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  • Aug. 1, 1857
  • Page 73
  • INDIA.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 1, 1857: Page 73

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    Article AMERICA, ← Page 5 of 5
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Page 73

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

America,

ina ^ Qnt h ^ country : fie was not only a brave man and a pure patrip ^ mSspn ^ and a Grand Master . Eighty-two years have passed aw ^ and instead of hii name fading from put * memories , It has grpvy ^ n brighter and brighter , until it sliines side by side w-itii Washington , the brightest names on our history ' s pages . /

On Wednesday , June ]! 7 , " 1857 , a vast pl ^ ude assembled on the spot where he fell to inaugurate ^ marble statue to his memory . It was an imposing sight . There were uhipny and more distinguished personages than were everbefore present on such ari occasionm our ( 5 % ^^ . The militai ^ cpntprismg twehty-m from Ne w Yprk ^ accompanied by fourteen bands of hiusic . The Masonic part of

the procession was composed of the Grand Lodges of Massiichusetts and New Hampshire ; Grand E Encampment of Knights Templar ; and twenty-four Lodges of Master Masons , ntin ^ erih ^ in ; all at lea were performed by the Girarid Lodge of Massaphusetts ( J \^ T . Beards 1 VL W . G . M ;) y

in ^ cbrdance m from a beautiful block of white marble , is seven feet high , exclusive of pedestal , aiici represehts General Warren in a citizen ' s dress > holding a sword in his right handy with his ; left in a position as if addressing some one , and his eyes' partially raised towards heaven ^ No hame disfigures the block , but upon the pedestal is to fee the siinpte ^ JournM . ,

India.

INDIA .

CAIiCUTTA . A farewell bariq [ uet was given by the Prov . G . M . ( Col . Ramsay ) , at the Freemasons' Hall , on the 19 th March . There was a sumptuous table , and a goodly gathering of Brethren . The following amongst other toasts were proposed : — " The Queen , the daughter and the niece of two Grand Masters of England , under whom , jointly , the union of the Modern and Ancient Masons was so happily effected in 1813 . " "The M . W . the Earl of Zetland , and the Grand Lodge of England . " ' " ¦ The M . W . the Duke of Athol , the M . W . the Duke of Leinster , and the Grand Lodges of Scotland and Ireland . "

The R . W . Bro , Longueville Clarke gave " The Grand Orient of France , and our Brother and ally the Emperor of the French . " The R . W . Brother , having introduced the toast , drew from it an illustration of the attracting and cementing nature of Masonry . One of the greatest landmarks of the Institution , he said , was Brotherly Love . The more that principle was admitted into the bosoms of Masons , and cherished by them , the more would Masonry fulfil its purpose as one of the means for drawing together not only the various classes of society , but also the different nations of the world . In the instance before him , political

reasons had united the armies of France and of England ; but political reasons and political expediency would not cause the two nations to forget the animosities which had subsisted between them for centuries , or to act together without secret hatred . This would be a jarring element in the council and the camp . But now there was ; an under-current at work which would , in a great measure , counteract all such repelling influences . English Masons penetrated all grades of society , and no doubt leavened large circles with their opinions . They saw at the h « ad of the French nation one to whom they could hold out the right hand of VOL . III . 4 T

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1857-08-01, Page 73” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01081857/page/73/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE CANADAS. Article 1
CLERICAL INTOLERANCE. Article 2
LADY MASONRY, OR MASONRY OF ADOPTION.* Article 7
MASONIC TOUR IN WALES. Article 13
ARCHITECTURAL MUSEUM CONVERSAZIONE. Article 15
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 16
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 19
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 23
METROPOLITAN. Article 26
PROVINCIAL. Article 34
ROYAL ARCH. Article 58
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE Article 59
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 61
MARK MASONRY Article 62
SCOTLAND Article 63
IRELAND. Article 68
COLONIAL. Article 68
AMERICA. Article 69
INDIA. Article 73
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR JULY. Article 79
Obituary. Article 86
NOTICE. Article 88
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Page 73

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

America,

ina ^ Qnt h ^ country : fie was not only a brave man and a pure patrip ^ mSspn ^ and a Grand Master . Eighty-two years have passed aw ^ and instead of hii name fading from put * memories , It has grpvy ^ n brighter and brighter , until it sliines side by side w-itii Washington , the brightest names on our history ' s pages . /

On Wednesday , June ]! 7 , " 1857 , a vast pl ^ ude assembled on the spot where he fell to inaugurate ^ marble statue to his memory . It was an imposing sight . There were uhipny and more distinguished personages than were everbefore present on such ari occasionm our ( 5 % ^^ . The militai ^ cpntprismg twehty-m from Ne w Yprk ^ accompanied by fourteen bands of hiusic . The Masonic part of

the procession was composed of the Grand Lodges of Massiichusetts and New Hampshire ; Grand E Encampment of Knights Templar ; and twenty-four Lodges of Master Masons , ntin ^ erih ^ in ; all at lea were performed by the Girarid Lodge of Massaphusetts ( J \^ T . Beards 1 VL W . G . M ;) y

in ^ cbrdance m from a beautiful block of white marble , is seven feet high , exclusive of pedestal , aiici represehts General Warren in a citizen ' s dress > holding a sword in his right handy with his ; left in a position as if addressing some one , and his eyes' partially raised towards heaven ^ No hame disfigures the block , but upon the pedestal is to fee the siinpte ^ JournM . ,

India.

INDIA .

CAIiCUTTA . A farewell bariq [ uet was given by the Prov . G . M . ( Col . Ramsay ) , at the Freemasons' Hall , on the 19 th March . There was a sumptuous table , and a goodly gathering of Brethren . The following amongst other toasts were proposed : — " The Queen , the daughter and the niece of two Grand Masters of England , under whom , jointly , the union of the Modern and Ancient Masons was so happily effected in 1813 . " "The M . W . the Earl of Zetland , and the Grand Lodge of England . " ' " ¦ The M . W . the Duke of Athol , the M . W . the Duke of Leinster , and the Grand Lodges of Scotland and Ireland . "

The R . W . Bro , Longueville Clarke gave " The Grand Orient of France , and our Brother and ally the Emperor of the French . " The R . W . Brother , having introduced the toast , drew from it an illustration of the attracting and cementing nature of Masonry . One of the greatest landmarks of the Institution , he said , was Brotherly Love . The more that principle was admitted into the bosoms of Masons , and cherished by them , the more would Masonry fulfil its purpose as one of the means for drawing together not only the various classes of society , but also the different nations of the world . In the instance before him , political

reasons had united the armies of France and of England ; but political reasons and political expediency would not cause the two nations to forget the animosities which had subsisted between them for centuries , or to act together without secret hatred . This would be a jarring element in the council and the camp . But now there was ; an under-current at work which would , in a great measure , counteract all such repelling influences . English Masons penetrated all grades of society , and no doubt leavened large circles with their opinions . They saw at the h « ad of the French nation one to whom they could hold out the right hand of VOL . III . 4 T

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