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  • Dec. 21, 1892
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The Freemason, Dec. 21, 1892: Page 7

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

"The Queen And The Craft."

Victor , h the Royal Alpha Lodge , No . 16 , and two years later he presided at the second grand Alasonic gathering held in the Royal Albert Fall , and moved an address of congratulation to the Queen on the completion ] of the Jubilee year of her happy and g lorious - -eign . On this occasion upAvards of 6000 brethren were assembled , while the address itself Avas presented to her Alajesty afc

Osborne l y a deputation from Grand Lodge , headed by his Royal Highness . In 1888 tAvo noteworthy events occurred . In the first place , Grand Lodge , in order to show its appreciation of the great services rendered to tho Craft b y his Royal Highness , voted a sum of £ 500 for th ? purpose of presenting a diamond butterfly to the Princess of Wales on the occasion of the Silver Wedding of their Royal

Highnesses ; and ; n June , the Prince , supported by his Alajesty the King of Sweden , Avho , 19 years previously , had assisted at his initiation into the Craft , presided at the Centenary Festival of tlie Royal Alasonic Institution foi Girls , when the total of donations and subscription ' s Avas announced as exceeding £ 50 , 000 . Subsequently by way of completing this auspicious duty on behalf of our senior Institution , his

Royal Highness , accompanied by the Princess of Wales , visited the School , and foratally opened the neAv Hall , which in the meantime had been erected ou ; of the proceeds of the Centenary Celebration . There are many other occasions on Avhich tlie Prince has demonstrated his love for tlie Craft , and many are tlie public functions in which he

has taken part in his capacity of Grand Alaster of English Masons ; but there is only one thafc I need add to the list I have enumerated , namely , the installation in the late autumn of 1890 , of his son , the Duke of Clarence and Avondale , as Grand Alaster of the newlycreated Province of Berkshire . Bufc in order to make this brief

retrospect of his career in Alasonry more complete , it seems fitting I should record that his Royal Highness is Grand Patron of the Order in Scotland and Ireland , and that previous to the part he took in the Girls' School Centenary , his Royal Highness had already presided as Chairman at a Festival of each of ou . i three Alasonic Charities . With reference to the private

lodges of which he is or has been an enrolled member , it is needless to enumerate more than a few , among the most prominent being the Prince of Wales , No . 259 , of Avhich he is perpetual Alaster , the Royal Alpha Lodge , No . 16 , and the Apollo University Lodge , No . 357 , of which he was installed Alaster in 1873 . In

the case of the Prince of Wales Lodge , No . 259 , of Avhich his greatuncle , George Prince of Wales , Avas founder and perpetnal Alaster , his Royal Highness was present al the celebration of its centenary a feAV years since , and has always evinced the greatest interest in its Avelfare .

The Prince of Wales , his brother , tlie Duke of Connanght , and the late Dnke of Albany belong to the fifth of the generations of the Royal Family Avhich havc successivel y furnished members to our Society , and ifc will certainly givo tho appearance of greater completeness to this paper if I state a feAV particulars of the Alasonic career of the Queen ' s eldest grandson in the direct line of descent ,

THE LATE DUKE OF CLARENCE AND AVONDALE .

who AVUS introduced into 1 < reemasonry under the auspices of his illustrious father and by him initiated into the mysteries of our ancient Craft , as alread y stated , in tlie Royal Alpha Lodge , No . 16 . Shortl y after that important ceremony , the young Prince , Avho had but just attained his majority , was passed to the Degree of Fellow Craft in the

liodgc of Friendship , No . 100 , Great Yarmouth , and still later was raised to the Sublime Degree of Alaster Alason in the Isaac Newton Universit y Lodge , No . 859 , Cambridge . In 1887 lie AVAS appointed Senior Grand Warden of United Grand Lodge , nnd on the lamented death of Bro . Sir Daniel Gooch , Bart ., P . G . AI . of Berks and Bucks , and the sub-division of that Province into two separate and

"The Queen And The Craft."

distinct Provinces Avhich followed that event , his Royal Highness was appointed Prov . G . Alaster for the Royal Count y of Berkshire , and formally installed , as I have before mentioned , by his father , the Mosfc Worshipful Grand Master . In the year of the Queen ' s Jubilee , the Prince laid the foundation-stone of the Jubilee Wing of the Northampton Infirmary , and in 1891 he did Bro . Lord Carrington

the honour to instal him in office as Provincial G . AIaster of Buckinghamshire . He had also served as W . AI . of the Royal Alpha Lodge , and at the time of his death was W . Alaster-elect of the Studholme Lodge No . 1591 , and a candidate for exaltation to fche Royal Arch Degree in the Chapter attached to that Lodge . Bat before these and the further distinctions which assuredly awaited

him could be conferred upon him , his Royal Hi ghness was prematurely cut , off to the deep grief of his illustrious parents ; the Queen , his grandmother ; the illustrious lady , the Princess Victoria Alary of Teck , Avith whom , had it pleased the Great Architect to prolong his life , he would have been , a few Aveeks later , united in

wedlock ; and the whole British nation . But though his career Avas brought to so untimely a close , the late Dnke had been long enough a member of our Fraternit y to have endeared himself to its members generally , but in a more especial degree to those with Avhom he had been brought into contact either in Grand or his Provincial Grand Lodge , or in the private lodges of Avhich he was a member .

I have thus given , firstly , general reasons , based on the fact of the Queen being the head of what may properly be described as a thoroughly Alasonic family ; and secondly , certain special reasons , derived from the facfc that her father and her eldest son were Grand Alasters of England , and her late grandson , the Duke of Clarence and Avondale , a distinguished member of our United Grand Lodge and

Prov . G . Alaster of Berkshire ; which amply justify tlie association of the Craft with her Alajesty in our first and most familiar toasfc . To these I am able to furnish other reasons on her Alajesfcy ' s own account , derivable from the generous support and patronage which she has been pleased to extend , during the greater part of her rei" * n , to our Alasonic Institutions . Her Alajesty is Chief Patroness of the

Girls' School , became firstl y Patroness in 1852—and moro recentl y Grand Patroness—of tho Boys' School , and is a Vice-Patron of tho Royal Alasonic Benevolent Institution ; and her claims on our loyalty ancl respect are enhanced by these as by the other facts I have enumerated . However , it is not necessary I should prolong this paper . I have already extended it beyond the limits I had originally marked out , because , as regards the Alasonic career of

the Duke of Kent , tho part he took in the affairs of "Ancient " Alasonry is not so widel y known as ifc deserves . Preston appears to have allowed his bias towards the " Alodcrn " Society to outrun tho absolute impartiality he should have shown as an historian , and those who are content to read his " Illustrations of Alasonry" Avithout going further into the history of the Union and thecircumstancesAvhich brought it about will , in all probability , remain under the impression that the Duke of Kent was an ornamental G . Alaster rather than ' one who

understood and was prepared to safeguard the interests of the Societyhe presided oA'or . As a matter of fact , there is no member of our Royal Family in past days—with the solitary exception , perhaps , of tlie Duke of Sussex—to Avhom the Craft owes a deeper debt of gratitude than to the Queen ' s father ; just as in the present day there is none to whom , for similar reasons , AVO are move grateful than her eldest son . Hence this toast of ours— "The Queen and the Craft "—above and

beyond the propriety of the association of which ifc is the symbol , has a special significance of its own which the mere A'erbal form in which it is expressed is quite incapable of conveying ; and I can onl y hope , as I am sure all the readers of this journal musfc hope , thafc for many years to come , " The Queen and the Craft" will retain its place of honour among the toasts of our Lodges , in AvhateA'er localities in the British they may be authorised to assemble .

Brotherly Love.

Brotherly Love .

u Ltd llrollierlij Love continue . " As modern science with its wond ' rous skill Imperious bends , subservient to her will , Tho power electric o ' er the earth ' s wide face

Alike , annihilating time and space ; Our mystic science , hallowed from Above , Sends forth its message of fraternal love ; From Arctic regions to the torrid sun , The electric flash of Brotherhood will run .

SOLO AXD CHORUSSpeed , swifl , O spark of Love to distant lands , In circling sympathy unite onr hands ; Dispel dark Error vvith th y splendour bright , Ancl Truth reveal in thy effulgent light .

Of parts conjoined , yet perfect as a whole , The cable joins tho . North to Southern pole ; Tlie li ghtning current flows with rapid force ,

Brotherly Love.

But slightest flaw" will stay its useful course . And so with us , joined in fraternal ties , Should cold mistrust within our hearts arise ; The chain of sympathy , one link but gone , No longer binds two friendly souls as one .

SOLO AND Ciiouus—Speed , swift , O spark of Love , & c . The Electrician in his watchful care , Will neither time nor anxious toil forbear ;

Strive to the utmost , to enhance his fame , And grateful thanks from future ages claim . Such bo our task , that home and foreign laud Bo linked together in unbroken band , Prove to tho world , that pure Alasonic love , Is bnt the forecast of Grand Lodge Above .

Soto AND Ciiouus—Speed , swift , O spark of Love , Ac . F . W . DRIVER . ALA

“The Freemason: 1892-12-21, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_21121892/page/7/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Ad 1
Untitled Ad 2
Untitled Ad 2
"The Queen and the Craft." Article 3
Brotherly Love. Article 7
THE SEVEN AGES OF MASONRY Article 8
The Dumfries Kilwinning MSS. Article 9
The Grand East of Ulster. Article 11
Craft or Conspiracy? A Tale of Masonry Article 16
Hungarian Masonic Medals. Article 17
The Priest's Secret. Article 18
"Mrs. Quilliam." Article 21
Untitled Ad 22
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 25
Untitled Ad 26
Frank Featherstone's Fairy. Article 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 29
Mademoiselle Aoremac; or, The power of Song. Article 30
Untitled Ad 30
Untitled Ad 31
Ballad. Article 33
"The Secret Tribunal." Article 34
Untitled Ad 36
A Carol at Eventide. Article 37
Untitled Ad 37
Masonic Honours. Article 38
Untitled Ad 38
Untitled Ad 38
Untitled Ad 38
Untitled Ad 39
Untitled Ad 39
Untitled Ad 39
Untitled Ad 40
Untitled Ad 40
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Page 7

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

"The Queen And The Craft."

Victor , h the Royal Alpha Lodge , No . 16 , and two years later he presided at the second grand Alasonic gathering held in the Royal Albert Fall , and moved an address of congratulation to the Queen on the completion ] of the Jubilee year of her happy and g lorious - -eign . On this occasion upAvards of 6000 brethren were assembled , while the address itself Avas presented to her Alajesty afc

Osborne l y a deputation from Grand Lodge , headed by his Royal Highness . In 1888 tAvo noteworthy events occurred . In the first place , Grand Lodge , in order to show its appreciation of the great services rendered to tho Craft b y his Royal Highness , voted a sum of £ 500 for th ? purpose of presenting a diamond butterfly to the Princess of Wales on the occasion of the Silver Wedding of their Royal

Highnesses ; and ; n June , the Prince , supported by his Alajesty the King of Sweden , Avho , 19 years previously , had assisted at his initiation into the Craft , presided at the Centenary Festival of tlie Royal Alasonic Institution foi Girls , when the total of donations and subscription ' s Avas announced as exceeding £ 50 , 000 . Subsequently by way of completing this auspicious duty on behalf of our senior Institution , his

Royal Highness , accompanied by the Princess of Wales , visited the School , and foratally opened the neAv Hall , which in the meantime had been erected ou ; of the proceeds of the Centenary Celebration . There are many other occasions on Avhich tlie Prince has demonstrated his love for tlie Craft , and many are tlie public functions in which he

has taken part in his capacity of Grand Alaster of English Masons ; but there is only one thafc I need add to the list I have enumerated , namely , the installation in the late autumn of 1890 , of his son , the Duke of Clarence and Avondale , as Grand Alaster of the newlycreated Province of Berkshire . Bufc in order to make this brief

retrospect of his career in Alasonry more complete , it seems fitting I should record that his Royal Highness is Grand Patron of the Order in Scotland and Ireland , and that previous to the part he took in the Girls' School Centenary , his Royal Highness had already presided as Chairman at a Festival of each of ou . i three Alasonic Charities . With reference to the private

lodges of which he is or has been an enrolled member , it is needless to enumerate more than a few , among the most prominent being the Prince of Wales , No . 259 , of Avhich he is perpetual Alaster , the Royal Alpha Lodge , No . 16 , and the Apollo University Lodge , No . 357 , of which he was installed Alaster in 1873 . In

the case of the Prince of Wales Lodge , No . 259 , of Avhich his greatuncle , George Prince of Wales , Avas founder and perpetnal Alaster , his Royal Highness was present al the celebration of its centenary a feAV years since , and has always evinced the greatest interest in its Avelfare .

The Prince of Wales , his brother , tlie Duke of Connanght , and the late Dnke of Albany belong to the fifth of the generations of the Royal Family Avhich havc successivel y furnished members to our Society , and ifc will certainly givo tho appearance of greater completeness to this paper if I state a feAV particulars of the Alasonic career of the Queen ' s eldest grandson in the direct line of descent ,

THE LATE DUKE OF CLARENCE AND AVONDALE .

who AVUS introduced into 1 < reemasonry under the auspices of his illustrious father and by him initiated into the mysteries of our ancient Craft , as alread y stated , in tlie Royal Alpha Lodge , No . 16 . Shortl y after that important ceremony , the young Prince , Avho had but just attained his majority , was passed to the Degree of Fellow Craft in the

liodgc of Friendship , No . 100 , Great Yarmouth , and still later was raised to the Sublime Degree of Alaster Alason in the Isaac Newton Universit y Lodge , No . 859 , Cambridge . In 1887 lie AVAS appointed Senior Grand Warden of United Grand Lodge , nnd on the lamented death of Bro . Sir Daniel Gooch , Bart ., P . G . AI . of Berks and Bucks , and the sub-division of that Province into two separate and

"The Queen And The Craft."

distinct Provinces Avhich followed that event , his Royal Highness was appointed Prov . G . Alaster for the Royal Count y of Berkshire , and formally installed , as I have before mentioned , by his father , the Mosfc Worshipful Grand Master . In the year of the Queen ' s Jubilee , the Prince laid the foundation-stone of the Jubilee Wing of the Northampton Infirmary , and in 1891 he did Bro . Lord Carrington

the honour to instal him in office as Provincial G . AIaster of Buckinghamshire . He had also served as W . AI . of the Royal Alpha Lodge , and at the time of his death was W . Alaster-elect of the Studholme Lodge No . 1591 , and a candidate for exaltation to fche Royal Arch Degree in the Chapter attached to that Lodge . Bat before these and the further distinctions which assuredly awaited

him could be conferred upon him , his Royal Hi ghness was prematurely cut , off to the deep grief of his illustrious parents ; the Queen , his grandmother ; the illustrious lady , the Princess Victoria Alary of Teck , Avith whom , had it pleased the Great Architect to prolong his life , he would have been , a few Aveeks later , united in

wedlock ; and the whole British nation . But though his career Avas brought to so untimely a close , the late Dnke had been long enough a member of our Fraternit y to have endeared himself to its members generally , but in a more especial degree to those with Avhom he had been brought into contact either in Grand or his Provincial Grand Lodge , or in the private lodges of Avhich he was a member .

I have thus given , firstly , general reasons , based on the fact of the Queen being the head of what may properly be described as a thoroughly Alasonic family ; and secondly , certain special reasons , derived from the facfc that her father and her eldest son were Grand Alasters of England , and her late grandson , the Duke of Clarence and Avondale , a distinguished member of our United Grand Lodge and

Prov . G . Alaster of Berkshire ; which amply justify tlie association of the Craft with her Alajesty in our first and most familiar toasfc . To these I am able to furnish other reasons on her Alajesfcy ' s own account , derivable from the generous support and patronage which she has been pleased to extend , during the greater part of her rei" * n , to our Alasonic Institutions . Her Alajesty is Chief Patroness of the

Girls' School , became firstl y Patroness in 1852—and moro recentl y Grand Patroness—of tho Boys' School , and is a Vice-Patron of tho Royal Alasonic Benevolent Institution ; and her claims on our loyalty ancl respect are enhanced by these as by the other facts I have enumerated . However , it is not necessary I should prolong this paper . I have already extended it beyond the limits I had originally marked out , because , as regards the Alasonic career of

the Duke of Kent , tho part he took in the affairs of "Ancient " Alasonry is not so widel y known as ifc deserves . Preston appears to have allowed his bias towards the " Alodcrn " Society to outrun tho absolute impartiality he should have shown as an historian , and those who are content to read his " Illustrations of Alasonry" Avithout going further into the history of the Union and thecircumstancesAvhich brought it about will , in all probability , remain under the impression that the Duke of Kent was an ornamental G . Alaster rather than ' one who

understood and was prepared to safeguard the interests of the Societyhe presided oA'or . As a matter of fact , there is no member of our Royal Family in past days—with the solitary exception , perhaps , of tlie Duke of Sussex—to Avhom the Craft owes a deeper debt of gratitude than to the Queen ' s father ; just as in the present day there is none to whom , for similar reasons , AVO are move grateful than her eldest son . Hence this toast of ours— "The Queen and the Craft "—above and

beyond the propriety of the association of which ifc is the symbol , has a special significance of its own which the mere A'erbal form in which it is expressed is quite incapable of conveying ; and I can onl y hope , as I am sure all the readers of this journal musfc hope , thafc for many years to come , " The Queen and the Craft" will retain its place of honour among the toasts of our Lodges , in AvhateA'er localities in the British they may be authorised to assemble .

Brotherly Love.

Brotherly Love .

u Ltd llrollierlij Love continue . " As modern science with its wond ' rous skill Imperious bends , subservient to her will , Tho power electric o ' er the earth ' s wide face

Alike , annihilating time and space ; Our mystic science , hallowed from Above , Sends forth its message of fraternal love ; From Arctic regions to the torrid sun , The electric flash of Brotherhood will run .

SOLO AXD CHORUSSpeed , swifl , O spark of Love to distant lands , In circling sympathy unite onr hands ; Dispel dark Error vvith th y splendour bright , Ancl Truth reveal in thy effulgent light .

Of parts conjoined , yet perfect as a whole , The cable joins tho . North to Southern pole ; Tlie li ghtning current flows with rapid force ,

Brotherly Love.

But slightest flaw" will stay its useful course . And so with us , joined in fraternal ties , Should cold mistrust within our hearts arise ; The chain of sympathy , one link but gone , No longer binds two friendly souls as one .

SOLO AND Ciiouus—Speed , swift , O spark of Love , & c . The Electrician in his watchful care , Will neither time nor anxious toil forbear ;

Strive to the utmost , to enhance his fame , And grateful thanks from future ages claim . Such bo our task , that home and foreign laud Bo linked together in unbroken band , Prove to tho world , that pure Alasonic love , Is bnt the forecast of Grand Lodge Above .

Soto AND Ciiouus—Speed , swift , O spark of Love , Ac . F . W . DRIVER . ALA

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