in book or pamphlet form . Bro . R . F . Gould , P . G . D ., has also written a Memoir of the Duke of Wharton , G . M ., 1722-23 , and the Order of the Gormogons , being the sixth of his

well-known and able scries of Masonic Celebrities , which have tppeared from time to time in the Transactions of Quatuor Coronati Lodge . In addition to these arc quite a number of Masonic Histories , notably , " The History of Freemasonry in Lincolnshire , " b y Bro . William Dixon , which is well written and contains a vast amount of information respecting the earlier lodges that were constituted in

that Province ; the History of St . John the Baptist Lodge , No . 39 , Exeter , by Bro . Andrew Hope , W . M ., with an Introduction by Bro . Hughan . This is dedicated to Bro . Viscount Ebriiigtou , Prov . G . Master of Devonshire , and though the record is far from complete —the minutes prior to 1777 having been lost—there is every reason why we should congratulate ourselves on the publication of Bro .

Hope ' s Book , especially as the original charter is preserved , and constitutes the principal feature in the volume . Among the other works of a similar character which have appeared during the year will be found the "History of Lodge St . Michael ' s , Kilwinning , No . 63 , Dumfries , " which has been very admirably compiled b y Bro . James Smith , P . M ., Prov . G . Treasurer of Dumfriesshire ; the

" History of the Lodge of St . James , No . 448 , Halifax , 1837—1890 , " h y Bro . Austen Roberts , P . M .. P . Prov . A . G . D . C . West Yorkshire , who is to be congratulated on the manner in which he has accomplished his task ; and the " Illustrated History of the St . Mark ' s Mark Lodge , No . 1 , " b y Professor P . L . Siininonds , P . M ., Past G . Stwd , with an introduction'by Bro . W . J . Hughan . This is dedicated by permission

•o the Earl of Euston , Pro Grand Masler , and contains a fund of valuable information respecting the Mark Degree . To these must he added those exceedingly useful compilations by Bro . Fred . J . W . Crowe , P . Prov . G . Organist , Devon , with , in each case , an introduction bom Bro . W . . 1 . Hughan , namely "The Scottish Master Mason ' s Handbook , " and "The Irish Master Mason ' s Handbook . " These

» ave been modelled precisely on the same lines as " The English Master Mason ' s Hinidbook , " which had some time previously been written b y the same author , and the three will be found most useful jrnides to the Craft , Arch , Mark , and other organisations established '" the three Kingdoms . There remain to be noticed , Parts Land II ,

"f Vol . VIJL of "Ars Quatuor Coroiiatorum , " which under the ! ll | le and painstaking JMitorship of Bro . G . VV . Speth , Sot ; ., of ' " V ' o . 2076 , arc becoming more and more valuable , especially in the ' ''¦ partnicnt of Masonic antiquarian lore . It is well nigh impossible ,, J speak in terms of exaggerated commendation of the articles and 1 ssays which appear in successive volumes of this publication .

Craft Masonry.

OBITUARY .

The losses which our Society has sustained by death are not , perhaps , more numerous than in previous years , but ( hey include several brethren who , in the course of their several Masonic careers , have ranked high among the most- prominent Masons of onr time , and not a few from whom , if it had pleased Providence to prolong their lives , even greater services than any they had previously

rendered , might , in reason , have been expecfed . Chiefesf anion " those whose death will be the subject of long-continued sorrow art Bro . Thomas W . Tew , . 1 . P ., Past Prov . G . Masler and G . Superintendent of West Yorkshire , who died on ( he 29 th March , and Bro Col . Gerald Noel Money , C . B ., Prov . G . Masler , ( . ) - . Superintendent , and Prov . G . Mark Master of Surrey , and Prov . Prior in the Ordei

of the Temple for Kent and Surrey . The former of these had been a prominent member of the Order in West Yorkshire for full y 20 years , firstly , from 1875 to 1885 , as Deputy to the late Bro . Sir II . Edwards , Bart ., and then as his successor from 1885 until his health failed him , and he found himself under the necessity of resigning the more laborious ollice of Prov . G . Master , but still eontiniiiii <> - to

retain that of G . Superintendent , to which he had been appointed the same day as he became P . G . M . His services to Craft , Arch , and Templar Masonry , and the generous support he gave to , and the active interest he exhibited in , our Institutions , are tn well known and too fresh in the minds of onr readers to need reca pitulation here . It is enough for us to say that he had succeeded in winniii"

the respect and affection of those he presided over , and of those with whom he came in contact , and that though for sonic time prior to his death he had been compelled to abstain from active parUcip-. v' . ion in the duties of Masonry , his loss was a great blow to the Province of West Yorkshire , indeed , to the whole bod y of English M isous , and will be the subject of never-failing grief on the part of all who

knew him . As regards Bro . Col . Money , C . B ., as his death was unexpected—it was only a mouth before he died that he consecrated the Ember Lodge at East Molesey—so has the loss we have sustained been more severely felt . Col . Money wasin his very prime , and duriii " the three years he had ruled the Province of Surrey in the Craft , Arch , and Mark Degrees , anil that of Kent and Surrey in the Ordei

of the Temple , had accomplished great things . He succeeded a "ood man—the late Bro . Genera ! Browurigg—who had held ollice for many years ; but he had not been long at his post before he and those ho presided over were on the friendliest footing , and it will be easily imagined that d y ing , as he did , not in the fulness of years at the end of a long and honourable career , but at the very outset

of a career , which though so brief , was of the bri ghtest promise , his loss , as we have before said , has caused the greatest grief among the lodges and brethren with whom he was associated . Anion" - other notable brethren who have passed away are Bro . the Rev . G . VV . Spencer-Stanhope , Past G . Chaplain of England , and G . Superintendent and Provincial Prior of Cheshire ; Comp . Sir Henry Bromley ,

Bart .. G . Superintendent of Nottinghamshire ; Bro . the Rev . Thomas Robinson , M . A ., Past G . Chaplain of England , and Prov . G . Mark Master for Kent ; Bros . Lord Alccster , and Sir F . Wyatt Trnscott Past G . Wardens of Ji ' nglan'd ; Bro . James Salmon , Ass . G . D . C , a leading Cheshire Mason ; Bro . J . Laurence Mather , Past A . G . D . C ., who till a few years since had taken a very active part in onr

proceedings botli in London and the Province of Hertfordshire ; Bro Col . H . Radcliffe , Past G . Stwd ; Bro . Thomas Dinning , P . Prov . ( . '{ - . Warden Northumberland ; Bro . Joseph Nicholson , P . Prov . G . Warden Cumberland and Westmoreland ; Bro . W . Davidson , P . Prov . S . G . W . Northumberland ; Bro . Earl Cowley , P . Prov . G . W . Wiltshire ; Bro ' Earl Cowley , P . Prov . G . W . Wiltshire ; Bro . Hyde Clarke , who had

taken the 33 ° of the A . and A . Rile , in the Supreme Council of France ; Bro . A . Kirk , P . Prov . G . W ., Prov . G . Treasurer ( R . A . ) , Lincolnshire ; Bro . T . Bateman Fox , P . Prov . G . W . West Yorkshire , and for . years the Chairman of its Charit y Committee ; Bro . W . B . Williamson , P . Prov . G . W . Worcestershire ; Bros . E . White , P . Prov ! G . W . Somersetshire , and W . Woodward , of the same Province- Bro

W . E . Gompert / ., P . M . 869 , P . Prov . G . D . Hertfordshire ; Bro . Carl J , H . Got / ., a prominent supporter of the Institutions in East Lancashire ; Bro . Dr . 11 . St . John Clark , a Past Grand Warden of the Victorian Constitution ; Bro . the Rev . M . Valentine , P . Prov . G . Chap . N . and E . Yorkshire ; and Bro . Thomas Rix , P . M . No . 697 1 \ Prov . G . S . B . Essex . Among others may he mentioned Bros '

Rawle , W . M . 19 ; George Denton , P . M ., P . Z . ; John Harnett . P . M . ; J . W . Lee , P . M . 226 , who died in Paris while on his honeymoon- A ' J . Dixie , P . M . 453 ; J . R , Stacey , P . M ., P . Z . ISO ; William Mastery J ' . M ., P . Z ., a member of the Board of Management of ( he Royal Masonic Inslitutioii for Boys , who died suddenl y in his office-T . Glass , P . M . 8 ( 50 ; M . M . Keniially , J . W . 975 ; G . S . Alford PAl '

P . Z . ; Thomas Beard , P . M . 101 , a former Deput y Sheriff of London-Deputy Rose-Lines , a prominent member of the London Corporation ' Alfred ' Gray , P . M . 949 ; Giovanni Segond , P . M . 515 , Malta ; James Burton , P . M . 1287 ; G . R . Cobham , P . M ., P . Z . ; ][ . A . Pocoek I'M 902 ; W . II . Kirby , P . M ., P . Z ., Preceptor of the Clarence Lo . W of

Instruction , 2 ( 59 ; K . Y . Jolliffe , P . M ., Sec . and P . Z . 1657- George Herbert Reynolds , P . M . 1614 ; and 2191 and VV . Edwards , 1052 . These by no means represent the full tale of the losses which Freemasonry has had to mourn during the year 1895 , but they are a formidable number , and by themselves have created " -aps in our ranks which it will not be easy to fill .

“The Freemason: 1895-12-07, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_07121895/page/7/.
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Freemasonry in 1895. Article 1
CRAFT MASONRY. Article 1
The Cross Of honour, Article 9
The "Langdale " Masonic MS. Article 13
The Distinguishing Characteristic of a freemason's beart. Article 17
The Permit of Dunstanborough. A Legend of Nortbumbria. Article 17
SIGNS OF THE TIMES. Article 21
RIDING THE GOAT. Article 21
THE FIFTH CITY MASONIC BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION. Article 21
TWO CURIOUS CERTIFICATES. Article 22
Untitled Article 23
OCCURRENCES OF THE YEAR. Article 24
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
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To Correspondents . Article 27
Untitled Article 27
Masonic Notes. Article 27
Correspondence. Article 28
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 28
BRO. ALDERMAN V. MORGAN AND THE GRAND TREASURERSHIP. Article 28
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 28
Untitled Ad 28
GRAND LODGE OF MARK MASTER MASONS. Article 30
Untitled Ad 31
Untitled Ad 32
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF DERBYSHIRE. Article 33
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF HERTFORDSHIRE. Article 33
Untitled Ad 33
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 34
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF JERSEY. Article 34
Untitled Ad 34
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF BERKSHIRE. Article 35
FREEMASONRY IN SOUTH AFRICA. Article 35
Untitled Ad 35
AMUSING EPISODES IN "ANCIENT" HISTORY. Article 36
Untitled Ad 36
Untitled Ad 37
The Craft Abroad. Article 38
Untitled Ad 38
CHRISTMAS AND THE KNIGHT TEMPLARS. Article 39
Craft Masonry. Article 39
Untitled Ad 39
Untitled Ad 39
Untitled Ad 40
FREEMASONRY BY LIMELIGHT. Article 40
Mark Masonry. Article 40
Untitled Ad 41
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 42
Untitled Ad 42
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Ballad. Article 44
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Craft Masonry.

MASONIC LITERATURE . In this branch of Masonic work , the year which is now approaching

its close has been a particularly hrilliaut one . In the first place , there have been issued second editions of two valuable works comp iled by two of our most eminent writers , which had long been out of print . It is not necessary we should refer to them here at any length . We have already , to the best of our humble judgment ,

expressed with no uncertain voice the very high opinion we entertain of their surpassing merit . It will be sufficient , therefore , if we say we are alluding , firstly , to Bro . John Lane ' s "Masonic Records , " the copyright of which he presented last , year to Grand Lodge , and the second edition of which , with corrections and additions to the present date , was published by Grand Lodge during the past summer . The other work is the Second Edition of the " Old Charges of British

freemasons , by Bro . W . J . Hughan , P . G . D . The first edition was issued as far back as 1 S 72 , and as in the interval that has since elapsed there have been discovered many new MSS . and printed versions of the " Old Charges , " our readers will have no difficulty in picturing to themselves that the now work , though it has been compiled on the lines of the earlier one , contains a far greater amount

of information . In fact , though other MSS . may be—indeed , have alread y been—discovered , it is hardly likely that , among them will be found one which will differ materially from those which he has described and classified with so much ability . As Bro . Watson of West-Yorkshire very justly remarked in these columns only a fewweeks since , had this been the only work that had emanated from the

pen of Bro . Hughan , it would be still difficult to estimate the extent of the services he had rendered to Masonic literature by its publication , and the corresponding extent of our indebtedness to him for his labonr . There is yet a third work which , as it deals with the earl y history of Freemasonry in the British Islands , deserves that it should be mentioned here , though as it has been compiled by an

Irish Grand Officer and treats strictl y of early Irish Masonic history , it would be more appropriate if we mentioned it in our review of " Ireland . " The work we alluded to is Part I . of the " Caunentaria Hibernica , " for which we are indebted to Bro . Cbetwode Crawley , LL . D ., S . G . Deacon of Ireland . Of this , likewise , we have expressed our opinion in former articles , and therefore it is unnecessary to say

more now than that the more we study it the more are we convinced of its great merit as a compilation , and its exceptional value us a basis for some fnture history of the Craft in Ireland . But these lire very far from being the full tale of Masonic works which have been published during the present year . To Bro . J . Rainsden Riley , author of the " Yorkshire Lodges , " than whom there is no greater

authority on "Masonic Certificates , has issued , under the auspices of Lodge Quatnor Corovnvti , No . 2076 , a work on the subject which eontains a rare amount of information which we have not previously seen brought together in book or pamphlet form . Bro . R . F . Gould , P . G . D ., has also written a Memoir of the Duke of Wharton , G . M ., 1722-23 , and the Order of the Gormogons , being the sixth of his

well-known and able scries of Masonic Celebrities , which have tppeared from time to time in the Transactions of Quatuor Coronati Lodge . In addition to these arc quite a number of Masonic Histories , notably , " The History of Freemasonry in Lincolnshire , " b y Bro . William Dixon , which is well written and contains a vast amount of information respecting the earlier lodges that were constituted in

that Province ; the History of St . John the Baptist Lodge , No . 39 , Exeter , by Bro . Andrew Hope , W . M ., with an Introduction by Bro . Hughan . This is dedicated to Bro . Viscount Ebriiigtou , Prov . G . Master of Devonshire , and though the record is far from complete —the minutes prior to 1777 having been lost—there is every reason why we should congratulate ourselves on the publication of Bro .

Hope ' s Book , especially as the original charter is preserved , and constitutes the principal feature in the volume . Among the other works of a similar character which have appeared during the year will be found the "History of Lodge St . Michael ' s , Kilwinning , No . 63 , Dumfries , " which has been very admirably compiled b y Bro . James Smith , P . M ., Prov . G . Treasurer of Dumfriesshire ; the

" History of the Lodge of St . James , No . 448 , Halifax , 1837—1890 , " h y Bro . Austen Roberts , P . M .. P . Prov . A . G . D . C . West Yorkshire , who is to be congratulated on the manner in which he has accomplished his task ; and the " Illustrated History of the St . Mark ' s Mark Lodge , No . 1 , " b y Professor P . L . Siininonds , P . M ., Past G . Stwd , with an introduction'by Bro . W . J . Hughan . This is dedicated by permission

•o the Earl of Euston , Pro Grand Masler , and contains a fund of valuable information respecting the Mark Degree . To these must he added those exceedingly useful compilations by Bro . Fred . J . W . Crowe , P . Prov . G . Organist , Devon , with , in each case , an introduction bom Bro . W . . 1 . Hughan , namely "The Scottish Master Mason ' s Handbook , " and "The Irish Master Mason ' s Handbook . " These

» ave been modelled precisely on the same lines as " The English Master Mason ' s Hinidbook , " which had some time previously been written b y the same author , and the three will be found most useful jrnides to the Craft , Arch , Mark , and other organisations established '" the three Kingdoms . There remain to be noticed , Parts Land II ,

"f Vol . VIJL of "Ars Quatuor Coroiiatorum , " which under the ! ll | le and painstaking JMitorship of Bro . G . VV . Speth , Sot ; ., of ' " V ' o . 2076 , arc becoming more and more valuable , especially in the ' ''¦ partnicnt of Masonic antiquarian lore . It is well nigh impossible ,, J speak in terms of exaggerated commendation of the articles and 1 ssays which appear in successive volumes of this publication .

Craft Masonry.

OBITUARY .

The losses which our Society has sustained by death are not , perhaps , more numerous than in previous years , but ( hey include several brethren who , in the course of their several Masonic careers , have ranked high among the most- prominent Masons of onr time , and not a few from whom , if it had pleased Providence to prolong their lives , even greater services than any they had previously

rendered , might , in reason , have been expecfed . Chiefesf anion " those whose death will be the subject of long-continued sorrow art Bro . Thomas W . Tew , . 1 . P ., Past Prov . G . Masler and G . Superintendent of West Yorkshire , who died on ( he 29 th March , and Bro Col . Gerald Noel Money , C . B ., Prov . G . Masler , ( . ) - . Superintendent , and Prov . G . Mark Master of Surrey , and Prov . Prior in the Ordei

of the Temple for Kent and Surrey . The former of these had been a prominent member of the Order in West Yorkshire for full y 20 years , firstly , from 1875 to 1885 , as Deputy to the late Bro . Sir II . Edwards , Bart ., and then as his successor from 1885 until his health failed him , and he found himself under the necessity of resigning the more laborious ollice of Prov . G . Master , but still eontiniiiii <> - to

retain that of G . Superintendent , to which he had been appointed the same day as he became P . G . M . His services to Craft , Arch , and Templar Masonry , and the generous support he gave to , and the active interest he exhibited in , our Institutions , are tn well known and too fresh in the minds of onr readers to need reca pitulation here . It is enough for us to say that he had succeeded in winniii"

the respect and affection of those he presided over , and of those with whom he came in contact , and that though for sonic time prior to his death he had been compelled to abstain from active parUcip-. v' . ion in the duties of Masonry , his loss was a great blow to the Province of West Yorkshire , indeed , to the whole bod y of English M isous , and will be the subject of never-failing grief on the part of all who

knew him . As regards Bro . Col . Money , C . B ., as his death was unexpected—it was only a mouth before he died that he consecrated the Ember Lodge at East Molesey—so has the loss we have sustained been more severely felt . Col . Money wasin his very prime , and duriii " the three years he had ruled the Province of Surrey in the Craft , Arch , and Mark Degrees , anil that of Kent and Surrey in the Ordei

of the Temple , had accomplished great things . He succeeded a "ood man—the late Bro . Genera ! Browurigg—who had held ollice for many years ; but he had not been long at his post before he and those ho presided over were on the friendliest footing , and it will be easily imagined that d y ing , as he did , not in the fulness of years at the end of a long and honourable career , but at the very outset

of a career , which though so brief , was of the bri ghtest promise , his loss , as we have before said , has caused the greatest grief among the lodges and brethren with whom he was associated . Anion" - other notable brethren who have passed away are Bro . the Rev . G . VV . Spencer-Stanhope , Past G . Chaplain of England , and G . Superintendent and Provincial Prior of Cheshire ; Comp . Sir Henry Bromley ,

Bart .. G . Superintendent of Nottinghamshire ; Bro . the Rev . Thomas Robinson , M . A ., Past G . Chaplain of England , and Prov . G . Mark Master for Kent ; Bros . Lord Alccster , and Sir F . Wyatt Trnscott Past G . Wardens of Ji ' nglan'd ; Bro . James Salmon , Ass . G . D . C , a leading Cheshire Mason ; Bro . J . Laurence Mather , Past A . G . D . C ., who till a few years since had taken a very active part in onr

proceedings botli in London and the Province of Hertfordshire ; Bro Col . H . Radcliffe , Past G . Stwd ; Bro . Thomas Dinning , P . Prov . ( . '{ - . Warden Northumberland ; Bro . Joseph Nicholson , P . Prov . G . Warden Cumberland and Westmoreland ; Bro . W . Davidson , P . Prov . S . G . W . Northumberland ; Bro . Earl Cowley , P . Prov . G . W . Wiltshire ; Bro ' Earl Cowley , P . Prov . G . W . Wiltshire ; Bro . Hyde Clarke , who had

taken the 33 ° of the A . and A . Rile , in the Supreme Council of France ; Bro . A . Kirk , P . Prov . G . W ., Prov . G . Treasurer ( R . A . ) , Lincolnshire ; Bro . T . Bateman Fox , P . Prov . G . W . West Yorkshire , and for . years the Chairman of its Charit y Committee ; Bro . W . B . Williamson , P . Prov . G . W . Worcestershire ; Bros . E . White , P . Prov ! G . W . Somersetshire , and W . Woodward , of the same Province- Bro

W . E . Gompert / ., P . M . 869 , P . Prov . G . D . Hertfordshire ; Bro . Carl J , H . Got / ., a prominent supporter of the Institutions in East Lancashire ; Bro . Dr . 11 . St . John Clark , a Past Grand Warden of the Victorian Constitution ; Bro . the Rev . M . Valentine , P . Prov . G . Chap . N . and E . Yorkshire ; and Bro . Thomas Rix , P . M . No . 697 1 \ Prov . G . S . B . Essex . Among others may he mentioned Bros '

Rawle , W . M . 19 ; George Denton , P . M ., P . Z . ; John Harnett . P . M . ; J . W . Lee , P . M . 226 , who died in Paris while on his honeymoon- A ' J . Dixie , P . M . 453 ; J . R , Stacey , P . M ., P . Z . ISO ; William Mastery J ' . M ., P . Z ., a member of the Board of Management of ( he Royal Masonic Inslitutioii for Boys , who died suddenl y in his office-T . Glass , P . M . 8 ( 50 ; M . M . Keniially , J . W . 975 ; G . S . Alford PAl '

P . Z . ; Thomas Beard , P . M . 101 , a former Deput y Sheriff of London-Deputy Rose-Lines , a prominent member of the London Corporation ' Alfred ' Gray , P . M . 949 ; Giovanni Segond , P . M . 515 , Malta ; James Burton , P . M . 1287 ; G . R . Cobham , P . M ., P . Z . ; ][ . A . Pocoek I'M 902 ; W . II . Kirby , P . M ., P . Z ., Preceptor of the Clarence Lo . W of

Instruction , 2 ( 59 ; K . Y . Jolliffe , P . M ., Sec . and P . Z . 1657- George Herbert Reynolds , P . M . 1614 ; and 2191 and VV . Edwards , 1052 . These by no means represent the full tale of the losses which Freemasonry has had to mourn during the year 1895 , but they are a formidable number , and by themselves have created " -aps in our ranks which it will not be easy to fill .

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