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  • June 24, 1893
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  • THE BOYS" SCHOOL FESTIVAL.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Boys" School Festival.

THE BOYS" SCHOOL FESTIVAL .

The 95 th Anniversary Festival of the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys will be held at the Royal Pavilion , Brighton , on Wednesday next , the 28 th instant , under the presidency of Bro . Lord BROOKE , Provincial Grand Master of Essex . His lordship will be supported by a Board of Stewards

which already numbers some 520 ladies and brethren , and we may , therefore , very reasonably anticipate that a large total of donations and subscrip . tions will be the result . We do not permit ourselves , as a rule , to be over sanguine in these matters ; but there is no doubt that exceptional efforts have been made by the Executive of the Institution to accumulate a large

total . The success of the Jubilee Festival in 1892 of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution was so amazing , that the friends of that Charity have realised that this year it was not their duty , having regard to the interests of the two Schools , to bestir themselves as actively as they are in the habit of doing . This comparative relaxation of the severe competition which ordinarily

prevails among the three Institutions has already been turned to excellent account by the Girls' School , the Festival of which in May yielded upwards of £ 14 , 000 , and it is by no means unlikely that even this large product may be exceeded next week . But , without entering into minute calculations , we may , as we have already said , regard the prospects as most encouraging . The

Chairman has already done good service on a similar occasion a few years since , when he presided at one of the Girls' School Festivals , and as the Board of Stewards which supports him is more numerous than it then was , it is possible and by no means improbable that the Returns may figure up proportionately . At all events , it is certain that the brethren who have been

exerting themselves with so much zeal and energy for some time past will give a very good account of their Stewardship , and we trust it will be our privilege to report next week a total which shall at least suffice for the requirements ofthe Institution , and leave a fair margin in hand for any contingencies which may arise during the current financial year .

VVe have on former occasions pointed out that the Boys' School is at a consiflerable disadvantage as compared with the Girls' School and Benevolent Institution in respect of its invested capital . The support it has received has sufficed for its yearly requirements , but has not allowed of any very great accumulation of invested property . In 1 S 90 , when ils administration of

was thoroughly overhauled , it had some ^ 17 , 500 Government other Stock , and its permanent income , including the small annual grants it receives from Grand Lodge and Grand Chapter , was not greatly in excess of £ 600 . In 1891 a great effort was made under the auspices of Bro . the Earl of LATHOM , Pro Grand Master and Provincial Grand Master of West

Lancashire , to reinstate the School in public favour , and the Festival yielded not far short of £ 30 , , the invested capital having since been increased to some £ 31 , 000 , and the permanent income to upwards of £ 1000 . But as the annual outlay for the 268 boys now on the establishment is between £ 12 , 000 ¦ ¦ "id £ 13 , 000 , it is still desirable that further investments should be made ,

and the present year is certainly a favourable one for a second effort in this direction to be made . The Benevolent Institution is still reaping the benefit ° f its successful Jubilee , while the Girls' School has recovered the ground which it had undoubtedly lost since the year of its Centenary Festival . It will , therefore , be a source of unfeigned satisfaction if the Institution which

is now preparing for its annual demonstration is able to strengthen itself further b y increasing its permanent resources . The Craft is so proud of the Charitable Institutions it has established , that so long as they are well

administered the support they need will be readily and regularly forthcoming . But a day may come when , owing to some ' political or financial cr | sis , the country generally is less prosperous than it is now , and then the authorities of institutions of this character will find it difficult to obtain the

ne cessary supplies . Thus the more that is done now to strengthen their Position , the less severely will any future strain caused by one or more "" successful Festivals be felt . 1 'here is yet another ground on which we rest our present appeal to the raft for a generous measure of support on Wednesday next . Thc School

un der its amended constitution has been doing excellent work . There are m ° re boys on the establishment than at any previous period of its career , j ^ d the manner in which they are being trained and educated is in the •; gliest degree creditable , both to the authorities and the educational staff . he tone of the School has been improved and those who contribute on this rind r . * ¦ . !••

• mture occasions need have no fear as to their donations ana suioscnpl ?? bc 'np well and worthily applied . We feel sure that an Institution , of ^ hich this can truthfully be said , will not look in vain for the means wherelo ca < ry on its beneficent work-.

Provincial Grand Lodge Of West Yorkshire.

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WEST YORKSHIRE .

LAYING OF THE FOUNDATION-STONE OF THE NEW INFIRMARY AT HALIFAX BY THE DEP . G . MASTER .

The old Infirmary at Halifax , which dates from 1 S 36 , has donegoodand useful work in its day , but , owing to the rapid increase in a population which now reaches 200 , 000 , it has long been inadequate to supply the needs of so densely crowded a district . This being so , the Committee of the Institution wisely decided to go in for an entirely new building . A site embracing an

area of 13 acres has been obtained , and plans have been prepared . The new Infirmary , which will be constructed on the most , approved principles , will , when complete , comprise 16 pavilions , or detached wards , and contain 320 beds , together with a nurses' home and extensive kitchens , laundry , medical , and administrative departments . Admirably as they have been supported

by all classes in Halifax and its neighbourhood , the Committee felt that they ' were not justified with the £ 52 , 000 that had been subscribed , in attempting more than partially to carry out the projected scheme , trusting to time and a generous public to enable them to add to it at no distant period , and gradually to complete an Institution which , on Saturday last , had so auspicious '

a commencement . Whilst giving due praise to the President of the Infirmary and Chairman of the Building Committee , Mr . T . Henry Morris ; ' to the Treasurer , Mr . John Whiteley , and to the zealous and active Secretaries , Mr . J . Whiteley Ward and Mr . John F . Hirst , it must be noted that the whole population has taken a lively interest in the undertaking , and that

thc pence of the masses have largely aided the generous gifts of the wealthy manufacturers and professional men of the old town of Halifax . The Freemasons have not been behindhand either , as upwards of , £ 5000 has been subscribed by members of the nine prosperous lodges in the immediate vicinity .

It was thought that if some distinguished member of the Craft could be induced to visit Halifax and lay the foundation-stone of the new infirmary , it would give brilliance and eclat to the proceedings , and would still further excite the sympathies of the people . A Alasonic Committee , of which Bro . Riley Patchett , W . M . 61 , has been the Chairman , was formed , and

with the aid of the retiring Provincial Grand Mastcr , Bros . Thos . Wm . Tew , J . P ., the help of the Right Hon . W . L . J ackson , M . P ., who is nominated as his successor , and the exertions of the Deputy Prov . Grand Master , Bro . Henry Smith , communications were opened with London , and the services of the Right Hon . the Earl of Lathom , G . C . B ., Pro Grand Master ,

secured . Unhappily , Lord Lathom fell ill , but , ever ready to support the cause of Charity , the Deputy Grand Master , Lord Mount Edgcumbe , graciously consented to take his place . The ceremony was witnessed b y thousands , and , notwithstanding the heat which was intense and the

pressure of the eager multitudes , the arrangements were so admirabl y organised and worked so easily that there was not the slightest hitch , nor . anything which , in any sense , could be said to mar the complete success of . the proceedings .

The officers of Grand Lodge who accompanied the Deputy Grand Master were Bros , the Rev . Canon Bullock , M . A ., G . Chap . ; the very Rev . Dr . Purey Cust , Dean of York , P . G . Chap . ; F . A . Philbrick , Q . C , G . Reg . ; E . Letchworth , G . Sec . ; Robert Grey , President of the Board of Benevolence ; Sir Reginald Hanson , Bart ., M . P ., P , G . W . ; the Hon . T .

W . Orde-Powlett , P . G . W . ; H . A . Hunt , P . G . S . of \ V . ; Frank Richardson , P . G . D . ; W . F . Smithson , P . G . D . ; Capt . J . D . Murray , P . G . Treas . ; R . Loveland Loveland , P . G . D . ; J . H . Mathews , P . D . G . D . of C . ; C . E . Keyser , P . G . D . ; Wm . Goodacre , P . G . S . B . ; W . H . Brittain , P . G . S . B . ; T . B . Whytehead , P . G . S . B . ; John Chadwick , P . G . S . B . ; M . C . Peck , P . G . S . B . ; and H . Sadler , G . Tyler .

The lodge room in St . John ' s-place , Halifax , handsome and commodious though it is , it was felt was not equal to thc demands which a meeting of this character would make upon it , and it was decided to open Provincial Grand Lodge in a school room close by , which was available . When that body entered it was crammed to its utmost capacity by Masons from the 75

lodges in West Yorkshire , and a contingent of visitors from the neighbouring Provinces of East and West Lancashire and Cheshire , numbering in all nearly 600 brethren . Bro . Henry Smith , D . Prov . G . M ., was supported by Bros . Richard Wilson , P . M . 2 S 0 , Prov . S . G . W . ; R . Jessop , 6 t , P . Prov . G . W . ( in theabsenceof the

Mayor of Halifax , Bro . J . W . Davis , J . P ., through illness ) Prov . J . G . W . ;' Rev . J . Dunbar , 1783 , Prov . G . Chap . ; Rev . F . E . Egerton , 910 , Prov . G . Chap . ; W . Fisher Tasker , 296 , Prov . G . Treas . ; Joseph Matthewman , 101 9 , acting Prov . G . Sec . ; Dr . John Foster , 974 , Prov . G . D . ; Cro ' sland Hirst , 2261 , Prov . G . D . ; Henry Cowborough , 1042 , Prov . G . D . ; W . B . Wall ,

“The Freemason: 1893-06-24, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_24061893/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE BOYS" SCHOOL FESTIVAL. Article 1
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WEST YORKSHIRE. Article 1
PROVINCIAL , GRAND LODGE OF CAMBRIDGESHIRE. Article 3
CONSECRATION OF THE EARL OF MORNINGTON CHAPTER, No. 2000. Article 3
FREEMASONRY IN HERTFORDSHIRE. Article 4
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF GLOUCESTERSHIRE AND HEREFORDSHIRE .' Article 4
CHESHIRE MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 5
PRESENTATION TO BRO. HORATIO WARD. Article 5
"OUR BOYS" AT THE ZOO. Article 5
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To Correspondents. Article 7
Untitled Article 7
Masonic Notes. Article 7
Correspondence. Article 8
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 8
PROVINCIAL MEETINGS. Article 9
Mark Masonry. Article 11
Allied Masonic Degrees. Article 11
THE BOYS' SCHOOL ATHLETIC SPORTS. Article 12
Our Portrait Gallery of Worshipful Masters. Article 12
BOARD OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 12
NEW CORRIDOR DINING TRAINS BETWEEN ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND. Article 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Boys" School Festival.

THE BOYS" SCHOOL FESTIVAL .

The 95 th Anniversary Festival of the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys will be held at the Royal Pavilion , Brighton , on Wednesday next , the 28 th instant , under the presidency of Bro . Lord BROOKE , Provincial Grand Master of Essex . His lordship will be supported by a Board of Stewards

which already numbers some 520 ladies and brethren , and we may , therefore , very reasonably anticipate that a large total of donations and subscrip . tions will be the result . We do not permit ourselves , as a rule , to be over sanguine in these matters ; but there is no doubt that exceptional efforts have been made by the Executive of the Institution to accumulate a large

total . The success of the Jubilee Festival in 1892 of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution was so amazing , that the friends of that Charity have realised that this year it was not their duty , having regard to the interests of the two Schools , to bestir themselves as actively as they are in the habit of doing . This comparative relaxation of the severe competition which ordinarily

prevails among the three Institutions has already been turned to excellent account by the Girls' School , the Festival of which in May yielded upwards of £ 14 , 000 , and it is by no means unlikely that even this large product may be exceeded next week . But , without entering into minute calculations , we may , as we have already said , regard the prospects as most encouraging . The

Chairman has already done good service on a similar occasion a few years since , when he presided at one of the Girls' School Festivals , and as the Board of Stewards which supports him is more numerous than it then was , it is possible and by no means improbable that the Returns may figure up proportionately . At all events , it is certain that the brethren who have been

exerting themselves with so much zeal and energy for some time past will give a very good account of their Stewardship , and we trust it will be our privilege to report next week a total which shall at least suffice for the requirements ofthe Institution , and leave a fair margin in hand for any contingencies which may arise during the current financial year .

VVe have on former occasions pointed out that the Boys' School is at a consiflerable disadvantage as compared with the Girls' School and Benevolent Institution in respect of its invested capital . The support it has received has sufficed for its yearly requirements , but has not allowed of any very great accumulation of invested property . In 1 S 90 , when ils administration of

was thoroughly overhauled , it had some ^ 17 , 500 Government other Stock , and its permanent income , including the small annual grants it receives from Grand Lodge and Grand Chapter , was not greatly in excess of £ 600 . In 1891 a great effort was made under the auspices of Bro . the Earl of LATHOM , Pro Grand Master and Provincial Grand Master of West

Lancashire , to reinstate the School in public favour , and the Festival yielded not far short of £ 30 , , the invested capital having since been increased to some £ 31 , 000 , and the permanent income to upwards of £ 1000 . But as the annual outlay for the 268 boys now on the establishment is between £ 12 , 000 ¦ ¦ "id £ 13 , 000 , it is still desirable that further investments should be made ,

and the present year is certainly a favourable one for a second effort in this direction to be made . The Benevolent Institution is still reaping the benefit ° f its successful Jubilee , while the Girls' School has recovered the ground which it had undoubtedly lost since the year of its Centenary Festival . It will , therefore , be a source of unfeigned satisfaction if the Institution which

is now preparing for its annual demonstration is able to strengthen itself further b y increasing its permanent resources . The Craft is so proud of the Charitable Institutions it has established , that so long as they are well

administered the support they need will be readily and regularly forthcoming . But a day may come when , owing to some ' political or financial cr | sis , the country generally is less prosperous than it is now , and then the authorities of institutions of this character will find it difficult to obtain the

ne cessary supplies . Thus the more that is done now to strengthen their Position , the less severely will any future strain caused by one or more "" successful Festivals be felt . 1 'here is yet another ground on which we rest our present appeal to the raft for a generous measure of support on Wednesday next . Thc School

un der its amended constitution has been doing excellent work . There are m ° re boys on the establishment than at any previous period of its career , j ^ d the manner in which they are being trained and educated is in the •; gliest degree creditable , both to the authorities and the educational staff . he tone of the School has been improved and those who contribute on this rind r . * ¦ . !••

• mture occasions need have no fear as to their donations ana suioscnpl ?? bc 'np well and worthily applied . We feel sure that an Institution , of ^ hich this can truthfully be said , will not look in vain for the means wherelo ca < ry on its beneficent work-.

Provincial Grand Lodge Of West Yorkshire.

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WEST YORKSHIRE .

LAYING OF THE FOUNDATION-STONE OF THE NEW INFIRMARY AT HALIFAX BY THE DEP . G . MASTER .

The old Infirmary at Halifax , which dates from 1 S 36 , has donegoodand useful work in its day , but , owing to the rapid increase in a population which now reaches 200 , 000 , it has long been inadequate to supply the needs of so densely crowded a district . This being so , the Committee of the Institution wisely decided to go in for an entirely new building . A site embracing an

area of 13 acres has been obtained , and plans have been prepared . The new Infirmary , which will be constructed on the most , approved principles , will , when complete , comprise 16 pavilions , or detached wards , and contain 320 beds , together with a nurses' home and extensive kitchens , laundry , medical , and administrative departments . Admirably as they have been supported

by all classes in Halifax and its neighbourhood , the Committee felt that they ' were not justified with the £ 52 , 000 that had been subscribed , in attempting more than partially to carry out the projected scheme , trusting to time and a generous public to enable them to add to it at no distant period , and gradually to complete an Institution which , on Saturday last , had so auspicious '

a commencement . Whilst giving due praise to the President of the Infirmary and Chairman of the Building Committee , Mr . T . Henry Morris ; ' to the Treasurer , Mr . John Whiteley , and to the zealous and active Secretaries , Mr . J . Whiteley Ward and Mr . John F . Hirst , it must be noted that the whole population has taken a lively interest in the undertaking , and that

thc pence of the masses have largely aided the generous gifts of the wealthy manufacturers and professional men of the old town of Halifax . The Freemasons have not been behindhand either , as upwards of , £ 5000 has been subscribed by members of the nine prosperous lodges in the immediate vicinity .

It was thought that if some distinguished member of the Craft could be induced to visit Halifax and lay the foundation-stone of the new infirmary , it would give brilliance and eclat to the proceedings , and would still further excite the sympathies of the people . A Alasonic Committee , of which Bro . Riley Patchett , W . M . 61 , has been the Chairman , was formed , and

with the aid of the retiring Provincial Grand Mastcr , Bros . Thos . Wm . Tew , J . P ., the help of the Right Hon . W . L . J ackson , M . P ., who is nominated as his successor , and the exertions of the Deputy Prov . Grand Master , Bro . Henry Smith , communications were opened with London , and the services of the Right Hon . the Earl of Lathom , G . C . B ., Pro Grand Master ,

secured . Unhappily , Lord Lathom fell ill , but , ever ready to support the cause of Charity , the Deputy Grand Master , Lord Mount Edgcumbe , graciously consented to take his place . The ceremony was witnessed b y thousands , and , notwithstanding the heat which was intense and the

pressure of the eager multitudes , the arrangements were so admirabl y organised and worked so easily that there was not the slightest hitch , nor . anything which , in any sense , could be said to mar the complete success of . the proceedings .

The officers of Grand Lodge who accompanied the Deputy Grand Master were Bros , the Rev . Canon Bullock , M . A ., G . Chap . ; the very Rev . Dr . Purey Cust , Dean of York , P . G . Chap . ; F . A . Philbrick , Q . C , G . Reg . ; E . Letchworth , G . Sec . ; Robert Grey , President of the Board of Benevolence ; Sir Reginald Hanson , Bart ., M . P ., P , G . W . ; the Hon . T .

W . Orde-Powlett , P . G . W . ; H . A . Hunt , P . G . S . of \ V . ; Frank Richardson , P . G . D . ; W . F . Smithson , P . G . D . ; Capt . J . D . Murray , P . G . Treas . ; R . Loveland Loveland , P . G . D . ; J . H . Mathews , P . D . G . D . of C . ; C . E . Keyser , P . G . D . ; Wm . Goodacre , P . G . S . B . ; W . H . Brittain , P . G . S . B . ; T . B . Whytehead , P . G . S . B . ; John Chadwick , P . G . S . B . ; M . C . Peck , P . G . S . B . ; and H . Sadler , G . Tyler .

The lodge room in St . John ' s-place , Halifax , handsome and commodious though it is , it was felt was not equal to thc demands which a meeting of this character would make upon it , and it was decided to open Provincial Grand Lodge in a school room close by , which was available . When that body entered it was crammed to its utmost capacity by Masons from the 75

lodges in West Yorkshire , and a contingent of visitors from the neighbouring Provinces of East and West Lancashire and Cheshire , numbering in all nearly 600 brethren . Bro . Henry Smith , D . Prov . G . M ., was supported by Bros . Richard Wilson , P . M . 2 S 0 , Prov . S . G . W . ; R . Jessop , 6 t , P . Prov . G . W . ( in theabsenceof the

Mayor of Halifax , Bro . J . W . Davis , J . P ., through illness ) Prov . J . G . W . ;' Rev . J . Dunbar , 1783 , Prov . G . Chap . ; Rev . F . E . Egerton , 910 , Prov . G . Chap . ; W . Fisher Tasker , 296 , Prov . G . Treas . ; Joseph Matthewman , 101 9 , acting Prov . G . Sec . ; Dr . John Foster , 974 , Prov . G . D . ; Cro ' sland Hirst , 2261 , Prov . G . D . ; Henry Cowborough , 1042 , Prov . G . D . ; W . B . Wall ,

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