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  • June 19, 1869
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The Freemason, June 19, 1869: Page 6

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    Article THE LONDON MASONIC SEASON. Page 1 of 1
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Births, Marriages, And Deaths.

Births , Marriages , and Deaths .

BIKTH . WALTKKS . —On the 13 th June , at 372 , New Cross-road , Deptford , the wife of Bro . Frederick Walters of a daughter .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

All communications for T HK FRKEMASOX should be written legibly , on one side of tbe paper only , and , if intended fer insertion in the current number must be received not later than 10 o ' clock a . m . on Thursdays , unless in very special cases . The name and address of every writer must be sent to us in confidence .

A STEWARD . —We believe tbe Inauguration Jewels will be ready in July . P . Z . —We are glad to be able to assure you that brethren serving as Stewards to any two of the Charities , and qualifying as Life Governors , will , in future , be entitled to wear the Charity Jewel . The Grand Master so decided at the last Grand Lodge , although , by some means or other ,

the reporters did not record his remark . ALPHA . —The 43 rd rule of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution reads thus : — "The accounts of receipts and disbursements of the Male Funds and of the Widows' Fund , shall be kept separate and distinct , and a general statement of the finances of the Institution shall be annually prepared ; and , after having been duly audited , shall , together with a report of the proceedings of the Committee of

Management , be presented to tbe Annual General Meeting in May , and to Grand Lodge in June following . " It is , to our judgement , perfectly clear that the objection to the reception of the report , " raised by Bro . Savage at the last Quarterly Communication , was wholly untenable as the rule ( which has been sanctioned by Grand Lodge ) expressly states that the report shall lie presented to tlie Grand Lodge in June , and there is , consequently , no necessity whatever for its prior submission to the Board of Masters .

Ar00608

NOTICE . Owing to the rapidly-increasing circulation of folic $ vmmxsQ \ x , its columns have now become valuable channels to all who Advertise . For terms and contracts , appl y to Bro . WOLPERT , 3 , BIIICHIN LANE , CORNHILL .

Ar00602

Cljc Jrcemum , SATURDAY , JUNE 19 , 1 SG 9 .

Ar00609

TUB KUKKMASON is puhlis-hed on Saturday Mornings in time for the early trains . The prico of Tim Fm * i- _» so-f is Twopence por week ; quarterly subscription ( including postage ) 3 s . 3 d . Annual Subscription , 12 s . Subscriptions payable in advance All communications , totters , _ c , to bo addressed to tho BSITOB , 3 _ 4 , Little Britain , EX ! . Tho Editor will pay careful attention to all MSS . entrusted to him , but cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied by postage stamps .

The London Masonic Season.

THE LONDON MASONIC SEASON .

THE snmmer brings with it , for metropolitan brethren , a cessation from Masonic labors . Lodge after lodge closes , and , until October , as a rule , few meetings are held in London . Master and warden , fellow-craft and apprentice , alike lay

aside the apron and don the tourists suit , in quest of well-earned relaxation by the sea shore or on the breezy hill . At this period of comparative leisure let us take a brief review of the season which has just closed , and which has been

an eventful one in many respects . Not only have we had to record the birth of several new lodges iu the metropolis , but the prosperity of the Craft has been still further evinced by the immense sums contributed to the Masonic

Charities at their annual festivals . We have also seen the completion of our magnificent Masonic tcmjile in Groat Queen-street , and

• witnessed its inauguration under circumstances eminently auspicious and gratifying . Our Grand Master has completed his quarter of a centtiry ' s fiway over the Craft , and has been re-installed as

The London Masonic Season.

the ruler of English Masonry amidst demonstrations of unabated esteem and affection . Moreover , within the last few days , we have welcomed into the ranks of English Freemasonry the Prince of Wales , who , we trust , will emulate the

royal Sussex in true and earnest devotion to the sublime principles of the Order , and prove himself the First Freemason , as well as the first

gentleman in the empire . We have not lost through death any very prominent member of the Craft during the past Masonic season , nor have we had to lament over the extinction of

lodges or the secession of brethren . In a word , the condition of Freemasonry in England at the present time is highly satisfactory , and the Order bids fair to increase both in strength and influence Turning to Scotland , we find that under the

vigorous rule of the Earl Dalhousie , Freemasonry maintains its high prestige in the la . nd of the Gael , while our Irish brethren are progressing in spite of the unscrupulous opposition of Cardinal Cullen and his priesthood .

It is much to be desired , however , that the ties which bind the Craft together should be still more closely drawn , by the adoption of something like uniformity of working in the three kingdoms . We are aware that the establishment

of an orthodox and recognized ritual for the Craft degrees will be a herculean task * and , doubtless , this feeling exercises a deterrent influence against making this attempt . But , surely ,

when the object to be attained is so great and so praiseworthy , qualified brethren willing to devote time ancl attention to the subject will come forward and lend their assistance . Now that the

Masonic London season is over , there is more leisure for conference and discussion , and we hope yet to see the matter dealt with by the authorities of the several Grand Lodges of the United Kingdom .

It is a matter of congratulation that the importance of the Masonic Press is now becoming generally ancl thoroughly realized in England ; our brethren in America , it is well known , have long appreciated its value , ancl we tire proud to

acknowledge that the support which has been extended by thc Craft to our own Journal is a gigantic stride in tho same direction . To all our friends whose Masonic labours in

the metropolis have now temporarily ceased—we earnestly wish the refreshment of renovated health and spirits , to engage again with renewed vigor in the work of beautifying ancl adorning the Masonic edifice .

The Red Cross Of Rome And Constantine.

THE RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE .

THE annual report of the Executive Committee of the Imperial , Ecclesiastical , ancl Military Order of Knights of the Red Cross of Rome and Constantine , for 1 SG 8-9 , contains a record of the proceedings of tho General Grand

Conclave of tho Order on March Gth , 18 G 8 ; a statement of the accounts from date of re-organization in May , 18 G 5 , to March , 18 G 9 , showing a balance in favour of the general fund of £ 79 6 s . 8 d .,

and in the Grand Almoner ' s , or charity fund , . £ 11 lis . Id . We also gather the following statistical information from its pages * . — The Grand Council consists of 12 members .

Thc Grand Senate is also conqioscd of 12 members . There are 20 local Inspectors General in the United Kingdom and foreign parts . Thc Knights of the Grand Cross are 9 in number . There are 15 officers of the Grand College of Viceroys , and 18 representatives of the 18 Con-

The Red Cross Of Rome And Constantine.

claves acting under the Grand Council . The K . H . S . are represented by the Patriarchal Council , which is composed of 18 members . In the aripendix the form of petition for a charter

is given , and two memorial pages are allotted to Sir Knts . Wm . Turner , and Dr . Vincent Westlake Bates , G . Senators , who died during the yeai * .

Brethren who may desire to make themselves acquainted with the progress of this ancient chivalric order , will do well to obtain this Report , which is published by Bro . G . Kenning , 3 and 4 , Little Britain .

We are much pleased to announce that Bro . W . Wither Bramston Beach , M . P ., has been appointed Prov . Grand Master for Hampshire , in succession to the late Admiral of the Fleet

Sir Lucius Curtis , Bart ., K . C . B ., and we are sure that Bro . Beach ' s appointment will give the greatest possible satisfaction to the Hampshire lodges and brethren generally .

Multum In Parbo, Or Masonic Notes And Queries.

Multum in Parbo , or Masonic Notes and Queries .

—?—Philolaus , a native of Crotona , and the scholar of Pythagoras , first taught publicly the diurnal motion of the earth round its axis , and its annual motion round the sun . —ANCIENT YORK LECTURER .

Can the degree of Most Excellent Master be obtained in England ?—The two other intermediate degrees , between M . M . and R . A ., worked in America are given here , but T believe the M . E . M . is not . —X . P . Nehemiah , a Jew , was cup-bearer to Artaxerxes Longimanus . He came to Jerusalem A . M .

3 G 09 , and having finished the temple , at the dedication thereof , the sacred fire , which had been hidden by Jeremiah , was found ; as likewise , they say , the ark of the covenant , and the altar of incense . He returned a second time to Jerusalem .. limit 3 G 2 . 1 . —SON OF SALATHIEL .

The 1722 Constitutions and the High Grades . — Bro . W . J . Hughan very kindly writes to me to say that Bro . Rd . Spencer has the " Old Constitutions " printed in 1722 , and that he ( Bro . Hughan ) had seen them , and taken extracts from them , but that there is no mention of High Grades in thein . 1 presume therefore that the allusions made have been

to some low country reprint of the 172 * 2 Constitutions . The learned Brother Dr . Leeson would confer a great obligation upon the Order , if he would set our minds at ease on this subject and the 1721 Warrant of James III ., by giving full particulars . Bro . Hughan adds that this 1722 pamphlet is very similar to a 1728 one he is reprinting . —JOHN YAUKEH , Manchester .

Red Cross of Constantine . —I had hoped to have seen Bro . Lambert ' s reply to R . W . L . on the Red Cross and the Rite of Bro . Rosa . Following the usual authorities , it is considered that about 17 * 28-9 , the Chevalier Ramsay invented three degrees of Knights of St . Andrew ( which he jn-oposed to

our G . A ) . These were an innovation upon the rite of the Chapter of Arras , and also differed from the York rite , but if the account given by Bro . Dr . Oliver of his three degrees are reliable , they could not have- originated the Royal Arch-Templar rite of York , the traditions of which they rather seem

to follow . About 1754 , Baron Huude ( a member of the High Grades of the Jesuit Chapter of Clermont ) , established his Templar rite of seven degrees , and from this in a very short time branched the rite of Clerks of Relaxed Observance , who beiug all members of the Church of Rome , added three more

degrees , including the Red Cross , which we are informed is found also in the Swedish rite of twelve degrees . Queries . —1 . What is Olivers authority for Ramsay ' s proposal , and was it really so far back as 1728-9 , " and did it contain a Templar Order 7 Oliver

seems to imply that it did not . 2 . Can any of the Jesuit Brothers ( Knights of thc Order of Constantine ) or of the Romish rite of Clerks of Relaxed Observance , be shown to have had Romish authority for the revival of tho Red Cross ? Are auy of the names known ? JOHN YARKKB , Manchester .

“The Freemason: 1869-06-19, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_19061869/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. Article 1
Reviews. Article 2
A MASONIC HYMN. Article 2
A MASONIC PRAYER. Article 2
PAPERS ON MASONRY. Article 3
Reports of Masonic Meeting. Article 4
ORDERS OF CHIVALRY. Article 4
MASONIC MYSTERIES. Article 5
MEETING OF THE PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF KENT. Article 5
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 5
MASONRY AND POLITICS. Article 5
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 6
Answers to Correspondents. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
THE LONDON MASONIC SEASON. Article 6
THE RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE. Article 6
Multum in Parbo, or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 6
GRAND LODGE OF CANADA. Article 7
ANNUAL "PIC-NIC" OF LODGE OF UNITY, No. 613, SOUTHPORT. Article 7
Original Correspondence. Article 7
ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. Article 8
ANOTHER FENIAN OUTRAGE: Article 9
Agents. Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
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Page 1

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Page 2

Page 2

6 Articles
Page 3

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3 Articles
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4 Articles
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5 Articles
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10 Articles
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3 Articles
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4 Articles
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Page 9

3 Articles
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15 Articles
Page 6

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

Births, Marriages, And Deaths.

Births , Marriages , and Deaths .

BIKTH . WALTKKS . —On the 13 th June , at 372 , New Cross-road , Deptford , the wife of Bro . Frederick Walters of a daughter .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

All communications for T HK FRKEMASOX should be written legibly , on one side of tbe paper only , and , if intended fer insertion in the current number must be received not later than 10 o ' clock a . m . on Thursdays , unless in very special cases . The name and address of every writer must be sent to us in confidence .

A STEWARD . —We believe tbe Inauguration Jewels will be ready in July . P . Z . —We are glad to be able to assure you that brethren serving as Stewards to any two of the Charities , and qualifying as Life Governors , will , in future , be entitled to wear the Charity Jewel . The Grand Master so decided at the last Grand Lodge , although , by some means or other ,

the reporters did not record his remark . ALPHA . —The 43 rd rule of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution reads thus : — "The accounts of receipts and disbursements of the Male Funds and of the Widows' Fund , shall be kept separate and distinct , and a general statement of the finances of the Institution shall be annually prepared ; and , after having been duly audited , shall , together with a report of the proceedings of the Committee of

Management , be presented to tbe Annual General Meeting in May , and to Grand Lodge in June following . " It is , to our judgement , perfectly clear that the objection to the reception of the report , " raised by Bro . Savage at the last Quarterly Communication , was wholly untenable as the rule ( which has been sanctioned by Grand Lodge ) expressly states that the report shall lie presented to tlie Grand Lodge in June , and there is , consequently , no necessity whatever for its prior submission to the Board of Masters .

Ar00608

NOTICE . Owing to the rapidly-increasing circulation of folic $ vmmxsQ \ x , its columns have now become valuable channels to all who Advertise . For terms and contracts , appl y to Bro . WOLPERT , 3 , BIIICHIN LANE , CORNHILL .

Ar00602

Cljc Jrcemum , SATURDAY , JUNE 19 , 1 SG 9 .

Ar00609

TUB KUKKMASON is puhlis-hed on Saturday Mornings in time for the early trains . The prico of Tim Fm * i- _» so-f is Twopence por week ; quarterly subscription ( including postage ) 3 s . 3 d . Annual Subscription , 12 s . Subscriptions payable in advance All communications , totters , _ c , to bo addressed to tho BSITOB , 3 _ 4 , Little Britain , EX ! . Tho Editor will pay careful attention to all MSS . entrusted to him , but cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied by postage stamps .

The London Masonic Season.

THE LONDON MASONIC SEASON .

THE snmmer brings with it , for metropolitan brethren , a cessation from Masonic labors . Lodge after lodge closes , and , until October , as a rule , few meetings are held in London . Master and warden , fellow-craft and apprentice , alike lay

aside the apron and don the tourists suit , in quest of well-earned relaxation by the sea shore or on the breezy hill . At this period of comparative leisure let us take a brief review of the season which has just closed , and which has been

an eventful one in many respects . Not only have we had to record the birth of several new lodges iu the metropolis , but the prosperity of the Craft has been still further evinced by the immense sums contributed to the Masonic

Charities at their annual festivals . We have also seen the completion of our magnificent Masonic tcmjile in Groat Queen-street , and

• witnessed its inauguration under circumstances eminently auspicious and gratifying . Our Grand Master has completed his quarter of a centtiry ' s fiway over the Craft , and has been re-installed as

The London Masonic Season.

the ruler of English Masonry amidst demonstrations of unabated esteem and affection . Moreover , within the last few days , we have welcomed into the ranks of English Freemasonry the Prince of Wales , who , we trust , will emulate the

royal Sussex in true and earnest devotion to the sublime principles of the Order , and prove himself the First Freemason , as well as the first

gentleman in the empire . We have not lost through death any very prominent member of the Craft during the past Masonic season , nor have we had to lament over the extinction of

lodges or the secession of brethren . In a word , the condition of Freemasonry in England at the present time is highly satisfactory , and the Order bids fair to increase both in strength and influence Turning to Scotland , we find that under the

vigorous rule of the Earl Dalhousie , Freemasonry maintains its high prestige in the la . nd of the Gael , while our Irish brethren are progressing in spite of the unscrupulous opposition of Cardinal Cullen and his priesthood .

It is much to be desired , however , that the ties which bind the Craft together should be still more closely drawn , by the adoption of something like uniformity of working in the three kingdoms . We are aware that the establishment

of an orthodox and recognized ritual for the Craft degrees will be a herculean task * and , doubtless , this feeling exercises a deterrent influence against making this attempt . But , surely ,

when the object to be attained is so great and so praiseworthy , qualified brethren willing to devote time ancl attention to the subject will come forward and lend their assistance . Now that the

Masonic London season is over , there is more leisure for conference and discussion , and we hope yet to see the matter dealt with by the authorities of the several Grand Lodges of the United Kingdom .

It is a matter of congratulation that the importance of the Masonic Press is now becoming generally ancl thoroughly realized in England ; our brethren in America , it is well known , have long appreciated its value , ancl we tire proud to

acknowledge that the support which has been extended by thc Craft to our own Journal is a gigantic stride in tho same direction . To all our friends whose Masonic labours in

the metropolis have now temporarily ceased—we earnestly wish the refreshment of renovated health and spirits , to engage again with renewed vigor in the work of beautifying ancl adorning the Masonic edifice .

The Red Cross Of Rome And Constantine.

THE RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE .

THE annual report of the Executive Committee of the Imperial , Ecclesiastical , ancl Military Order of Knights of the Red Cross of Rome and Constantine , for 1 SG 8-9 , contains a record of the proceedings of tho General Grand

Conclave of tho Order on March Gth , 18 G 8 ; a statement of the accounts from date of re-organization in May , 18 G 5 , to March , 18 G 9 , showing a balance in favour of the general fund of £ 79 6 s . 8 d .,

and in the Grand Almoner ' s , or charity fund , . £ 11 lis . Id . We also gather the following statistical information from its pages * . — The Grand Council consists of 12 members .

Thc Grand Senate is also conqioscd of 12 members . There are 20 local Inspectors General in the United Kingdom and foreign parts . Thc Knights of the Grand Cross are 9 in number . There are 15 officers of the Grand College of Viceroys , and 18 representatives of the 18 Con-

The Red Cross Of Rome And Constantine.

claves acting under the Grand Council . The K . H . S . are represented by the Patriarchal Council , which is composed of 18 members . In the aripendix the form of petition for a charter

is given , and two memorial pages are allotted to Sir Knts . Wm . Turner , and Dr . Vincent Westlake Bates , G . Senators , who died during the yeai * .

Brethren who may desire to make themselves acquainted with the progress of this ancient chivalric order , will do well to obtain this Report , which is published by Bro . G . Kenning , 3 and 4 , Little Britain .

We are much pleased to announce that Bro . W . Wither Bramston Beach , M . P ., has been appointed Prov . Grand Master for Hampshire , in succession to the late Admiral of the Fleet

Sir Lucius Curtis , Bart ., K . C . B ., and we are sure that Bro . Beach ' s appointment will give the greatest possible satisfaction to the Hampshire lodges and brethren generally .

Multum In Parbo, Or Masonic Notes And Queries.

Multum in Parbo , or Masonic Notes and Queries .

—?—Philolaus , a native of Crotona , and the scholar of Pythagoras , first taught publicly the diurnal motion of the earth round its axis , and its annual motion round the sun . —ANCIENT YORK LECTURER .

Can the degree of Most Excellent Master be obtained in England ?—The two other intermediate degrees , between M . M . and R . A ., worked in America are given here , but T believe the M . E . M . is not . —X . P . Nehemiah , a Jew , was cup-bearer to Artaxerxes Longimanus . He came to Jerusalem A . M .

3 G 09 , and having finished the temple , at the dedication thereof , the sacred fire , which had been hidden by Jeremiah , was found ; as likewise , they say , the ark of the covenant , and the altar of incense . He returned a second time to Jerusalem .. limit 3 G 2 . 1 . —SON OF SALATHIEL .

The 1722 Constitutions and the High Grades . — Bro . W . J . Hughan very kindly writes to me to say that Bro . Rd . Spencer has the " Old Constitutions " printed in 1722 , and that he ( Bro . Hughan ) had seen them , and taken extracts from them , but that there is no mention of High Grades in thein . 1 presume therefore that the allusions made have been

to some low country reprint of the 172 * 2 Constitutions . The learned Brother Dr . Leeson would confer a great obligation upon the Order , if he would set our minds at ease on this subject and the 1721 Warrant of James III ., by giving full particulars . Bro . Hughan adds that this 1722 pamphlet is very similar to a 1728 one he is reprinting . —JOHN YAUKEH , Manchester .

Red Cross of Constantine . —I had hoped to have seen Bro . Lambert ' s reply to R . W . L . on the Red Cross and the Rite of Bro . Rosa . Following the usual authorities , it is considered that about 17 * 28-9 , the Chevalier Ramsay invented three degrees of Knights of St . Andrew ( which he jn-oposed to

our G . A ) . These were an innovation upon the rite of the Chapter of Arras , and also differed from the York rite , but if the account given by Bro . Dr . Oliver of his three degrees are reliable , they could not have- originated the Royal Arch-Templar rite of York , the traditions of which they rather seem

to follow . About 1754 , Baron Huude ( a member of the High Grades of the Jesuit Chapter of Clermont ) , established his Templar rite of seven degrees , and from this in a very short time branched the rite of Clerks of Relaxed Observance , who beiug all members of the Church of Rome , added three more

degrees , including the Red Cross , which we are informed is found also in the Swedish rite of twelve degrees . Queries . —1 . What is Olivers authority for Ramsay ' s proposal , and was it really so far back as 1728-9 , " and did it contain a Templar Order 7 Oliver

seems to imply that it did not . 2 . Can any of the Jesuit Brothers ( Knights of thc Order of Constantine ) or of the Romish rite of Clerks of Relaxed Observance , be shown to have had Romish authority for the revival of tho Red Cross ? Are auy of the names known ? JOHN YARKKB , Manchester .

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