Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason
  • July 10, 1875
  • Page 10
  • THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE BOYS' SCHOOL FOR 1875.
Current:

The Freemason, July 10, 1875: Page 10

  • Back to The Freemason, July 10, 1875
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article Untitled Page 1 of 1
    Article TO OUR READERS. Page 1 of 1
    Article TO ADVERTISERS. Page 1 of 1
    Article Answers to Correspondents. Page 1 of 1
    Article Untitled Page 1 of 1
    Article THE CONSECRATION OF THE CHAUCER LODGE. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE CONSECRATION OF THE CHAUCER LODGE. Page 1 of 1
    Article MASONIC SYMPATHY. Page 1 of 1
    Article MASONIC SYMPATHY. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE BOYS' SCHOOL FOR 1875. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 10

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

Ar01000

NOTICE Many 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 "f the appointed agents : — ibbott , Wm ., East-cheap . Bates , Pilgrim-street , Ludgate-hill . Born , H ., us , 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 . H . Smith & Son ' s Bookstalls at the following City Stations : — Broad-street . I Holborn Viaduct . Cannon-street . | London Bridge . Ludgate Hill .

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 thc most important and useful information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Annual subscription in the United Kingdom , Post free , 10 / . Brethren in foreign parts , wishing to have this newspaper sent them regularly

from the office of publication , should , in sending their remittances , add ti _ the 2 d . per week the postage on 2 oz . newspapers . The Freemason may be procured through any newsagent in the United Kingdom by giving ( if needed ) the

publisher ' s address , 198 , Fleet-st . All communications , correspondence , reports , & c , must be addressed to the Editor . Advertisements , change in address , complaints of difficulties in procuring Freemason , & c , to thc Publisher , 198 , Fleet-st ., London , E . C .

Careful attention will be paid to all MSS . 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 of the Globe , its advantages as an advertising medium can therefore scarcely be overrated . For terms , position , & c , apply to GEOIIGE KENNING , 198 , Fleet-st .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

All 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 : — Funeral Lodge at Glasgow ; Sham Decorations ; The Mercers Letter ; Reports of Lodges 160 , 1012 , 112 5 , 145 S , 1482 , 1494 .

Ar01009

The Freemason , SATURDAY , J 10 , 1871 ; .

The Consecration Of The Chaucer Lodge.

THE CONSECRATION OF THE CHAUCER LODGE .

The consecration of this new lodge took place , according to the report elsewhere , on Friday last , under very favourable auspices . There was a numerous attendance of the brethren , in a very handsome room ; all the ancient ceremonies weie duly performed , under the presidency of

our distinguished Bro . J . Hervey , Grand Secretary , with his two assistant officers , Bros . Little and Woodford , and the proceedings passed over prosperously and satisfactorily . In compliment to the old poet , the new lodge being in Southwark , not far from the site of the original

Tabard Inn , adopted the time-honoured name of Geoffrey Chaucer , and we think very opportunely and wisely . For speculative Freemasonry always does well , in our opinion , when it connects itself , n / ore or less directly , with those elevating acts and civilizing labours , which tend so

greatly to the onward progress and peaceful victories of mankind . Since the days when Chaucer penned his famous lays , at least 400 years ago , what mighty changes have passed over this world of ours , and what struggles , and advances , and ameliorations , have successive generations

witnessed , in all that renders life endurable and comfortable , attractive , and welcome . No longer for the most part spent amid the more degrading aspects of barbarous existence , this earth of ours to-day seems to manifest everywhere the

upward condition of civilization and education There is much no doubt to condemn , and more to deplore , alike in social anomalies and passing habits of life , modes of thought , the turbid passions , the fleeting pageantry of the hour . But yet his must be either a very cynical or morbid

The Consecration Of The Chaucer Lodge.

mind , or he must take a very imperfect view [ of things , who does not and will not admit , that amid much that is sensational and startling , and more that is saddening and sorrowful day by day , there are yet tokens of the gradual improvement , alike of individual tastes and of national

feelings . And it seems to us that amid the rolling cycles of time , which have left us since the hour that Chaucer , for instance , gave us his happy thoughts and quaint expressions in the then Anglo-Saxon vernacular , the voice of the poet especially has ever been distinctly heard

above the din of men , and over the strife of tongues , uttering words of gentleness and fancy , of sympathy and goodness , of purity , honour , truth , and right , for the elevation of our struggling race , and for the spiritual improvement of the world . We commend , then , warmly the idea ,

whose soever it originally was , which induced Bro . Sabine and his officers and brethren to give to the new lodge the name of Chaucer . We are glad to see another vigorous offshoot of our old and grand Masonic tree " taking root downwards , " and , let us hope , " bearing fruit upwards , "

especially in so important a portion of our Metropolis . For we are amongst those infatuated persons , as some would term us , who believe in Freemasonry , both in the propagation of its principles , and the development of its moral and peaceful influences . We do not wish to take

too high a ground , or claim too great a scope for its labours and its lessons ; we equally object to rhapsodical utterances , and untenable assertions ; but we think we are warranted in saying this much , that every lodge , fitly presided over , properlv worked , and composed of congenial

elements , may be an instrument , providentially , of much intellectual , moral , and civilizing good ! It is true that we have nothing very new to announce , and like the famous sufferer of old , ours may fairly be the response to-day , " Story , God bless

you , I ve none to tell you , Sir . For ours are only old-fashioned truths , and antiquated moralities 5 we proclaim reverence to our Maker , and loyalty to our Queen ; we ask for due respect to constituted authority , obedience to our laws , and avoidance alike of seditious aims , orrevolutiouary

tendencies . We want no definition of personal belief , we respect the right of conscience , we uphold liberty of opinion , free discussion , and we denounce persecution , whether sectarian or pseudo-religious , of every kind . We are a religious , a peaceable , a good feeling , a loyal , a

benevolent , a liberal-minded , a tolerant fraternity , and when we have said this we have not much more to say . We welcome all good men and true within our pale , not asking them * ' how do you believe , or what do you believe , " contented so long as agreeing together in humble

acknowledgment of the Great Creator and Father of all , and sympathizing with the brotherhood of our fellow children of the dust , we seek in the works of heartfelt charity and good will , to assuage the contentions , to soften tlie acerbities , to relieve the distresses , and to lessen the calamities of our common earthly inheritance . And here we stop

to-day , congratulating Bro . Sabine and all the members of his lodge on their auspicious start in Masonic life , proposing next week to call attention to the weighty words and sound seasonable advice which fell from the lips of Bro . Hervey , as Consecrating Officer of this , one of the youngest of the many promising numbers of our rapidly increasing Masonic family .

Masonic Sympathy.

MASONIC SYMPATHY .

Old John Wesley made a great use , in his early teaching at any rate , of the duty and importance of sympathy . He worked , so to say , upon a long neglected mine deeply lying in the heart and emotion of his hearers , and we have

always felt that many religious teachers might now-a-days well follow in his steps , and even improve upon his endeavours . For curiously enough , despite our habitual coldness and

inconsideratoness for each other here , our want too often of hearty interest in the welfare and griefs , the trials and joys of our fellow creatures , we all of us often require sympathy ourselves at many times and at many crossings of our journey of life . It has been said , and probably truly , that

Masonic Sympathy.

we all have more sympathy for others than we are aware of , arid that it only requires to be stirred and evoked in order to be manifested more clearly and fully in us all alike . There may be some truth in such a statement as regards us all in our psychological formation , and our

individual temperament , but yet , on the whole , we are inclined to believe that sympathy , like every other grace , if implanted in us by our Divine Creator , has to be educed and expanded , and invigorated , and trained under a higher power , by the needs and claims , the duties and

responsibilities of life . We all of us have experienced times when sympathy is very needful and very refreshing to us . In the first moments of personal bereavement , in the full flowing tide of heavy sorrow , in the pressure of adverse circumstances , in the cruel tortures of calumny , in

morbid moods , and in lonely cares , how pleasant it is to listen to the always tender accents of true and faithful sympathy ? Then it is that we rejoiee to think that God has given us those who cheer our anxieties , who lessen our woes , who repair our misfortunes , who soothe our wounded

or complaining spirit with all that graceful charm which sympathizing friendship can offer to lighten the dark clouds of trouble , or smooth away the rugged corners of the road on which we all are travelling now . And some of us have found in Freemasonry a brotherly good will , affection , and

interest , the truest expression of personal sympathy and kindly concern . It is one of the great charms of Freemasonry , that it conciliates firm friendships amongst men of diverse views and beliefs , and that it serves often to quicken in us all alike , these sympathetic

evidences of friendly concern and friendship , which if they belong to us all more or less alike , we too often allow to " rest , " so to say in '' abeyance , " or to be forgotten in stoic indifference . Yes somehow Freemasonry often aids to kindle

a fire where none has burnt vividly before , and to evoke for us all alike , those living and active exertions of friendship , interest , and good wiH which serve more than anything else to render human life enjoyable , and to work out all the nobler characteristics of the human race . How

many fast friendships has Freemasonry cemented ? How much undying sympathy has it brought to li ght and perfection ? And after all no nobler or better expression of our true individual life , and our purely personal showing can be aimed at , or believed in , or worked out by any of us . To

sympathize with our brother , to believe in his truth and honour , and good repute , to smile on his efforts , to encourage his toils , to uphold his good name , to vindicate his upright character , to rebuke the slanderer , and the maligner , who like gad flies both buz and sting , is indeed the

true work of Masonic sympathy . To feel for each other here , to grieve with the calamities , to rejoice with the successes of humanity , to mourn over grevious wrong , and to uphold manfully the right , in season and out of season , never to desert a good cause , and ever to sympathize with

all that is pure , and peaceable , and righteous , and of good repute , is the duty of every true Freemason . While then weall sympathize warmly with each other , ana learn even to sympathize more and more with each other , let us never be ashamed boldly to discountenance vice and wrong ,

injustice and vilhany , under whatever names they may be cloaked among men , and let us , we repeat , have a fellow feeling from the bottom of our hearts , not only for our friend and our brother , but for everything here that lends dignity to virtue , and gives consistency to truth .

The Anniversary Of The Boys' School For 1875.

THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE BOYS ' SCHOOL FOR 1875 .

When these lines meet the eyes of our readers the Anniversary for 1875 ° * - ' s most important institution will be a thing of the past , let us hope , " though lost to sight to memory dear . " As we pen these words to-day , the result of the

"coup de Binckes , " to which he himself humorously and vivaciously alluded at the Chaucor Lodge gathering , amid the applause of the brethren , is still enveloped in the haze of uncertainty . Bro . Binckes , in his animated address last Friday , seemed to anticipate a very great success , and we sincerely trust that his legitimate anticipa-

“The Freemason: 1875-07-10, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_10071875/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Royal Arch. Article 5
Scotland. Article 5
CONSECRATION OF THE UNITED MILITARY LODGE (No. 1537.) Article 6
CONSECRATION OF THE CHAUCER LODGE, No. 1540. Article 7
Masonic Tidings. Article 8
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF DEVON. Article 9
Untitled Article 10
TO OUR READERS. Article 10
TO ADVERTISERS. Article 10
Answers to Correspondents. Article 10
Untitled Article 10
THE CONSECRATION OF THE CHAUCER LODGE. Article 10
MASONIC SYMPATHY. Article 10
THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE BOYS' SCHOOL FOR 1875. Article 10
THE RECENT FLOODS IN FRANCE. Article 11
PROVINCIAL FUNDS.—III. Article 11
Original Correspondence. Article 11
Multum in Parbo; or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 12
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 12
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF SOMERSET. Article 12
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 13
INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 13
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF LEICESTERSHIRE AND RUTLAND. Article 15
AN ORATION Article 16
LODGE "ROMAN EAGLE," EDINBURGH , No. 160. Article 16
Freemasonry in New Zealand. Article 17
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 18
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE. Article 18
MASONIC MEETINGS IN EAST LANCASHIRE. Article 18
MASONIC MEETINGS IN GLASGOW AND VICINITY. Article 18
MASONIC MEETINGS IN EDINBURGH AND VICINITY. Article 18
Page 1

Page 1

4 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

3 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

3 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

3 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

5 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

4 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

4 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

4 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

3 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

10 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

6 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

6 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

4 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

3 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

4 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

4 Articles
Page 17

Page 17

3 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

7 Articles
Page 10

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

Ar01000

NOTICE Many 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 "f the appointed agents : — ibbott , Wm ., East-cheap . Bates , Pilgrim-street , Ludgate-hill . Born , H ., us , 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 . H . Smith & Son ' s Bookstalls at the following City Stations : — Broad-street . I Holborn Viaduct . Cannon-street . | London Bridge . Ludgate Hill .

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 thc most important and useful information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Annual subscription in the United Kingdom , Post free , 10 / . Brethren in foreign parts , wishing to have this newspaper sent them regularly

from the office of publication , should , in sending their remittances , add ti _ the 2 d . per week the postage on 2 oz . newspapers . The Freemason may be procured through any newsagent in the United Kingdom by giving ( if needed ) the

publisher ' s address , 198 , Fleet-st . All communications , correspondence , reports , & c , must be addressed to the Editor . Advertisements , change in address , complaints of difficulties in procuring Freemason , & c , to thc Publisher , 198 , Fleet-st ., London , E . C .

Careful attention will be paid to all MSS . 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 of the Globe , its advantages as an advertising medium can therefore scarcely be overrated . For terms , position , & c , apply to GEOIIGE KENNING , 198 , Fleet-st .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

All 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 : — Funeral Lodge at Glasgow ; Sham Decorations ; The Mercers Letter ; Reports of Lodges 160 , 1012 , 112 5 , 145 S , 1482 , 1494 .

Ar01009

The Freemason , SATURDAY , J 10 , 1871 ; .

The Consecration Of The Chaucer Lodge.

THE CONSECRATION OF THE CHAUCER LODGE .

The consecration of this new lodge took place , according to the report elsewhere , on Friday last , under very favourable auspices . There was a numerous attendance of the brethren , in a very handsome room ; all the ancient ceremonies weie duly performed , under the presidency of

our distinguished Bro . J . Hervey , Grand Secretary , with his two assistant officers , Bros . Little and Woodford , and the proceedings passed over prosperously and satisfactorily . In compliment to the old poet , the new lodge being in Southwark , not far from the site of the original

Tabard Inn , adopted the time-honoured name of Geoffrey Chaucer , and we think very opportunely and wisely . For speculative Freemasonry always does well , in our opinion , when it connects itself , n / ore or less directly , with those elevating acts and civilizing labours , which tend so

greatly to the onward progress and peaceful victories of mankind . Since the days when Chaucer penned his famous lays , at least 400 years ago , what mighty changes have passed over this world of ours , and what struggles , and advances , and ameliorations , have successive generations

witnessed , in all that renders life endurable and comfortable , attractive , and welcome . No longer for the most part spent amid the more degrading aspects of barbarous existence , this earth of ours to-day seems to manifest everywhere the

upward condition of civilization and education There is much no doubt to condemn , and more to deplore , alike in social anomalies and passing habits of life , modes of thought , the turbid passions , the fleeting pageantry of the hour . But yet his must be either a very cynical or morbid

The Consecration Of The Chaucer Lodge.

mind , or he must take a very imperfect view [ of things , who does not and will not admit , that amid much that is sensational and startling , and more that is saddening and sorrowful day by day , there are yet tokens of the gradual improvement , alike of individual tastes and of national

feelings . And it seems to us that amid the rolling cycles of time , which have left us since the hour that Chaucer , for instance , gave us his happy thoughts and quaint expressions in the then Anglo-Saxon vernacular , the voice of the poet especially has ever been distinctly heard

above the din of men , and over the strife of tongues , uttering words of gentleness and fancy , of sympathy and goodness , of purity , honour , truth , and right , for the elevation of our struggling race , and for the spiritual improvement of the world . We commend , then , warmly the idea ,

whose soever it originally was , which induced Bro . Sabine and his officers and brethren to give to the new lodge the name of Chaucer . We are glad to see another vigorous offshoot of our old and grand Masonic tree " taking root downwards , " and , let us hope , " bearing fruit upwards , "

especially in so important a portion of our Metropolis . For we are amongst those infatuated persons , as some would term us , who believe in Freemasonry , both in the propagation of its principles , and the development of its moral and peaceful influences . We do not wish to take

too high a ground , or claim too great a scope for its labours and its lessons ; we equally object to rhapsodical utterances , and untenable assertions ; but we think we are warranted in saying this much , that every lodge , fitly presided over , properlv worked , and composed of congenial

elements , may be an instrument , providentially , of much intellectual , moral , and civilizing good ! It is true that we have nothing very new to announce , and like the famous sufferer of old , ours may fairly be the response to-day , " Story , God bless

you , I ve none to tell you , Sir . For ours are only old-fashioned truths , and antiquated moralities 5 we proclaim reverence to our Maker , and loyalty to our Queen ; we ask for due respect to constituted authority , obedience to our laws , and avoidance alike of seditious aims , orrevolutiouary

tendencies . We want no definition of personal belief , we respect the right of conscience , we uphold liberty of opinion , free discussion , and we denounce persecution , whether sectarian or pseudo-religious , of every kind . We are a religious , a peaceable , a good feeling , a loyal , a

benevolent , a liberal-minded , a tolerant fraternity , and when we have said this we have not much more to say . We welcome all good men and true within our pale , not asking them * ' how do you believe , or what do you believe , " contented so long as agreeing together in humble

acknowledgment of the Great Creator and Father of all , and sympathizing with the brotherhood of our fellow children of the dust , we seek in the works of heartfelt charity and good will , to assuage the contentions , to soften tlie acerbities , to relieve the distresses , and to lessen the calamities of our common earthly inheritance . And here we stop

to-day , congratulating Bro . Sabine and all the members of his lodge on their auspicious start in Masonic life , proposing next week to call attention to the weighty words and sound seasonable advice which fell from the lips of Bro . Hervey , as Consecrating Officer of this , one of the youngest of the many promising numbers of our rapidly increasing Masonic family .

Masonic Sympathy.

MASONIC SYMPATHY .

Old John Wesley made a great use , in his early teaching at any rate , of the duty and importance of sympathy . He worked , so to say , upon a long neglected mine deeply lying in the heart and emotion of his hearers , and we have

always felt that many religious teachers might now-a-days well follow in his steps , and even improve upon his endeavours . For curiously enough , despite our habitual coldness and

inconsideratoness for each other here , our want too often of hearty interest in the welfare and griefs , the trials and joys of our fellow creatures , we all of us often require sympathy ourselves at many times and at many crossings of our journey of life . It has been said , and probably truly , that

Masonic Sympathy.

we all have more sympathy for others than we are aware of , arid that it only requires to be stirred and evoked in order to be manifested more clearly and fully in us all alike . There may be some truth in such a statement as regards us all in our psychological formation , and our

individual temperament , but yet , on the whole , we are inclined to believe that sympathy , like every other grace , if implanted in us by our Divine Creator , has to be educed and expanded , and invigorated , and trained under a higher power , by the needs and claims , the duties and

responsibilities of life . We all of us have experienced times when sympathy is very needful and very refreshing to us . In the first moments of personal bereavement , in the full flowing tide of heavy sorrow , in the pressure of adverse circumstances , in the cruel tortures of calumny , in

morbid moods , and in lonely cares , how pleasant it is to listen to the always tender accents of true and faithful sympathy ? Then it is that we rejoiee to think that God has given us those who cheer our anxieties , who lessen our woes , who repair our misfortunes , who soothe our wounded

or complaining spirit with all that graceful charm which sympathizing friendship can offer to lighten the dark clouds of trouble , or smooth away the rugged corners of the road on which we all are travelling now . And some of us have found in Freemasonry a brotherly good will , affection , and

interest , the truest expression of personal sympathy and kindly concern . It is one of the great charms of Freemasonry , that it conciliates firm friendships amongst men of diverse views and beliefs , and that it serves often to quicken in us all alike , these sympathetic

evidences of friendly concern and friendship , which if they belong to us all more or less alike , we too often allow to " rest , " so to say in '' abeyance , " or to be forgotten in stoic indifference . Yes somehow Freemasonry often aids to kindle

a fire where none has burnt vividly before , and to evoke for us all alike , those living and active exertions of friendship , interest , and good wiH which serve more than anything else to render human life enjoyable , and to work out all the nobler characteristics of the human race . How

many fast friendships has Freemasonry cemented ? How much undying sympathy has it brought to li ght and perfection ? And after all no nobler or better expression of our true individual life , and our purely personal showing can be aimed at , or believed in , or worked out by any of us . To

sympathize with our brother , to believe in his truth and honour , and good repute , to smile on his efforts , to encourage his toils , to uphold his good name , to vindicate his upright character , to rebuke the slanderer , and the maligner , who like gad flies both buz and sting , is indeed the

true work of Masonic sympathy . To feel for each other here , to grieve with the calamities , to rejoice with the successes of humanity , to mourn over grevious wrong , and to uphold manfully the right , in season and out of season , never to desert a good cause , and ever to sympathize with

all that is pure , and peaceable , and righteous , and of good repute , is the duty of every true Freemason . While then weall sympathize warmly with each other , ana learn even to sympathize more and more with each other , let us never be ashamed boldly to discountenance vice and wrong ,

injustice and vilhany , under whatever names they may be cloaked among men , and let us , we repeat , have a fellow feeling from the bottom of our hearts , not only for our friend and our brother , but for everything here that lends dignity to virtue , and gives consistency to truth .

The Anniversary Of The Boys' School For 1875.

THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE BOYS ' SCHOOL FOR 1875 .

When these lines meet the eyes of our readers the Anniversary for 1875 ° * - ' s most important institution will be a thing of the past , let us hope , " though lost to sight to memory dear . " As we pen these words to-day , the result of the

"coup de Binckes , " to which he himself humorously and vivaciously alluded at the Chaucor Lodge gathering , amid the applause of the brethren , is still enveloped in the haze of uncertainty . Bro . Binckes , in his animated address last Friday , seemed to anticipate a very great success , and we sincerely trust that his legitimate anticipa-

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 9
  • You're on page10
  • 11
  • 18
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy