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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Dec. 1, 1904
  • Page 10
  • The Library and Museum of the Grand Lodge of England.
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The Masonic Illustrated, Dec. 1, 1904: Page 10

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    Article The Library and Museum of the Grand Lodge of England. ← Page 4 of 5 →
Page 10

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Library And Museum Of The Grand Lodge Of England.

occupy their leisure time in reading for improvement . The men who worked the hardest for their bread would go most to the spring of knowledge . —to many the Library would be a great boon . He wanted to make this an intellectual institution . He moved the adoption of the report of the Board as regarded the Library .

" Brother J . L . Stevens seconded the motion . " The several suggestions were then put seriatim and approved . "

DR . ROBERT T . CUUCEl'IX , P . O . I ) . ' J'llr l- 'irnt CuntI'ihtilui' tn lite llfiimt Ltnltje I . ihfiirl / . This was , to say the least of it , a promising outlook , but , as Burns savs , " The best laid schemes o' mice an' men ,

Gang aft a-gley . " The following paragraph in the report of the Board of General Purposes to Grand Lodge , on the 5 th of June , 1850 , speaks for itself . " The Board beg to suggest and recommend to the

Grand Lodge to discontinue the payment of X 15 per annum for keeping the Library open in the evening according to the present regulation , the number of Brethren who have attended during the past year being so few as to render the expense quite unnecssary . " The action of the Earl of Zetland in opposing so small a grant as . £ 20 , in furtherance of an object which he admitted

to be a valuable one , is , in our opinion , inexplicable , especially in view of the fact that some of his advisers were strongly in favour of the movement advocated , as was also the Board of General Purposes , but whether to the extent of an annual subsidy we have no means of knowing . We now know , however , that the comparatively small sum named would

have been then of as much value to the Library as treble the amount at a later period . Meanwhile , Masonic relichunting has become almost a mania , not only with our brethren across the Atlantic , but also with many private collectors at home ; as a natural result the price of rare

Masonic books , relics , and curio ' s appertaining to the Craft , has gone up enormously , and an article which could formerly have been purchased for a few shillings , now fetches as many pounds . Moreover , as will be seen hereafter , no real progress was made in the establishing either a Library or a Masonic Museum until the Grand Lodge decided to appropriate a portion of its funds annually towards this object .

At the Grand Festival in 1857 , alter an interval of twenty years , John Henderson was again appointed Grand Registrar , and although he might well have been disheartened , he evidently was not dismayed , for , at the first meeting of the

new Board of General Purposes in June , 1857 , a Library and Museum Committee was appointed , consisting of the President and Vice-President , John Henderson ( Chairman ) , Richard W . Jennings , John Havers , Lord Carnarvon , and the Rev . George R . Portal . This committee made a report to the Board on the 17 th

of November to the following purport"As to the matters referred to your sub-committee , no change has taken place since the last report made to your Board , nor , indeed , since a much earlier period . The comparatively small number of books as yet collected have

remained for years locked up in book-cases in the ante-room of the Temple , and the subject of a Alasonic Library and Museum appears to have long faded from the recollection of the Brethren . Yet it appears to your sub-committee that this subject deserves far more consideration than it has

hitherto met with , and that the object in view tends most importantly towards the benefit and honor of the Order . " The proposal made on the 6 th of September , 18 37 , for establishment of a Masonic Library and Museum , was adopted , not only unanimously , but enthusiastically by Grand

Lodge , and it is believed that on reflection , the Brethren will still approve themselves sensible of what is due to the Literature of Freemasonry .

" 1 he followers of every other Art and Science have diligently collected and preserved in libraries devoted to their purposes , whatever could illustrate the subjects of their pursuits . It is not seemly that our Society should stand alone in neglecting to provide for its members , and for future times , the means of learning all that has been written to teach , and of seeing all that can be found to illustrate its history and doctrines .

I he number of books in various languages written on subjects exclusively Masonic is far greater than is commonly supposed . Books in which Masonry is partially treated of or referred to are very numerous . Masonic manuscripts , many of them very valuable , and architectural emblems , and

tl'lintii Elil !¦ Part mil Cn . ) SII . VK 11 MASONIC CD' ( AMHltlCAN MAKK ) . 1 ' ei-ti-nli-il // . // Henri / ,- J . l'iiii-kiinl , lii-it . ' . ' . / .. ' ;/ ' Knijluiiil at li . L . ,, f Imtifimin . other remains of antiquity which would be profitable to the student of Freemasonry , are yearly lost to the Order for want of a suitable repository . To collect together all that

peculiarly belongs to Masonry , is the first , but not the only object . As Masonry embraces the whole circle of the Arts and Sciences , so every good book on any subject would be welcome in a Masonic Library .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1904-12-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01121904/page/10/.
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Untitled Article 1
The Province of Cheshire. Article 2
Some Continental Lodge Jewels . Article 4
The Library and Museum of the Grand Lodge of England. Article 7
Some Notes on Freemasonry in Australasia.-(Continued). Article 12
RULERS IN THE CRAFT Article 14
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Music in the Lodge Room. Article 16
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 17
Untitled Article 19
Untitled Ad 19
Music for Christmas. Article 20
Untitled Ad 21
Untitled Ad 21
Untitled Ad 21
Consecration of the Gordon Langton Lodge, No. 3069. Article 22
Untitled Ad 22
Whittington Lodge, No. 862. Article 23
Untitled Ad 23
Kirby Lodge of Instruction, No. 263. Article 24
The Power of the Grip. Article 24
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 25
Untitled Ad 26
Order of the Temple. Article 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
"CHARITY NEVER FAILETH." Article 27
Untitled Article 27
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Library And Museum Of The Grand Lodge Of England.

occupy their leisure time in reading for improvement . The men who worked the hardest for their bread would go most to the spring of knowledge . —to many the Library would be a great boon . He wanted to make this an intellectual institution . He moved the adoption of the report of the Board as regarded the Library .

" Brother J . L . Stevens seconded the motion . " The several suggestions were then put seriatim and approved . "

DR . ROBERT T . CUUCEl'IX , P . O . I ) . ' J'llr l- 'irnt CuntI'ihtilui' tn lite llfiimt Ltnltje I . ihfiirl / . This was , to say the least of it , a promising outlook , but , as Burns savs , " The best laid schemes o' mice an' men ,

Gang aft a-gley . " The following paragraph in the report of the Board of General Purposes to Grand Lodge , on the 5 th of June , 1850 , speaks for itself . " The Board beg to suggest and recommend to the

Grand Lodge to discontinue the payment of X 15 per annum for keeping the Library open in the evening according to the present regulation , the number of Brethren who have attended during the past year being so few as to render the expense quite unnecssary . " The action of the Earl of Zetland in opposing so small a grant as . £ 20 , in furtherance of an object which he admitted

to be a valuable one , is , in our opinion , inexplicable , especially in view of the fact that some of his advisers were strongly in favour of the movement advocated , as was also the Board of General Purposes , but whether to the extent of an annual subsidy we have no means of knowing . We now know , however , that the comparatively small sum named would

have been then of as much value to the Library as treble the amount at a later period . Meanwhile , Masonic relichunting has become almost a mania , not only with our brethren across the Atlantic , but also with many private collectors at home ; as a natural result the price of rare

Masonic books , relics , and curio ' s appertaining to the Craft , has gone up enormously , and an article which could formerly have been purchased for a few shillings , now fetches as many pounds . Moreover , as will be seen hereafter , no real progress was made in the establishing either a Library or a Masonic Museum until the Grand Lodge decided to appropriate a portion of its funds annually towards this object .

At the Grand Festival in 1857 , alter an interval of twenty years , John Henderson was again appointed Grand Registrar , and although he might well have been disheartened , he evidently was not dismayed , for , at the first meeting of the

new Board of General Purposes in June , 1857 , a Library and Museum Committee was appointed , consisting of the President and Vice-President , John Henderson ( Chairman ) , Richard W . Jennings , John Havers , Lord Carnarvon , and the Rev . George R . Portal . This committee made a report to the Board on the 17 th

of November to the following purport"As to the matters referred to your sub-committee , no change has taken place since the last report made to your Board , nor , indeed , since a much earlier period . The comparatively small number of books as yet collected have

remained for years locked up in book-cases in the ante-room of the Temple , and the subject of a Alasonic Library and Museum appears to have long faded from the recollection of the Brethren . Yet it appears to your sub-committee that this subject deserves far more consideration than it has

hitherto met with , and that the object in view tends most importantly towards the benefit and honor of the Order . " The proposal made on the 6 th of September , 18 37 , for establishment of a Masonic Library and Museum , was adopted , not only unanimously , but enthusiastically by Grand

Lodge , and it is believed that on reflection , the Brethren will still approve themselves sensible of what is due to the Literature of Freemasonry .

" 1 he followers of every other Art and Science have diligently collected and preserved in libraries devoted to their purposes , whatever could illustrate the subjects of their pursuits . It is not seemly that our Society should stand alone in neglecting to provide for its members , and for future times , the means of learning all that has been written to teach , and of seeing all that can be found to illustrate its history and doctrines .

I he number of books in various languages written on subjects exclusively Masonic is far greater than is commonly supposed . Books in which Masonry is partially treated of or referred to are very numerous . Masonic manuscripts , many of them very valuable , and architectural emblems , and

tl'lintii Elil !¦ Part mil Cn . ) SII . VK 11 MASONIC CD' ( AMHltlCAN MAKK ) . 1 ' ei-ti-nli-il // . // Henri / ,- J . l'iiii-kiinl , lii-it . ' . ' . / .. ' ;/ ' Knijluiiil at li . L . ,, f Imtifimin . other remains of antiquity which would be profitable to the student of Freemasonry , are yearly lost to the Order for want of a suitable repository . To collect together all that

peculiarly belongs to Masonry , is the first , but not the only object . As Masonry embraces the whole circle of the Arts and Sciences , so every good book on any subject would be welcome in a Masonic Library .

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