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Freemasonry In 1897.

organisation which was inaugurated in i 8 y 6 . The abolition of Convent General has greatly simplified matters , and the Great Priories which held under it have in the main fared prosperously . On the Sth April a special meeting of the Great Prion *

of England was held at Mark Masons' Hall , Great Queen-street , under the presidency of the Earl of Euston , G . Master , when deputations from the Great Priory of Ireland and the Chaptei General of Scotland were received with a most cordial welcome

the knights composing the former being Sir Charles A . Cameron , G . C . T ., Great Chancellor ; A . V . Davoren , G . C . T ., Great Constable ; J . Creed Meredith ; Colonel T . C . McCammon , Great Treasurer ; and R . N . Walker , Great Vice-Chancellor ; while the Scottish delegates were the Earl of Kintore , G . C . T ., Great

Senesciial ; Sir James Buchanan , K . C . T . ; Lindsay Mackcrsey , G . C . T ., Treasurer and Registrar ; G . M . Allan , Lord Saltoun , Grand Prior ; and Robert Inches . A most fraternal greeting was extended to the visitors by the Earl of liuston on behalf of

Great Priory , and after li . Knights the Hon . Alan de Tatton Egerton , M . P ., and Col . Harvey Byrde had been introduced and done homage as Provincial Priors respectively , of Cheshire and and Ceylon , and li . Knights the Hon . A . de Tatton Iigerton and the Earl of Onslow had been invested , the former with the

insignia of his new ollice , and the latter with those of Provincial Prior of Kent and Surrey , a candidate was installed as Knight Templar for the edification ol the visitors , and Great Priory was closed , a Special Priory of the Order of Malta being subsequently opened , and a number of Knights Templar admitted to

the Order . The delegates were afterwards entertained at a grand banquet by the English Templars . At the half-yearl y meeting of Great Priory , on the 14 th May , the minutes of the annual conference which had been held by the representatives of the Templars of England , Ireland , and Scotland , on the 7 II 1

April , were read , and the resolutions which it had seen lit to recommend on the subject of corresponding rank and other matters were adopted . An address of congratulation to the Queen on the completion of the Goth year of her reign was adopted by acclamation , and Ii . Knights the liarl of Yarborough

and Maj . G . C . Davie having been introduced and invested with their insignia as K . C . T ., and the officers forthe ensuing vear appointed , the proceedings closed , with the usual banquet . There have likewise been the usual meetingsof Provincial Priories , and all things considered , we think the Order has fully maintained

ils position , if , indeed , it has not materially strengthened it . Wc regret we cannot say the same of the Order of Rome and the Red Cross of Constantine . The Premier Conclave appears to have done its work admirably , and the Grand Imperial Council presides over the affairs of the Order , but that is about all we

feel justified in saying of the Order . The Royal and Select Masters , and the Allied Degrees likewise exist , but the evidences of a flourishing existence do not present themselves frequently , aad we judge of them rather by what we read in calendars than by the records of their doings which come under our notice .

The Supreme Council of the Ancient and Accepted Rite has fully maintained its position . Its popularity is as deservedl y great as ever and it is not therefore surprising that it should continue to be one of the strongest and most influential and at the same time , one of the wealthiest , Masonic organisations in

the country The Royal Order of Scotland remains in aboul the same position as last year . The Metropolitan and Yorkshire Colleges of the Rosicrucian Society still meet ^ and discuss the more abstruse questions which find favour with ils members , and

the Order of the Secret Monitor , under the liarl of Warwick , as Supreme Grand Ruler , flourishes , though we do not gather that it is any nearer a settlement of its little differences with the Grand Council of thc Allied Degrees than it was 12 months since .

OUR INSTITUTIONS . We now pass on to a consideration ol what has happened in connection with our central Masonic Institutions . Thus we

nave certainly no reason to complain ol any shortcomings on the part of the Craft either as regards the contributions they have raised towards ( heir maintenance and support or in the interest which has been exhibited in their work . It is true that the

aggregate of the Returns al the Festivals held in their behalf during the year has been substantially less than it was in 18 9 6 , the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution having obtained subscriptions and donations amounting lo £ 19 , 083 ; the Royal Masonic Institution for Girls to / , 16 , 02 b ; and the Royal

Masonic Institution for Boys to £ 15 , 031 ; giving a total of £ 50 , 141 . 1 , as compared with a total for l . Sjb ranging from £ 54 , 000 to £ 54 , 500 . But for this diminution there was ample

compensation in the grants of £ 2000 made by ( irand Lodge to each Institution , and the £ 1166 which each received as its allotted portion of ( he sum paid lor admission to the memorable Diamond Jubilee meeting in the Roval Albert Hall

on the 14 th June . ' 1 hese gilts amount to over £ 9500 and raise the total of the aggregate distributed among the three Charities to not far short of £ 60 , 000 . Thus , their receipts from this the most important source of income on which they have to rely has been in all respects satisfactory , while as regards the beneficent

work they have done during the year there has never been , not never could be , the slightest question . This , how ever , will be more apparent from the particulars wc are able to furnish in respect of each Institution , taking them , as usual , in thc order in which their respective Festivals were held .

The Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution celebrated its anniversary at the Freemasons' Tavern , un Wednesday , the 24 th February , under the presidency of I I . R . I I . thc Duke ol Connaught , K . G ., Past G . Mast er , Prov . G . Master of Sussex , and District G . Master of Bombay , and when in the course ol

the evening , thc duty ol announcing the Returns devolved on the Secretary , that brother had the pleasure of declaring that the total contributed reached £ 18 , 197 which was subsequently augmented by the receipt of outstanding lists and donations , & c , to £ 19 , 083 . 'towards this handsome total London ,

by the medium of 198 Stewards , gave £ 10 , 405 , thc highest individual Stewards' lists being those of Bro . John R . Roberts , Fellowship Lodge , No . 2535 , for £ 259 ; Mro . Charles Spencer , of St . John ' s Lodge , No . 130 b . for £ 215 ; and of Mro . James Terry himself , unattached , for £ 187 . The Provinces , of

which 35 were represented by 234 Stewards contributed £ 8 ( 107 towards which Sussex , as the Chairman ' s Province , gave £ 1263 , 1 lertfordshire £ 857 , West Yorkshire £ 009 , Worcestershire £ 504 , Iiasl Lancashire £ 4 64 , Berkshire £ 455 , Essex £ 415 , Middlesex £ 352 , Suffolk £ 325 , and Cambridgeshire £ . 302 . It was a grand

result worthy of his Royal Highness the Chairman , of the Institution , and especially of tbe auspicious vear in which the Festival was held , and most cordial were the thanks which the Committee of Management returned lo the Royal Chairman , and the Board of 432 Stewards which had so energetically and so

successfully supported his Royal Highness . At the annual meeting of the Governors and Subscribers , which was held on the 21 st May , the Report of the Committee embod y ing their thanks was accepted with acclamation ; but no increase in the number of annuitants was made on either Fund , and only the

vacancies whicli had occurred up to that day were filled up , the numbers remaining as at the previous annual meeting , that is to say , at 200 annuitants on the Male Fund , and 242 on the Widows ' F ' und , there being at the same lime 28 widows of more or less recently deceased male annuitants in receipt of half of their late

husbands annuities . I he Committee—in our opinion verv wisely—considered lhat the raising of £ 15 , 744 for annuities , and £ 560 for the half annuities , or together £ 16 , 204 nas a sufficientl y heavy responsibility for the Institution to bear , but they were b y no means oblivious ol the generous support which they had

received at the Festival , or of the national rejoicing over the Queen ' s Diamond Jubilee , and by way of celebrating ( he latter event they presented each of the unsuccessful candidates with £ 5 as a solatium for their unsuccess ; the numbers elected being in the case of the Male Fund 2 *—inclusive of the three deferred

annuitants—from a list ol 65 candidates , and in that of the Widows' Fund , and also inclusive of the three deferred annuitants , JI from a list of 52 candidates . There thus remained 42 men and 31 widows , and to 39 of the former and 28 ' of the latter , this most acceptable gift of the Committee was presented

a lew days after the meeting , the remaining three candidates for each Fund having apportioned amongst them the interest on the " Hervey Memorial Fund , " anil the annua ! grant by the Simulation Lodge of Improvement . There is but one other matter of importance to record , the alteration in the law defining the

qualifications of widows which had been amended a few years previously , and was held to be ( 00 stringent in requiring that ( he husbands should have been subscribing members to a lodge or lodges for 15 years . Hence a Special General Meeting was called ior thc loth February , at whicli it was resolved

that while the minimum age ol a widow candidate should remain at 60 years , her husband must have been a subscribing member for only 10 years , and the amended law was sanctioned and approved by United ( Irand Lodge at its Quarterl y Communication on the * rd March . Il only remains for us to add that the

Festival Stewards ol I lie year paid their customary visit to the Asylum at Croydon , and found everything to their satisfaction ; that the New Year ' s Day and Midsummer Entertainments were given , as usual , to the inmates of the aforesaid Asylum and thai oilier arrangements were made on occasions for affording

them pleasure ; and when the year closes , as it will do in the course of two or ( luce weeks , wc doubt not that , thanks to tlie generosity ol ihe Craft and the special grants of ( irand Lodge , it will be found to have been financially and in all other respects one of the most successful known for some time past . The Royal Masonic Institution for Girls may also be congra-

“The Freemason: 1897-12-09, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_09121897/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CHRISTMAS NUMBER Article 1
Untitled Ad 2
Untitled Ad 2
Untitled Ad 2
Freemasonry in 1897. Article 3
The Craft and its Orphans in the Eighteenth Century. Article 12
A PROPOSAL. Article 13
The Object of Freemasonry. Article 14
An Old Masters' Lodge. Article 15
An Old Patent. Article 18
Sir Henry Harben, P.M. No. 92. Article 19
Quatuor Coronati Lodge, No. 2076. Article 20
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 24
Occurrences of the Year Article 26
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 29
The Susser Calf. Article 30
Untitled Ad 30
The Order of the Secret Monitor. Article 31
Untitled Ad 31
A Visit to Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk, Article 32
Untitled Ad 32
Untitled Article 33
The Service in St. Paul's Cathedral. Article 34
A Life's Hatred. Article 38
Untitled Ad 38
Untitled Ad 39
Untitled Ad 40
Untitled Ad 41
Untitled Ad 42
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 44
Untitled Ad 45
Untitled Ad 46
Untitled Ad 47
Untitled Ad 48
Untitled Ad 48
Untitled Ad 49
Tylers and Tyling. Article 50
Untitled Ad 50
Untitled Ad 51
Untitled Ad 52
Untitled Ad 53
Untitled Ad 54
District Grand Masters. Article 55
Untitled Ad 56
Untitled Ad 56
Untitled Ad 57
Untitled Ad 59
Untitled Ad 59
Untitled Ad 59
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasonry In 1897.

organisation which was inaugurated in i 8 y 6 . The abolition of Convent General has greatly simplified matters , and the Great Priories which held under it have in the main fared prosperously . On the Sth April a special meeting of the Great Prion *

of England was held at Mark Masons' Hall , Great Queen-street , under the presidency of the Earl of Euston , G . Master , when deputations from the Great Priory of Ireland and the Chaptei General of Scotland were received with a most cordial welcome

the knights composing the former being Sir Charles A . Cameron , G . C . T ., Great Chancellor ; A . V . Davoren , G . C . T ., Great Constable ; J . Creed Meredith ; Colonel T . C . McCammon , Great Treasurer ; and R . N . Walker , Great Vice-Chancellor ; while the Scottish delegates were the Earl of Kintore , G . C . T ., Great

Senesciial ; Sir James Buchanan , K . C . T . ; Lindsay Mackcrsey , G . C . T ., Treasurer and Registrar ; G . M . Allan , Lord Saltoun , Grand Prior ; and Robert Inches . A most fraternal greeting was extended to the visitors by the Earl of liuston on behalf of

Great Priory , and after li . Knights the Hon . Alan de Tatton Egerton , M . P ., and Col . Harvey Byrde had been introduced and done homage as Provincial Priors respectively , of Cheshire and and Ceylon , and li . Knights the Hon . A . de Tatton Iigerton and the Earl of Onslow had been invested , the former with the

insignia of his new ollice , and the latter with those of Provincial Prior of Kent and Surrey , a candidate was installed as Knight Templar for the edification ol the visitors , and Great Priory was closed , a Special Priory of the Order of Malta being subsequently opened , and a number of Knights Templar admitted to

the Order . The delegates were afterwards entertained at a grand banquet by the English Templars . At the half-yearl y meeting of Great Priory , on the 14 th May , the minutes of the annual conference which had been held by the representatives of the Templars of England , Ireland , and Scotland , on the 7 II 1

April , were read , and the resolutions which it had seen lit to recommend on the subject of corresponding rank and other matters were adopted . An address of congratulation to the Queen on the completion of the Goth year of her reign was adopted by acclamation , and Ii . Knights the liarl of Yarborough

and Maj . G . C . Davie having been introduced and invested with their insignia as K . C . T ., and the officers forthe ensuing vear appointed , the proceedings closed , with the usual banquet . There have likewise been the usual meetingsof Provincial Priories , and all things considered , we think the Order has fully maintained

ils position , if , indeed , it has not materially strengthened it . Wc regret we cannot say the same of the Order of Rome and the Red Cross of Constantine . The Premier Conclave appears to have done its work admirably , and the Grand Imperial Council presides over the affairs of the Order , but that is about all we

feel justified in saying of the Order . The Royal and Select Masters , and the Allied Degrees likewise exist , but the evidences of a flourishing existence do not present themselves frequently , aad we judge of them rather by what we read in calendars than by the records of their doings which come under our notice .

The Supreme Council of the Ancient and Accepted Rite has fully maintained its position . Its popularity is as deservedl y great as ever and it is not therefore surprising that it should continue to be one of the strongest and most influential and at the same time , one of the wealthiest , Masonic organisations in

the country The Royal Order of Scotland remains in aboul the same position as last year . The Metropolitan and Yorkshire Colleges of the Rosicrucian Society still meet ^ and discuss the more abstruse questions which find favour with ils members , and

the Order of the Secret Monitor , under the liarl of Warwick , as Supreme Grand Ruler , flourishes , though we do not gather that it is any nearer a settlement of its little differences with the Grand Council of thc Allied Degrees than it was 12 months since .

OUR INSTITUTIONS . We now pass on to a consideration ol what has happened in connection with our central Masonic Institutions . Thus we

nave certainly no reason to complain ol any shortcomings on the part of the Craft either as regards the contributions they have raised towards ( heir maintenance and support or in the interest which has been exhibited in their work . It is true that the

aggregate of the Returns al the Festivals held in their behalf during the year has been substantially less than it was in 18 9 6 , the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution having obtained subscriptions and donations amounting lo £ 19 , 083 ; the Royal Masonic Institution for Girls to / , 16 , 02 b ; and the Royal

Masonic Institution for Boys to £ 15 , 031 ; giving a total of £ 50 , 141 . 1 , as compared with a total for l . Sjb ranging from £ 54 , 000 to £ 54 , 500 . But for this diminution there was ample

compensation in the grants of £ 2000 made by ( irand Lodge to each Institution , and the £ 1166 which each received as its allotted portion of ( he sum paid lor admission to the memorable Diamond Jubilee meeting in the Roval Albert Hall

on the 14 th June . ' 1 hese gilts amount to over £ 9500 and raise the total of the aggregate distributed among the three Charities to not far short of £ 60 , 000 . Thus , their receipts from this the most important source of income on which they have to rely has been in all respects satisfactory , while as regards the beneficent

work they have done during the year there has never been , not never could be , the slightest question . This , how ever , will be more apparent from the particulars wc are able to furnish in respect of each Institution , taking them , as usual , in thc order in which their respective Festivals were held .

The Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution celebrated its anniversary at the Freemasons' Tavern , un Wednesday , the 24 th February , under the presidency of I I . R . I I . thc Duke ol Connaught , K . G ., Past G . Mast er , Prov . G . Master of Sussex , and District G . Master of Bombay , and when in the course ol

the evening , thc duty ol announcing the Returns devolved on the Secretary , that brother had the pleasure of declaring that the total contributed reached £ 18 , 197 which was subsequently augmented by the receipt of outstanding lists and donations , & c , to £ 19 , 083 . 'towards this handsome total London ,

by the medium of 198 Stewards , gave £ 10 , 405 , thc highest individual Stewards' lists being those of Bro . John R . Roberts , Fellowship Lodge , No . 2535 , for £ 259 ; Mro . Charles Spencer , of St . John ' s Lodge , No . 130 b . for £ 215 ; and of Mro . James Terry himself , unattached , for £ 187 . The Provinces , of

which 35 were represented by 234 Stewards contributed £ 8 ( 107 towards which Sussex , as the Chairman ' s Province , gave £ 1263 , 1 lertfordshire £ 857 , West Yorkshire £ 009 , Worcestershire £ 504 , Iiasl Lancashire £ 4 64 , Berkshire £ 455 , Essex £ 415 , Middlesex £ 352 , Suffolk £ 325 , and Cambridgeshire £ . 302 . It was a grand

result worthy of his Royal Highness the Chairman , of the Institution , and especially of tbe auspicious vear in which the Festival was held , and most cordial were the thanks which the Committee of Management returned lo the Royal Chairman , and the Board of 432 Stewards which had so energetically and so

successfully supported his Royal Highness . At the annual meeting of the Governors and Subscribers , which was held on the 21 st May , the Report of the Committee embod y ing their thanks was accepted with acclamation ; but no increase in the number of annuitants was made on either Fund , and only the

vacancies whicli had occurred up to that day were filled up , the numbers remaining as at the previous annual meeting , that is to say , at 200 annuitants on the Male Fund , and 242 on the Widows ' F ' und , there being at the same lime 28 widows of more or less recently deceased male annuitants in receipt of half of their late

husbands annuities . I he Committee—in our opinion verv wisely—considered lhat the raising of £ 15 , 744 for annuities , and £ 560 for the half annuities , or together £ 16 , 204 nas a sufficientl y heavy responsibility for the Institution to bear , but they were b y no means oblivious ol the generous support which they had

received at the Festival , or of the national rejoicing over the Queen ' s Diamond Jubilee , and by way of celebrating ( he latter event they presented each of the unsuccessful candidates with £ 5 as a solatium for their unsuccess ; the numbers elected being in the case of the Male Fund 2 *—inclusive of the three deferred

annuitants—from a list ol 65 candidates , and in that of the Widows' Fund , and also inclusive of the three deferred annuitants , JI from a list of 52 candidates . There thus remained 42 men and 31 widows , and to 39 of the former and 28 ' of the latter , this most acceptable gift of the Committee was presented

a lew days after the meeting , the remaining three candidates for each Fund having apportioned amongst them the interest on the " Hervey Memorial Fund , " anil the annua ! grant by the Simulation Lodge of Improvement . There is but one other matter of importance to record , the alteration in the law defining the

qualifications of widows which had been amended a few years previously , and was held to be ( 00 stringent in requiring that ( he husbands should have been subscribing members to a lodge or lodges for 15 years . Hence a Special General Meeting was called ior thc loth February , at whicli it was resolved

that while the minimum age ol a widow candidate should remain at 60 years , her husband must have been a subscribing member for only 10 years , and the amended law was sanctioned and approved by United ( Irand Lodge at its Quarterl y Communication on the * rd March . Il only remains for us to add that the

Festival Stewards ol I lie year paid their customary visit to the Asylum at Croydon , and found everything to their satisfaction ; that the New Year ' s Day and Midsummer Entertainments were given , as usual , to the inmates of the aforesaid Asylum and thai oilier arrangements were made on occasions for affording

them pleasure ; and when the year closes , as it will do in the course of two or ( luce weeks , wc doubt not that , thanks to tlie generosity ol ihe Craft and the special grants of ( irand Lodge , it will be found to have been financially and in all other respects one of the most successful known for some time past . The Royal Masonic Institution for Girls may also be congra-

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