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Notes On The Ceremony Of Installation.

his Masonic career . He was nominated by the Duke of Kent , one of the orig inal members of the Lodge of Reconciliation , and was seldom absent from its meetings , generally officiating as S . VV . He was a warm supporter of the Boys' School , and a regular attendant at the meetings of the Committee of that Institution .

Henry Rogers , P . M . No . 5 , is thus referred to by the writer of his obituary in the Freemasons' Quarterly Review , 1835 . " Brother Rogers ' s career in Masonry was sincerely characterized by strict propriety . Fully

competent to the most important duties , he was always ready to fill the junior offices when circumstances rendered it necessary . For several years he was the Installing Officer of the Bank of England Lodge , the members of which entertain an affectionate reverence for his worth . "

In contemplating the signatures of these old brethren , and hunting up their achievements , I find it somewhat difficult to avoid running into a sort of Masonic biography , and thereby losing sight ot my first intention , which was merely to show in what manner our ceremony of installation originated and received official sanction , and the channel by which the present

generation obtained a knowledge of it . Having completed , I hope to the satisfaction of all concerned , the former portion of my undertaking , I will now endeavour to discharge the latter , and for this purpose will first offer a few observations on the subject of general lodges of instruction . In all

probability assemblages of Masons for the purpose of mutual instruction are coeval with the formation of regular lodges meeting on stated days , but when the lodges met much more frequently than they do now , there was , as a matter of course , less need of lodges of instruction .

An examination of the old lists will show that many lodges formerly held fortnightly meetings , and some even more frequently ; for instance , No . 163 , of 1738 , is advertised to meet on the ist , 2 nd , and 3 rd Thursday , and to hold a Master ' s Lodge every Sunday ; and , as I happen to have the minute book of the period before me , I can safely say that the lodge did so

meet . No special legislation for instruction purposes seems to have been required until after the Union , when the ceremonies were re-arranged and promulgated throughout the English Fraternity , and lodges of instruction naturally became important factors in our Masonic system . I cannot find them mentioned in the Constitutions prior to 1819 ; but in this edition

regulations similar in substance to those now in force appear , and others have been added as circumstances required . Fifteen Lodges of Instruction are named in the Calendar for 1814 ( issued in November , 1813 ) , and the same number in that for 1815 , after which years they appear to have been entirely omitted from the Calendar until 1841 , when , under the heading of

"Lodges of Instruction which have given notice of their meetings in conformity with the laws of the Grand Lodge , " three only are named in London , although it is quite certain that many others were at this time in active and regular work . Ten years later the list includes 29 , and others were added , increasing year by year , the last issue of the Calendar showing no less than 148 in the London district alone .

The first volume of the Freemasons' Quarterly Review , published in 1834 , gives a list of 12 Lodges of Instruction in London , with the names of about 20 brethren who attended them for the purpose of imparting Masonic

knowledge . At the head of this list stands the " Emulation Lodge of Improvement , Blue Posts , Charlotte-street , Rathbone Place ; Friday , at 7 in the winter and 8 in the summer . Brothers Dovvley , Cooper , Wilson , Pitt , & c . "

Each of the lodges mentioned appear to have been attended by several of these old instructors , some of whose names are appended to more than one of the lodges . Unfortunately , the early records of the Emulation Lodge of Improvement are lost , but the list of members from its commencement is still preserved intact .

The last-named publication for 1836 contains the following brief outline of its origin . "About the year 1823 several Brethren considered that the Masonic lectures were not worked in Lodges upon a sufficiently regulated system , and that if those whose attainments as working Masons placed them as a prominent authority were to meet together and to work efficiently ,

they might be the means of effecting much improvement . They accordingly •net , we believe , in Wardour Street , pursuant to a general notice in the Public papers , which advertisement created a considerable sensation in the Craft . Some members of the Grand Stewards Lodge , hitherto the only authority for a recognised system , felt that it was necessary to watch the

proceedings . Some Grand Officers , with Brother E . Harper , the Grand Secretary , also attended . The several chairs , from the Master to the Outer Guard , were all filled with the most practical and experienced Masons of the day ; and we have the authority of a Grand Officer for stating , that never

was there so perfect an illustration of the ceremonies and lectures ever before manifested . The visitors separated highly delighted ; amongst ftem the lamented Peter Gilkes , who so highly approved of the proceedings , fnat in about twelve months afterwards he joined the Lodge , and supported 11 until the time of his death .

'At first the object was confined to the delivering of lectures , but after-Wards the ceremonies were introduced which gave great satisfaction , gratified as we are to bear testimony to the value and importance of this Lod ge , and satisfied as we are of its influence on the Craft , we must enter 0 u r caution to the leading members of it not to relax from the discipline so

unremittingly enforced by the institutors , and which was especially observed b y the late Peter Gilkes . We do not make this allusion without cause . Let " excellent Brethren to whose care the interests of the Lodge are unanimo usly confided , feel no diffidence in correcting the passing errors . They should

remember that error may become practice unless early checked , nd we further call upon the junior members to weigh with scrupulous care . e language which the landmarks permit , and not to be too ready to alter , ln the sli ghtest degree , what is in itself so excellent . "

Notes On The Ceremony Of Installation.

The estimation in which this Lodge of Improvement was held half a century ago is thus plainly manifested , and the distinguished place it has ever since occupied is ample evidence that the warning contained in the concluding sentences was fully appreciated by those for whom it was intended .

The reader will observe that one person is particularly mentioned in the foregoing quotation , and as there are probably very few now living who were acquainted with the "late Peter Gilkes" I will here introduce a few extracts from his biography in the Freemasons' Quarterly Review of 1834 .

" An honest man ' s the noblest work of God . " " Brother Peter William Gilkes was born on the ist of May , 1765 , in the neighbourhood of Carnaby Market , and baptised a member of the Catholic church in the same year ; he was named alter the late Lord Petre , who had been an excellent friend to his family The funeral

of a distinguished brother , whom the Craft honoured by a public procession , first directed his attention to Masonry ; enquiry satisfied his mind of the utility and benevolent views of of the Order , and he was initiated in the year 1786 , at the age of twenty-one , in the British Lodge , now No . 8 . Delighted with the science , he devoted his energies and time to qualify himself for those honours which Masonry holds out for the deserving . . .

" The Lodge of Unity , now 82 , satisfied with his attainments and general conduct , first elected him their Master . He filled successively the chairs of 23 , 188 , 201 , 211 , 318 , 259 , and 7 , several times each , and died the

Worshipful Master of the St . Michael's Lodge , No . 235 . For the last 16 years of his life he was a distinguished member of the Board of Benevolence , to qualify himself for which he , during that period , annually filled the chair of a lodge , and discharged its arduous duties . . . .

" The difficulties Bro . Gilkes had encountered in perfecting himself in Masonry made him resolve to teach gratuitously such brethren as were disposed to attend him every day from one o ' clock till time to attend some

lodge or other , where his evenings were generally spent ; he was always ready to receive them for this purpose , and even made several journies into Lincolnshire , Cambridge , and Norfolk , refusing all remuneration further than the mere expenses of his visit . . . .

" He was in a manner something Johnsonian in regard to Masonry—no advantage could be taken of him in lodge—he would not allow the slightest deviation in word , or manner , or matter , to please the most learned or the

most accomplished in other subjects ; we have observed him correct many men of rank and influence for deviations from the standard of Masonic illustration , and who , to their credit , acknowledged the reproof with all the courtesy which became their allegiance to the Craft . . . .

" In his youth he must have been an extremely powerful man , for when in his 67 th year , on his return from the Blackfriars Lodge , he was attacked in Lincoln ' s Inn Fields by four men , three ot whom he knocked down ; he generally carried a cook ' s knife to defend himself with in case of attack , but , fortunately , he had left it at home on the night of the attack .

" Although universally held in esteem amongst Masons , his conduct was always characterised by good sense ; he never aspired beyond his station in life , and declined the honour of an office in the Grand Lodge , because he considered that his circumstances in life were not equal to the appointment . "

Peter Gilkes died on the I ith , and was buried on the 19 th December , 18 33 , in St . James ' s Churchyard , Piccadilly . " The highest tribute of respect to departed merit was amply offered in the number as well as b y the character of a larger concourse of the Fraternity than were probably ever congregated at any Masonic meeting , whether of a public nature or upon

any occasion of festivity . " In the following year ( 18 34 ) , a Committee was appointed to collect subscriptions for the purpose of erecting a monument to his memory . As may readily be imagined , the many admirers of the departed brother , soon enabled the Committee to carry out their wishes , and a most appropriate and handsome tablet , the gratuitous design of his

friend and pupil , the late Stephen Barton Wilson , P . G . D ., wis placed on one of the pillars in the South aisle of the above-named church , where it can still be seen by anyone who cares to inspect it . No doubt the foregoing extracts will sufficiently evince the esteem in which this worthy brother was held by the Fraternity in London , forming , however , but a

very small portion of the well-merited encomiums bestowed upon him ; indeed , I question whether any single individual , either before his time or since , has attained to such distinction as a Masonic instructor . Gifted with an extraordinary memory , he seems to have to come to the front at a period when his peculiar qualifications were most in demand , and consequently

fully appreciated . The official records show that he was a frequent attendant at the Lodges of Promulgation and Reconciliation , and , as will be seen , he attended every meeting of the •' Board of Installation . " The following copy of a letter written by W . H . White , Grand Secretary , will indicate the official estimate of his character and abilities :

"F . M . Hall , 6 Sept ., 1843 . " W . Master , In reply to yr letter of the 5 th instant enquiring whether any alterations have been made in the Ceremonies of Initiation , & c , since the late P . Gilkes was in the Country ; I beg to say ( without knowing at what

period that visit took place ) that no alterations have been made since the G . Lo . formally approved and decided on them in the year 1816 . Br , Gilkes was fully Master of all the Ceremonies ' and I believe most strictly observed them . " I remain

W . Master , " Lodge 323 , Yrs fraternally , Kidderminster . " W . H . W ., G . S . I cannot well close my remarks on the career of Bro . Gilkes without adverting to his connection with the Emulation Lodge of Improvement

“The Freemason: 1888-12-08, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_08121888/page/3/.
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CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
OLD WARRANTS, XXXII. AND XXXIII. Article 2
NOTES ON THE CEREMONY OF INSTALLATION. Article 2
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 4
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WILTSHIRE. Article 6
CONSECRATION OF THE THORNHAM LODGE, No. 2279. Article 7
GRAND MARK LODGE. Article 8
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To Correspondents. Article 11
Untitled Article 11
Original Correspondence. Article 11
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 11
INSTRUCTION. Article 13
Royal Arch. Article 14
INSTRUCTION. Article 14
Mark Masonry. Article 14
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 14
Rosicrucian Society of England. Article 14
Cryptic Masonry. Article 14
South Africa. Article 14
BANQUET AND BALL OF THE SKELMERSDALE LODGE, No. 1658. Article 15
THE ANNUAL SUPPER OF THE RANELAGH LODGE OF INSTRUCTION, No. 834. Article 15
PRESENTATION OF PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE CLOTHING TO BRO. HENRY AXLEY, P.M. No.495 Article 15
FESTIVAL OF THE GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 15
Saint Helena. Article 16
HISTORICAL NOTES ON SCOTCH LODGES. Article 16
Order of the Secret Monitor. Article 17
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 17
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Eastern Archipelago. Article 17
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 18
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Notes On The Ceremony Of Installation.

his Masonic career . He was nominated by the Duke of Kent , one of the orig inal members of the Lodge of Reconciliation , and was seldom absent from its meetings , generally officiating as S . VV . He was a warm supporter of the Boys' School , and a regular attendant at the meetings of the Committee of that Institution .

Henry Rogers , P . M . No . 5 , is thus referred to by the writer of his obituary in the Freemasons' Quarterly Review , 1835 . " Brother Rogers ' s career in Masonry was sincerely characterized by strict propriety . Fully

competent to the most important duties , he was always ready to fill the junior offices when circumstances rendered it necessary . For several years he was the Installing Officer of the Bank of England Lodge , the members of which entertain an affectionate reverence for his worth . "

In contemplating the signatures of these old brethren , and hunting up their achievements , I find it somewhat difficult to avoid running into a sort of Masonic biography , and thereby losing sight ot my first intention , which was merely to show in what manner our ceremony of installation originated and received official sanction , and the channel by which the present

generation obtained a knowledge of it . Having completed , I hope to the satisfaction of all concerned , the former portion of my undertaking , I will now endeavour to discharge the latter , and for this purpose will first offer a few observations on the subject of general lodges of instruction . In all

probability assemblages of Masons for the purpose of mutual instruction are coeval with the formation of regular lodges meeting on stated days , but when the lodges met much more frequently than they do now , there was , as a matter of course , less need of lodges of instruction .

An examination of the old lists will show that many lodges formerly held fortnightly meetings , and some even more frequently ; for instance , No . 163 , of 1738 , is advertised to meet on the ist , 2 nd , and 3 rd Thursday , and to hold a Master ' s Lodge every Sunday ; and , as I happen to have the minute book of the period before me , I can safely say that the lodge did so

meet . No special legislation for instruction purposes seems to have been required until after the Union , when the ceremonies were re-arranged and promulgated throughout the English Fraternity , and lodges of instruction naturally became important factors in our Masonic system . I cannot find them mentioned in the Constitutions prior to 1819 ; but in this edition

regulations similar in substance to those now in force appear , and others have been added as circumstances required . Fifteen Lodges of Instruction are named in the Calendar for 1814 ( issued in November , 1813 ) , and the same number in that for 1815 , after which years they appear to have been entirely omitted from the Calendar until 1841 , when , under the heading of

"Lodges of Instruction which have given notice of their meetings in conformity with the laws of the Grand Lodge , " three only are named in London , although it is quite certain that many others were at this time in active and regular work . Ten years later the list includes 29 , and others were added , increasing year by year , the last issue of the Calendar showing no less than 148 in the London district alone .

The first volume of the Freemasons' Quarterly Review , published in 1834 , gives a list of 12 Lodges of Instruction in London , with the names of about 20 brethren who attended them for the purpose of imparting Masonic

knowledge . At the head of this list stands the " Emulation Lodge of Improvement , Blue Posts , Charlotte-street , Rathbone Place ; Friday , at 7 in the winter and 8 in the summer . Brothers Dovvley , Cooper , Wilson , Pitt , & c . "

Each of the lodges mentioned appear to have been attended by several of these old instructors , some of whose names are appended to more than one of the lodges . Unfortunately , the early records of the Emulation Lodge of Improvement are lost , but the list of members from its commencement is still preserved intact .

The last-named publication for 1836 contains the following brief outline of its origin . "About the year 1823 several Brethren considered that the Masonic lectures were not worked in Lodges upon a sufficiently regulated system , and that if those whose attainments as working Masons placed them as a prominent authority were to meet together and to work efficiently ,

they might be the means of effecting much improvement . They accordingly •net , we believe , in Wardour Street , pursuant to a general notice in the Public papers , which advertisement created a considerable sensation in the Craft . Some members of the Grand Stewards Lodge , hitherto the only authority for a recognised system , felt that it was necessary to watch the

proceedings . Some Grand Officers , with Brother E . Harper , the Grand Secretary , also attended . The several chairs , from the Master to the Outer Guard , were all filled with the most practical and experienced Masons of the day ; and we have the authority of a Grand Officer for stating , that never

was there so perfect an illustration of the ceremonies and lectures ever before manifested . The visitors separated highly delighted ; amongst ftem the lamented Peter Gilkes , who so highly approved of the proceedings , fnat in about twelve months afterwards he joined the Lodge , and supported 11 until the time of his death .

'At first the object was confined to the delivering of lectures , but after-Wards the ceremonies were introduced which gave great satisfaction , gratified as we are to bear testimony to the value and importance of this Lod ge , and satisfied as we are of its influence on the Craft , we must enter 0 u r caution to the leading members of it not to relax from the discipline so

unremittingly enforced by the institutors , and which was especially observed b y the late Peter Gilkes . We do not make this allusion without cause . Let " excellent Brethren to whose care the interests of the Lodge are unanimo usly confided , feel no diffidence in correcting the passing errors . They should

remember that error may become practice unless early checked , nd we further call upon the junior members to weigh with scrupulous care . e language which the landmarks permit , and not to be too ready to alter , ln the sli ghtest degree , what is in itself so excellent . "

Notes On The Ceremony Of Installation.

The estimation in which this Lodge of Improvement was held half a century ago is thus plainly manifested , and the distinguished place it has ever since occupied is ample evidence that the warning contained in the concluding sentences was fully appreciated by those for whom it was intended .

The reader will observe that one person is particularly mentioned in the foregoing quotation , and as there are probably very few now living who were acquainted with the "late Peter Gilkes" I will here introduce a few extracts from his biography in the Freemasons' Quarterly Review of 1834 .

" An honest man ' s the noblest work of God . " " Brother Peter William Gilkes was born on the ist of May , 1765 , in the neighbourhood of Carnaby Market , and baptised a member of the Catholic church in the same year ; he was named alter the late Lord Petre , who had been an excellent friend to his family The funeral

of a distinguished brother , whom the Craft honoured by a public procession , first directed his attention to Masonry ; enquiry satisfied his mind of the utility and benevolent views of of the Order , and he was initiated in the year 1786 , at the age of twenty-one , in the British Lodge , now No . 8 . Delighted with the science , he devoted his energies and time to qualify himself for those honours which Masonry holds out for the deserving . . .

" The Lodge of Unity , now 82 , satisfied with his attainments and general conduct , first elected him their Master . He filled successively the chairs of 23 , 188 , 201 , 211 , 318 , 259 , and 7 , several times each , and died the

Worshipful Master of the St . Michael's Lodge , No . 235 . For the last 16 years of his life he was a distinguished member of the Board of Benevolence , to qualify himself for which he , during that period , annually filled the chair of a lodge , and discharged its arduous duties . . . .

" The difficulties Bro . Gilkes had encountered in perfecting himself in Masonry made him resolve to teach gratuitously such brethren as were disposed to attend him every day from one o ' clock till time to attend some

lodge or other , where his evenings were generally spent ; he was always ready to receive them for this purpose , and even made several journies into Lincolnshire , Cambridge , and Norfolk , refusing all remuneration further than the mere expenses of his visit . . . .

" He was in a manner something Johnsonian in regard to Masonry—no advantage could be taken of him in lodge—he would not allow the slightest deviation in word , or manner , or matter , to please the most learned or the

most accomplished in other subjects ; we have observed him correct many men of rank and influence for deviations from the standard of Masonic illustration , and who , to their credit , acknowledged the reproof with all the courtesy which became their allegiance to the Craft . . . .

" In his youth he must have been an extremely powerful man , for when in his 67 th year , on his return from the Blackfriars Lodge , he was attacked in Lincoln ' s Inn Fields by four men , three ot whom he knocked down ; he generally carried a cook ' s knife to defend himself with in case of attack , but , fortunately , he had left it at home on the night of the attack .

" Although universally held in esteem amongst Masons , his conduct was always characterised by good sense ; he never aspired beyond his station in life , and declined the honour of an office in the Grand Lodge , because he considered that his circumstances in life were not equal to the appointment . "

Peter Gilkes died on the I ith , and was buried on the 19 th December , 18 33 , in St . James ' s Churchyard , Piccadilly . " The highest tribute of respect to departed merit was amply offered in the number as well as b y the character of a larger concourse of the Fraternity than were probably ever congregated at any Masonic meeting , whether of a public nature or upon

any occasion of festivity . " In the following year ( 18 34 ) , a Committee was appointed to collect subscriptions for the purpose of erecting a monument to his memory . As may readily be imagined , the many admirers of the departed brother , soon enabled the Committee to carry out their wishes , and a most appropriate and handsome tablet , the gratuitous design of his

friend and pupil , the late Stephen Barton Wilson , P . G . D ., wis placed on one of the pillars in the South aisle of the above-named church , where it can still be seen by anyone who cares to inspect it . No doubt the foregoing extracts will sufficiently evince the esteem in which this worthy brother was held by the Fraternity in London , forming , however , but a

very small portion of the well-merited encomiums bestowed upon him ; indeed , I question whether any single individual , either before his time or since , has attained to such distinction as a Masonic instructor . Gifted with an extraordinary memory , he seems to have to come to the front at a period when his peculiar qualifications were most in demand , and consequently

fully appreciated . The official records show that he was a frequent attendant at the Lodges of Promulgation and Reconciliation , and , as will be seen , he attended every meeting of the •' Board of Installation . " The following copy of a letter written by W . H . White , Grand Secretary , will indicate the official estimate of his character and abilities :

"F . M . Hall , 6 Sept ., 1843 . " W . Master , In reply to yr letter of the 5 th instant enquiring whether any alterations have been made in the Ceremonies of Initiation , & c , since the late P . Gilkes was in the Country ; I beg to say ( without knowing at what

period that visit took place ) that no alterations have been made since the G . Lo . formally approved and decided on them in the year 1816 . Br , Gilkes was fully Master of all the Ceremonies ' and I believe most strictly observed them . " I remain

W . Master , " Lodge 323 , Yrs fraternally , Kidderminster . " W . H . W ., G . S . I cannot well close my remarks on the career of Bro . Gilkes without adverting to his connection with the Emulation Lodge of Improvement

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