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Contents.

CONTENTS .

LEADERS j 8 [ Old Warrants . —XXVIII 582 England and Quebec 582 provincial Grand Lodge of West Lancashire 583 provincial Grand Lodge of West Yorkshire 584 Consecration of the Chough Lodge , No . 2264 J 84

Consecration of the Hallamshire Lodge , No . 2268 , at Sheffield . " 586 provincial Grand Chapter of Cheshire 587 provincial Grand Chapter of West Lancashire $ 8 7 C ORRESPONDENCEThe Royal Masonic Institution for Boys 580 Reviews 580

Contents.

REPORTS or MASONIC MEETINGSCraft Masonry £ 0 , 0 Instruction 592 Royal Arch S 93 Instruction 593 Mark Masonry J 93 Knights Templar 593 Consecration of a New Masonic Hall at Hull

: 503 The Fund of Scottish Benevolence 594 Royal Masonic Institution for Boys $ 94 The Girls' School Centenary Festival 594 Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution 594 Obituary 594 Theatres S 94 Masonic and General Tidings S 9 i Lodge Meetings for Next Week 596

Ar00101

, „ EVERY now and then we obtain an insight into the work that The Influence _ " of is done by Freemasonry in other countries , and the influence

Freemasonry . _ it exercises on the community at large ; and it almost invariably is found that the work it does and the influence it exercises are beneficial

in their character . More especially is this the case in the newer and more remote colonies of the British Empire , or in countries like the United States of North America , which , as an independent political organisation , is of comparatively recent growth . In the latter country there are some

600 , 000 Masons , who are distributed very liberally , as regards numbers , among the States and Territories which compose it ; and we may reasonably expect that , ere many years have passed , when the country has become more thickly populated , the present number will have been very largely augmented . Had the United States been an old country , the progress of

Freemasonry would have been less remarkable , or , atall events , its position would have rested on less secure foundations . The reason of this is obvious . In a vast expanse of country , where even a numerous population seems scanty , and the statute law of an organised community is less implicitly obeyed than where the law has reigned more or less supreme for a long

course of centuries , men are apt to look to each other for that goodwill and neighbourly support which is essential to their happiness and success ; and there is no Society whose principles are so likely to prove efficacious in promoting this mutual goodwill and support as Freemasonry . It

instils into the hearts of men the nei ghbourly duty of doing unto others as they would be done by , and in the more sparselypopulated regions of the far West , where [ the representatives of the law , not being ubiquitous , are by no means ever present to impress people with

its transcendent powers , it is more often the influence of Freemasonry than the influence of the law which impels men to do the thing that is right . The same may be said of the influence exercised by our Fraternity in the Dominion of Canada and in our great Australasian Colonies , where , though

there are regularly organised governments , the influence of the law is but 'ittle felt in the remoter districts . At the Antipodes , in particular , where the several governments which have been organised are of comparatively recent establishment , the influence of Freemasonry is more real than

apparent . There are only some four or five hundred lodges scattered about among our Australasian Colonies , with only a few thousands of brethren a 'l told , yet it is only the other day that our Ri ght Rev . Bro . S . T . NEVILL , Bishop of Dunedin , New Zealand , who had been summoned to this country

to attend the Pan-Anglican Synod , paid a visit to his old lodge—the Mentuna , No . 418 , Hanley—of which in former days he had been W . M . —and , ln repl ying to the toast of his health , bore willing and grateful testimony to the beneficent influence which our Society exercises among the population

01 his diocese . He explained that , though as a bishop he had suffered just a '' ttle through allying himself with the Masons , he had never hesitated jtoout doing so , because , as a minister of religion , he had never discovered n "eemasonrv anything that was inconsistent with thf > nrinr-mlpc ™ wrh i , »

, jas called upon to preach . Moreover , as he pointed out , New Zealand is a p eW Colony , and inhabitedjby men of all nations , yet under whatever flag reemasons sailed thither , the moment they met together they were brothers , a consequentl y the service which Freemasonry rendered in uniting and

as th " Pe ° ° f different nationalities was incalculable . Such testimony his to the beneficent influence of Freemasonry from a distinguished an /^ ' ° P resides over a diocese as large as the whole of Ireland

h us iurther statement that , whenever the opportunity presented itself , church ° thC brethren t 0 assist him in la y ' ng the foundation-stones of cnes and other similar buildings , clearly prove that our estimate of rnu „ v ° as a civilisit , g influence in new or comparativel y new complies is very far from being exaggerated .

Ar00102

CHESHIRE has latterly been one of the chief centres of Masonic Craft ' m activity . In addition to the ordinary lodge gatherings , there Cheshire . haye been meetingS 0 f the Prov . Grand Lodge at Knutsford on the 19 th ult ., and of the Prov . G . Chapter at Crewe , on the 27 th ult .,

an especial interest attaching to the latter of these in consequence of its being the occasion selected for the installation of Comp . the Rev . C . W . SPENCER S TANHOPE as Grand Superintendent of R . A . Masons , in succession to the late Comp . Lord DE TABLEY , who had occupied that post concurrently with the Prov . G . Mastership for many years . The Prov . G .

Lodge meeting at Knutsford was presided over by Bro , Lord EOERTON or TATTON , Prov , G . Master , in person , and his lordship in his address to the assembled brethren was able to congratulate them on the satisfactory con „ dition of Masonry in Cheshire , on its numerical strength—which had been well maintained during the past year—and on the state of their funds , the

amount of capital they have invested being £ 1200 . He also spoke of the lodges having been ably conducted during the year , and the obligations they were under to give as much support as possible to the central Masonic Institutions , more particularly as Cheshire was deriving considerable benefit from them . He also alluded to the loss sustained by Freemasonry as a

whole through the lamented death of the Emperor FREDERICK , protector of German Freemasons , and the splendid success of the Girls' School Centenary Festival , in which the Province , he rejoiced to say , had borne a useful and an honourable part , and he concluded by proposing that a sum of 100 guineas be contributed to the London Charities—a proposition

which , it is needless to say , was passed without a single dissentient voice . Subsequently , his lordship entertained the brethren at his seat at Tatton Park , and the day was brought to a close amid mutual demonstrations of respect and goodwill . The meeting of the Provincial Grand Chapter was necessarily less impressive as regards the number of those present , but it

had its compensation in the more imposing but less frequent spectacle which it offered of the installation of a new chief of the Royal Arch Degree in the Province . The companion whom the Grand Z . had chosen for the office of Grand Superintendent—Comp . the Rev . C . W . SPENCER STANHOPE—is in all respects worthy of the honour conferred upon him by his

Royal Hig hness . He has discharged the various duties which have been required of him during a career extending over the best part of a quarter of a century with exemplary tact and ability . He is deservedly popular in Cheshire , as he is likewise in London Masonic circles , and it is but

reasonable to expect that under his directing care and influence R . A . Masonry in Cheshire will continue to flourish as abundantly as under the late Comp . Lord DE TABLEY . We congratulate Comp . SPENCER STANHOPE on his appointment to so exalted an office , and the Province on having so . distinguished a Mason as the Superintendent of their chapters .

* * * The THE recent meeting of the Prov . G . Lodge at Gateshead , Prov . G . Lodge jer the auspices of the two lodges held in that town—the Durham . Industry , No . 48 , and the Borough , No . 424—was a great sue .

cess . Bro . Sir HEDWORTH WILLIAMSON , Bart ., Prov . G . Master , presided in person , and the attendance of brethren was larger than usual . The reports , too , which were submitted by the Charities' and other Committees were eminently satisfactory . The Prov . G . Treasurer ' s statement of account showed a balance in hand of over £ 292 . The Fund Committee ,

whose report was read by the worthy Deputy P . G . M ., Bro . Rev . Canon TRISTRAM , Past G . Chaplain of England , recommended that £ 2 $ should be given to the Durham Masonic Educational Fund , and 200 guineas distributed among our Central Charities , 100 guineas being allotted to the Boys' School , and 50 guineas each to the Girls' School and Benevolent

Institution . Bro . BRADLEY , Secretary of the Chanties Committee , handed in its nth annual report , and from this we learn that since the establishment of this Committee its ^ uccess has been most gratifying . It has carried the election into the London Masonic Institutions of n boys , three girls , three male annuitants , and one widow annuitant . It had a number of

candidates on its list , whose election it would be its duty to promote , and taking into consideration the benefits it was receiving from the principal Masonic Institutions , it strongly urged upon the Province to contribute to its utmost ability towards their maintenance and support . As regards the Durham Masonic Educational Fund ,

the work it was doing was considerable . It was assisting in the education and part maintenance of if children , at an annual outlay of over J ( , ; it had a capital of nearly ^ 8 32 , which had been all raised since 1882 , and the allowances to children per annum ranged from ^ 40 to ^ 90 . The address of the PROV . GRAND MASTER was characterised b y his usual

geniality . He congratulated the brethren on the numerical strength of- the province , the number of subscribing members being 2200 . He paid a handsome compliment to the entertaining lodges for the admirable manner in which they had received Provincial Grand Lodge , and he spoke in terms oi high commendation of the working in those lodges which he had had the

“The Freemason: 1888-10-13, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_13101888/page/1/.
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
OLD WARRANTS, No. XXVIII. Article 2
ENGLAND AND QUEBEC. Article 2
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WEST LANCASHIRE. Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WEST YORKSHIRE. Article 4
CONSECRATION OF THE CHOUGH LODGE, No. 2264. Article 4
CONSECRATION OF THE HALLAMSHIRE LODGE, No. 2268, AT SHEFFIELD. Article 6
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF CHESHIRE. Article 7
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF WEST LANCASHIRE. Article 7
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THE COSMOPOLITAN MASONIC CALENDAR AND POCKET BOOK FOR 1889. Article 9
To Correspondents. Article 9
Untitled Article 9
Original Correspondence. Article 9
REVIEWS Article 9
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 10
INSTRUCTION. Article 12
Royal Arch. Article 13
INSTRUCTION. Article 13
Mark Masonry. Article 13
Knights Templar. Article 13
CONSECRATION OF A NEW MASONIC HALL AT HULL. Article 13
THE FUND OF SCOTTISH MASONIC BENEVOLENCE. Article 14
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 14
THE GIRLS' SCHOOL CENTENARY FESTIVAL. Article 14
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 14
Obituary. Article 14
THE THEATRES. Article 14
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 15
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 16
PROVINCIAL MASONIC MEETINGS Article 16
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Contents.

CONTENTS .

LEADERS j 8 [ Old Warrants . —XXVIII 582 England and Quebec 582 provincial Grand Lodge of West Lancashire 583 provincial Grand Lodge of West Yorkshire 584 Consecration of the Chough Lodge , No . 2264 J 84

Consecration of the Hallamshire Lodge , No . 2268 , at Sheffield . " 586 provincial Grand Chapter of Cheshire 587 provincial Grand Chapter of West Lancashire $ 8 7 C ORRESPONDENCEThe Royal Masonic Institution for Boys 580 Reviews 580

Contents.

REPORTS or MASONIC MEETINGSCraft Masonry £ 0 , 0 Instruction 592 Royal Arch S 93 Instruction 593 Mark Masonry J 93 Knights Templar 593 Consecration of a New Masonic Hall at Hull

: 503 The Fund of Scottish Benevolence 594 Royal Masonic Institution for Boys $ 94 The Girls' School Centenary Festival 594 Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution 594 Obituary 594 Theatres S 94 Masonic and General Tidings S 9 i Lodge Meetings for Next Week 596

Ar00101

, „ EVERY now and then we obtain an insight into the work that The Influence _ " of is done by Freemasonry in other countries , and the influence

Freemasonry . _ it exercises on the community at large ; and it almost invariably is found that the work it does and the influence it exercises are beneficial

in their character . More especially is this the case in the newer and more remote colonies of the British Empire , or in countries like the United States of North America , which , as an independent political organisation , is of comparatively recent growth . In the latter country there are some

600 , 000 Masons , who are distributed very liberally , as regards numbers , among the States and Territories which compose it ; and we may reasonably expect that , ere many years have passed , when the country has become more thickly populated , the present number will have been very largely augmented . Had the United States been an old country , the progress of

Freemasonry would have been less remarkable , or , atall events , its position would have rested on less secure foundations . The reason of this is obvious . In a vast expanse of country , where even a numerous population seems scanty , and the statute law of an organised community is less implicitly obeyed than where the law has reigned more or less supreme for a long

course of centuries , men are apt to look to each other for that goodwill and neighbourly support which is essential to their happiness and success ; and there is no Society whose principles are so likely to prove efficacious in promoting this mutual goodwill and support as Freemasonry . It

instils into the hearts of men the nei ghbourly duty of doing unto others as they would be done by , and in the more sparselypopulated regions of the far West , where [ the representatives of the law , not being ubiquitous , are by no means ever present to impress people with

its transcendent powers , it is more often the influence of Freemasonry than the influence of the law which impels men to do the thing that is right . The same may be said of the influence exercised by our Fraternity in the Dominion of Canada and in our great Australasian Colonies , where , though

there are regularly organised governments , the influence of the law is but 'ittle felt in the remoter districts . At the Antipodes , in particular , where the several governments which have been organised are of comparatively recent establishment , the influence of Freemasonry is more real than

apparent . There are only some four or five hundred lodges scattered about among our Australasian Colonies , with only a few thousands of brethren a 'l told , yet it is only the other day that our Ri ght Rev . Bro . S . T . NEVILL , Bishop of Dunedin , New Zealand , who had been summoned to this country

to attend the Pan-Anglican Synod , paid a visit to his old lodge—the Mentuna , No . 418 , Hanley—of which in former days he had been W . M . —and , ln repl ying to the toast of his health , bore willing and grateful testimony to the beneficent influence which our Society exercises among the population

01 his diocese . He explained that , though as a bishop he had suffered just a '' ttle through allying himself with the Masons , he had never hesitated jtoout doing so , because , as a minister of religion , he had never discovered n "eemasonrv anything that was inconsistent with thf > nrinr-mlpc ™ wrh i , »

, jas called upon to preach . Moreover , as he pointed out , New Zealand is a p eW Colony , and inhabitedjby men of all nations , yet under whatever flag reemasons sailed thither , the moment they met together they were brothers , a consequentl y the service which Freemasonry rendered in uniting and

as th " Pe ° ° f different nationalities was incalculable . Such testimony his to the beneficent influence of Freemasonry from a distinguished an /^ ' ° P resides over a diocese as large as the whole of Ireland

h us iurther statement that , whenever the opportunity presented itself , church ° thC brethren t 0 assist him in la y ' ng the foundation-stones of cnes and other similar buildings , clearly prove that our estimate of rnu „ v ° as a civilisit , g influence in new or comparativel y new complies is very far from being exaggerated .

Ar00102

CHESHIRE has latterly been one of the chief centres of Masonic Craft ' m activity . In addition to the ordinary lodge gatherings , there Cheshire . haye been meetingS 0 f the Prov . Grand Lodge at Knutsford on the 19 th ult ., and of the Prov . G . Chapter at Crewe , on the 27 th ult .,

an especial interest attaching to the latter of these in consequence of its being the occasion selected for the installation of Comp . the Rev . C . W . SPENCER S TANHOPE as Grand Superintendent of R . A . Masons , in succession to the late Comp . Lord DE TABLEY , who had occupied that post concurrently with the Prov . G . Mastership for many years . The Prov . G .

Lodge meeting at Knutsford was presided over by Bro , Lord EOERTON or TATTON , Prov , G . Master , in person , and his lordship in his address to the assembled brethren was able to congratulate them on the satisfactory con „ dition of Masonry in Cheshire , on its numerical strength—which had been well maintained during the past year—and on the state of their funds , the

amount of capital they have invested being £ 1200 . He also spoke of the lodges having been ably conducted during the year , and the obligations they were under to give as much support as possible to the central Masonic Institutions , more particularly as Cheshire was deriving considerable benefit from them . He also alluded to the loss sustained by Freemasonry as a

whole through the lamented death of the Emperor FREDERICK , protector of German Freemasons , and the splendid success of the Girls' School Centenary Festival , in which the Province , he rejoiced to say , had borne a useful and an honourable part , and he concluded by proposing that a sum of 100 guineas be contributed to the London Charities—a proposition

which , it is needless to say , was passed without a single dissentient voice . Subsequently , his lordship entertained the brethren at his seat at Tatton Park , and the day was brought to a close amid mutual demonstrations of respect and goodwill . The meeting of the Provincial Grand Chapter was necessarily less impressive as regards the number of those present , but it

had its compensation in the more imposing but less frequent spectacle which it offered of the installation of a new chief of the Royal Arch Degree in the Province . The companion whom the Grand Z . had chosen for the office of Grand Superintendent—Comp . the Rev . C . W . SPENCER STANHOPE—is in all respects worthy of the honour conferred upon him by his

Royal Hig hness . He has discharged the various duties which have been required of him during a career extending over the best part of a quarter of a century with exemplary tact and ability . He is deservedly popular in Cheshire , as he is likewise in London Masonic circles , and it is but

reasonable to expect that under his directing care and influence R . A . Masonry in Cheshire will continue to flourish as abundantly as under the late Comp . Lord DE TABLEY . We congratulate Comp . SPENCER STANHOPE on his appointment to so exalted an office , and the Province on having so . distinguished a Mason as the Superintendent of their chapters .

* * * The THE recent meeting of the Prov . G . Lodge at Gateshead , Prov . G . Lodge jer the auspices of the two lodges held in that town—the Durham . Industry , No . 48 , and the Borough , No . 424—was a great sue .

cess . Bro . Sir HEDWORTH WILLIAMSON , Bart ., Prov . G . Master , presided in person , and the attendance of brethren was larger than usual . The reports , too , which were submitted by the Charities' and other Committees were eminently satisfactory . The Prov . G . Treasurer ' s statement of account showed a balance in hand of over £ 292 . The Fund Committee ,

whose report was read by the worthy Deputy P . G . M ., Bro . Rev . Canon TRISTRAM , Past G . Chaplain of England , recommended that £ 2 $ should be given to the Durham Masonic Educational Fund , and 200 guineas distributed among our Central Charities , 100 guineas being allotted to the Boys' School , and 50 guineas each to the Girls' School and Benevolent

Institution . Bro . BRADLEY , Secretary of the Chanties Committee , handed in its nth annual report , and from this we learn that since the establishment of this Committee its ^ uccess has been most gratifying . It has carried the election into the London Masonic Institutions of n boys , three girls , three male annuitants , and one widow annuitant . It had a number of

candidates on its list , whose election it would be its duty to promote , and taking into consideration the benefits it was receiving from the principal Masonic Institutions , it strongly urged upon the Province to contribute to its utmost ability towards their maintenance and support . As regards the Durham Masonic Educational Fund ,

the work it was doing was considerable . It was assisting in the education and part maintenance of if children , at an annual outlay of over J ( , ; it had a capital of nearly ^ 8 32 , which had been all raised since 1882 , and the allowances to children per annum ranged from ^ 40 to ^ 90 . The address of the PROV . GRAND MASTER was characterised b y his usual

geniality . He congratulated the brethren on the numerical strength of- the province , the number of subscribing members being 2200 . He paid a handsome compliment to the entertaining lodges for the admirable manner in which they had received Provincial Grand Lodge , and he spoke in terms oi high commendation of the working in those lodges which he had had the

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