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  • Sept. 19, 1874
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  • Original Correspondence.
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The Freemason, Sept. 19, 1874: Page 9

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    Article APPROACHING ELECTIONS OF THE BOYS' AND GIRLS' SCHOOLS. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article OUR LATE GRAND MASTER. Page 1 of 1
    Article OUR LATE GRAND MASTER. Page 1 of 1
    Article Original Correspondence. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 9

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

Approaching Elections Of The Boys' And Girls' Schools.

to be filled up . At the April election this year , we may remember , 16 g irls were elected from a list of 3 1 candidates . Of the 29 candidates for the October election , 14 are applicants for the

first time . It is also important to note , that of these 39 candidates , n are from London- and 18 are from the provinces ¦ and of these provinces , Kent has 3 , East Lancashire a ,

Hampshire and Isle of Wight 2 , and Suffolk 2 candidates •while South Wales , Devon , Lincolnshire , South Africa , Staffordshire , Calcutta , Cornwall , Surrey , and Warwickshire , put

forward 1 candidate each . For the Boys' School election , October 12 th , out of 44 candidates , 13 are to be elected . At the last election , ijj boys were elected , out of 52 candidates . Of the 44

candidates for election in October , 18 apply for the first time . It is also instructive to remember that of these 44 candidates , 14 are from London , and 30 from the provinces . Hampshiieand the

Isle of Wight have 3 candidates , East Lancashire 1 , West Yorkshire 2 , Durham 2 , Kent 2 Devonshire 2 , North Wales and Salop 1 , and St . Helena , Gibraltar , East Indies , Foreign

Stations , Lincolnshire , Hong Kong , Gloucester ' shire , Oxfordshire , Derbyshire , Dorsetshire , Stafford shire , Norfolk , Cumberland , Northamptonshire , and South Wales r each . Now these ,

both as regards the Girls and Boys Schools , are very remarkable facts and figures , and suggest some special considerations , which , on an earl y occasion , we may think well to advert to . But

to-day we will content ourselves with observing how very incontestably these voting papers con » vince us of the need and importance—may we not say the increasing need of these educational

institutions of ours ? The present position of our Order is one of unprecedented material prosperity , and numerical increase , but that very prosperity , and that very increase inevitably

bring upon us still more abounding claims on our active Masonic sympathy and charity . May 1874 and 1875 witness the same unflagging zeal ,

and the same meritorious efforts on behalf of these two admirable institutions , the BOYS' and the GIRLS' SCHOOLS .

Our Late Grand Master.

OUR LATE GRAND MASTER .

Little indeed did Freemasons in general , or even those assembled to hear the letter of the Marquis of Ripon , conceive the severity of the ( COMMUMCATHD ) .

blow which had fallen upon tbem , and now that the truth is known in its entirety , the shock seems almost too great to be endured . The resignation alone of a Grand Master , who had by his zeal for Masonry , unabated while he

fulfilled one of the highest offices of the State , and b y his courtesy and affability towards those with whom he became officially connected , endeared himself to all his brethren , and gained a lasting hold npon their affection and esteem ,

would have been received with feelings of the deepest sorrow , but' when we learn that the step we so heartily deplore has been occasioned by the alliance of our noble brother with the bitter enemies of the Craft , whose undying

hatred for our Order has from time to time prompted them to publish the most unjustifiable falsehoods , and to utter the grossest perversions of the truth concerning us , then indeed the

poignancy of our grief is increased tenfold , our sorrow is deepened with lamentation , and we are constrained to cry out with the sweet singer of Israel , " How are the mighty fallen ! " The importance of the occurrence can hardly be over-

Our Late Grand Master.

rated . For the first time since the establishment of the Grand Lodge in 1717 has the Ruler of our Order become a Roman Catholic , and surrende-ied his moral liberty , that right so dear to and jealously guarded by Englishmen in general , to the keeping of his leaders

in religion . And what is ostensibly the first sacrifice which they demand of their convert ? It is nothing less than that he should sever himself from a body of men whose watchwords are charity and benevolence , whose aim and boast is to do good to their fellow creatures , and

who are in possession of certain secrets which , for the purpose of keeping out unwelcome visitors and preventing the intrusion of impostors , they are in the habit of communicating in a peculiar manner . Verily , we Freemasons must be a dangerous lot ! The help which we afford

to those in distress—not , be it remembered , to members of our community alone—is called in question by the intolerant Church of Rome ; our forms and ceremonies , harmless and unproductive of ill as our opponents know them to be , are stigmatized . is unlawful and irreligious : and

our instruction , for the most part conveyed in parables , as was the custom of One whose wisdom and goodness not even our slanderous assailants dare deny , is denounced by them as ungodly and impure . We cannot do better than quote the well known and forcible words

of our Rev . Brother Osmond Dakeyne , which , though delivered thirty years ago , are still perfect in their truthful representation of an Institution " founded on the purest princi ples of piety and virtue . " The speaker was referring to the charges which were then , as now , unjustly

brought against us , and he proceeds— " Disloyal ! Why at the very moment when Professor Robinson published his book , who were the heads of our Order ; The chivalrous Earl of Moira , George , Prince of Wales , and Edward , Duke of Kent ! Disloyal ! Was not George the Fourth

our Grand Master ! Was not William the Fourth our brother and patron ! Our last Grand Master was a Royal Duke ! The Duke of York was one of our brotherhood . The King of Hanover is a Freemason . Would all these Princes have belonged to a disloyal society ! Are we

conspirators to overthrow settled institutions ? Who is the present head of the army ? The Duke of Wellington !—aye , the Duke of Wellington is a Freemason ! Are we irreligious ? The Archbishop of Canterbury , the Primate of all England , is a Freemason , and was once

Master of Bristol lodge ! " And these words , as they then were , in their bold enunciation of the truth , can at the present time be supplemented by many other royal and notable names , as witnesses to the loyalty to Throne and State , and the freedom from irreligion , nav more ,

the actual tendency to religious feeling which prevails in the working of our Lodges . Latterly the Romish Church , apparently afraid ofthe gigantic strides which Freemasonry has been making , and jealous of the wholesome teachings

which it inculcates in its assemblies , has been by no means unsparing in its misrepresentation and attempts at coercion . Witness the uncalled-for refusal of Mr . Cuffe to perform the burial service over the remains of a Member of our

fraternity , and the scandalous and wholesale vilifying of the Westminster Review . And no » v that by a blow in the dark , as it were , our head has been taken from us , it behoves ns to consider what we should do . Shall we tamely

submit to the aspersions of our foes , and quietly endure their slander and evil speaking ? No ! However much we grieve for what appears to us as the defection of the highest member of onr Craft , it is our duty by earnest perseverance in our lawful work and steadfast adherence to the

principles of our Order to refute the utterance of calumny , to " put lo silence the ignorance of foolish men , " and to prove to the world that Freemasons are loyal , honourable , and generous , and practise those sublime precepts which in other words they profess : — " Honour all men . Love the brotherhood . Fear God . Honour the King . " H . M . G .

[ We publish this as we have received it , wishing to allow all 1 free discussion within certain limits . —ED , ]

Original Correspondence.

Original Correspondence .

[ We do net hold oursch-cs responsible for , or even as approving of the opinions expressed by our correspondents , hut we wish , in a spirit of fair play to all , to permit—within certain necessary limits—free discussion . —I £ D . ]

THE ROYAL VISIT TO PLYMOUTH .

To the Editor of the Freemason . Dear Sir and Brother , — I have recently had my attention drawn to various articles and letters in the Freemason on the unfortunate exclusion from the Masonic

procession of the non - commisioned - officer brethren , on the occasion of the Royal visit to Plymouth last month : — Tlie two questions to be answered you say are : 1 st . Who laid down as a regulation that our

soldier brethren must appear in black coats , & c ? 2 nd , Was there any military prohibition of our soldier brethren marching in the procession ' In answer to the first of these questions , I should say no one laid down such a regulation .

The committee numbered amongst its members more than one who knew full well the value to Masonry of these intellectual and highly disciplined brethren , the N .-C . officers of the army-, and the regulations laid down by the

committee to establish — wisely enough I think—a uniformity in the dress , were intended to apply to thc civilian brethren alone , for it was well known by the committee , some of whom had been for many years connected with the

service , that whilst to general' officers commanding discretion is given by the Queen ' s regulations , to permit officers to wear plain clothes , no such discretionary power is given to extend the indulgence to N .-C . officers

or men . The custom of the service requires that soldiers shall appear in the public streets properly dressed in their uniforms . Your correspondent P . G . D . is quite right •it would be a military offence for

an officer , N . C . officer , or private soldier to appear in a procession , with Masonic regalia worn over his uniform , unless previous permission had been obtained for his so appearing . Such permission has been accorded to the military on former occasions , and the committee had

no doubt that the same indulgence would have been extended on the occasion referred to . They universally regretted the absence of their military brethren . Very fraternally yours , J . E LLIOTT , Colonel , P . P . G . H . & P . S . G . W . Devon .

Stonehouse , Devon , 9 th September , 1874 . [ Since the above was in type , we have received another and explanatory letter from Bro . Col . Elliott , ofthe letter we have just given .

which we will print next week , as we have no spare space for it , unfortunately , this week , our columns being much crowded , and many communications having to stand over . —Ei >]

To the Editor of the Freemason . Dear Sir and Brother , — Whatever may have been the alleged cause of the non-appearance of the military

brethren at the recent Masonic public procession at Plymouth . I cannot help thinking that some of your correspondents on the subject have not viewed the matter quite in its right light .

The Queen ' s Regulations and Orders for the Army used to contain a paragraph forbidding officers and soldiers from belonging to secret societies . This has now disappeared , but in the present edition ( 31 st Dec ., 1873 ) yon will find

the following— " Soldiers are not to be permitted to go beyond the precinots of their barracks unless properly dressed . " A Masonic apron , or collar , or badge , or jewel , is nowhere laid down as a part of their dress . It appears that the Committee required the

brethren to " take patt in the procession , " clothed according * to the usual custom , this I take it was intended to refer not only to what is generally known amongst us as " Masonic Clothing , " but also to the remaining portion of the usual proper attire of a Mason , ; when attending Masonic duty , black and white .

“The Freemason: 1874-09-19, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_19091874/page/9/.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 3
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 3
Royal Arch. Article 4
Mark Masonry. Article 4
Scotland. Article 5
OPENING OF A NEW LODGE AT KILSYTH. Article 5
CONSECRATION OF A NEW LODGE IN LIVERPOOL. Article 6
ROYAL MASONIC PEDIGREE WHEAT. Article 6
OUR MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 7
SUMMER BANQUET OF THE HERVEY LODGE (No. 1260). Article 7
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 7
Obituary. Article 7
THE STRONG FOUNDATION. Article 7
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 8
MADAME TUSSAUD'S EXHIBITION. Article 8
Untitled Ad 8
Answers to Correspondents. Article 8
Untitled Article 8
SCOTTISH FREEMASONRY. Article 8
APPROACHING ELECTIONS OF THE BOYS' AND GIRLS' SCHOOLS. Article 8
OUR LATE GRAND MASTER. Article 9
Original Correspondence. Article 9
Multum in Parbo, or Masonic Notes and.Queries. Article 10
THE NEW PORCH OF SWANSCOMBE CHURCH. Article 10
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF SOMERSET. Article 11
CONSECRATION OF ST. ELETH LODGE (No. 1488) AT AMLWCH. Article 11
Untitled Article 12
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 12
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Province of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight. Article 13
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MASONIC BOOKS IN STOCK Article 15
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Approaching Elections Of The Boys' And Girls' Schools.

to be filled up . At the April election this year , we may remember , 16 g irls were elected from a list of 3 1 candidates . Of the 29 candidates for the October election , 14 are applicants for the

first time . It is also important to note , that of these 39 candidates , n are from London- and 18 are from the provinces ¦ and of these provinces , Kent has 3 , East Lancashire a ,

Hampshire and Isle of Wight 2 , and Suffolk 2 candidates •while South Wales , Devon , Lincolnshire , South Africa , Staffordshire , Calcutta , Cornwall , Surrey , and Warwickshire , put

forward 1 candidate each . For the Boys' School election , October 12 th , out of 44 candidates , 13 are to be elected . At the last election , ijj boys were elected , out of 52 candidates . Of the 44

candidates for election in October , 18 apply for the first time . It is also instructive to remember that of these 44 candidates , 14 are from London , and 30 from the provinces . Hampshiieand the

Isle of Wight have 3 candidates , East Lancashire 1 , West Yorkshire 2 , Durham 2 , Kent 2 Devonshire 2 , North Wales and Salop 1 , and St . Helena , Gibraltar , East Indies , Foreign

Stations , Lincolnshire , Hong Kong , Gloucester ' shire , Oxfordshire , Derbyshire , Dorsetshire , Stafford shire , Norfolk , Cumberland , Northamptonshire , and South Wales r each . Now these ,

both as regards the Girls and Boys Schools , are very remarkable facts and figures , and suggest some special considerations , which , on an earl y occasion , we may think well to advert to . But

to-day we will content ourselves with observing how very incontestably these voting papers con » vince us of the need and importance—may we not say the increasing need of these educational

institutions of ours ? The present position of our Order is one of unprecedented material prosperity , and numerical increase , but that very prosperity , and that very increase inevitably

bring upon us still more abounding claims on our active Masonic sympathy and charity . May 1874 and 1875 witness the same unflagging zeal ,

and the same meritorious efforts on behalf of these two admirable institutions , the BOYS' and the GIRLS' SCHOOLS .

Our Late Grand Master.

OUR LATE GRAND MASTER .

Little indeed did Freemasons in general , or even those assembled to hear the letter of the Marquis of Ripon , conceive the severity of the ( COMMUMCATHD ) .

blow which had fallen upon tbem , and now that the truth is known in its entirety , the shock seems almost too great to be endured . The resignation alone of a Grand Master , who had by his zeal for Masonry , unabated while he

fulfilled one of the highest offices of the State , and b y his courtesy and affability towards those with whom he became officially connected , endeared himself to all his brethren , and gained a lasting hold npon their affection and esteem ,

would have been received with feelings of the deepest sorrow , but' when we learn that the step we so heartily deplore has been occasioned by the alliance of our noble brother with the bitter enemies of the Craft , whose undying

hatred for our Order has from time to time prompted them to publish the most unjustifiable falsehoods , and to utter the grossest perversions of the truth concerning us , then indeed the

poignancy of our grief is increased tenfold , our sorrow is deepened with lamentation , and we are constrained to cry out with the sweet singer of Israel , " How are the mighty fallen ! " The importance of the occurrence can hardly be over-

Our Late Grand Master.

rated . For the first time since the establishment of the Grand Lodge in 1717 has the Ruler of our Order become a Roman Catholic , and surrende-ied his moral liberty , that right so dear to and jealously guarded by Englishmen in general , to the keeping of his leaders

in religion . And what is ostensibly the first sacrifice which they demand of their convert ? It is nothing less than that he should sever himself from a body of men whose watchwords are charity and benevolence , whose aim and boast is to do good to their fellow creatures , and

who are in possession of certain secrets which , for the purpose of keeping out unwelcome visitors and preventing the intrusion of impostors , they are in the habit of communicating in a peculiar manner . Verily , we Freemasons must be a dangerous lot ! The help which we afford

to those in distress—not , be it remembered , to members of our community alone—is called in question by the intolerant Church of Rome ; our forms and ceremonies , harmless and unproductive of ill as our opponents know them to be , are stigmatized . is unlawful and irreligious : and

our instruction , for the most part conveyed in parables , as was the custom of One whose wisdom and goodness not even our slanderous assailants dare deny , is denounced by them as ungodly and impure . We cannot do better than quote the well known and forcible words

of our Rev . Brother Osmond Dakeyne , which , though delivered thirty years ago , are still perfect in their truthful representation of an Institution " founded on the purest princi ples of piety and virtue . " The speaker was referring to the charges which were then , as now , unjustly

brought against us , and he proceeds— " Disloyal ! Why at the very moment when Professor Robinson published his book , who were the heads of our Order ; The chivalrous Earl of Moira , George , Prince of Wales , and Edward , Duke of Kent ! Disloyal ! Was not George the Fourth

our Grand Master ! Was not William the Fourth our brother and patron ! Our last Grand Master was a Royal Duke ! The Duke of York was one of our brotherhood . The King of Hanover is a Freemason . Would all these Princes have belonged to a disloyal society ! Are we

conspirators to overthrow settled institutions ? Who is the present head of the army ? The Duke of Wellington !—aye , the Duke of Wellington is a Freemason ! Are we irreligious ? The Archbishop of Canterbury , the Primate of all England , is a Freemason , and was once

Master of Bristol lodge ! " And these words , as they then were , in their bold enunciation of the truth , can at the present time be supplemented by many other royal and notable names , as witnesses to the loyalty to Throne and State , and the freedom from irreligion , nav more ,

the actual tendency to religious feeling which prevails in the working of our Lodges . Latterly the Romish Church , apparently afraid ofthe gigantic strides which Freemasonry has been making , and jealous of the wholesome teachings

which it inculcates in its assemblies , has been by no means unsparing in its misrepresentation and attempts at coercion . Witness the uncalled-for refusal of Mr . Cuffe to perform the burial service over the remains of a Member of our

fraternity , and the scandalous and wholesale vilifying of the Westminster Review . And no » v that by a blow in the dark , as it were , our head has been taken from us , it behoves ns to consider what we should do . Shall we tamely

submit to the aspersions of our foes , and quietly endure their slander and evil speaking ? No ! However much we grieve for what appears to us as the defection of the highest member of onr Craft , it is our duty by earnest perseverance in our lawful work and steadfast adherence to the

principles of our Order to refute the utterance of calumny , to " put lo silence the ignorance of foolish men , " and to prove to the world that Freemasons are loyal , honourable , and generous , and practise those sublime precepts which in other words they profess : — " Honour all men . Love the brotherhood . Fear God . Honour the King . " H . M . G .

[ We publish this as we have received it , wishing to allow all 1 free discussion within certain limits . —ED , ]

Original Correspondence.

Original Correspondence .

[ We do net hold oursch-cs responsible for , or even as approving of the opinions expressed by our correspondents , hut we wish , in a spirit of fair play to all , to permit—within certain necessary limits—free discussion . —I £ D . ]

THE ROYAL VISIT TO PLYMOUTH .

To the Editor of the Freemason . Dear Sir and Brother , — I have recently had my attention drawn to various articles and letters in the Freemason on the unfortunate exclusion from the Masonic

procession of the non - commisioned - officer brethren , on the occasion of the Royal visit to Plymouth last month : — Tlie two questions to be answered you say are : 1 st . Who laid down as a regulation that our

soldier brethren must appear in black coats , & c ? 2 nd , Was there any military prohibition of our soldier brethren marching in the procession ' In answer to the first of these questions , I should say no one laid down such a regulation .

The committee numbered amongst its members more than one who knew full well the value to Masonry of these intellectual and highly disciplined brethren , the N .-C . officers of the army-, and the regulations laid down by the

committee to establish — wisely enough I think—a uniformity in the dress , were intended to apply to thc civilian brethren alone , for it was well known by the committee , some of whom had been for many years connected with the

service , that whilst to general' officers commanding discretion is given by the Queen ' s regulations , to permit officers to wear plain clothes , no such discretionary power is given to extend the indulgence to N .-C . officers

or men . The custom of the service requires that soldiers shall appear in the public streets properly dressed in their uniforms . Your correspondent P . G . D . is quite right •it would be a military offence for

an officer , N . C . officer , or private soldier to appear in a procession , with Masonic regalia worn over his uniform , unless previous permission had been obtained for his so appearing . Such permission has been accorded to the military on former occasions , and the committee had

no doubt that the same indulgence would have been extended on the occasion referred to . They universally regretted the absence of their military brethren . Very fraternally yours , J . E LLIOTT , Colonel , P . P . G . H . & P . S . G . W . Devon .

Stonehouse , Devon , 9 th September , 1874 . [ Since the above was in type , we have received another and explanatory letter from Bro . Col . Elliott , ofthe letter we have just given .

which we will print next week , as we have no spare space for it , unfortunately , this week , our columns being much crowded , and many communications having to stand over . —Ei >]

To the Editor of the Freemason . Dear Sir and Brother , — Whatever may have been the alleged cause of the non-appearance of the military

brethren at the recent Masonic public procession at Plymouth . I cannot help thinking that some of your correspondents on the subject have not viewed the matter quite in its right light .

The Queen ' s Regulations and Orders for the Army used to contain a paragraph forbidding officers and soldiers from belonging to secret societies . This has now disappeared , but in the present edition ( 31 st Dec ., 1873 ) yon will find

the following— " Soldiers are not to be permitted to go beyond the precinots of their barracks unless properly dressed . " A Masonic apron , or collar , or badge , or jewel , is nowhere laid down as a part of their dress . It appears that the Committee required the

brethren to " take patt in the procession , " clothed according * to the usual custom , this I take it was intended to refer not only to what is generally known amongst us as " Masonic Clothing , " but also to the remaining portion of the usual proper attire of a Mason , ; when attending Masonic duty , black and white .

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