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  • Dec. 22, 1883
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  • THE ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION.
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The Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution.

of General Purposes A communication was at once drawn up and delivered at the Grand Secretary ' s office , while a duplicate was laid before the General Committee at their usual meeting in November . The contents , however , were nothing else than a recital of the resolutions passed and confirmed in

October , accompanied by a request that a conference mig ht be arranged with the Board . In due course , an answer was received fixing the afternoon of the 7 th December for the conference requested , when the Sub-Committee attended and submitted the following resolutions which had previously been agreed to as a basis for the proposed arrangement , namely : —

First . That the Annuity Fund of this Institution be added to the fund proposed to be raised in accordance with the report of the Board of General Purposes , provided that the Annuitants now on this Institution are respectively provided for on equal terms with the other Annuitants ; and that the subscribers of this Institution do retain their

privileges " pro rata in that about to be formed . Second . That the Building Fund of this Institution be also placed in the hands of Grand Lodge , through the Board of General Purposes , to accumulate and be applied in accordance with the resolutions passed at a general meeting on the 13 th October last , and communicated to the Board of General Purposes .

Third . That the preceding arrangements being made , all offices held in this Institution be vacated . Copy of the foregoing having been taken , the Sub-Committee , in reply to questions by the President and members of the Board , said that no difficulty was apprehended with reference to the transfer of the two funds ; but that there were insuperable objections , both on the part of the Trustees and

of many of the subscribers , to the transfer of the Building Fund for any other purpose than that of building , the period of erecting which would remain entirely in the hands of the Grand Lodge . However , after gravely considering the subject , the Board unanimously resolved as follows : " That in consequence of the resolution passed by the members of the Asylum for Worthy Aged and Decayed Freemasons requiring the Building Fund shall

be continued , the Board declines to entertain the proposition ; but the Board is willing to receive and consider any proposition that may be made having reference to the application of the entire fund for annuities . " No other result perhaps could have been expected , seeing how recently and how warmly the merits of the rival princip les of Annuity and Asylum had been discussed , and with what result as regards certain of the most prominent among the

advocates of the latter . Still , it speaks well for the Asylum authorities that , when they found the Grand Master was resolved on pushing forward his favourite Annuity principle , and obtaining for it the support of Grand Lodge , they should have evinced such readiness to sink their own individuality and that of their fellow-workers in order that the separate proposals for the benefit of aged and distressed brethren might combine together to the general

good , instead of being left to clash with each other , and so weaken the efforts which it was generally agreed must be made in order to establish an additional Masonic Charity . And yet more creditable is it to them and their co-workers that , nothwithstanding this repulse , the General Committee of subscribers at their meeting on the 8 th December should have passed the following resolutions :

That to appropriate the Building Fund of this Institution to any other pfcrpose than that of erecting an Asylum would be a breach of faith with the subscribers , as had been previously intimated by the Sub-Committee to the Board of General Purposes . That , whilst regretting , for the sake of peace and harmony , the rejection of the proposition made on the 7 th inst ., the Sub-Committee be instructed to renew the conference with the Board of General Purposes , and to offer the transfer of the Annuity Fund without reference to the Building Fund .

The result of this was that the Sub-Committee held a meeting on the nth of the month , when the following letter for transmission to the Board of

General Purposes was drawn up ; 25 , Tibberton-square , Islington , nth December , 1841 . Gentlemen and Brothers , A meeting of the Committee of the Asylum for Worthy Aged and Decayed Free masons was held on Wednesday , the 8 th inst ., to which the resolution of your Worship ful Board was submitted .

The Committee concurred in the opinion previously expressed by the Sub-Committee to your Worshipful Board , that to appropriate the Building Fund of that Institution for any other purpose than that of the ultimate erection of an Asylum would be a breach of faith with the subscribers . They further unanimously concurred in the expression of regret that your

Worshipful Board should have declined to entertain the proposition submitted on the 7 th inst . by the Sub-Committee , thus preventing the subject from being entertained by Grand Lodge , with the advantage of a reference from your Worshipful Board . They also concur in believing that such a reference made to Grand Lodge would have so brought the subject under the consideration of the Craft as to produce a result calculated entirely and immediately to heal all differences of opinion .

But anxious to attain that desirable object , and to unite the charitable efforts of the Craft as far as possible , the General Committee have authorised the Sub-Committee to renew the conference with your Worshipful Board , with a view to the transfer of the Annuity Fund without reference to the Building Fund , and 1 am therefore requested by the Sub-Committee to solicit the favour of another interview with your Worshipful Board .

I have , & c , ( Signed ) R . FIELD , Secretary Aged Freemasons' Asylum . To the Worshipful the President , the Vice-President , and Members of the Board of General Purposes of the United Grand Lodge of England

Some time elapsed before any reply to the above was received . At length , however , Bro . White , Grand Secretary , sent the following : Freemasons' Hall , London , 25 th January , 1 S 43 . W . Sir and Brother , I am directed by the Board of General Purposes to acknowledge the receipt of

your communication on behalf of the Committee of the Asylum for Worthy Aged and Decayed Freemasons , addressed to the Board , requesting another interview grounded on certain resolutions which you have forwarded ; and I am directed , in reply , to say , that after mature deliberation , the Board must beg to refer you to their resolution of the 7 th of December last , communicated to you in my letter of the same day , and to state that

the Board are still willing to receive and consider any proposition that . may be made having reference to the application of the entire fund for Annuities . I have , & c , ( Signed ) WILLIAM H . WHITE , Grand Secretary . To Robert Field , Esq .,

Secretary of the Asylum for Worthy Aged and Decayed Freemasons . Thus the friendly endeavour to bring about united action on the part of the Craft , as initiated by the Asylum Committee , fell through , and what little on their part it remained for them to do was done at the Quarterly General Meeting on the 13 th April , 1842 , when it was resolved " that the

The Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution.

thanks of this Quarterly General Meeting be presented to the Sub-Committee for the manner in which they conducted the conference with the Board of General Purposes , with an expression of sincere regret at the failure of their exertions to carry into effect the amalgamation of the Charity with the annuity plan propounded by Grand Lodge . " Meantime it may be worth while mentioning as a further , yet pitiful , illustration of the hostility to

which the Asylum and all concerned in its maintenance were subjected , that at the Committee meeting in February a letter was read from Bro . Nicholls , the collector to the Institution , regretting the necessity he was under of resigning his office , the necessity being subsequenty explained b y Bro . Crucefix , the Chairman , as the consequence of a pledge he had given on becoming candidate for the collectorship of the Girls' School , that he would resign his connection with the Asylum in the event of his being

successful . Bro . Nicholls had been elected by a small majority , and hence his resignation , which of course was accepted , an honorarium of five guineas being voted him for his services in a most complimentary manner . At the Quarterly Meeting on the 13 th July , 18 42 , in consequence of the steps taken by Grand Lodge for the establishment of an Annuity Fund , the following resolutions were agreed to , and confirmed at the next Quarterly Meeting in October , namely :

That the Grand Lodge , having sanctioned a plan for granting Annuities to Aged brethren , no more Annuitants be elected upon the funds of this Institution . That the proposed amalgamation of this Charity with the one adopted by Grand Lodge , under the sanction of the Grand Master , having been rejected , all laws , regulations , & c , relating to the subject of Annuities be repealed , and the whole amount already and to be hereafter collected , be dedicated to the original object of the Charity , namely ,

the Building and Endowment of an Asylum for Worthy Aged and Decayed Freemasons . That the Annuitants heretofore elected upon the funds of this Charity shall continue to be entitled to all the benefits to which they have been admitted , notwithstanding the foregoing , or any other resolution relating to the disposal of the funds of this Charity . That the following be substituted for No . XX . of the printed Preliminary Regulations , page 5 : Tim f frl-n » f"VitY \ tviif f ^ o An m /*» f nn fTi » ce * rr \ nA \\/ V > rln « crTa *» fn ft »«» rw * - » nf lie r \ F f \ f ^••/ 'k Tuna Ilt IlllWkVVf lllbblUM Lllb VLilltJUUI Vl HHll lll

A * b "" - V > UIII u « OI . I . UIIU » I III HI * . IIIUIUU ^ - ) J UIILj September , and December , at Radley ' s Hotel , New Bridge-street , Blackfriars , at seven o ' clock in the evening ; five to be a quorum ; and the Annual General Meeting be held on the second Wednesday in July , at the same time and place , unless otherwise determined upon . The Annual Meeting to be summoned by advertisement ; Special General Meetings by circular as well as advertisement , and the Committee Meetings by summons .

A conversation having arisen as to the state of the funds belonging to the Charity , the Treasurer stated as nearly as he could , in the absence of the acting Trustee , Bro . Rowe , that they amounted to ^ 3404 17 s . nd ., of which £ 2169 10 s . 7 d . was Three per Cent . Consols , _ £ gooin | Exchequer Bills , ^ 110 in the Cripplegate Savings' Bank , and ^ 225 7 s . 4 d . being the balance in hands of Tieasurer and at the bankers . There was also a sum of £ 200 uncollected , which , in the opinion of the Treasurer , was all good .

The bulk of the minutes that follow , and are continued well into the year 1 S 45 , refer to a costly , as well as a painful , episode in the brief separate career of the Asylum . It will be in the recollection of the reader that in the year 1839 the question had been raised of superseding the Provisional by Permanent Trustees ; but difficulties having arisen , and three of the brethren elected to fill the latter positions having declined to occupy them ,

the matter bad remained in abeyance , the Provisional Trustees continuing to act . One of them , Bro . Henry Rowe , unlike other of his co-Trustees who tendered their resignations , in order to facilitate the arrangements it was considered desirable to make , point blank refused to lay down his trust , one of the reasons assigned by him being that the Neptune Lodge , No . 22 , of which he was a member , had desired him not to do so . This Bro . Rowe

unfortunately for the Institution , was the acting Trustee , and was in the habit of receiving the dividends as they became payable , which dividends it was part of his duty to invest . This part of his duty , however , was after a time unfulfilled , and when the Committee pressed him to hand over what moneys he had in hand on this account , as well as a further sum of about £ 120 he was said to have received on account of the Asylum from the estate

of the late Bro . Sansum , in respect of the proceeds of the Asylum benefit at the English Opera House , the course he adopted was such that the governing body of the Asylum found themselves under the necessity of filing a Bill in Chancery , in order that they might have the property belonging to them placed in the hands of Trustees approved by the Court , and the nature of the trust as clearly defined as possible . All hope of recovering

any portion of the money due was set aside b y Bro . Rowe declaring himself bankrupt , so that the loss sustained by the Institution amounted to over £ 300 , of which £ iS 8 was in respect of dividends and the ^ 120 from Bro . Sansum ' s estate , while the costs of the legal proceedings represented a further sum of upwards of £ 320 , making together a clear loss of some X 620 , which the Charity sustained through the defalcatiohs of one of its

earliest supporters . What makes the recital of this episode the more painful is the insolence of Bro . Rowe ' s behaviour ; and it is not surprising that , when the suit was terminated , the Committee should have put on record their feeling of satisfaction " at the removal of Mr . Henry Roive from the trusteeship of their funds , whether his conduct be contemplated as appropriating to his own use the funds of a public Charity , and putting that Charity to considerable expense in procuring his removal by the Court of Chancery ,

or in the cool insolence thereof during the progress of the transaction . " On the other hand , a most handsome vote of thanks was passed to Bros . Alderman T . Wood , J . C . Bell , J . Partridge , and Z . Watkins for their conduct in the trusteeship . One good came of this—that the following brethren were appointed Trustees , namely : Bros , the Earl of Aboyne , the Earl of Southampton , Col . the Hon . Geo . Anson , M . P ., B . Bond Cabbell , and R . Thos . Crucefix , M . D .

The other events which occurred during the progress of this lamentable difference may be very briefly disposed of . The Earl of Aboyne , Prov . Grand Master for Norths and Hunts , presided at the festival for 1843 , when subscriptions were announced to the extent of some £ 400 . In 1844 the chair was taken by Col . the Hon . G . Anson , M . P ., P . G . M . Staffordshire ,

“The Freemason: 1883-12-22, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_22121883/page/4/.
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CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
CONSECRATION OF THE QUEEN'S WESTMINSTER LODGE, No. 2021. Article 2
CONSECRATION OF THE METHUEN CHAPTER, No. 1533, AT MARLBOROUGH, WILTS. Article 3
ST. BOTOLPH'S LODGE, No. 2020. Article 3
THE ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 3
Untitled Ad 6
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Untitled Ad 7
To Correspondents. Article 7
Untitled Article 7
Original Correspondence. Article 7
REVIEWS Article 7
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 8
BOARD OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 8
DEDICATION OF A NEW MASONIC HALL AT GOOLE. Article 8
CONSECRATION OF THE URANIA MARK LODGE, AT LOUTH. Article 9
Obituary. Article 9
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 9
INSTRUCTION. Article 14
Royal Arch. Article 14
Mark Masonary. Article 15
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 15
Knights Templar. Article 15
Red Cross of Constantine. Article 16
THE CREMATION OF THE BODY OF THE LATE BRO. CAPTAIN HANHAM. Article 16
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 17
THE THEATRES. Article 18
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 18
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE, Article 18
Untitled Ad 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution.

of General Purposes A communication was at once drawn up and delivered at the Grand Secretary ' s office , while a duplicate was laid before the General Committee at their usual meeting in November . The contents , however , were nothing else than a recital of the resolutions passed and confirmed in

October , accompanied by a request that a conference mig ht be arranged with the Board . In due course , an answer was received fixing the afternoon of the 7 th December for the conference requested , when the Sub-Committee attended and submitted the following resolutions which had previously been agreed to as a basis for the proposed arrangement , namely : —

First . That the Annuity Fund of this Institution be added to the fund proposed to be raised in accordance with the report of the Board of General Purposes , provided that the Annuitants now on this Institution are respectively provided for on equal terms with the other Annuitants ; and that the subscribers of this Institution do retain their

privileges " pro rata in that about to be formed . Second . That the Building Fund of this Institution be also placed in the hands of Grand Lodge , through the Board of General Purposes , to accumulate and be applied in accordance with the resolutions passed at a general meeting on the 13 th October last , and communicated to the Board of General Purposes .

Third . That the preceding arrangements being made , all offices held in this Institution be vacated . Copy of the foregoing having been taken , the Sub-Committee , in reply to questions by the President and members of the Board , said that no difficulty was apprehended with reference to the transfer of the two funds ; but that there were insuperable objections , both on the part of the Trustees and

of many of the subscribers , to the transfer of the Building Fund for any other purpose than that of building , the period of erecting which would remain entirely in the hands of the Grand Lodge . However , after gravely considering the subject , the Board unanimously resolved as follows : " That in consequence of the resolution passed by the members of the Asylum for Worthy Aged and Decayed Freemasons requiring the Building Fund shall

be continued , the Board declines to entertain the proposition ; but the Board is willing to receive and consider any proposition that may be made having reference to the application of the entire fund for annuities . " No other result perhaps could have been expected , seeing how recently and how warmly the merits of the rival princip les of Annuity and Asylum had been discussed , and with what result as regards certain of the most prominent among the

advocates of the latter . Still , it speaks well for the Asylum authorities that , when they found the Grand Master was resolved on pushing forward his favourite Annuity principle , and obtaining for it the support of Grand Lodge , they should have evinced such readiness to sink their own individuality and that of their fellow-workers in order that the separate proposals for the benefit of aged and distressed brethren might combine together to the general

good , instead of being left to clash with each other , and so weaken the efforts which it was generally agreed must be made in order to establish an additional Masonic Charity . And yet more creditable is it to them and their co-workers that , nothwithstanding this repulse , the General Committee of subscribers at their meeting on the 8 th December should have passed the following resolutions :

That to appropriate the Building Fund of this Institution to any other pfcrpose than that of erecting an Asylum would be a breach of faith with the subscribers , as had been previously intimated by the Sub-Committee to the Board of General Purposes . That , whilst regretting , for the sake of peace and harmony , the rejection of the proposition made on the 7 th inst ., the Sub-Committee be instructed to renew the conference with the Board of General Purposes , and to offer the transfer of the Annuity Fund without reference to the Building Fund .

The result of this was that the Sub-Committee held a meeting on the nth of the month , when the following letter for transmission to the Board of

General Purposes was drawn up ; 25 , Tibberton-square , Islington , nth December , 1841 . Gentlemen and Brothers , A meeting of the Committee of the Asylum for Worthy Aged and Decayed Free masons was held on Wednesday , the 8 th inst ., to which the resolution of your Worship ful Board was submitted .

The Committee concurred in the opinion previously expressed by the Sub-Committee to your Worshipful Board , that to appropriate the Building Fund of that Institution for any other purpose than that of the ultimate erection of an Asylum would be a breach of faith with the subscribers . They further unanimously concurred in the expression of regret that your

Worshipful Board should have declined to entertain the proposition submitted on the 7 th inst . by the Sub-Committee , thus preventing the subject from being entertained by Grand Lodge , with the advantage of a reference from your Worshipful Board . They also concur in believing that such a reference made to Grand Lodge would have so brought the subject under the consideration of the Craft as to produce a result calculated entirely and immediately to heal all differences of opinion .

But anxious to attain that desirable object , and to unite the charitable efforts of the Craft as far as possible , the General Committee have authorised the Sub-Committee to renew the conference with your Worshipful Board , with a view to the transfer of the Annuity Fund without reference to the Building Fund , and 1 am therefore requested by the Sub-Committee to solicit the favour of another interview with your Worshipful Board .

I have , & c , ( Signed ) R . FIELD , Secretary Aged Freemasons' Asylum . To the Worshipful the President , the Vice-President , and Members of the Board of General Purposes of the United Grand Lodge of England

Some time elapsed before any reply to the above was received . At length , however , Bro . White , Grand Secretary , sent the following : Freemasons' Hall , London , 25 th January , 1 S 43 . W . Sir and Brother , I am directed by the Board of General Purposes to acknowledge the receipt of

your communication on behalf of the Committee of the Asylum for Worthy Aged and Decayed Freemasons , addressed to the Board , requesting another interview grounded on certain resolutions which you have forwarded ; and I am directed , in reply , to say , that after mature deliberation , the Board must beg to refer you to their resolution of the 7 th of December last , communicated to you in my letter of the same day , and to state that

the Board are still willing to receive and consider any proposition that . may be made having reference to the application of the entire fund for Annuities . I have , & c , ( Signed ) WILLIAM H . WHITE , Grand Secretary . To Robert Field , Esq .,

Secretary of the Asylum for Worthy Aged and Decayed Freemasons . Thus the friendly endeavour to bring about united action on the part of the Craft , as initiated by the Asylum Committee , fell through , and what little on their part it remained for them to do was done at the Quarterly General Meeting on the 13 th April , 1842 , when it was resolved " that the

The Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution.

thanks of this Quarterly General Meeting be presented to the Sub-Committee for the manner in which they conducted the conference with the Board of General Purposes , with an expression of sincere regret at the failure of their exertions to carry into effect the amalgamation of the Charity with the annuity plan propounded by Grand Lodge . " Meantime it may be worth while mentioning as a further , yet pitiful , illustration of the hostility to

which the Asylum and all concerned in its maintenance were subjected , that at the Committee meeting in February a letter was read from Bro . Nicholls , the collector to the Institution , regretting the necessity he was under of resigning his office , the necessity being subsequenty explained b y Bro . Crucefix , the Chairman , as the consequence of a pledge he had given on becoming candidate for the collectorship of the Girls' School , that he would resign his connection with the Asylum in the event of his being

successful . Bro . Nicholls had been elected by a small majority , and hence his resignation , which of course was accepted , an honorarium of five guineas being voted him for his services in a most complimentary manner . At the Quarterly Meeting on the 13 th July , 18 42 , in consequence of the steps taken by Grand Lodge for the establishment of an Annuity Fund , the following resolutions were agreed to , and confirmed at the next Quarterly Meeting in October , namely :

That the Grand Lodge , having sanctioned a plan for granting Annuities to Aged brethren , no more Annuitants be elected upon the funds of this Institution . That the proposed amalgamation of this Charity with the one adopted by Grand Lodge , under the sanction of the Grand Master , having been rejected , all laws , regulations , & c , relating to the subject of Annuities be repealed , and the whole amount already and to be hereafter collected , be dedicated to the original object of the Charity , namely ,

the Building and Endowment of an Asylum for Worthy Aged and Decayed Freemasons . That the Annuitants heretofore elected upon the funds of this Charity shall continue to be entitled to all the benefits to which they have been admitted , notwithstanding the foregoing , or any other resolution relating to the disposal of the funds of this Charity . That the following be substituted for No . XX . of the printed Preliminary Regulations , page 5 : Tim f frl-n » f"VitY \ tviif f ^ o An m /*» f nn fTi » ce * rr \ nA \\/ V > rln « crTa *» fn ft »«» rw * - » nf lie r \ F f \ f ^••/ 'k Tuna Ilt IlllWkVVf lllbblUM Lllb VLilltJUUI Vl HHll lll

A * b "" - V > UIII u « OI . I . UIIU » I III HI * . IIIUIUU ^ - ) J UIILj September , and December , at Radley ' s Hotel , New Bridge-street , Blackfriars , at seven o ' clock in the evening ; five to be a quorum ; and the Annual General Meeting be held on the second Wednesday in July , at the same time and place , unless otherwise determined upon . The Annual Meeting to be summoned by advertisement ; Special General Meetings by circular as well as advertisement , and the Committee Meetings by summons .

A conversation having arisen as to the state of the funds belonging to the Charity , the Treasurer stated as nearly as he could , in the absence of the acting Trustee , Bro . Rowe , that they amounted to ^ 3404 17 s . nd ., of which £ 2169 10 s . 7 d . was Three per Cent . Consols , _ £ gooin | Exchequer Bills , ^ 110 in the Cripplegate Savings' Bank , and ^ 225 7 s . 4 d . being the balance in hands of Tieasurer and at the bankers . There was also a sum of £ 200 uncollected , which , in the opinion of the Treasurer , was all good .

The bulk of the minutes that follow , and are continued well into the year 1 S 45 , refer to a costly , as well as a painful , episode in the brief separate career of the Asylum . It will be in the recollection of the reader that in the year 1839 the question had been raised of superseding the Provisional by Permanent Trustees ; but difficulties having arisen , and three of the brethren elected to fill the latter positions having declined to occupy them ,

the matter bad remained in abeyance , the Provisional Trustees continuing to act . One of them , Bro . Henry Rowe , unlike other of his co-Trustees who tendered their resignations , in order to facilitate the arrangements it was considered desirable to make , point blank refused to lay down his trust , one of the reasons assigned by him being that the Neptune Lodge , No . 22 , of which he was a member , had desired him not to do so . This Bro . Rowe

unfortunately for the Institution , was the acting Trustee , and was in the habit of receiving the dividends as they became payable , which dividends it was part of his duty to invest . This part of his duty , however , was after a time unfulfilled , and when the Committee pressed him to hand over what moneys he had in hand on this account , as well as a further sum of about £ 120 he was said to have received on account of the Asylum from the estate

of the late Bro . Sansum , in respect of the proceeds of the Asylum benefit at the English Opera House , the course he adopted was such that the governing body of the Asylum found themselves under the necessity of filing a Bill in Chancery , in order that they might have the property belonging to them placed in the hands of Trustees approved by the Court , and the nature of the trust as clearly defined as possible . All hope of recovering

any portion of the money due was set aside b y Bro . Rowe declaring himself bankrupt , so that the loss sustained by the Institution amounted to over £ 300 , of which £ iS 8 was in respect of dividends and the ^ 120 from Bro . Sansum ' s estate , while the costs of the legal proceedings represented a further sum of upwards of £ 320 , making together a clear loss of some X 620 , which the Charity sustained through the defalcatiohs of one of its

earliest supporters . What makes the recital of this episode the more painful is the insolence of Bro . Rowe ' s behaviour ; and it is not surprising that , when the suit was terminated , the Committee should have put on record their feeling of satisfaction " at the removal of Mr . Henry Roive from the trusteeship of their funds , whether his conduct be contemplated as appropriating to his own use the funds of a public Charity , and putting that Charity to considerable expense in procuring his removal by the Court of Chancery ,

or in the cool insolence thereof during the progress of the transaction . " On the other hand , a most handsome vote of thanks was passed to Bros . Alderman T . Wood , J . C . Bell , J . Partridge , and Z . Watkins for their conduct in the trusteeship . One good came of this—that the following brethren were appointed Trustees , namely : Bros , the Earl of Aboyne , the Earl of Southampton , Col . the Hon . Geo . Anson , M . P ., B . Bond Cabbell , and R . Thos . Crucefix , M . D .

The other events which occurred during the progress of this lamentable difference may be very briefly disposed of . The Earl of Aboyne , Prov . Grand Master for Norths and Hunts , presided at the festival for 1843 , when subscriptions were announced to the extent of some £ 400 . In 1844 the chair was taken by Col . the Hon . G . Anson , M . P ., P . G . M . Staffordshire ,

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