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  • Jan. 28, 1882
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Contents.

CONTENTS .

l . r . ADF . RS 4 ? Supreme Grand Chapter 411 Rovnl Masonic Institution for Girls 40 Consecration of the Suutluratc LoJ ;; e , No . mso 4 " Inauguration of a New Masonic Hall at ( latcshead 47

CoRRKSl'il \ nE \ CE" Honour to Whom Honour is Due . " ... co Master of Ceremonies 50 Ue \ icws ' . 50 Masonic Notes and ( hlcric-s 50 A Masonic Lecture 50 RKI' - IUTS or MASONIC

MKLIINOSPresentation to R . W . liro . W . Carlwrijjht , | . P ., !* - '•• Sec . Stairord > hire 4 S Mrs . G . irlield 4 ' ) Pali ol the l . odi ; c of 1 ' rnspciity , . No . dj 41 ) Callcrr I . od ;; e Hall 4 'I Annual . MasonicSocial Parlyat Manchester 4 , ) j Ancient and Accepted Rite 4 'l Kninhts Templar 40 j Allied Decrees 4 ' ) ' Ireland 4 'J !

| Craft . Masonry 51 Instruction 50 Royal Arch 57 Mark Masonry 57 Thelhealres ... ' tS Music ; S Science < S Art JS Masonic ami General Tidings 50 i . oiljje . Mec-timjs for Next Week do

Ar00101

OUR contemporary , the Canadian Craftsman , seems to us to lay far too much stress on Bro . GRAHAM ' S argument . incut exclusive sovereignty of Masonic jurisdiction , as he calls it , which he obtains from an entire misreading of one of the older regulations which is incorporated in our Hook of Constitutions . Wc almost wonder that our contemporary does not see that that

is a regulation " quoad" the Grand Lodge only , and docs not aflect the question of territorial jurisdiction , which in America has become , as they say , mixed up with exclusive sovcicignly . Originally , it simply was meant to act compulsorily on lodges like those of Swalwell , which did not acknowledge for some time the Grand Lodge of 1717 , anil were actually without

charters of any kind apparently . Now , of course , it is . 1 necessary accompaniment of Masonic legislation , inasmuch as it limits and delincs the right and status of those who claim to have seats in Grand Lodge on account of their lodge membership . It is , in fact , a regulation affecting both the membership and privileges of those who profess to form the Grand Lodge .

There are two lodges , and only two now , which are recognized by ihc Grand Lodge of England , acting horn immemorial constitution ; all the other lodges on its roll are duly warranted and registered , as , indeed , both the Lodge of Antiquity and Somerset House Lodge are registered on the list of the Grand Lodge , though thev act from immemorial usage . Hut this

law does not alTcct the question of territorial jurisdiction at all . Wc were quite astonished at our able Bro . GRAHAM deriving such an argument from words which deal with an entirely different state of affairs " and facts , and arc still more so at our contemporary endorsing such a straining of the QUEEN ' English .

* * THE question of territorial jurisdiction is , no doubt , a vcry difficult and delicate or . e , and which requires careful and judicious handlii g , but from first to last the action of the Knglish Grand Lodge has been both clear and consistent on the point . Originally , warrants and charters were sought for

from the English Grand Lodge in unoccupied countries , and gradually many of those bodies , which drew their life and birth from England , and England alone , declared themselves independent of their mother Grand Lodge . Some bodies , too , which were only private lodges , without any principle of representation or aggregation , equally declared themselves Grand Lodges , though ,

strictly speaking , they could hardly be , and arc not Grand Lodges except now by the user , so to say , of long sufferance . The old Roman Gild law applies here , " Tres faciunt Collegium , " and so three lodges , at the least , must constitute a Grand Lodge . In America some of the State Grand Lodges hail from Scotland , so that the uniform descent from the English Grand Lodge

i s not maintained in the United States . In England we once had two Grand Lodges in active operation , and , from one or other of them , all American and Canadian Grand Lodges come . There were also the recognized Grand Lodges of Scotland and Ireland . The York Grand Lodge never gave colonial or foreign warrants , as far as wc know ; and the famous

old Lodge of Antiquity , the Quondam-Grand Lodge south of the Trent , as an emanation of the G . L . of York , never got into working order , though it was formed . Wc wonder that Bro . GRAHAM and the Canadian Craftsman do not sec that the constitutions they refer to only relate to the internal government of Grand Lodge and its private lodges , and do not touch upon

jurisdictional questions . In . the last century neither the modern nor antient Grand Lodge ever denied , as far as we are aware , the' equity of their respective constitution of lodges and Provincial Grand Lodges , and as one by one in independent countries the Masonic bodies claimed to have a Masonic jurisdiction contemporary withthepolitical , the Grand Lodge of England has

wisely conceded the point . But in Canada the case is a little different . We were not aware that the province of Quebec claimed to be a sovereign state , like an American state , co-equal with every other ; and though , considering the expanse of country in the Canadas , we should not be surprised at the various governments with legislation asking for a Grand Lodge ,

Ar00102

yet it is quite clear that they do not stand , with due deference to them be it said , on the same ground as independent territorial jurisdictions , Supreme Sovereign Stales . It is , however , probably a needless question to raise ; the only thing we are concerned * with is the absolute " bona fides " of the Grand Lodge of England . Had the Grand Lodge of Oucbcc been

wise , and we feel sure that even now it is , their best policy , —if we were living in Quebec wc should ourselves urge it upon this Grand Lodge , — it would at once enter into a friendly concordat with the Grand Lodge of England , leaving it to time to settle the points as regards the English lodges in Oucbcc . The English mind is

essentially practic . il , as no one knows better than Bro . GRAHAM , and a " bargain ' s a bargain " is a popular and cherished Engli .-, h proverb . What was settled with the Grand Lodge of Canada cannot be unsettled by the Grand Lodge of Quebec , which was not a parly to the original compact . They took the position , by a well-known principle of equity , with ils obligations , and we

Ic . 'l convinced that they will probably expedite the object they have in view if they at once place themselves in friendly communication with the Grand Lodge of England , leaving ihe settlement of the controversy , as the GRAND SECRET \ RY has so wisely recommended them , alone to the elllux of lime ; any other course will speedily land them in serious and lasting difficulties .

IN England we shall all , as Craft Masons , fully recognize the position taken up b } ' Bro . Col . M , ui . / : oi > MOORE , as Grand Prior of the Templar organinization , acting under a patent of ILK . II . the GRVND MASTER of that distinguished body . It is quite clear that any so-called attempted formation of an independent body will be an illegal one by their laws and the laws of

C raft Masonry . We regret to note this tendency just now , as we always fear that these impatient movements emanate from a few restless , busy , self-estimating men , anxious for distinction and notoriety , the tinsel show of brief authority , forgetting tint nothing is so bad for society and the world as this repudiation of old established formula , this schism from lawfully constituted and supreme bodies .

A i WE were vcry glad a short time back to hear from a vcry able and distinguished brother from New Zealand that the large majority of the New Zealand brethren were loyal to their English Mother Grand Lodge , and were in no ways wishful to sever the links which bound them to the most

venerable and distinguished Masonic organization in existence . We have always regretted theexlrcnie facility with which both American and Canadian bodies have recognized the absolutely illegal formation in New South Wales , without carefully looking inlo the question ; and had they only kept before

them the points so lucidly set forth by our GRAND REGISTRAR in Grand Lodge , thai safe and careful adviser on all such topics of our Craft , they would have avoided falling inlo a mistake which sets at deliance all Masonic precedents , and affords a very wide loop-hole for clandestine Freemasonry .

* * OUR lodge reports , in various tones and tacts , week by week , after all admirably represent the passing temper of the times we live in of current English Freemasonry , and wc rejoice to note the uniform witness they ever bear to the harmonious feelings and zealous efforts of our ever loyal , sympathetic and charitable Craft .

IT seems that there is a little weekly professedly humorous paper , published at Bradford , in Yorkshire , called The Yorkshircman , and which has reached to its iSSth number , vol . xiii . It devotes its weekl y illustration , which it appears is not original , however , ( o the ridicule of the "Humbug of Freemasonry . " Wc cannot say honestly either that the

drawing itself represents a very high standard of .-esthetic art or a genial pen , and seems to us , on the contrary , vcry feeble and very absurd . It ridicules Freemasonry for want of charity to the widow . And this in a town where exists a certain lodge called the Lodge of Hope , among others , which is most noteworth y for its noble efforts for the Masonic

Charities and ( he " widows . Wc can recall the time when , with a band of good men and true , second to none as workers in Masonry and supporters of the Charities , the efforts of the Lodge of Hope were unceasing and their offerings most liberal , even striking . Many of these genial and hearty brethren are , alas , no longer to the fore , but some happily still remain who could a talc

unfold , if only they would , of ceaseless devotion and disinterested sacrifices for the best of all causes—Charily . It is astonishing to realize sometimes what an amount of ignorance still lingers in the mind of the foolish fanatic who attacks or depreciates Freemasonry . We should have thought that the return of / , 43 , ooo for our great metropolitan Masonic Charities

“The Freemason: 1882-01-28, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_28011882/page/1/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER. Article 2
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 2
CONSECRATION OF THE SOUTHGATE LODGE, No. 1950. Article 2
INAUGURATION OF A NEW MASONIC HALL AT GATESHEAD. Article 3
PRESENTATION TO R.W. BRO. W. CARTWRIGHT J.P., P.G. SEC. STAFFORDSHIRE. Article 4
MRS. GARFIELD. Article 5
BALL OF THE LODGE OF PROSPERITY. No. 65. Article 5
GALLERY LODGE BALL. Article 5
ANNUAL MASONIC SOCIAL PARTY AT MANCHESTER. Article 5
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 5
Knights Templar. Article 5
Allied Degrees. Article 5
Ireland. Article 5
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
To Correspondents. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Original Correspondence. Article 6
Reviews. Article 6
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 6
Obituary. Article 6
A MASONIC LECTURE. Article 6
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 7
Untitled Article 12
INSTRUCTION. Article 12
Royal Arch. Article 13
Mark Masonry. Article 13
Births ,Marriages and Deaths. Article 13
The Theatres. Article 14
Music. Article 14
Science. Article 14
Art. Article 14
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 15
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 16
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE Article 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Contents.

CONTENTS .

l . r . ADF . RS 4 ? Supreme Grand Chapter 411 Rovnl Masonic Institution for Girls 40 Consecration of the Suutluratc LoJ ;; e , No . mso 4 " Inauguration of a New Masonic Hall at ( latcshead 47

CoRRKSl'il \ nE \ CE" Honour to Whom Honour is Due . " ... co Master of Ceremonies 50 Ue \ icws ' . 50 Masonic Notes and ( hlcric-s 50 A Masonic Lecture 50 RKI' - IUTS or MASONIC

MKLIINOSPresentation to R . W . liro . W . Carlwrijjht , | . P ., !* - '•• Sec . Stairord > hire 4 S Mrs . G . irlield 4 ' ) Pali ol the l . odi ; c of 1 ' rnspciity , . No . dj 41 ) Callcrr I . od ;; e Hall 4 'I Annual . MasonicSocial Parlyat Manchester 4 , ) j Ancient and Accepted Rite 4 'l Kninhts Templar 40 j Allied Decrees 4 ' ) ' Ireland 4 'J !

| Craft . Masonry 51 Instruction 50 Royal Arch 57 Mark Masonry 57 Thelhealres ... ' tS Music ; S Science < S Art JS Masonic ami General Tidings 50 i . oiljje . Mec-timjs for Next Week do

Ar00101

OUR contemporary , the Canadian Craftsman , seems to us to lay far too much stress on Bro . GRAHAM ' S argument . incut exclusive sovereignty of Masonic jurisdiction , as he calls it , which he obtains from an entire misreading of one of the older regulations which is incorporated in our Hook of Constitutions . Wc almost wonder that our contemporary does not see that that

is a regulation " quoad" the Grand Lodge only , and docs not aflect the question of territorial jurisdiction , which in America has become , as they say , mixed up with exclusive sovcicignly . Originally , it simply was meant to act compulsorily on lodges like those of Swalwell , which did not acknowledge for some time the Grand Lodge of 1717 , anil were actually without

charters of any kind apparently . Now , of course , it is . 1 necessary accompaniment of Masonic legislation , inasmuch as it limits and delincs the right and status of those who claim to have seats in Grand Lodge on account of their lodge membership . It is , in fact , a regulation affecting both the membership and privileges of those who profess to form the Grand Lodge .

There are two lodges , and only two now , which are recognized by ihc Grand Lodge of England , acting horn immemorial constitution ; all the other lodges on its roll are duly warranted and registered , as , indeed , both the Lodge of Antiquity and Somerset House Lodge are registered on the list of the Grand Lodge , though thev act from immemorial usage . Hut this

law does not alTcct the question of territorial jurisdiction at all . Wc were quite astonished at our able Bro . GRAHAM deriving such an argument from words which deal with an entirely different state of affairs " and facts , and arc still more so at our contemporary endorsing such a straining of the QUEEN ' English .

* * THE question of territorial jurisdiction is , no doubt , a vcry difficult and delicate or . e , and which requires careful and judicious handlii g , but from first to last the action of the Knglish Grand Lodge has been both clear and consistent on the point . Originally , warrants and charters were sought for

from the English Grand Lodge in unoccupied countries , and gradually many of those bodies , which drew their life and birth from England , and England alone , declared themselves independent of their mother Grand Lodge . Some bodies , too , which were only private lodges , without any principle of representation or aggregation , equally declared themselves Grand Lodges , though ,

strictly speaking , they could hardly be , and arc not Grand Lodges except now by the user , so to say , of long sufferance . The old Roman Gild law applies here , " Tres faciunt Collegium , " and so three lodges , at the least , must constitute a Grand Lodge . In America some of the State Grand Lodges hail from Scotland , so that the uniform descent from the English Grand Lodge

i s not maintained in the United States . In England we once had two Grand Lodges in active operation , and , from one or other of them , all American and Canadian Grand Lodges come . There were also the recognized Grand Lodges of Scotland and Ireland . The York Grand Lodge never gave colonial or foreign warrants , as far as wc know ; and the famous

old Lodge of Antiquity , the Quondam-Grand Lodge south of the Trent , as an emanation of the G . L . of York , never got into working order , though it was formed . Wc wonder that Bro . GRAHAM and the Canadian Craftsman do not sec that the constitutions they refer to only relate to the internal government of Grand Lodge and its private lodges , and do not touch upon

jurisdictional questions . In . the last century neither the modern nor antient Grand Lodge ever denied , as far as we are aware , the' equity of their respective constitution of lodges and Provincial Grand Lodges , and as one by one in independent countries the Masonic bodies claimed to have a Masonic jurisdiction contemporary withthepolitical , the Grand Lodge of England has

wisely conceded the point . But in Canada the case is a little different . We were not aware that the province of Quebec claimed to be a sovereign state , like an American state , co-equal with every other ; and though , considering the expanse of country in the Canadas , we should not be surprised at the various governments with legislation asking for a Grand Lodge ,

Ar00102

yet it is quite clear that they do not stand , with due deference to them be it said , on the same ground as independent territorial jurisdictions , Supreme Sovereign Stales . It is , however , probably a needless question to raise ; the only thing we are concerned * with is the absolute " bona fides " of the Grand Lodge of England . Had the Grand Lodge of Oucbcc been

wise , and we feel sure that even now it is , their best policy , —if we were living in Quebec wc should ourselves urge it upon this Grand Lodge , — it would at once enter into a friendly concordat with the Grand Lodge of England , leaving it to time to settle the points as regards the English lodges in Oucbcc . The English mind is

essentially practic . il , as no one knows better than Bro . GRAHAM , and a " bargain ' s a bargain " is a popular and cherished Engli .-, h proverb . What was settled with the Grand Lodge of Canada cannot be unsettled by the Grand Lodge of Quebec , which was not a parly to the original compact . They took the position , by a well-known principle of equity , with ils obligations , and we

Ic . 'l convinced that they will probably expedite the object they have in view if they at once place themselves in friendly communication with the Grand Lodge of England , leaving ihe settlement of the controversy , as the GRAND SECRET \ RY has so wisely recommended them , alone to the elllux of lime ; any other course will speedily land them in serious and lasting difficulties .

IN England we shall all , as Craft Masons , fully recognize the position taken up b } ' Bro . Col . M , ui . / : oi > MOORE , as Grand Prior of the Templar organinization , acting under a patent of ILK . II . the GRVND MASTER of that distinguished body . It is quite clear that any so-called attempted formation of an independent body will be an illegal one by their laws and the laws of

C raft Masonry . We regret to note this tendency just now , as we always fear that these impatient movements emanate from a few restless , busy , self-estimating men , anxious for distinction and notoriety , the tinsel show of brief authority , forgetting tint nothing is so bad for society and the world as this repudiation of old established formula , this schism from lawfully constituted and supreme bodies .

A i WE were vcry glad a short time back to hear from a vcry able and distinguished brother from New Zealand that the large majority of the New Zealand brethren were loyal to their English Mother Grand Lodge , and were in no ways wishful to sever the links which bound them to the most

venerable and distinguished Masonic organization in existence . We have always regretted theexlrcnie facility with which both American and Canadian bodies have recognized the absolutely illegal formation in New South Wales , without carefully looking inlo the question ; and had they only kept before

them the points so lucidly set forth by our GRAND REGISTRAR in Grand Lodge , thai safe and careful adviser on all such topics of our Craft , they would have avoided falling inlo a mistake which sets at deliance all Masonic precedents , and affords a very wide loop-hole for clandestine Freemasonry .

* * OUR lodge reports , in various tones and tacts , week by week , after all admirably represent the passing temper of the times we live in of current English Freemasonry , and wc rejoice to note the uniform witness they ever bear to the harmonious feelings and zealous efforts of our ever loyal , sympathetic and charitable Craft .

IT seems that there is a little weekly professedly humorous paper , published at Bradford , in Yorkshire , called The Yorkshircman , and which has reached to its iSSth number , vol . xiii . It devotes its weekl y illustration , which it appears is not original , however , ( o the ridicule of the "Humbug of Freemasonry . " Wc cannot say honestly either that the

drawing itself represents a very high standard of .-esthetic art or a genial pen , and seems to us , on the contrary , vcry feeble and very absurd . It ridicules Freemasonry for want of charity to the widow . And this in a town where exists a certain lodge called the Lodge of Hope , among others , which is most noteworth y for its noble efforts for the Masonic

Charities and ( he " widows . Wc can recall the time when , with a band of good men and true , second to none as workers in Masonry and supporters of the Charities , the efforts of the Lodge of Hope were unceasing and their offerings most liberal , even striking . Many of these genial and hearty brethren are , alas , no longer to the fore , but some happily still remain who could a talc

unfold , if only they would , of ceaseless devotion and disinterested sacrifices for the best of all causes—Charily . It is astonishing to realize sometimes what an amount of ignorance still lingers in the mind of the foolish fanatic who attacks or depreciates Freemasonry . We should have thought that the return of / , 43 , ooo for our great metropolitan Masonic Charities

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