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  • Nov. 20, 1869
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar00600

IMPORTANT NOTICE .

We have great pleasure in announcing that we have decided to - publish THE FREEMASON —commencing xoith Volume III ., January 1 st ,

1870—on toned paper , and with old-faced type , similar to that used b y the Pall Mall Gazette and other hi g h-class publications .

The size will also be permanentl y enlarged to Sixteen Pages , and , with other improvements contemplated , THE FREEMASON will then be the leading weekl y organ of the Craft throughout the globe .

Ad00603

TO ADVERTISERS . THE Circulation of THE FREEMASON being now at the rate of nearl y Half-a-Million per annum , it offers peculiar facilities to all who advertise . It is well-known that the Fraternity of Freemasons is a large and constantly increasing body , mainly composed of the influential and educated classes of society ; and as W \; t $ x minis on is now the accepted organ of the Brotherhood in thc United Kingdom , and also enjoys an extensive sale in the colonies •nd foreign parts , its advantages as an advertising medium can scarcely be overrated . For terms apply to GEOKGE KENNING . 3 < fc 4 , LITTLK BRITAIN , LONDON , E . C .

Ad00604

NOW ME A BY , Cases to hold 4 copies of " The Freemason , " 1 / 6 . Cases to hold 52 copies of '' The Freemason , " 2 / 6 . With THE FiiKEMisira emblematically depicted , and other Masonic emblems in gold . To be liad at tlio Offices , 3 & 4 , Little Britain

Ad00605

Jmnrfii ana ttolomnl gUrcnts . —?—AMERICA : Uro . , 1 . FLETCIIKII BURNJJA : * , lid , Mainstreet , Cincinnati , Ohio . „ Messrs . Woomturi . ' and BI . OCIIEII , Little Hock , Arkansas , U . S . CANADA : Messrs . UI-VUIK & SON , Ottawa . CAPE OF GOOD HOPE : Bro . GEORGE BIUTTAIH , Cape Town . ' * CEYLON : Messrs . AV . L . SKEEUE & Co ., Colnmbo CONSTANTINOPLE : Bro . J . L , HANLY , Levant Times EAST INDIES : Allahabad : Messrs . WYMAJJ Eltos . Bycatla : Bro . UEO . BEASE . Central Provinces : Bro . V . , T . JoilDAN . Kurrac / icc : Bro . G . C . BiursoN . Madras : Mr . CAMB EOSTFK . MIIOIB : Un . UotVAsjKE NUSSEIIWAXJEE . Poona : llro . W . WKILIS . OAI . ATA : Irsicit KAII . Y , Perchembe ' -Eajar . UBEKIA : Bro . UK . VIIV D . BIIOWN , Monrovia . PAKIS : XI . DirciiEVAUx-DiDiKSNiL , Hue dc Harlny-du-Puluix , iu , near the Pont Ncuf ; Editor Le l ' ranc-Mucon . And all Booksellers and Newsagents iu England , Ireland aud Scotland . '

Birth, Marriges, And Deaths.

Birth , Marriges , and Deaths .

BlttTllS . HiWDKnso . v . —On the 7 th inst ., at Nelson-street , the wife nf Bro , James Boyes Henderson , K . A ., Lodge fl 73 , Tralcc of a sun . ' ' IAA * . -On Ihe 1 -1 th In * , at Pccknm Bye , S . E ., the wife of Bro . Walter Lean , P . M . 1087 , of a daughter . DEATHS . Tni . sr . LTox—On Saturday the 13 th inst . aged C 9 rear ? Bro . Augustus Union Tldseltmi , I'M , l . „ dg 0 of Anti ' - U . % ... , *'» ' Se"et '" y of the Boyal Masonic liutitutiuu for Boys . ^ V inr " ' I ! , , ' ' " - 3 «' . ^ ' -crossroad , in tuJCth year , Bro Henry Whittle , S . W ., 817 , and Mem-*> i the btut Lodge , No . 1 ^ 75 , deeply regretted .

All communications for THE F REEMASON should be written legibly , on one side of the paper only , and , if intended for 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 .

Ar00606

C|cJreemaann, SATURDAY , NOVEMBER 20 , 1869 .

Ar00608

THB FBBBMASON is published on Saturday Mornings in time for the early trains . Tho price of TUB FREEMASON is Twopence per week ; quarterly subscription ( including postage ) 3 s . 3 d . Annual Subscription , 12 s . Subscriptionspayablo in advance . All communications , letters , & c , to be addressed to the EDIIOB , 3 & i , Little Britain , K . U . The Editor will pay careful attention to all MSS . entrusted to him , but cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied by postage stamps .

The Earl Of Zetland.

THE EARL OF ZETLAND .

THE announcement that the Most Worshipful Grand Master of England intends to retire from the high office ho now fills in the Craft is one which , though not unexpected , Avill excite the most sincere sentiments of regret throughout the

vast Masonic Jurisdiction over which he has presided for so many years . We simply echo the feelings of every English Mason Avhen we say that Lord Zetland has endeared himself to all our hearts , not only by his unswerving

devotion to the hig h and holy principles of Freemasonry , but by the courtesy , the urbanity , and the dignity Avith which he has jierformed his duties as Grand Master of England . The post that his lordship occupies is one of the most

lofty and honourable positions to which a man can aspire during his earthly career . Wc would rather be the ruler of a glorious fraternity of good and true men , than the monarch of many a European realm . We would

rather reign , as the Earl of Zetland has reigned , in the " hearts and affections" of his brother Masons than exercise command over their "lives and fortunes . " AVe would rather have the epitaph p laced over our tomb that AVC had served our

fellow-men , and advanced tho interests of truth and virtue , than to have recorded there those titles of majesty and dominion which sit so sadly on the cold brow of death . Give us the affectionate remembrance of those whom we loved

and cherished , give us a name like that of Bro . Thomas Dundas , a Nobleman in every sense of the word , a Mason in every signification of the name , a Man in the most exalted acceptation of the term . It is true that we have a right to

expect in tbe Grand Master of the Mother Grand Lodgo of the world , a knight like Bayard sans rcprochc ; it is true that we rely implicitly on the honor , the integrity , and thc zeal of the Brother who rules the Freemasons of England ; and it is

equally true that in our present Grand Master we have had one to whom wo could point with pride , one whose consistency as a gentleman and a Freemason has never been questioned , and who will hand thc sceptre of his office to his

successor untarnished h y a single stain . Tlie Earl of Zetland comes of a good Masonio stock , as wc . shall prove in a few words . His grandfather , the first Lord Dundas , was Deputy Grand Master under tho Duke of Sussex in 1813 ,

and his father , tlio first Earl of Zetland , afterwards filled the . same post , and died , in 1839 , Pro . Grand Master of England . Our Most

Worshi pful Hrother was born on the 5 th of February , 17 D-3 , and is consequently now in his seventy-fifth year . His Masonio career dates from tho ISth Juno , 1830 , when , as the " Honor-

The Earl Of Zetland.

able Thomas Dundas , " he Avas initiated m the Prince of Wales Lodge , No . 259 , in Avhich lodge he eventually occupied the chair of Worship ful Master . His lordship Avas appointed Senior Grand Warden on the 25 th of April .

1832 ; he succeeded the late Earl of Durham , as Deputy Grand Master , on the 24 th of April ,. 1839 , and followed the same lamented nobleman in the office of Pro . Grand Master in 1840 ; this hig h post he held at the death of H . R . H .

the Duke of Sussex , in April 1843 , whon by the Constitutions of the Order , the Earl became the ruler of the English Craft until the next period of election , at which time , namely on the Gth of March , 1844 , his lordship was elected Most

Worship ful Grand Master , and was installed as such on the 24 th of April following . In Royal Arch Masonry , Lord Zetland's career has been , equally brilliant ; ho was exalted on the 1 st June 1832 , i * i the Princo of Wales Chapter , Wo . 259 ,

ancl duly served iu each of the principal chairs ; he was appointed one of the Grand Sojourners in 1832 ; as Deputy Grand Master he became , ex officio , Second Grand Principal , aud of course as Grand Master he was elevated to tho dignity

of Supreme Grand Z ., in accordance with the Regulations of the Order . His lordallip has also been Provincial Grand Master for tho North and East Ridings of Yorkshire since 183 5 . It now only remains to trace the progress of

English Freemasonry under his benign sway . From seven hundred and sixteen lodges at the time of Lord Zetland's installation as Grand Master , wc have increased to nearly thirteen hundred ! From au estimated membership of

twenty-seven thousand , AVC have increased , in England alone , to eighty-four thousand five hundred , and tho increase in our Foreign and Colonial lodges is far greater in proportion . The immense Masouic constellation thafc now

shines in the far Pacific Seas , lias arisen in light and beauty during tho period of our present Grand Master ' s rule . Remote and almost mythical corners of the globo have received the benefits of Freemasonry under his auspices . From

Japan to Gibraltar , from the Gold Coast to the Himalayan mountains , thr . mgh the ancient empire of Cathay , and the bleak regions of Newfoundland the blessings of our Friendly Craft have been ( spread through the fostering

care of the Earl of Zetland . This is a result of which any man might be justly proud , and like his great predecessor Sir Christopher Wren , posterity will be able to say of our nuble chief , "if you seek his monument , look around . " Tho

universe of civilization will bear his name , and the hearts of men will hymn his praises , it is therefore with pain that wo shall witness the retirement of olio who has for such a lengthened period filled the foremost place in the regard of

his brethren ; wc shall miss the stately presence , and tho suave dignity , which so fitly represented the innate nobility of the Masonic Institution . in this brief notice , we shall say not one word of the future—it is all too feeble a tribute ) to ft

loved and venerated name—but as tho accepted organ of the great English Craft , as thu voice of in my thousands of the household of faith , AVC tender to tho Most Worshipful Grand Master , our unfeigned gratitude for his lilb lung devotion

to the interests of the Order ; lor his recognition and suppoit of those principles which aie dear to the hearts of all Masons , and no cordially wish

him , on his retirement from the active duties of Freemasonry , that repose nnd happiness which are ever the , accompaniment- of a conscience void of offence to all mankind .

“The Freemason: 1869-11-20, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 4 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_20111869/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
FREEMASONRY AND THE LAWS OF THE LAND. Article 1
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 1
THE METHODISTS AND THE FREEMASONS. Article 2
EASTERN STAR ENTERTAINMENT AT ASTORIA, L.I. Article 2
A PLEASING INSTANCE OF THE VALUE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 2
NOSGLYNGAUA, OR WINTER'S EVE , 31ST OCTOBER. Article 2
PROVINCE OF MIDDLESEX. Article 3
Obituary. Article 3
Reports of Masonic Meetings. Article 3
THE ROYAL ARCH. Article 5
ORDERS OF CHIVALRY. Article 5
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 5
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Birth, Marriges, and Deaths. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
THE EARL OF ZETLAND. Article 6
Multum in Parbo, or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 7
NOTABLE ROSICRUCIAN WORKS. Article 7
GRAND LODGE. Article 8
THE LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 8
CHESHIRE EDUCATIONAL MASONIC INSTITUTION. Article 8
LORD ZETLAND AND THE GRAND ORIENT OF FRANCE. Article 8
CONSECRATION OF THE NEW HALL OF THE MASONIC LODGE. GLASGOW, No. 411. Article 8
Original Correspondence. Article 9
RETIREMENT OF THE M.W. GRAND MASTER. Article 9
ANCIENT AND MODERN MYSTERIES. Article 9
THE ROSICRUCIAN. Article 9
AN ESSAY Article 11
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar00600

IMPORTANT NOTICE .

We have great pleasure in announcing that we have decided to - publish THE FREEMASON —commencing xoith Volume III ., January 1 st ,

1870—on toned paper , and with old-faced type , similar to that used b y the Pall Mall Gazette and other hi g h-class publications .

The size will also be permanentl y enlarged to Sixteen Pages , and , with other improvements contemplated , THE FREEMASON will then be the leading weekl y organ of the Craft throughout the globe .

Ad00603

TO ADVERTISERS . THE Circulation of THE FREEMASON being now at the rate of nearl y Half-a-Million per annum , it offers peculiar facilities to all who advertise . It is well-known that the Fraternity of Freemasons is a large and constantly increasing body , mainly composed of the influential and educated classes of society ; and as W \; t $ x minis on is now the accepted organ of the Brotherhood in thc United Kingdom , and also enjoys an extensive sale in the colonies •nd foreign parts , its advantages as an advertising medium can scarcely be overrated . For terms apply to GEOKGE KENNING . 3 < fc 4 , LITTLK BRITAIN , LONDON , E . C .

Ad00604

NOW ME A BY , Cases to hold 4 copies of " The Freemason , " 1 / 6 . Cases to hold 52 copies of '' The Freemason , " 2 / 6 . With THE FiiKEMisira emblematically depicted , and other Masonic emblems in gold . To be liad at tlio Offices , 3 & 4 , Little Britain

Ad00605

Jmnrfii ana ttolomnl gUrcnts . —?—AMERICA : Uro . , 1 . FLETCIIKII BURNJJA : * , lid , Mainstreet , Cincinnati , Ohio . „ Messrs . Woomturi . ' and BI . OCIIEII , Little Hock , Arkansas , U . S . CANADA : Messrs . UI-VUIK & SON , Ottawa . CAPE OF GOOD HOPE : Bro . GEORGE BIUTTAIH , Cape Town . ' * CEYLON : Messrs . AV . L . SKEEUE & Co ., Colnmbo CONSTANTINOPLE : Bro . J . L , HANLY , Levant Times EAST INDIES : Allahabad : Messrs . WYMAJJ Eltos . Bycatla : Bro . UEO . BEASE . Central Provinces : Bro . V . , T . JoilDAN . Kurrac / icc : Bro . G . C . BiursoN . Madras : Mr . CAMB EOSTFK . MIIOIB : Un . UotVAsjKE NUSSEIIWAXJEE . Poona : llro . W . WKILIS . OAI . ATA : Irsicit KAII . Y , Perchembe ' -Eajar . UBEKIA : Bro . UK . VIIV D . BIIOWN , Monrovia . PAKIS : XI . DirciiEVAUx-DiDiKSNiL , Hue dc Harlny-du-Puluix , iu , near the Pont Ncuf ; Editor Le l ' ranc-Mucon . And all Booksellers and Newsagents iu England , Ireland aud Scotland . '

Birth, Marriges, And Deaths.

Birth , Marriges , and Deaths .

BlttTllS . HiWDKnso . v . —On the 7 th inst ., at Nelson-street , the wife nf Bro , James Boyes Henderson , K . A ., Lodge fl 73 , Tralcc of a sun . ' ' IAA * . -On Ihe 1 -1 th In * , at Pccknm Bye , S . E ., the wife of Bro . Walter Lean , P . M . 1087 , of a daughter . DEATHS . Tni . sr . LTox—On Saturday the 13 th inst . aged C 9 rear ? Bro . Augustus Union Tldseltmi , I'M , l . „ dg 0 of Anti ' - U . % ... , *'» ' Se"et '" y of the Boyal Masonic liutitutiuu for Boys . ^ V inr " ' I ! , , ' ' " - 3 «' . ^ ' -crossroad , in tuJCth year , Bro Henry Whittle , S . W ., 817 , and Mem-*> i the btut Lodge , No . 1 ^ 75 , deeply regretted .

All communications for THE F REEMASON should be written legibly , on one side of the paper only , and , if intended for 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 .

Ar00606

C|cJreemaann, SATURDAY , NOVEMBER 20 , 1869 .

Ar00608

THB FBBBMASON is published on Saturday Mornings in time for the early trains . Tho price of TUB FREEMASON is Twopence per week ; quarterly subscription ( including postage ) 3 s . 3 d . Annual Subscription , 12 s . Subscriptionspayablo in advance . All communications , letters , & c , to be addressed to the EDIIOB , 3 & i , Little Britain , K . U . The Editor will pay careful attention to all MSS . entrusted to him , but cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied by postage stamps .

The Earl Of Zetland.

THE EARL OF ZETLAND .

THE announcement that the Most Worshipful Grand Master of England intends to retire from the high office ho now fills in the Craft is one which , though not unexpected , Avill excite the most sincere sentiments of regret throughout the

vast Masonic Jurisdiction over which he has presided for so many years . We simply echo the feelings of every English Mason Avhen we say that Lord Zetland has endeared himself to all our hearts , not only by his unswerving

devotion to the hig h and holy principles of Freemasonry , but by the courtesy , the urbanity , and the dignity Avith which he has jierformed his duties as Grand Master of England . The post that his lordship occupies is one of the most

lofty and honourable positions to which a man can aspire during his earthly career . Wc would rather be the ruler of a glorious fraternity of good and true men , than the monarch of many a European realm . We would

rather reign , as the Earl of Zetland has reigned , in the " hearts and affections" of his brother Masons than exercise command over their "lives and fortunes . " AVe would rather have the epitaph p laced over our tomb that AVC had served our

fellow-men , and advanced tho interests of truth and virtue , than to have recorded there those titles of majesty and dominion which sit so sadly on the cold brow of death . Give us the affectionate remembrance of those whom we loved

and cherished , give us a name like that of Bro . Thomas Dundas , a Nobleman in every sense of the word , a Mason in every signification of the name , a Man in the most exalted acceptation of the term . It is true that we have a right to

expect in tbe Grand Master of the Mother Grand Lodgo of the world , a knight like Bayard sans rcprochc ; it is true that we rely implicitly on the honor , the integrity , and thc zeal of the Brother who rules the Freemasons of England ; and it is

equally true that in our present Grand Master we have had one to whom wo could point with pride , one whose consistency as a gentleman and a Freemason has never been questioned , and who will hand thc sceptre of his office to his

successor untarnished h y a single stain . Tlie Earl of Zetland comes of a good Masonio stock , as wc . shall prove in a few words . His grandfather , the first Lord Dundas , was Deputy Grand Master under tho Duke of Sussex in 1813 ,

and his father , tlio first Earl of Zetland , afterwards filled the . same post , and died , in 1839 , Pro . Grand Master of England . Our Most

Worshi pful Hrother was born on the 5 th of February , 17 D-3 , and is consequently now in his seventy-fifth year . His Masonio career dates from tho ISth Juno , 1830 , when , as the " Honor-

The Earl Of Zetland.

able Thomas Dundas , " he Avas initiated m the Prince of Wales Lodge , No . 259 , in Avhich lodge he eventually occupied the chair of Worship ful Master . His lordship Avas appointed Senior Grand Warden on the 25 th of April .

1832 ; he succeeded the late Earl of Durham , as Deputy Grand Master , on the 24 th of April ,. 1839 , and followed the same lamented nobleman in the office of Pro . Grand Master in 1840 ; this hig h post he held at the death of H . R . H .

the Duke of Sussex , in April 1843 , whon by the Constitutions of the Order , the Earl became the ruler of the English Craft until the next period of election , at which time , namely on the Gth of March , 1844 , his lordship was elected Most

Worship ful Grand Master , and was installed as such on the 24 th of April following . In Royal Arch Masonry , Lord Zetland's career has been , equally brilliant ; ho was exalted on the 1 st June 1832 , i * i the Princo of Wales Chapter , Wo . 259 ,

ancl duly served iu each of the principal chairs ; he was appointed one of the Grand Sojourners in 1832 ; as Deputy Grand Master he became , ex officio , Second Grand Principal , aud of course as Grand Master he was elevated to tho dignity

of Supreme Grand Z ., in accordance with the Regulations of the Order . His lordallip has also been Provincial Grand Master for tho North and East Ridings of Yorkshire since 183 5 . It now only remains to trace the progress of

English Freemasonry under his benign sway . From seven hundred and sixteen lodges at the time of Lord Zetland's installation as Grand Master , wc have increased to nearly thirteen hundred ! From au estimated membership of

twenty-seven thousand , AVC have increased , in England alone , to eighty-four thousand five hundred , and tho increase in our Foreign and Colonial lodges is far greater in proportion . The immense Masouic constellation thafc now

shines in the far Pacific Seas , lias arisen in light and beauty during tho period of our present Grand Master ' s rule . Remote and almost mythical corners of the globo have received the benefits of Freemasonry under his auspices . From

Japan to Gibraltar , from the Gold Coast to the Himalayan mountains , thr . mgh the ancient empire of Cathay , and the bleak regions of Newfoundland the blessings of our Friendly Craft have been ( spread through the fostering

care of the Earl of Zetland . This is a result of which any man might be justly proud , and like his great predecessor Sir Christopher Wren , posterity will be able to say of our nuble chief , "if you seek his monument , look around . " Tho

universe of civilization will bear his name , and the hearts of men will hymn his praises , it is therefore with pain that wo shall witness the retirement of olio who has for such a lengthened period filled the foremost place in the regard of

his brethren ; wc shall miss the stately presence , and tho suave dignity , which so fitly represented the innate nobility of the Masonic Institution . in this brief notice , we shall say not one word of the future—it is all too feeble a tribute ) to ft

loved and venerated name—but as tho accepted organ of the great English Craft , as thu voice of in my thousands of the household of faith , AVC tender to tho Most Worshipful Grand Master , our unfeigned gratitude for his lilb lung devotion

to the interests of the Order ; lor his recognition and suppoit of those principles which aie dear to the hearts of all Masons , and no cordially wish

him , on his retirement from the active duties of Freemasonry , that repose nnd happiness which are ever the , accompaniment- of a conscience void of offence to all mankind .

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