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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Oct. 1, 1903
  • Page 16
  • The Clerkenw ell Priory of the Hnights Ho spitallers of St. John of Jerusalem.
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The Masonic Illustrated, Oct. 1, 1903: Page 16

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    Article Grand Lodge of Scotland. Page 1 of 1
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Grand Lodge Of Scotland.

Grand Lodge of Scotland .

MMIE quarterly meeting of the Grand Lodge of Scotland I was held in the Freemasons' Hall , Edinburgh , on the full August . There was a large attendance , about 300 brethren being present . Bro . J . D . G . Dalrymple was Acting Grand Master , and Bros . A . A . Speirs and A . Dinwiddie acted as Grand Wardens . The Acting Grand Master

expressed regret at the absence of the Grand Master , Bro . the Hon . James Ho / . ier , M . P ., but was pleased to report that his health was improving , and that he hoped soon to have it altogether restored . The Deputy Grand Master , Bro . the Hon . C . Maule Ramsay , was absent , he explained , owing to

the inspection of the regiment with which he was connected . It was reported that , in reply to the loyal address presented to the King on the occasion of His Majesty ' s visit lo Edinburgh , a communication had been received from the Secretary for Scotland stilting that he had personally laid the address

before the King at Dalkeith Palace , and His Majesty had been pleased to receive the same in the most gracious manner . It was agreed , on the recommendation of the Grand Committee , to appoint Bro . James Maxtone Grahame Auditor of the Grand Lodge , in room of the late Bro . F . A . Bringloc . His Excellency Miliary Wilmot Travis , Grand

Master ol Liberia , was appointed representative of the Grand Lodge in that District ; Bro . W . F . Roberts was re-appointed to the Provincial Grand Mastership of Gibraltar , and Bro . William 1 ) . Todd was appointed to the Grand Lodge ol Colorado . The Visiting Committees reported with regard to the Metropolitan Lodges , West Aberdeenshire , Argyll

and the Isles , Wigtown , and Kirkcudbright , and Caithness , Orkney , and Zetland , the reports in every instance showing an increasing growth of the Craft . Charters were granted to Lodges Concordia , Pretoria ; Bellevue , Bellevue East , Johannesburg ; St . Andrew , Johannesburg ; and Langside ,

Glasgow . It was agreed to vote 100 guineas to the Townsville Masonic Relief Fund for brethren who had suffered from the cyclone that had passed over that township . The report of the Benevolent Committee showed that during the quarter _ £ ' i 68 6 s . had been voted ; and the

Annuity Board ' s report slated that of sixty applications to be dealt with thirty-one had been granted , the value of the annuities amounting to . £ 340 . At the beginning of the year there were on the roll 152 annuitants , receiving £ " 1570 annually . The other business was of the usual routine character .

The Clerkenw Ell Priory Of The Hnights Ho Spitallers Of St. John Of Jerusalem.

The Clerkenwell Priory of the Hnights Hospitallers of St . John of Jerusalem .

r r HE site o ( Clerkenwell , upon which now stand small I houses and shops , was , in the year 1185 , covered by a grand priory , named St . John , which was the chief home , in England , of the Knights of St . John of Jerusalem . This Order was founded in the eleventh century for the purpose of ministering to the needs of the pilgrims to the Holy

Sepulchre . The Knights came lo Clerkenwell , about the year 1100 , where they built their Priory . A small Xonnan church , nearly the whole of which is to be seen in the crypt , which supports the lloor of the present church of St . John the Baptist at Clerkenwell , was sufficient , at first , for the religious

ST . . lOIIX'S ( 'ATKU'AY AS IT A PPI- ' . Wt Id ) IX 1 ( 1 ( 11 .

needs ol the Order ; this was gradually added to , and the Priory completed in J . 18 5 , when the church was consecrated b y Heraslius , Patriarch of Jerusalem . The Order prospered and its revenues increased , and the poor , ascetic society became rich and luxurious , and when the Commons , nuclei Wat Tyler and Jack Straw , in 13 81 , rose in rebellion , the

Prior )* was one of the first buildings attacked . The mob seized and beheaded the Grand Prior , Sir Robert Hales , set the Priory on lire and let it burn for seven days . Tlie destroyed portions were subsequently rebuilt , and until the

time of Henry VIII . the Prior reigned here in great splendour , ranking amongst the peers as the first Baron of England , but at the dissolution of the monasteries , by Henry VIII ., the grand estate was broken up and the property seized by the King . In tlie following reign , Edward VI ., the buildings were further destroyed , being undermined and blown up

with gunpowder , the stone afterwards being used in building the Lord Protector ' s House in the Strand . In Queen Mary ' s reign the Priory was reconstituted , and a Prior , Sir Thomas Treshaw , appointed , but under Elizabeth it again passed to secular hands , and was used as the head quarters of the Master of the Queen ' s Revels , who licensed several of

Shakespeare ' s plays , and soon nothing was remaining but the choir of the old church with the crypt beneath and the principal gateway . For a while the remains of the church were used as a

private chapel , being known in the seventeenth century as the Aylesbury Chapel , which was , according to Fuller , " one of the best private chapels in England , discreetly embracing the mean of decency betwixt the extremes of slovenly profaueness and gaudy superstition . " Near by was the house of Dr . Gilbert Burnet , the well-known Bishop of Salisbury , who ,

writing of the Sacherverell riots , says : "There happened to be a meeting-house near me out of which they drew everything that was in it , and burned il before the door of the house . "

In 1721 Simon Michell , who had built Red Lion Square close by , restored and refitted the church and afterwards sold it to the Commissioners appointed under an Act of Queen Anne for building fifty churches in London . In this way came into existence the parish church of St . John , Clerkenwell , which was duly consecrated by the Bishop of London ,

December 27 , 1723 . The chief glory of the present church is its ancient crypt , which is very much in the same condition as at the time when Hie church and Priory were relinquished by the Knights in the reign of Henry VIII . The only other relic of the Priory now existing besides the crypt is the St . ( ' ) hn ' s Gale .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1903-10-01, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01101903/page/16/.
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Untitled Article 1
The Province of Somerset.—(Concluded.) Article 2
United Grand Lodge of England. Article 5
Visit of Queen Victoria to Warwick Castle. Article 6
Provincial Grand Lodge of Cornwall. Article 7
Provincial Grand Lodge of Durham. Article 8
Provincial Grand Lodge of Wiltshire. Article 8
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Cheapening the Order. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 11
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
Consecration of the Knightsbridge Lod ge, No. 2978 . Article 14
Untitled Article 15
Grand Lodge of Scotland. Article 16
The Clerkenw ell Priory of the Hnights Ho spitallers of St. John of Jerusalem. Article 16
History of the Emulation Lodge of Improvement, No. 256.——(Continued). Article 17
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Grand Lodge Of Scotland.

Grand Lodge of Scotland .

MMIE quarterly meeting of the Grand Lodge of Scotland I was held in the Freemasons' Hall , Edinburgh , on the full August . There was a large attendance , about 300 brethren being present . Bro . J . D . G . Dalrymple was Acting Grand Master , and Bros . A . A . Speirs and A . Dinwiddie acted as Grand Wardens . The Acting Grand Master

expressed regret at the absence of the Grand Master , Bro . the Hon . James Ho / . ier , M . P ., but was pleased to report that his health was improving , and that he hoped soon to have it altogether restored . The Deputy Grand Master , Bro . the Hon . C . Maule Ramsay , was absent , he explained , owing to

the inspection of the regiment with which he was connected . It was reported that , in reply to the loyal address presented to the King on the occasion of His Majesty ' s visit lo Edinburgh , a communication had been received from the Secretary for Scotland stilting that he had personally laid the address

before the King at Dalkeith Palace , and His Majesty had been pleased to receive the same in the most gracious manner . It was agreed , on the recommendation of the Grand Committee , to appoint Bro . James Maxtone Grahame Auditor of the Grand Lodge , in room of the late Bro . F . A . Bringloc . His Excellency Miliary Wilmot Travis , Grand

Master ol Liberia , was appointed representative of the Grand Lodge in that District ; Bro . W . F . Roberts was re-appointed to the Provincial Grand Mastership of Gibraltar , and Bro . William 1 ) . Todd was appointed to the Grand Lodge ol Colorado . The Visiting Committees reported with regard to the Metropolitan Lodges , West Aberdeenshire , Argyll

and the Isles , Wigtown , and Kirkcudbright , and Caithness , Orkney , and Zetland , the reports in every instance showing an increasing growth of the Craft . Charters were granted to Lodges Concordia , Pretoria ; Bellevue , Bellevue East , Johannesburg ; St . Andrew , Johannesburg ; and Langside ,

Glasgow . It was agreed to vote 100 guineas to the Townsville Masonic Relief Fund for brethren who had suffered from the cyclone that had passed over that township . The report of the Benevolent Committee showed that during the quarter _ £ ' i 68 6 s . had been voted ; and the

Annuity Board ' s report slated that of sixty applications to be dealt with thirty-one had been granted , the value of the annuities amounting to . £ 340 . At the beginning of the year there were on the roll 152 annuitants , receiving £ " 1570 annually . The other business was of the usual routine character .

The Clerkenw Ell Priory Of The Hnights Ho Spitallers Of St. John Of Jerusalem.

The Clerkenwell Priory of the Hnights Hospitallers of St . John of Jerusalem .

r r HE site o ( Clerkenwell , upon which now stand small I houses and shops , was , in the year 1185 , covered by a grand priory , named St . John , which was the chief home , in England , of the Knights of St . John of Jerusalem . This Order was founded in the eleventh century for the purpose of ministering to the needs of the pilgrims to the Holy

Sepulchre . The Knights came lo Clerkenwell , about the year 1100 , where they built their Priory . A small Xonnan church , nearly the whole of which is to be seen in the crypt , which supports the lloor of the present church of St . John the Baptist at Clerkenwell , was sufficient , at first , for the religious

ST . . lOIIX'S ( 'ATKU'AY AS IT A PPI- ' . Wt Id ) IX 1 ( 1 ( 11 .

needs ol the Order ; this was gradually added to , and the Priory completed in J . 18 5 , when the church was consecrated b y Heraslius , Patriarch of Jerusalem . The Order prospered and its revenues increased , and the poor , ascetic society became rich and luxurious , and when the Commons , nuclei Wat Tyler and Jack Straw , in 13 81 , rose in rebellion , the

Prior )* was one of the first buildings attacked . The mob seized and beheaded the Grand Prior , Sir Robert Hales , set the Priory on lire and let it burn for seven days . Tlie destroyed portions were subsequently rebuilt , and until the

time of Henry VIII . the Prior reigned here in great splendour , ranking amongst the peers as the first Baron of England , but at the dissolution of the monasteries , by Henry VIII ., the grand estate was broken up and the property seized by the King . In tlie following reign , Edward VI ., the buildings were further destroyed , being undermined and blown up

with gunpowder , the stone afterwards being used in building the Lord Protector ' s House in the Strand . In Queen Mary ' s reign the Priory was reconstituted , and a Prior , Sir Thomas Treshaw , appointed , but under Elizabeth it again passed to secular hands , and was used as the head quarters of the Master of the Queen ' s Revels , who licensed several of

Shakespeare ' s plays , and soon nothing was remaining but the choir of the old church with the crypt beneath and the principal gateway . For a while the remains of the church were used as a

private chapel , being known in the seventeenth century as the Aylesbury Chapel , which was , according to Fuller , " one of the best private chapels in England , discreetly embracing the mean of decency betwixt the extremes of slovenly profaueness and gaudy superstition . " Near by was the house of Dr . Gilbert Burnet , the well-known Bishop of Salisbury , who ,

writing of the Sacherverell riots , says : "There happened to be a meeting-house near me out of which they drew everything that was in it , and burned il before the door of the house . "

In 1721 Simon Michell , who had built Red Lion Square close by , restored and refitted the church and afterwards sold it to the Commissioners appointed under an Act of Queen Anne for building fifty churches in London . In this way came into existence the parish church of St . John , Clerkenwell , which was duly consecrated by the Bishop of London ,

December 27 , 1723 . The chief glory of the present church is its ancient crypt , which is very much in the same condition as at the time when Hie church and Priory were relinquished by the Knights in the reign of Henry VIII . The only other relic of the Priory now existing besides the crypt is the St . ( ' ) hn ' s Gale .

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