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Contents.

CONTENTS .

LEADERS 239 i United Grand Lodge 240 Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution ...... 241 Royal Masonic Institution for Girls 242 Consecration of the Prince Edward of Saxe-. Weimar Lodge , No . igoj , at Portsmouth 243 Services of Grand Ollicers . " 244 Provincial Grand Lodi * c of North Wales and

Shropshire 245 j Provincial Grand Mark Lodge of C heshire 245 CORRESPONDENCEThe Girls'School 246 Book of Constitutions , 1723 246 ¦ An Error of the Scrutineers 246 The Banners of Freemasonry 246 A . Vagrant Mason 246

Reviews 246 Masonic Notes and Queries 247 Consecration of the Citadel Lodge , No . 1897 247 REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGSCraft Masonry 248 Instruction 249 Royal Arch 249 Instruction 249

Mark Masonry 249 Cryptic Masonrv 249 Scotland . ' 349 Royal Masonic Institution for Girls 249 Ireland 250 . Masonic Tidings 250 Lodge Meetings for Next Week I . Advertisements II ., III ., IV .

Ar00101

ALL the members of the Craft will hear with deep satisfaction that H ER MAJESTY has called H . R . H . PRINCE LEOPOLD tothe House of Peers , by the title of the DUKE OF ALBANY . The public , as well as the Masonic Order , have been able to realize his many and great gifts of eloquence and power , while his friendly sympathy and his " don de pluire , " very much

resembling the PRINCE OF WALES , have endeared him to all who have heard his kindly utterances , or have been permitted in any way to form part of his society . We feel sure that as the DUKE OF ALBANY he will be greeted by all classes alike in this country , if it be possible , with renewed interest and increased admiration .

* * * THE Stewards' returns for the Girls' School are very interesting , for various reasons , for while they point to much good , hard work , they also suggest several very important considerations as regards the continual and lively interest exhibited by our good brethren in our great Masonic Charities .

Despite bad times , and hard times , notwithstanding depression of trade , and pressure , and uneasiness in various departments , agricultural , commercial , exporting , and monetary , the zeal of Freemasons has not slackened , their love of charity has not grown cold . At the recent festival , the metropolis has sent up £ 5570 7 s . 6 d ., with a few lists to come in , the provinces / 5 SS 4 17 s . . id ., in all £ 11 , 455 4 s . iod ., and which probably before the end

of 1881 will reach ^ 12 , 000 . Of the metropolitan lodges , No . 1642 , the Earl of Carnarvon , whose zeal for the Charities is most commendable , with three Stewards , Bros . GEO . PENN , E . M . LUNDER , and S . H . PARKHOUSE , has brought up the eoodly amount of £ 300 . Next to it appears No . 6 K

Prosperity . Bro . G . T . BROWN , with ^ 246 15 s ., while succeeding it in order of amount is the Grand Stewards' Lodge , Bro . FRANK RICHARDSON , with £ 156 gs . No . 1383 , Friends in Council , Bro . Capt . W . R . G . FARMER , is next with ^ 140 14 s ., and No . 657 , Canonbury , Bro . Wm . MAPLE , succeeds with ^ 136 ios . Five lodges now appear , No . 1563 , City of Westminster ,

Bro . EDWIN J . SCOTT , £ 119 14 s ., No . 1608 , Kilburn , Bro . J . W . CUFF , £ 108 19 s ., No . 1719 , Evening Star , Bro . ALFRED WILLIAMS , £ 105 , and No . 862 , Whittington , Bro . J . IRVINE , £ 103 19 s ., and No . 167 , St . John's , Bro . GEO . DAVIS , £ 100 16 s . This summary exhausts the returns with " three figures , " and though many of the other returns are doubtless very

praiseworthy , especially if we knew the exact position of affairs , we can only allude to them here " in the gross , " as making up the metropolitan total of ^ 557 ° 7 s * 6 d . We notice that from 1700 to 1800 only eight lodges in London make returns , and from 1800 only two . This fact we confess to think not at all a healthy one , either as regards the lodges themselves or the

great work of Masonic charity . In the provinces the list is gallantly and significantly headed by Gloucestershire with twenty-four Stewards and with ; £ iooo , as our esteemed Bro . C . J . MARTYN , P . G . C , remarked in his excellent speech at the festival , a very praiseworthy and striking return for that province—comparatively a small one . Gloucestershire is followed by

West Yorkshire , always liberal and " in earnest , " with £ 500 , and we mayobserve that its Prov . Grand Master , and Deputy Prov . Grand Master , and twenty-three Stewards attended the festival , and we believe several other West Yorkshire brethren . Kent comet , next with ten Stewards and ^ 340 , and is succeeded , at some little distance , by Middlesex , with nine Stewards and

£ 307 3 s ., as well as by South Wales , W . Division , with one Steward and ^ 300 . This is a very noteworthy return . Three provinces , Lancashire , Western Division , with eleven Stewards and £ 277 3 s ., Essex with four Stewards and £ 221 3 s ., and Devonshire with three Stewards and £ 201 7 s ., next appear on . the scene . In the " hundreds" we have fourteen provinces ,

Lancashire , Eastern Division , £ 197 18 s ., Somersetshire , with one Steward , £ 181 13 s ., Staffordshire ( a very striking list ) with one Steward , £ 157 ios . , Yorkshire , North and East Riding , three Stewards and ^ 134 8 s ., Cheshire , with six Stewards and £ 129 3 s . nd ., Berks and Bucks , six Stewards and , £ 122 17 s ., Dorsetshire , two Stewards and £ 122 17 s ., Durham , one Steward

and £ 121 15 s . 6 d ., South Wales , Eastern Division , one Steward and £ 120 , Norfolk , with two Stewards and ^ 111 6 s ., and Sussex , with one Steward and £ 105 . Eight other provinces , with sums under £ 100 , make up the provincial returns to £ 5884 17 s . 4 d . In the provinces we note that from No . 1700 to No . 1800 only two lodges have sent Stewards or returns , and from No . 1800 to No . 1900 only two more . Surely this is a fact which deserves atten-

Ar00102

tion , a state of affairs which calls for amendment . Still , as we said before , the Stewards' returns are very noteworthy in themselves .

* * WE see that the Stewards for the Boys' School Festival have decided to hold their gathering at Brighton , in the Royal Pavilion . We trust sincerely that this change will be for the benefit materially of the Boys' School , and a striking success . Our worthy brethren in Sussex are very zealous Masons ,

and there are amongst them many who we doubt not will wish to assist what Bro . BINCKES terms " the most deserving of all our Masonic-Institutions . " We trust that a " visit to London on the Sea , " as Brighton has been named , may give pleasure , and health , and a holiday , and good

digestion to many of our readers and many warm friends of the Boys' School , and that the festival for 1881 may indeed , by its happy and goodly returns , enable the governing body to add essentially to the funded capital of that important and much needed Institution . It is understood that the distribution of prizes will take place on Tuesday , June 28 th .

* * * WE said that we should recur to the subject of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , and , aided by a kind friend , we do so to-day . The polling on Friday , the 20 th inst ., was in many respects remarkable and very high indeed ; in fact , never so high before for the number elected . In May , 1880 ,

twenty-two " aged Freemasons were elected , the minimum successful being 320 ; hence it might fairlyhave been expected that 500 this year would have been a safe number for the twenty-fifth on the list , but , as a matter of fact , it was not so . The lowest successful polled 719 , and one with 705 was "left out in the cold . " Every year increases the number of

votes , and the management improves likewise , for there are fewer thrown away now than there used to be . In 1880 the highest number was 2163 , and in 1 S 79 the maximum reached 2079 . In 1881 the first on the list only polled 1 5 11 , and from the first to the twenty-fifth of the successful there was only a difference of 792 . For the " widows" the maximum in 1880 was 1259 , and

the twenty-sixth of the successful won with 545 , but this time several are disappointed who polled over 700 , the minimum successful of the fifteen elected being 872 , the maximum only reaching 1697 . We understand that as many

as 3 L 5 I 3 votes were polled for the " aged Freemasons , making , with 208 left over , a total of 31 , 305 . The total votes used never to reach 28 , 000 before this election . For " widows , " with [ those left over , the number polled amounted to 29 , 919 , which was largely in excess of any previous election .

WE were pleased to have to record in our pages last week the pleasant and seasonable testimonial of the Britannic Lodge to our esteemed Bro . J . SAMPSON PEIRCE , G . D . of England . No more worthy and hard-working Mason exists in our Order , and no one has more fully gained the attachment of many friends .

* * WE call attention to a report elsewhere of the distribution of prizes to the Masonic Orphan School , Dublin , by the COUNTESS OF COWPER , wife of the LORD LIEUTENANT , on the 13 th inst ., before a brilliant assemblage , in

the Exhibition Palace . The whole affair appears to have been a great success , and we offer our " Hearty good wishes " for the progress and prosperity of that excellent Institution . We only wish that the pressure on our pages admitted of a fuller report .

* * * BY the Agenda Paperfor next meeting of Grand Lodge , besides the normal and general business , is the Report of the Board of General Purposes , anent Bro . TUDOR TREVOR ' S appeal . The report is unfavourable to Bro . TUDOR TREVOR ' application for aid , and is an unanimous one . The Board of

General Purposes proposes to buy an adjacent piece of property for £ 600 , no doubt a wise of act of foresi ght , and in the best interest of Freemasons ' Hall . Bro . Col . CREATON proposes the usual grant for the coals for the Asylum , and Bro . Major BOND proposes to remit the two shillings a year paid by provincial brethren to the Fund of Benevolence , and return it to

the provincial bodies . We hardly think that he realizes the full effect of this proposal , which must deprive the provincial brethren of all ^ further claims on the Fund of Benevolence , and is the " narrow end of the wedge" for the dislocation and breaking up of our now united and homogeneous jurisdiction . Such a resolution has no chance of being carried , and is , in fact , a " Masonic

revolution . " The important question of increase of Grand Officers and Prov . Grand Officers will also come before Grand Lodge—we venture to think wisely and seasonable . To such a proposal there can be no possible objection . As we have been reminded by a very able correspondent , it is interesting to remember how this " accretion " of Grand Officers has proceeded gradually

and carefully . Indeed , the motto of Grand Lodge seems to have been " Festina lente . " A Past Grand Directorof Ceremonies was appointed on the 29 th of April , 1829 ; Grand Pursuivant , 24 th of April , 1833 ; and a Past Grand Pursuivant , June , 1 st , 1859 . Two additional Grand Deacons were appointed June 5 , 1861 ; Presidentof Board of General Purposes , September

“The Freemason: 1881-05-28, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_28051881/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 2
NEW LODGES. Article 3
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 3
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 4
CONSECRATION OF THE PRINCE EDWARD OF SAXE-WEIMAR LODGE, No. 1903, AT PORTSMOUTH. Article 5
SERVICES OF GRAND OFFICERS. Article 6
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF NORTH WALES AND SHROPSHIRE. Article 7
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF CHESHIRE. Article 7
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Original Correspondence. Article 8
Reviews. Article 8
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 9
CONSECRATION OF THE CITADEL LODGE, No. 1897. Article 9
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS, Article 10
Royal Arch. Article 11
Mark Masonry. Article 11
Cryptic Masonry. Article 11
Scotland. Article 11
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 11
Ireland. Article 12
Masonic Tidings. Article 12
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 13
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 13
Untitled Ad 13
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Contents.

CONTENTS .

LEADERS 239 i United Grand Lodge 240 Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution ...... 241 Royal Masonic Institution for Girls 242 Consecration of the Prince Edward of Saxe-. Weimar Lodge , No . igoj , at Portsmouth 243 Services of Grand Ollicers . " 244 Provincial Grand Lodi * c of North Wales and

Shropshire 245 j Provincial Grand Mark Lodge of C heshire 245 CORRESPONDENCEThe Girls'School 246 Book of Constitutions , 1723 246 ¦ An Error of the Scrutineers 246 The Banners of Freemasonry 246 A . Vagrant Mason 246

Reviews 246 Masonic Notes and Queries 247 Consecration of the Citadel Lodge , No . 1897 247 REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGSCraft Masonry 248 Instruction 249 Royal Arch 249 Instruction 249

Mark Masonry 249 Cryptic Masonrv 249 Scotland . ' 349 Royal Masonic Institution for Girls 249 Ireland 250 . Masonic Tidings 250 Lodge Meetings for Next Week I . Advertisements II ., III ., IV .

Ar00101

ALL the members of the Craft will hear with deep satisfaction that H ER MAJESTY has called H . R . H . PRINCE LEOPOLD tothe House of Peers , by the title of the DUKE OF ALBANY . The public , as well as the Masonic Order , have been able to realize his many and great gifts of eloquence and power , while his friendly sympathy and his " don de pluire , " very much

resembling the PRINCE OF WALES , have endeared him to all who have heard his kindly utterances , or have been permitted in any way to form part of his society . We feel sure that as the DUKE OF ALBANY he will be greeted by all classes alike in this country , if it be possible , with renewed interest and increased admiration .

* * * THE Stewards' returns for the Girls' School are very interesting , for various reasons , for while they point to much good , hard work , they also suggest several very important considerations as regards the continual and lively interest exhibited by our good brethren in our great Masonic Charities .

Despite bad times , and hard times , notwithstanding depression of trade , and pressure , and uneasiness in various departments , agricultural , commercial , exporting , and monetary , the zeal of Freemasons has not slackened , their love of charity has not grown cold . At the recent festival , the metropolis has sent up £ 5570 7 s . 6 d ., with a few lists to come in , the provinces / 5 SS 4 17 s . . id ., in all £ 11 , 455 4 s . iod ., and which probably before the end

of 1881 will reach ^ 12 , 000 . Of the metropolitan lodges , No . 1642 , the Earl of Carnarvon , whose zeal for the Charities is most commendable , with three Stewards , Bros . GEO . PENN , E . M . LUNDER , and S . H . PARKHOUSE , has brought up the eoodly amount of £ 300 . Next to it appears No . 6 K

Prosperity . Bro . G . T . BROWN , with ^ 246 15 s ., while succeeding it in order of amount is the Grand Stewards' Lodge , Bro . FRANK RICHARDSON , with £ 156 gs . No . 1383 , Friends in Council , Bro . Capt . W . R . G . FARMER , is next with ^ 140 14 s ., and No . 657 , Canonbury , Bro . Wm . MAPLE , succeeds with ^ 136 ios . Five lodges now appear , No . 1563 , City of Westminster ,

Bro . EDWIN J . SCOTT , £ 119 14 s ., No . 1608 , Kilburn , Bro . J . W . CUFF , £ 108 19 s ., No . 1719 , Evening Star , Bro . ALFRED WILLIAMS , £ 105 , and No . 862 , Whittington , Bro . J . IRVINE , £ 103 19 s ., and No . 167 , St . John's , Bro . GEO . DAVIS , £ 100 16 s . This summary exhausts the returns with " three figures , " and though many of the other returns are doubtless very

praiseworthy , especially if we knew the exact position of affairs , we can only allude to them here " in the gross , " as making up the metropolitan total of ^ 557 ° 7 s * 6 d . We notice that from 1700 to 1800 only eight lodges in London make returns , and from 1800 only two . This fact we confess to think not at all a healthy one , either as regards the lodges themselves or the

great work of Masonic charity . In the provinces the list is gallantly and significantly headed by Gloucestershire with twenty-four Stewards and with ; £ iooo , as our esteemed Bro . C . J . MARTYN , P . G . C , remarked in his excellent speech at the festival , a very praiseworthy and striking return for that province—comparatively a small one . Gloucestershire is followed by

West Yorkshire , always liberal and " in earnest , " with £ 500 , and we mayobserve that its Prov . Grand Master , and Deputy Prov . Grand Master , and twenty-three Stewards attended the festival , and we believe several other West Yorkshire brethren . Kent comet , next with ten Stewards and ^ 340 , and is succeeded , at some little distance , by Middlesex , with nine Stewards and

£ 307 3 s ., as well as by South Wales , W . Division , with one Steward and ^ 300 . This is a very noteworthy return . Three provinces , Lancashire , Western Division , with eleven Stewards and £ 277 3 s ., Essex with four Stewards and £ 221 3 s ., and Devonshire with three Stewards and £ 201 7 s ., next appear on . the scene . In the " hundreds" we have fourteen provinces ,

Lancashire , Eastern Division , £ 197 18 s ., Somersetshire , with one Steward , £ 181 13 s ., Staffordshire ( a very striking list ) with one Steward , £ 157 ios . , Yorkshire , North and East Riding , three Stewards and ^ 134 8 s ., Cheshire , with six Stewards and £ 129 3 s . nd ., Berks and Bucks , six Stewards and , £ 122 17 s ., Dorsetshire , two Stewards and £ 122 17 s ., Durham , one Steward

and £ 121 15 s . 6 d ., South Wales , Eastern Division , one Steward and £ 120 , Norfolk , with two Stewards and ^ 111 6 s ., and Sussex , with one Steward and £ 105 . Eight other provinces , with sums under £ 100 , make up the provincial returns to £ 5884 17 s . 4 d . In the provinces we note that from No . 1700 to No . 1800 only two lodges have sent Stewards or returns , and from No . 1800 to No . 1900 only two more . Surely this is a fact which deserves atten-

Ar00102

tion , a state of affairs which calls for amendment . Still , as we said before , the Stewards' returns are very noteworthy in themselves .

* * WE see that the Stewards for the Boys' School Festival have decided to hold their gathering at Brighton , in the Royal Pavilion . We trust sincerely that this change will be for the benefit materially of the Boys' School , and a striking success . Our worthy brethren in Sussex are very zealous Masons ,

and there are amongst them many who we doubt not will wish to assist what Bro . BINCKES terms " the most deserving of all our Masonic-Institutions . " We trust that a " visit to London on the Sea , " as Brighton has been named , may give pleasure , and health , and a holiday , and good

digestion to many of our readers and many warm friends of the Boys' School , and that the festival for 1881 may indeed , by its happy and goodly returns , enable the governing body to add essentially to the funded capital of that important and much needed Institution . It is understood that the distribution of prizes will take place on Tuesday , June 28 th .

* * * WE said that we should recur to the subject of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , and , aided by a kind friend , we do so to-day . The polling on Friday , the 20 th inst ., was in many respects remarkable and very high indeed ; in fact , never so high before for the number elected . In May , 1880 ,

twenty-two " aged Freemasons were elected , the minimum successful being 320 ; hence it might fairlyhave been expected that 500 this year would have been a safe number for the twenty-fifth on the list , but , as a matter of fact , it was not so . The lowest successful polled 719 , and one with 705 was "left out in the cold . " Every year increases the number of

votes , and the management improves likewise , for there are fewer thrown away now than there used to be . In 1880 the highest number was 2163 , and in 1 S 79 the maximum reached 2079 . In 1881 the first on the list only polled 1 5 11 , and from the first to the twenty-fifth of the successful there was only a difference of 792 . For the " widows" the maximum in 1880 was 1259 , and

the twenty-sixth of the successful won with 545 , but this time several are disappointed who polled over 700 , the minimum successful of the fifteen elected being 872 , the maximum only reaching 1697 . We understand that as many

as 3 L 5 I 3 votes were polled for the " aged Freemasons , making , with 208 left over , a total of 31 , 305 . The total votes used never to reach 28 , 000 before this election . For " widows , " with [ those left over , the number polled amounted to 29 , 919 , which was largely in excess of any previous election .

WE were pleased to have to record in our pages last week the pleasant and seasonable testimonial of the Britannic Lodge to our esteemed Bro . J . SAMPSON PEIRCE , G . D . of England . No more worthy and hard-working Mason exists in our Order , and no one has more fully gained the attachment of many friends .

* * WE call attention to a report elsewhere of the distribution of prizes to the Masonic Orphan School , Dublin , by the COUNTESS OF COWPER , wife of the LORD LIEUTENANT , on the 13 th inst ., before a brilliant assemblage , in

the Exhibition Palace . The whole affair appears to have been a great success , and we offer our " Hearty good wishes " for the progress and prosperity of that excellent Institution . We only wish that the pressure on our pages admitted of a fuller report .

* * * BY the Agenda Paperfor next meeting of Grand Lodge , besides the normal and general business , is the Report of the Board of General Purposes , anent Bro . TUDOR TREVOR ' S appeal . The report is unfavourable to Bro . TUDOR TREVOR ' application for aid , and is an unanimous one . The Board of

General Purposes proposes to buy an adjacent piece of property for £ 600 , no doubt a wise of act of foresi ght , and in the best interest of Freemasons ' Hall . Bro . Col . CREATON proposes the usual grant for the coals for the Asylum , and Bro . Major BOND proposes to remit the two shillings a year paid by provincial brethren to the Fund of Benevolence , and return it to

the provincial bodies . We hardly think that he realizes the full effect of this proposal , which must deprive the provincial brethren of all ^ further claims on the Fund of Benevolence , and is the " narrow end of the wedge" for the dislocation and breaking up of our now united and homogeneous jurisdiction . Such a resolution has no chance of being carried , and is , in fact , a " Masonic

revolution . " The important question of increase of Grand Officers and Prov . Grand Officers will also come before Grand Lodge—we venture to think wisely and seasonable . To such a proposal there can be no possible objection . As we have been reminded by a very able correspondent , it is interesting to remember how this " accretion " of Grand Officers has proceeded gradually

and carefully . Indeed , the motto of Grand Lodge seems to have been " Festina lente . " A Past Grand Directorof Ceremonies was appointed on the 29 th of April , 1829 ; Grand Pursuivant , 24 th of April , 1833 ; and a Past Grand Pursuivant , June , 1 st , 1859 . Two additional Grand Deacons were appointed June 5 , 1861 ; Presidentof Board of General Purposes , September

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