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  • June 21, 1890
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  • THE ORDER OF THE TEMPLE.
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    Article THE PROVINCE OF MIDDLESEX. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE EAST LANCASHIRE SYSTEMATIC MASONIC INSTITUTION. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE EAST LANCASHIRE SYSTEMATIC MASONIC INSTITUTION. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE ORDER OF THE TEMPLE. Page 1 of 1
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Province Of Middlesex.

THE PROVINCE OF MIDDLESEX .

As will be seen from the report we publish in another part of our columns , the annual meeting of the Provincial Grand Lodge of Middlesex , which was held at Enfield , on Saturdaylast , under the presidency of the Provincial Grand Master in person , proved a most successful gathering . The

arrangements for the comfort and convenience of those present gave general satisfaction , the attendance was numerous , and the proceedings of a most harmonious character . In Provincial Grand Lodge , the principal episode concerned Bfo . J . F . H . WOODWARD , Past Grand S . B . England , and lately Provincial Grand

Secretary Middlesex , to whom , in his latter capacity , the Provincial Grand Master , in the name and on behalf of the province , presented a handsome testimonial , consisting of an illuminated address , a handsome gold watch and chain , and a bracelet and locket for Mrs . WOODWARD , in recognition of his

important services to the province at a time when it was not in the best of form , and needed a man of ability , tact , and judgment to set it straight . In making the presentation , Bro . Sir FRANCIS BURDETT , Bart ., congratulated Bro . WOODWARD on the satisfactory results as now manifested of

his efficient administration of the office lately held by him , and expressed the hope that he might still for many years be able to continue to the Province the benefit of his experience and counsel . The Province also voted 30 guineas to the Royal Masonic Institution for Girls , 15 guineas to the Royal Masonic

Institution for Boys , and 15 guineas to the Benevolent Institution . The senior of the three received the hi gher amount from the fact that the Provincial Grand Master had presided as Chairman at its recent Festival . At the banquet which followed

the lodge the proceedings were of an equally agreeable character , the brethren , from the Provincial Grand Master downwards , having every reason to be gratified at the events of the past year . We trust that future annual meetings of this Provincial Grand Lodge may pass off as satisfactorily .

The East Lancashire Systematic Masonic Institution.

THE EAST LANCASHIRE SYSTEMATIC MASONIC INSTITUTION .

The Annual Report of the General Committee of the " East Lancashire Systematic Masonic Educational and Benevolent Institution" for the year is pleasant reading , and must in particular be highly gratifying to the brethren of the Province which has established it . The Committee state the income to

the 31 st December last as having amounted to £ 1619 5 s . 3 d . as compared with that for the year to 31 st December , 1 S 88 , which reached only £ 822 4 s . id ., and they attribute— -we dare say not without very good reason—this large increase to the effect

produced by the circular addressed by the Prov . Grand Master to the lodges of the Province , many of which they consider were ignorant of the facts , that is , of the beneficial work done by the Institute in educating the children of necessitous brethren , and

in the assistance rendered them and their families . Certainl y , if we look narrowly into the figures showing the receipts for each of the two years mentioned , we shall be more likel y to accept this opinion as correct . The subscriptions from lodges , chapters ,

& c , in 1888 , amounted to £ 368 13 s . 6 d ., but in 188 9 they were more than double this sum , and amounted to £ 824 10 s . The subscriptions from private individuals , Avhich reached to only £ 188 15 s . in 1888 , realised last year £ 531 4 s . There was ,

however , only an increase of some few pounds in the income derived from investments . As regards the expenditure , which was £ 5 88 os . 2 d ., as against £ 671 17 s . 4 d . in 1888 , the grants for

relief amounted to £ 229 10 s ., and for education to £ 259 6 s ., the number of children among whom this latter sum was distributed being 32 , namely , 17 boys and 15 girls . There was also a sum ° f £ 30 paid to the Almoners , making the total expended in benevolence £ 518 16 s . The establishment charges , including

The East Lancashire Systematic Masonic Institution.

the Secretary ' s salary of ^ 50 , amounted to only £ 6 g 4 s . 2 d ., and there was expended a sum of £ 1013 2 s . 6 d ., in investments which now reach £ 8114 6 s . Sd . There remained a balance in hand at the close of the account of a little over ^ , 347 , as compared with one of nearly £ 310 for the year 1888 . Thus , even in

ready cash , as in capital , and the increased amount of good that is being done , this East Lancashire Institute is able to show an improvement over 1888 , while , in the matter of subscriptions , the increase is marvellous and will fully account for and excuse the smallness of the contributions by East Lancashire to the central

Masonic Charities . It is , indeed , to this and the many other organisations already established or likely to be established in the Provinces , that we must , after all , look for a substantial measure of relief from the ever-increasing pressure on the resources of our principal Institutions . ?

The Order Of The Temple.

THE ORDER OF THE TEMPLE .

The Masonic Templar body in England is not , like the Templar body in the United States , a vast organisation , divided into many jurisdictions , and comprising some 70 , 000 subscribing members . It is , on the contrary , somewhat limited as to its membership , and it musters under its Great Priory about 100

preceptories , exclusive of those suspended for default in forwarding annual returns and dues . To judge , however , from the particulars furnished in the Calendar of the Great Priory for 18 90 —1891 , which has just reached us , its proceedings appear to be

well regulated , and its condition , pecuniarily , on the whole prosperous . It is true that , according to the report of the Council , the General Fund is in need of strengthening , but the Benevolent Fund is sound , with an invested capital , of which the annual interest alone is more than sufficient to meet the demands

that are made u pon it , or that are likel y to be made upon it in the future . The Council , therefore , proposed , and Great Priory at its meeting at Mark Masons' Hall , on the 9 th May last , has agreed , that certain simple steps should be taken by which the General Fund would be placed on a firmer

footing , without causing any detriment to the Fund of Benevolence , by appropriating wholly to the former certain fees paid annually for members of a preceptory , and by transferring the payment of 100 guineas , voted in 188 7 to the Imperial Institute , from the General Fund , to which it had been debited , to the

Benevolent Fund , out of which , in the opinion of the Council , it should more properly have been met . Hitherto one shilling out of the 3 s . 6 d . payable annually for a member has gone to the Benevolent Fund and the rest to the General ; but now it has been determined that the whole shall be paid to the latter , while the payment

out of the former of the donation to the Imperial Institute will still leave it the substantial balance in hand of close on ^ 200 . Thus , as the expenditure of the Order cannot safel y be lessened , the Fund which bears them will be in a position to meet it , and the Benevolent Fund will remain , as we have said , ample

to meet all calls that may be made upon it . We notice as regards the preceptories which retain under suspension that three have been in this condition for seven years , two for six years , four for five years , two for four years , and one for three years , irrespective of three , which have been so only for one

year . We like to see the authorities tender in cases of this kind , especially where they have reason to believe that the restoration of a defaulting preceptory to the active list is probable or possible within a reasonable period of time ; but unless this is so , there appears to us to be no advantage to be gained by retaining

preceptories on the roll of Great Priory which have virtually passed out of existence . Perhaps if some of these useless limbs of the Order were lopped off , and a greater amount of activity exhibited by the Templar body generally this highly reputable appendage

to the Craft of Masonry might become more popular , without , however , assuming anything of the character of the American Templar organisation , which appears to be intended more for display than anything else ,

“The Freemason: 1890-06-21, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_21061890/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE PROVINCE OF MIDDLESEX. Article 1
THE EAST LANCASHIRE SYSTEMATIC MASONIC INSTITUTION. Article 1
THE ORDER OF THE TEMPLE. Article 1
HARMONIC LODGE, No. 216, LIVERPOOL. Article 2
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF CHESHIRE. Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF MIDDLESEX. Article 3
CONSECRATION OF THE CORNISH LODGE, No, 2369. Article 5
ADDRESS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 5
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS, Article 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
WILLING'S SELECTED THEATRICAL PROGRAMME. Article 7
Untitled Ad 7
To Correspondents. Article 7
Untitled Article 7
Masonic Notes. Article 7
Correspondence. Article 8
Craft Masonry. Article 8
PROVINCIAL MEETINGS. Article 9
Royal Arch. Article 11
Lodges and Chapters of Instruction. Article 11
Knights Templar. Article 12
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 12
BOARD OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 12
THE MASONIC FEMALE ORPHAN SCHOOLS. Article 12
A PLEASING CEREMONY. Article 12
LAYING THE FOUNDATION-STONE OF A SCHOOL. Article 13
PROPOSED TESTIMONIAL TO BRO. JAMES WARREN, P.M., &c. Article 13
Ireland. Article 13
Australia. Article 13
DISTRICT GRAND LODGE OF NORTHERN CHINA. Article 13
Marriage. Article 13
CHOKING ASTHMA. Article 13
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 14
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Province Of Middlesex.

THE PROVINCE OF MIDDLESEX .

As will be seen from the report we publish in another part of our columns , the annual meeting of the Provincial Grand Lodge of Middlesex , which was held at Enfield , on Saturdaylast , under the presidency of the Provincial Grand Master in person , proved a most successful gathering . The

arrangements for the comfort and convenience of those present gave general satisfaction , the attendance was numerous , and the proceedings of a most harmonious character . In Provincial Grand Lodge , the principal episode concerned Bfo . J . F . H . WOODWARD , Past Grand S . B . England , and lately Provincial Grand

Secretary Middlesex , to whom , in his latter capacity , the Provincial Grand Master , in the name and on behalf of the province , presented a handsome testimonial , consisting of an illuminated address , a handsome gold watch and chain , and a bracelet and locket for Mrs . WOODWARD , in recognition of his

important services to the province at a time when it was not in the best of form , and needed a man of ability , tact , and judgment to set it straight . In making the presentation , Bro . Sir FRANCIS BURDETT , Bart ., congratulated Bro . WOODWARD on the satisfactory results as now manifested of

his efficient administration of the office lately held by him , and expressed the hope that he might still for many years be able to continue to the Province the benefit of his experience and counsel . The Province also voted 30 guineas to the Royal Masonic Institution for Girls , 15 guineas to the Royal Masonic

Institution for Boys , and 15 guineas to the Benevolent Institution . The senior of the three received the hi gher amount from the fact that the Provincial Grand Master had presided as Chairman at its recent Festival . At the banquet which followed

the lodge the proceedings were of an equally agreeable character , the brethren , from the Provincial Grand Master downwards , having every reason to be gratified at the events of the past year . We trust that future annual meetings of this Provincial Grand Lodge may pass off as satisfactorily .

The East Lancashire Systematic Masonic Institution.

THE EAST LANCASHIRE SYSTEMATIC MASONIC INSTITUTION .

The Annual Report of the General Committee of the " East Lancashire Systematic Masonic Educational and Benevolent Institution" for the year is pleasant reading , and must in particular be highly gratifying to the brethren of the Province which has established it . The Committee state the income to

the 31 st December last as having amounted to £ 1619 5 s . 3 d . as compared with that for the year to 31 st December , 1 S 88 , which reached only £ 822 4 s . id ., and they attribute— -we dare say not without very good reason—this large increase to the effect

produced by the circular addressed by the Prov . Grand Master to the lodges of the Province , many of which they consider were ignorant of the facts , that is , of the beneficial work done by the Institute in educating the children of necessitous brethren , and

in the assistance rendered them and their families . Certainl y , if we look narrowly into the figures showing the receipts for each of the two years mentioned , we shall be more likel y to accept this opinion as correct . The subscriptions from lodges , chapters ,

& c , in 1888 , amounted to £ 368 13 s . 6 d ., but in 188 9 they were more than double this sum , and amounted to £ 824 10 s . The subscriptions from private individuals , Avhich reached to only £ 188 15 s . in 1888 , realised last year £ 531 4 s . There was ,

however , only an increase of some few pounds in the income derived from investments . As regards the expenditure , which was £ 5 88 os . 2 d ., as against £ 671 17 s . 4 d . in 1888 , the grants for

relief amounted to £ 229 10 s ., and for education to £ 259 6 s ., the number of children among whom this latter sum was distributed being 32 , namely , 17 boys and 15 girls . There was also a sum ° f £ 30 paid to the Almoners , making the total expended in benevolence £ 518 16 s . The establishment charges , including

The East Lancashire Systematic Masonic Institution.

the Secretary ' s salary of ^ 50 , amounted to only £ 6 g 4 s . 2 d ., and there was expended a sum of £ 1013 2 s . 6 d ., in investments which now reach £ 8114 6 s . Sd . There remained a balance in hand at the close of the account of a little over ^ , 347 , as compared with one of nearly £ 310 for the year 1888 . Thus , even in

ready cash , as in capital , and the increased amount of good that is being done , this East Lancashire Institute is able to show an improvement over 1888 , while , in the matter of subscriptions , the increase is marvellous and will fully account for and excuse the smallness of the contributions by East Lancashire to the central

Masonic Charities . It is , indeed , to this and the many other organisations already established or likely to be established in the Provinces , that we must , after all , look for a substantial measure of relief from the ever-increasing pressure on the resources of our principal Institutions . ?

The Order Of The Temple.

THE ORDER OF THE TEMPLE .

The Masonic Templar body in England is not , like the Templar body in the United States , a vast organisation , divided into many jurisdictions , and comprising some 70 , 000 subscribing members . It is , on the contrary , somewhat limited as to its membership , and it musters under its Great Priory about 100

preceptories , exclusive of those suspended for default in forwarding annual returns and dues . To judge , however , from the particulars furnished in the Calendar of the Great Priory for 18 90 —1891 , which has just reached us , its proceedings appear to be

well regulated , and its condition , pecuniarily , on the whole prosperous . It is true that , according to the report of the Council , the General Fund is in need of strengthening , but the Benevolent Fund is sound , with an invested capital , of which the annual interest alone is more than sufficient to meet the demands

that are made u pon it , or that are likel y to be made upon it in the future . The Council , therefore , proposed , and Great Priory at its meeting at Mark Masons' Hall , on the 9 th May last , has agreed , that certain simple steps should be taken by which the General Fund would be placed on a firmer

footing , without causing any detriment to the Fund of Benevolence , by appropriating wholly to the former certain fees paid annually for members of a preceptory , and by transferring the payment of 100 guineas , voted in 188 7 to the Imperial Institute , from the General Fund , to which it had been debited , to the

Benevolent Fund , out of which , in the opinion of the Council , it should more properly have been met . Hitherto one shilling out of the 3 s . 6 d . payable annually for a member has gone to the Benevolent Fund and the rest to the General ; but now it has been determined that the whole shall be paid to the latter , while the payment

out of the former of the donation to the Imperial Institute will still leave it the substantial balance in hand of close on ^ 200 . Thus , as the expenditure of the Order cannot safel y be lessened , the Fund which bears them will be in a position to meet it , and the Benevolent Fund will remain , as we have said , ample

to meet all calls that may be made upon it . We notice as regards the preceptories which retain under suspension that three have been in this condition for seven years , two for six years , four for five years , two for four years , and one for three years , irrespective of three , which have been so only for one

year . We like to see the authorities tender in cases of this kind , especially where they have reason to believe that the restoration of a defaulting preceptory to the active list is probable or possible within a reasonable period of time ; but unless this is so , there appears to us to be no advantage to be gained by retaining

preceptories on the roll of Great Priory which have virtually passed out of existence . Perhaps if some of these useless limbs of the Order were lopped off , and a greater amount of activity exhibited by the Templar body generally this highly reputable appendage

to the Craft of Masonry might become more popular , without , however , assuming anything of the character of the American Templar organisation , which appears to be intended more for display than anything else ,

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