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    Article TO OUR READERS. Page 1 of 1
    Article TO ADVERTISERS. Page 1 of 1
    Article Untitled Page 1 of 1
    Article Births, Marriages and Deaths. Page 1 of 1
    Article Answers to Correspondents. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE GRAPHIC Page 1 of 1
    Article Untitled Page 1 of 1
    Article MEMORIES OF THE GREAT INSTALLATION. Page 1 of 1
    Article MEMORIES OF THE GREAT INSTALLATION. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE ADVANTAGES OF DISCIPLINE. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE ADVANTAGES OF DISCIPLINE. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE NEW GRAND OFFICERS. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 6

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

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

The Freemason is a sixteen page weekly newspaper , price 2 d . It is published every Friday morning , and contains the most important and useful information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Annual subscription in the United Kingdom , Post free , io / . Brethren in foreign parts , wishing to have this newspaper sent them regularly from the office of publication , should , in sending their remittances , add to the 21 I . per week the postage on 20 Z .

newspapers . The Freemason may be procured through any newsagen in the United Kingdom by giving ( if needed ) the publisher ' s address , 198 , Flcct-st . All communications , correspondence , reports , & c , must be addressed to the Editor .

Advertisements , change in address , complaints of diffi . culties in procuring Freemason , tec , to the Publisher , 198 , Fleet-st ., London , E . C . Careful attention will be paid to all AISS . entrusted to the Editor , but he cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied by stamp directed covers .

To Advertisers.

TO ADVERTISERS .

The Freemason has a large circulation in all parts ol the Globe , its advantages as an advertising medium can therefore scarcely be overrated . For terms , position , Sec , apply to GEOIIGF . RUNNING , 198 , Fleet-st .

Ar00601

NOTICE .

Alany complaints having been received of the difficulty experienced in procuring the Freemason in the City , the publisher begs to append the following list , being a selected few of the appointed agents : — Abbott , Wm ., East Cheap . Bates , Pilgrim-street , Ludgate-hill . Born , H ., 11 5 , London-wall .

Dawson , Wm ., 121 , Cannon-street . Gilbert , Jas ,, 18 , Gracechurch-street . Guest , Wm ., 54 , Paternoster-row . Phillpott Bros ., 65 , King William-street . Pottle , R ., 14 , Royal Exchange . May also be obtained at W . II . Smith & Son ' s Bookstalls at the following City Stations : —

Broad-strcct . I Holborn Viaduct . Cannon-street . | London Bridge . Ludgate Hill .

Births, Marriages And Deaths.

Births , Marriages and Deaths .

BIRTH . WEAVER . —On the 28 th April , the wife of I 5 ro . James Weaver , P . AI . 862 and 1319 , P . Prov . G . Org ., Aliddlesex , of a son .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

AU Communications , Advertisements , & c , intended for insertion in the Number of the following Saturday , must reach the Office not later than 12 o ' clock on Wednesday morning .

The following stand over and will bc inserted next week ** - ¦* I (¦ Letters from T . C . G . L . ; W . Kelly ; Edwin Prior ; "A New Order in Yorkshire . " Poetry : " The Installation ; " "Ode , " W . S . ; "The Berkshire Alasons . " Reports of Lodges : 21 , 141 , 332 , 464 , 1018 , 1138 , 1239 , 1309 , 1381 , E . C , Grand Lodge of Scotland .

The Graphic

THE GRAPHIC

This Week , May 8 , contains the following Fine Engravings : Portrait of Aliss Elizabeth Thompson ( Drawn from Life ) , Painter of the " Roll Call , " fcc . " Off Duty , " from the Picture by G . Pope . Collision Between a Ship and an Iceberg off Cape I lorn .

THE FREEMASONS

At the Albert Hall . The Earl of Carnarvon leading H . R . H . the Prince of Wales to the Throne . Signor Tommaso Salvini , the great Italian Tragedian . The Transit of Venus : An Observatory Station in the Australian Bush . Patent Reversible Lifeboat for Ships . The Civil War in Spain : Don Carlos attending Alass at the Cathedral of Tolosa . Old Country Seats : Scighford Hall , Staffordshire .

School Revisited : One ot the Heads from Mr . G . D . Leslie's Picture in the Royal Academy Exhibition ( Extra Double-Page Engraving on Plate Paper ) . The Threatened War in Burmah : A Bore on the Sitang River . Our Obituary Record : Portraits of Baron Brunnow , Sir Arthur Helps , Canon Selwyn , H . W . Pickersgill , R . A ., and Air . T . Wright ,

the Prison Philanthropist . The Snake-eating Snake at the Zoological Gardens . The Arctic Expedition : Patent Gun for Shooting Walruses ; Snow Boot . A Gondola Race at Venice . A New Story by Air . George Alacdonald , entitled St . George and St . Alichael , is continued in this Week's Number .

Ar00610

The Freemason , SATURDAY , MAY 8 , 187 . 5 .

Memories Of The Great Installation.

MEMORIES OF THE GREAT INSTALLATION .

By this time most of our good brethren have gone home again , and find themselves amid the joys and comforts of their " own fireside . " We trust that they will carry a tale back to those who will eagerly listen , of all that is precious and

Memories Of The Great Installation.

pleasant connected with that red letter day henceforth in our Masonic calendar , April 28 th , 1875 . They will , we think , take away with them , at least we hope so , many pleasurable reminiscences . They saw and heard their Grand Master in all the warmth of his amiable

kindliness , and in all the manly sincerity of his genial nature . They witnessed a sight , that they will never forget , in the enthusiastic fervour of commander and brethren , and the most famous , and best disciplined meeting that our Order has ever been privileged to hold . Why , even

today we are still regarding with astonishment and pride those serried lines of exulting Craftsmen . We even still can behold their manipulations . All honour to them ! They came from all directions , and they proved themselves to be what we knewthem to be , despite the vaticinations

of some and the fear of others , a most warmhearted , gentlemanly , amiable and loyal body of men , obedient to lawful authority , and eager to please and be pleased . Even the profane press , the Times for example , is deeply struck by the order , the zeal , the perfect subordination

of that mighty assembly , and there can be no doubt , that that noble gathering has given , and will give , muchadditional " eclat " and" prestige " to our Order generally . The banquet passed over as well as the meeting , and the speeches were equally marked by good taste , much happy

facility , and above all with true Masonic teaching . Anything more thoroughly and truly in the spirit of our old Grand Masters than the heartfelt expressions of our august Grand Master , we have never read , and we augur well indeed for the Craft and for him . The Duke of Connaught

was loudly cheered , as he well deserved to be , and the Duke of Manchester ' s opportune little address deserves to be specially commended . I 3 ro . Erasmus Wilson and his Board of Stewards demand all praise and many thanks . The genial Doctor himself made a very effective speech , and

under his skilful direction there could be no doubt that not only was the festival itself a great success , but the guests thoroughly enjoyed their dinner . Some one has said that " the things of to-day are the things of to-morrow / ' but we doubt the truth of the axiom as regards April 28 th , 1875 . We

shall never behold such another assembly again . It was quite pleasant to see so many old Freemasons , and to shake hands with so many ancient friends , and we are not likely or willing to let go its agreeable souvenirs . But , like as when one bids adieu to an old mate who is setting off

for a distant clime , or just as when we leave some old familiar spot with a sigh and a wrench ofthe heart , so as we wish good bye to our grea . Installation gathering , as we say " vale " to its bril liant pageant , and its glorious heartiness , we do so with mingled pleasure and regret . Pleasure to

have been present , regret that it is now a thing of the past ! But for us in England it will ever remain an event of imperishable recollections , and nothing can ever lessen its value or dim its grandeur to our English and loyal Craft . As Moore sang of old , it is still ever true in this

mundane existence of ours , in great things as well as in humble—You may break , you may shatter the vase if you will , But the scent ofthe roses will hang round it still .

The Advantages Of Discipline.

THE ADVANTAGES OF DISCIPLINE .

It is well known that it is not an easy matter to move a large body of men . In theory it may seem a facile operation , and the book of mancefc . vres may be very precise , but yet in practice it requires , as all know who have anything to do

with such things , no little carefulness , much selfpossession , and a great deal of " savoir faire , " to say nothing of a " memoria technica . " And so to many the control over from 7 to 8 , 000 Freemasons seemed somewhat dubious , and not a little hazardous . And yet here " without a

casualty , ' such is the police report , they all moved in and they all moved out , without the least difficulty or the smallest confusion . Too much praise cannot be accorded to their commanders , too much admiration cannot be expended upon them . We do not know to whom exactl y belongs the praise of drawing ojut the scheme for the ar-

The Advantages Of Discipline.

rangement of the brethren , but we believe it to belong to Bro . Albert W . Woods and Brother Thomas Fenn alone . Whoever it was , has a clear talent for organization , and we may be glad that we have one brother or more capable of successfully handling and controlling

large masses of Freemasons . But still equal kudos , we think , ought to be given to our brethren . An old soldier once said that the " greatest merit of all was to know how to obey orders , " and certainly no body of men could have been more docile or more

tractable than those many thousands of Freemasons on April 28 th . Indeed , Freemasonry teaches us all the good lesson of discipline , whether general or personal , from first to last . From the time we see the light until we pass away from all of earth , so long as we are affiliated—and all Masons

ought to be affiliated Masons—ours is a continuous exhortation , alike to discipline of self and discipline in the lodge . We are , as Lord Winchelsea once said ofthe great Duke , " taught to command by learning to obey , " and he , in our opinion , is the truest Freemason who has learnt

the best of all lessons next to self disci pline , namely , obedience . And though Freemasons , like all Englishmen , have a slight tendency to grumble , they are not as a general rule either " frondeurs" or insubordinate . They are , for the most part , a very cheerful , contented ,

easily gratified , orderly body of men , amenable to authority , and loyal to their chiefs . We have , happily , few disagreements , and no cabals amongst us ; complaints are unfrequent , and controversy is at a discount . Hence we have every element of stable prosperity and

peaceful progress . And long may it so continue . Long may we be free from idle questions and hurtful logomachies , long may we remain a loving , a forbearing , a tolerant , an united Order . When we are gone , and another generation has

taken our places , and they talk of our great Installation of 1875 , may they be as happily cemented as we are in all fraternal good will , may they equally manifest th ^* advantages of discipline , and of obedience to authority .

The New Grand Officers.

THE NEW GRAND OFFICERS .

We have much pleasure in being enabled to publish the following short memoirs of some of the n » w Grand Officers : —

J UNIOR GRAND WARDEN . The Lord Mayor was initiated in the Tuscan Lodge , 14 , in the year 1 855 ; in 1857 joined the Grand Masters' Lodge , No . 1 ; served all the offices , including Master ; appointed Grand Steward b y the Grand Masters' Lodge ; served the office and was appointed President of the

Grand Stewards . Joined the Moira Chapter , R . A . j filled the three chairs and is M . E . Z ., and will be promoted to Grand Chapter on Wednesday . Subsequently became a member of a Surrey lodge , the Frederick of Unity , also joined chapter connected with it . Is also a member of the Rose Croix and a K . Templar . Has served the office of Steward on several

. GRAND CHAPLAIN . The Rev . Spencer Robert Wigram , M . A ., Balliol Coliege , Oxon , vicar of Brittle well , Essex , and rural dean , was initiated in Romford , Lodge Hope and Unity , No . 214 ; Past Grand Chaplain of the Province of Essex : J . W . Priory Lodge ,

1000 , and P . M . and P . Z . 2 x 4 . Son of Bro . Octavius Wigram , of Bryanstone Square , for many years Governor of Royal Exchange Assurance , a very hard-working Mason ; has devoted a great deal of time to the interests of the Craft in Essex , and is well known aud extremel y liked by all who have the pleasure of coming in contact with him .

J UNIOR GRAND DEACON . Bro . Robert Grey was initiated into Freemasonry on the 13 th February , i 860 , in the St . Andrews-in-the-East Lodge , No . 222 , and passed the chair of that lodge in 1865-6 . He joined the

Prince of Wales ' s Lodge , No . 259 , on the 23 rd February , 1864 , and represented that lodge as Grand Steward in 1866 . In 186 9 he acted as one of the Stewards at the Inauguration Festival . In 1874 , on the occasion of the Installation ofthe Prince of Wales as W . M , of the Prince of

“The Freemason: 1875-05-08, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_08051875/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Scotland. Article 1
Obituary. Article 2
SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER. Article 3
BRO. CONSTABLE'S DRAWING. Article 3
CONSECRATION OF THE "BECTIVE" LODGE, CARLISLE. Article 4
FREEMASONRY IN TRINIDAD. Article 4
DISTRICT GRAND LODGE OF THE PUNJAB. Article 4
CONSECRATION OF THE PRIORY CHAPTER (No. 1000). Article 5
THE LONDON MASONIC CLUB. Article 5
TO OUR READERS. Article 6
TO ADVERTISERS. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Births, Marriages and Deaths. Article 6
Answers to Correspondents. Article 6
THE GRAPHIC Article 6
Untitled Article 6
MEMORIES OF THE GREAT INSTALLATION. Article 6
THE ADVANTAGES OF DISCIPLINE. Article 6
THE NEW GRAND OFFICERS. Article 6
THE WEST LANCASHIRE MASONIC EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION. Article 7
THE GRAND ORIENT AND THE CHAPITRES. Article 7
THE PRINCE OF WALES AND THE " SCOTTISH FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE." Article 7
Original Correspondenece. Article 7
Multum in Parbo; or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 8
VISIT OF THE SWEDISH DEPUTATION TO THE ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 9
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 9
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 9
Poetry. Article 9
Masonic Tidings. Article 9
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 9
MASONIC MEETINGS IN GLASGOW AND VICINITY. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN EDINBURGH AND VICINITY. Article 10
THE PICTORIAL WORLD. Article 10
Installation of H.R.H. The Prince of Wales. Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

The Freemason is a sixteen page weekly newspaper , price 2 d . It is published every Friday morning , and contains the most important and useful information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Annual subscription in the United Kingdom , Post free , io / . Brethren in foreign parts , wishing to have this newspaper sent them regularly from the office of publication , should , in sending their remittances , add to the 21 I . per week the postage on 20 Z .

newspapers . The Freemason may be procured through any newsagen in the United Kingdom by giving ( if needed ) the publisher ' s address , 198 , Flcct-st . All communications , correspondence , reports , & c , must be addressed to the Editor .

Advertisements , change in address , complaints of diffi . culties in procuring Freemason , tec , to the Publisher , 198 , Fleet-st ., London , E . C . Careful attention will be paid to all AISS . entrusted to the Editor , but he cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied by stamp directed covers .

To Advertisers.

TO ADVERTISERS .

The Freemason has a large circulation in all parts ol the Globe , its advantages as an advertising medium can therefore scarcely be overrated . For terms , position , Sec , apply to GEOIIGF . RUNNING , 198 , Fleet-st .

Ar00601

NOTICE .

Alany complaints having been received of the difficulty experienced in procuring the Freemason in the City , the publisher begs to append the following list , being a selected few of the appointed agents : — Abbott , Wm ., East Cheap . Bates , Pilgrim-street , Ludgate-hill . Born , H ., 11 5 , London-wall .

Dawson , Wm ., 121 , Cannon-street . Gilbert , Jas ,, 18 , Gracechurch-street . Guest , Wm ., 54 , Paternoster-row . Phillpott Bros ., 65 , King William-street . Pottle , R ., 14 , Royal Exchange . May also be obtained at W . II . Smith & Son ' s Bookstalls at the following City Stations : —

Broad-strcct . I Holborn Viaduct . Cannon-street . | London Bridge . Ludgate Hill .

Births, Marriages And Deaths.

Births , Marriages and Deaths .

BIRTH . WEAVER . —On the 28 th April , the wife of I 5 ro . James Weaver , P . AI . 862 and 1319 , P . Prov . G . Org ., Aliddlesex , of a son .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

AU Communications , Advertisements , & c , intended for insertion in the Number of the following Saturday , must reach the Office not later than 12 o ' clock on Wednesday morning .

The following stand over and will bc inserted next week ** - ¦* I (¦ Letters from T . C . G . L . ; W . Kelly ; Edwin Prior ; "A New Order in Yorkshire . " Poetry : " The Installation ; " "Ode , " W . S . ; "The Berkshire Alasons . " Reports of Lodges : 21 , 141 , 332 , 464 , 1018 , 1138 , 1239 , 1309 , 1381 , E . C , Grand Lodge of Scotland .

The Graphic

THE GRAPHIC

This Week , May 8 , contains the following Fine Engravings : Portrait of Aliss Elizabeth Thompson ( Drawn from Life ) , Painter of the " Roll Call , " fcc . " Off Duty , " from the Picture by G . Pope . Collision Between a Ship and an Iceberg off Cape I lorn .

THE FREEMASONS

At the Albert Hall . The Earl of Carnarvon leading H . R . H . the Prince of Wales to the Throne . Signor Tommaso Salvini , the great Italian Tragedian . The Transit of Venus : An Observatory Station in the Australian Bush . Patent Reversible Lifeboat for Ships . The Civil War in Spain : Don Carlos attending Alass at the Cathedral of Tolosa . Old Country Seats : Scighford Hall , Staffordshire .

School Revisited : One ot the Heads from Mr . G . D . Leslie's Picture in the Royal Academy Exhibition ( Extra Double-Page Engraving on Plate Paper ) . The Threatened War in Burmah : A Bore on the Sitang River . Our Obituary Record : Portraits of Baron Brunnow , Sir Arthur Helps , Canon Selwyn , H . W . Pickersgill , R . A ., and Air . T . Wright ,

the Prison Philanthropist . The Snake-eating Snake at the Zoological Gardens . The Arctic Expedition : Patent Gun for Shooting Walruses ; Snow Boot . A Gondola Race at Venice . A New Story by Air . George Alacdonald , entitled St . George and St . Alichael , is continued in this Week's Number .

Ar00610

The Freemason , SATURDAY , MAY 8 , 187 . 5 .

Memories Of The Great Installation.

MEMORIES OF THE GREAT INSTALLATION .

By this time most of our good brethren have gone home again , and find themselves amid the joys and comforts of their " own fireside . " We trust that they will carry a tale back to those who will eagerly listen , of all that is precious and

Memories Of The Great Installation.

pleasant connected with that red letter day henceforth in our Masonic calendar , April 28 th , 1875 . They will , we think , take away with them , at least we hope so , many pleasurable reminiscences . They saw and heard their Grand Master in all the warmth of his amiable

kindliness , and in all the manly sincerity of his genial nature . They witnessed a sight , that they will never forget , in the enthusiastic fervour of commander and brethren , and the most famous , and best disciplined meeting that our Order has ever been privileged to hold . Why , even

today we are still regarding with astonishment and pride those serried lines of exulting Craftsmen . We even still can behold their manipulations . All honour to them ! They came from all directions , and they proved themselves to be what we knewthem to be , despite the vaticinations

of some and the fear of others , a most warmhearted , gentlemanly , amiable and loyal body of men , obedient to lawful authority , and eager to please and be pleased . Even the profane press , the Times for example , is deeply struck by the order , the zeal , the perfect subordination

of that mighty assembly , and there can be no doubt , that that noble gathering has given , and will give , muchadditional " eclat " and" prestige " to our Order generally . The banquet passed over as well as the meeting , and the speeches were equally marked by good taste , much happy

facility , and above all with true Masonic teaching . Anything more thoroughly and truly in the spirit of our old Grand Masters than the heartfelt expressions of our august Grand Master , we have never read , and we augur well indeed for the Craft and for him . The Duke of Connaught

was loudly cheered , as he well deserved to be , and the Duke of Manchester ' s opportune little address deserves to be specially commended . I 3 ro . Erasmus Wilson and his Board of Stewards demand all praise and many thanks . The genial Doctor himself made a very effective speech , and

under his skilful direction there could be no doubt that not only was the festival itself a great success , but the guests thoroughly enjoyed their dinner . Some one has said that " the things of to-day are the things of to-morrow / ' but we doubt the truth of the axiom as regards April 28 th , 1875 . We

shall never behold such another assembly again . It was quite pleasant to see so many old Freemasons , and to shake hands with so many ancient friends , and we are not likely or willing to let go its agreeable souvenirs . But , like as when one bids adieu to an old mate who is setting off

for a distant clime , or just as when we leave some old familiar spot with a sigh and a wrench ofthe heart , so as we wish good bye to our grea . Installation gathering , as we say " vale " to its bril liant pageant , and its glorious heartiness , we do so with mingled pleasure and regret . Pleasure to

have been present , regret that it is now a thing of the past ! But for us in England it will ever remain an event of imperishable recollections , and nothing can ever lessen its value or dim its grandeur to our English and loyal Craft . As Moore sang of old , it is still ever true in this

mundane existence of ours , in great things as well as in humble—You may break , you may shatter the vase if you will , But the scent ofthe roses will hang round it still .

The Advantages Of Discipline.

THE ADVANTAGES OF DISCIPLINE .

It is well known that it is not an easy matter to move a large body of men . In theory it may seem a facile operation , and the book of mancefc . vres may be very precise , but yet in practice it requires , as all know who have anything to do

with such things , no little carefulness , much selfpossession , and a great deal of " savoir faire , " to say nothing of a " memoria technica . " And so to many the control over from 7 to 8 , 000 Freemasons seemed somewhat dubious , and not a little hazardous . And yet here " without a

casualty , ' such is the police report , they all moved in and they all moved out , without the least difficulty or the smallest confusion . Too much praise cannot be accorded to their commanders , too much admiration cannot be expended upon them . We do not know to whom exactl y belongs the praise of drawing ojut the scheme for the ar-

The Advantages Of Discipline.

rangement of the brethren , but we believe it to belong to Bro . Albert W . Woods and Brother Thomas Fenn alone . Whoever it was , has a clear talent for organization , and we may be glad that we have one brother or more capable of successfully handling and controlling

large masses of Freemasons . But still equal kudos , we think , ought to be given to our brethren . An old soldier once said that the " greatest merit of all was to know how to obey orders , " and certainly no body of men could have been more docile or more

tractable than those many thousands of Freemasons on April 28 th . Indeed , Freemasonry teaches us all the good lesson of discipline , whether general or personal , from first to last . From the time we see the light until we pass away from all of earth , so long as we are affiliated—and all Masons

ought to be affiliated Masons—ours is a continuous exhortation , alike to discipline of self and discipline in the lodge . We are , as Lord Winchelsea once said ofthe great Duke , " taught to command by learning to obey , " and he , in our opinion , is the truest Freemason who has learnt

the best of all lessons next to self disci pline , namely , obedience . And though Freemasons , like all Englishmen , have a slight tendency to grumble , they are not as a general rule either " frondeurs" or insubordinate . They are , for the most part , a very cheerful , contented ,

easily gratified , orderly body of men , amenable to authority , and loyal to their chiefs . We have , happily , few disagreements , and no cabals amongst us ; complaints are unfrequent , and controversy is at a discount . Hence we have every element of stable prosperity and

peaceful progress . And long may it so continue . Long may we be free from idle questions and hurtful logomachies , long may we remain a loving , a forbearing , a tolerant , an united Order . When we are gone , and another generation has

taken our places , and they talk of our great Installation of 1875 , may they be as happily cemented as we are in all fraternal good will , may they equally manifest th ^* advantages of discipline , and of obedience to authority .

The New Grand Officers.

THE NEW GRAND OFFICERS .

We have much pleasure in being enabled to publish the following short memoirs of some of the n » w Grand Officers : —

J UNIOR GRAND WARDEN . The Lord Mayor was initiated in the Tuscan Lodge , 14 , in the year 1 855 ; in 1857 joined the Grand Masters' Lodge , No . 1 ; served all the offices , including Master ; appointed Grand Steward b y the Grand Masters' Lodge ; served the office and was appointed President of the

Grand Stewards . Joined the Moira Chapter , R . A . j filled the three chairs and is M . E . Z ., and will be promoted to Grand Chapter on Wednesday . Subsequently became a member of a Surrey lodge , the Frederick of Unity , also joined chapter connected with it . Is also a member of the Rose Croix and a K . Templar . Has served the office of Steward on several

. GRAND CHAPLAIN . The Rev . Spencer Robert Wigram , M . A ., Balliol Coliege , Oxon , vicar of Brittle well , Essex , and rural dean , was initiated in Romford , Lodge Hope and Unity , No . 214 ; Past Grand Chaplain of the Province of Essex : J . W . Priory Lodge ,

1000 , and P . M . and P . Z . 2 x 4 . Son of Bro . Octavius Wigram , of Bryanstone Square , for many years Governor of Royal Exchange Assurance , a very hard-working Mason ; has devoted a great deal of time to the interests of the Craft in Essex , and is well known aud extremel y liked by all who have the pleasure of coming in contact with him .

J UNIOR GRAND DEACON . Bro . Robert Grey was initiated into Freemasonry on the 13 th February , i 860 , in the St . Andrews-in-the-East Lodge , No . 222 , and passed the chair of that lodge in 1865-6 . He joined the

Prince of Wales ' s Lodge , No . 259 , on the 23 rd February , 1864 , and represented that lodge as Grand Steward in 1866 . In 186 9 he acted as one of the Stewards at the Inauguration Festival . In 1874 , on the occasion of the Installation ofthe Prince of Wales as W . M , of the Prince of

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