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  • The Masonic Mirror
  • May 1, 1855
  • Page 7
  • FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND.
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The Masonic Mirror, May 1, 1855: Page 7

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    Article FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. ← Page 3 of 6 →
Page 7

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

Freemasonry In England.

and to be the centre of the town , from whence sixty streets were to lead to the principal parts of the city . The quays on the banks of the Thames to be open , continuous , and convenient , with docks for the reception of barges heavily laden . The churches to be constructed in the best manner for the convenience and hearing of their congregations , to be adorned with porticos , towers , and steeples ; all churchyards , gardens , ancl unnecessary

vacuities , and all trades using great fires , or yielding unwholesome smells , to be excluded from the town . A plan Avas constructed ancl laid before the King and House of Commons , exemplifying those arrangements , and explanations given as to the practicability of carrying them out ; but it unfortunately met with great opposition from those who had for a number of years been accustomed to '

carry on their business on a certain site , and could not , or would not understand the necessity of the change , and distrusted the giving up their properties into the hands of public trustees , until they ivere certain of an equivalent . Hence the representation of these improvements was lost on the citizens , who were disposed rather to have their old city again , under all its disadvantages , than one which they were ' not only unable but unwilling

to understand . In consequence of this feeling , the opportunity was lost , of making it not only the most commodious , but the most healthy city in the world ; and it ivas only ivith extreme labour and difficulty , that the ultimate arrangements for its construction were made . Among the public buildings of the city when rebuilt , most worthy of notice , was the Custom House for the Port of London , situated on the

south side of Thames Street , ancl erected 1668 . It was adorned with an upper and a lower order of architecture ; in the latter were stone columns , and entablement of the Tuscan Order ; in the former , pilasters , entabliture , and five pediments of the Ionic Order . The wings were elevated on columns , forming piazzas . The length of the building was 189 feet , breadth in the middle part 27 feet , and at the west end , fee ., 60 feet .

On the 13 th of October , 1667 , the King levelled the foot stone of the new Eoyal Exchange , in solemn form , and it was opened by the Mayor and Aldermen , on the 28 th September , 1669 . Bound the inside of the square , above the arcades , ancl between the windows , were the statues of the Sovereigns of England . Afterwards , the merchant adventurers employed the Grand Warder , Gibbons , to erect in the middle of the square the statue of the King , in a Csesarean habit , sculptured in white marble ; with the following inscription : —

Carole Secundo Csesari Britannico Patriae Patri Kegum Optimo Cletnentissimo Augustissimo Generis Humani Delieiis Uti-iusciuo Fortunse Victori Pacis Europas Arbitro Maris Domino Ac Vindici Soeietas Mercatoi-um Adventer Angliie Quas Par CCCC lam Prope Annos Regia Benignitate Floret

“The Masonic Mirror: 1855-05-01, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mir/issues/mmg_01051855/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE LITERATURE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 1
THE AGED MASONS' ASYLUM Article 4
FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. Article 5
MASONIC REMINISCENCES. Article 11
BROTHERLY LOVE. Article 18
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 22
PROVINCIAL LODGES. Article 37
KNIGHT TEMPLARS. Article 41
SCOTLAND. Article 41
THE COLONIES. Article 44
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 45
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR APRIL. Article 46
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 52
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasonry In England.

and to be the centre of the town , from whence sixty streets were to lead to the principal parts of the city . The quays on the banks of the Thames to be open , continuous , and convenient , with docks for the reception of barges heavily laden . The churches to be constructed in the best manner for the convenience and hearing of their congregations , to be adorned with porticos , towers , and steeples ; all churchyards , gardens , ancl unnecessary

vacuities , and all trades using great fires , or yielding unwholesome smells , to be excluded from the town . A plan Avas constructed ancl laid before the King and House of Commons , exemplifying those arrangements , and explanations given as to the practicability of carrying them out ; but it unfortunately met with great opposition from those who had for a number of years been accustomed to '

carry on their business on a certain site , and could not , or would not understand the necessity of the change , and distrusted the giving up their properties into the hands of public trustees , until they ivere certain of an equivalent . Hence the representation of these improvements was lost on the citizens , who were disposed rather to have their old city again , under all its disadvantages , than one which they were ' not only unable but unwilling

to understand . In consequence of this feeling , the opportunity was lost , of making it not only the most commodious , but the most healthy city in the world ; and it ivas only ivith extreme labour and difficulty , that the ultimate arrangements for its construction were made . Among the public buildings of the city when rebuilt , most worthy of notice , was the Custom House for the Port of London , situated on the

south side of Thames Street , ancl erected 1668 . It was adorned with an upper and a lower order of architecture ; in the latter were stone columns , and entablement of the Tuscan Order ; in the former , pilasters , entabliture , and five pediments of the Ionic Order . The wings were elevated on columns , forming piazzas . The length of the building was 189 feet , breadth in the middle part 27 feet , and at the west end , fee ., 60 feet .

On the 13 th of October , 1667 , the King levelled the foot stone of the new Eoyal Exchange , in solemn form , and it was opened by the Mayor and Aldermen , on the 28 th September , 1669 . Bound the inside of the square , above the arcades , ancl between the windows , were the statues of the Sovereigns of England . Afterwards , the merchant adventurers employed the Grand Warder , Gibbons , to erect in the middle of the square the statue of the King , in a Csesarean habit , sculptured in white marble ; with the following inscription : —

Carole Secundo Csesari Britannico Patriae Patri Kegum Optimo Cletnentissimo Augustissimo Generis Humani Delieiis Uti-iusciuo Fortunse Victori Pacis Europas Arbitro Maris Domino Ac Vindici Soeietas Mercatoi-um Adventer Angliie Quas Par CCCC lam Prope Annos Regia Benignitate Floret

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