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  • Jan. 5, 1861
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 5, 1861: Page 26

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    Article INDIA. ← Page 2 of 2
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Page 26

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India.

Bro . Hollingberry's able assistance as interpreter , His Highness the Prince could not have been initiated , Bro . Hollingberry having returned thanks , the AV . M . gave as a last toast , "All poor and distressed Masons" —drunk in solemn silence . The only other speech we shall allude to is that of Major Chamberlain , Superintendent of Thuggee , himself a hig h Mason . It was fully of anecdotes and numerous allusions , and he succeeded in keeping up one continuous flow of merriment ; the party did not break up till the small hours , hoping they mig ht soon again meet to spend as pleasant an evening . —Delhi Gazelle .

Obituary.

Obituary .

THE R . AV . BRO . THE EARL OF MKXBOROtTGH , PROV . G . M . OF AVEST YORKSHIRE . The R . AA ' . the Earl of Mexborough rlied on Tuesday , December 25 th , 1 SG 0 , at the residence of Colonel the Hon . James Lindsay , M . P ., in Fortman-sqnarc , after a short illness . The deceased was born on the 3 rd of July , 17 S 3 , and married ou the 29 th of August , 1 S 07 , Lady Anne Yorkc , eldest daughter of Philip , third Earl of Hardwicke , by whom , Avho survives his lordship , he leaves surviving

issue three sons and a daughter , namely , Viscount I'ollington ( now Earl of Mexborough ) , the Hon . and Rev . Philip Yorkc Savile , the Hon . Charles Stuart Savile , and Lady Sarah , married to Colonel the Hon . James Lindsay , ! a [ . P „ of the Grenadier Guards . The deceased nobleman is succeeded iu the family honours hy his eldest son , John Charles George , A'iscount I'ollington , born the : 1 th of June , 1 S 10 , and married on the 2 . 1 th of February , 1812 , to Lad y Rachel Walpolc , eldest daughter of the late Earl of Orford , who ' died the 21 st of

June , 1854 , and by whom he has an only son , John Horace , born in 1 S 13 . The present peer ivas educated at 'Trinit y College , Cambridge , at which University he graduated IiI . A . in 1 S 30 . In 1 S 31 he was returned to Parliament for Gatton , and represented Pontofract in the House of Commons from 1 S 35 to 18 . 17 . Our Bro . the late Earl was one of the oldest Masons—indeed so far back is the date of Ms initiation that we have been unable to trace it . His lordship , it is well knoivn , ivas what has been termed an " Athol

Mason , " and when the IAVO sections of our order merged in tho United Grand Lodg-c of Eiig-l-iiicl , in 2810 , it is believed that many of the Athol hooks were destroyed , the record of the late Prov . G . M . ' s Masonic career being amongst those missing . His lordshi p held the office of Prov . G . M . of West Yorkshire for many years , and up to the time of his decease .

BROTHER MATTHEW DAAVES . On the 13 th of December , at his residence , AVostbrook , Bolton , Lancashire , Brother Mattheiv Dawes , P . S . A ., JP . & . S , in his 57 th year . Bro . Dawes ivas initiated iu the Anchor and Hope Lodge , So . -11 , March 3 , 1 S 35 , and served the office of W . M . in 1810 ; he was exalted in the chapter attached to the same Lodge , May 31 , 1 S 37 , and passed the chairs . Bro . Dawes Avas i ' rov . Grand Com . of Knights Templar for Lancashire , and a member of the Supreme

Council of the 33 rrl degree . In the Templar degree , as also those under the Ancient and Accepted Rite , Bro . DIIAVCS look great interest . He ivas au assiduous searcher after Masons' marks , ' and had a most extensive collection of these memorials of Craftsmen . Few brethren were more esteemed and respected than our departed brother , and AVC may truly say a courteous gentleman has gone to his rest .

The Week.

THE WEEK .

THE COURT . —During the early part of the week , her Majest y and family have been dispensing the usual hospitalities of Windsor , and Mr . Lock , who brought the despatches from China , where he was one of the prisoners , has harl tho honour of joining the Royal circle at dinner . On New Year ' s-day the band of the Royal Horse Guards played a selection of favourite airs ou the East Terrace . Her Majesty ' s annual distribution of food and clothing to about GGO poor persons of the Windsor and Clewer parishes took place on in the of

Wednesday , Biding . House the Castle . The Queen and Prince Consort , accompanied by the Prince of AVales ^ Princess Alice , Prince Arthur , Prince Leopold , and the Princesses Helena , Louisa , and Beatrice , left AVindsor b y a special train for Osborne ! Prince Alfred has proceeded on a visit to Germany . GEXERAT , HOME NRWS . — -An increased rate ' of mortalit" is shown by the metropolitan returns for last week , attributable to the severity of the weather . From 1260 in thc previous week- the number of deaths '

rose to 1-107 . Of births there wove durin . " tho same period 1188—731 being boys and 751 girls . A proper idea of the unusual degree of cold may be had from the fact that the mean temperature of the air was 11 ° below the average of the same week

in 13 years . The lowest point reached by the thermometer was S ,. which happened at seven o ' clock on the morning of Christmas-day , Heavy snow and intense cold are reported from various quarters of the kingdom ; cold , indeed , to a degree such as has , perhaps , never been chronicled in our country ' s meteorological records . As muchas 45 degrees of frost , or 13 below zero , has been registered by the thermometer in some situations . In the western counties the snoivfall has been very great , and in consequence of the obstruction

caused to traffic several mails were delayed , and the Post-office announced the non-arrival of sixty in one day . On Sunday there was a fearful storm , accompanied by the breaking-up of the frost ,. AA-hich has made itself felt on the coast , antVmarked its passage by a considerable amount of damage to both life and property afloat ; The French sloop , Jean Baplisie , with a valuable cargo , was driven on shore under the South Foreland . All hands were got safely on shore with the exception of . the captain , who , unfortunately ,

was drowned . In Cawsand Bay a schooner was wrecked , the captain , mate , and three men losing their lives . At Portland Bay a Swedish ship called the Irene ivas driven against the neiv breakwater , when the pilot ivho had chargeof her was drowned . Another storm passed over the metropolis on Monday night and Tuesday morning ' , which told Avith disastrous effect in the * Channel , where its violence Avas experienced to a fearful degree . Serious losses , both of life and property , have been the result . On Neiv Year ' s

morning a large French barque ivas wrecked on the GoodAviu Sa ' nds . Of the ' crew tho fate is uncertain , it being only knoivn that they succeeded in getting into their boats . Another large vessel , belonging to Hamburgh , was also wrecked on the south part of the same sands . In this instance , also , it is to be feared the unfortunate creiv have perished . The opposite French coast appears to have been the scene of even more numerous casualties than our OAvn , the gale having raged there with extreme fury . The frost

has since returned with tho utmost severity . A serious boiler explosion happened in the building of the School of Medicine and Surgery , Manchester , on AVednesday , through the pipes having become frozen up . Much damage ivas done to the house , and some of the students narrowly escaped ivith their lives . At the Surrey Sessions a youth named George Lingham was charged with obtaining 10 s . fraudulently . He had gone into a public-house where the prosecutor , a female , was standing at the bar , and offered lier a " gulrl watch " for a pound . S ! ie , however , not satisfied AA-ith such a decided bargain , agreed to pay half the sum demanded .

Soon after , on examining her purchase , she found it to consist of a brass locket . The prisoner was found guilty , and sentenced to tAvelve months' hard labour . In the Court of Queen's Bench an action against the Eastern Counties Raihvay Company , arising out of an accident at Tottenham , by which a gentleman named Stokes lost his life , and ivhieh has been protracted through six days , the jury found that there was no evidence to prove the ivelding of the defective tire by the company—that the weld was a proper one

—that the defect could not have been discovered by inspectionthat there ivas an insufficiency of break poiver , but had there been more the nature of the accident would not have been altered . A verdict ivas accordingly entered for the defendants . A bill of exceptions was tendered to his lordship ' s summing up on behalf ot the plaintiff . A young man named Lot Ivanson Leather , who shot a girl at Bury a tew days ago , ivas brought before the magistrates on Friday , charged with attempted murder . It ivas

sliOAi-n that the girl , Jane Mooney , had refused to receive the prisoner as her suitor , which moved him to commit the crime . After firing a pistol at her and wounding her he made several successive attempts upon his oivn life—hy shooting , hanging , droAvning , and ultimately cut his throat with a knife . He ivas committed for trial . At a coroner ' s inquest , held in the Hut Barracks , Woolwich Common , on Saturday , a verdict of manslaughter was returned against a soldier , named May , for causing the death of his

comrade . Immediately after tho occurrence May absconded , and had succeeded in defeating the efforts of the pickets to discover his whereabouts . Ou AVednesday , lioivever , he turned up amongst a batch of ruffians who were charged at AVestminster police-court with perpetrating a series of dastardly outrages in Chelsea ; showing by his subsequent conduct how little the fate of his poor comrade had affected his mind . TAVO farmers of Somerton have been committed for trial at the assizes on a charge of cutting aivay a

portion of the bank of the River Barrett . Their object is stated to have been to benefit a portion of their own land by the deposit from the river water thus made to overfloAv ; but the effect to others is represented as likely to be very disastrous . An explosion of gas has taken place at the South-Western Railway Station , Glasgow , ivhieh , although fortunately not attended with loss of life , has caused a serious destruction of propertj * . The gas had accumulated in the cellars underneath , and ignited upon the door being opened . Doors aud windows Avere bloAvn out , the floor of the booking-office was lifted up and sent into the street , whilst a huge iron gate , several tons in weight , was shattered to pieces . Of

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-01-05, Page 26” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 7 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_05011861/page/26/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
ADDRESS TO OUR READERS. Article 3
INDEX. Article 5
TO OUR READERS. Article 9
THE GRAND MASTER OF CANADA. Article 9
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XXXIX. Article 11
POPULARITY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 12
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 12
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 15
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 17
Poetry. Article 19
VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA) TO ENGLAND. Article 19
THE DYING HEROES. Article 20
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 20
THE SUFFERING RIBBON WEAVERS AT COVENTRY. Article 21
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 21
PROVINCIAL. Article 21
ROYAL ARCH. Article 23
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 23
COLONIAL. Article 24
TURKEY. Article 25
INDIA. Article 25
Obituary. Article 26
THE WEEK. Article 26
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 27
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 28
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

India.

Bro . Hollingberry's able assistance as interpreter , His Highness the Prince could not have been initiated , Bro . Hollingberry having returned thanks , the AV . M . gave as a last toast , "All poor and distressed Masons" —drunk in solemn silence . The only other speech we shall allude to is that of Major Chamberlain , Superintendent of Thuggee , himself a hig h Mason . It was fully of anecdotes and numerous allusions , and he succeeded in keeping up one continuous flow of merriment ; the party did not break up till the small hours , hoping they mig ht soon again meet to spend as pleasant an evening . —Delhi Gazelle .

Obituary.

Obituary .

THE R . AV . BRO . THE EARL OF MKXBOROtTGH , PROV . G . M . OF AVEST YORKSHIRE . The R . AA ' . the Earl of Mexborough rlied on Tuesday , December 25 th , 1 SG 0 , at the residence of Colonel the Hon . James Lindsay , M . P ., in Fortman-sqnarc , after a short illness . The deceased was born on the 3 rd of July , 17 S 3 , and married ou the 29 th of August , 1 S 07 , Lady Anne Yorkc , eldest daughter of Philip , third Earl of Hardwicke , by whom , Avho survives his lordship , he leaves surviving

issue three sons and a daughter , namely , Viscount I'ollington ( now Earl of Mexborough ) , the Hon . and Rev . Philip Yorkc Savile , the Hon . Charles Stuart Savile , and Lady Sarah , married to Colonel the Hon . James Lindsay , ! a [ . P „ of the Grenadier Guards . The deceased nobleman is succeeded iu the family honours hy his eldest son , John Charles George , A'iscount I'ollington , born the : 1 th of June , 1 S 10 , and married on the 2 . 1 th of February , 1812 , to Lad y Rachel Walpolc , eldest daughter of the late Earl of Orford , who ' died the 21 st of

June , 1854 , and by whom he has an only son , John Horace , born in 1 S 13 . The present peer ivas educated at 'Trinit y College , Cambridge , at which University he graduated IiI . A . in 1 S 30 . In 1 S 31 he was returned to Parliament for Gatton , and represented Pontofract in the House of Commons from 1 S 35 to 18 . 17 . Our Bro . the late Earl was one of the oldest Masons—indeed so far back is the date of Ms initiation that we have been unable to trace it . His lordship , it is well knoivn , ivas what has been termed an " Athol

Mason , " and when the IAVO sections of our order merged in tho United Grand Lodg-c of Eiig-l-iiicl , in 2810 , it is believed that many of the Athol hooks were destroyed , the record of the late Prov . G . M . ' s Masonic career being amongst those missing . His lordshi p held the office of Prov . G . M . of West Yorkshire for many years , and up to the time of his decease .

BROTHER MATTHEW DAAVES . On the 13 th of December , at his residence , AVostbrook , Bolton , Lancashire , Brother Mattheiv Dawes , P . S . A ., JP . & . S , in his 57 th year . Bro . Dawes ivas initiated iu the Anchor and Hope Lodge , So . -11 , March 3 , 1 S 35 , and served the office of W . M . in 1810 ; he was exalted in the chapter attached to the same Lodge , May 31 , 1 S 37 , and passed the chairs . Bro . Dawes Avas i ' rov . Grand Com . of Knights Templar for Lancashire , and a member of the Supreme

Council of the 33 rrl degree . In the Templar degree , as also those under the Ancient and Accepted Rite , Bro . DIIAVCS look great interest . He ivas au assiduous searcher after Masons' marks , ' and had a most extensive collection of these memorials of Craftsmen . Few brethren were more esteemed and respected than our departed brother , and AVC may truly say a courteous gentleman has gone to his rest .

The Week.

THE WEEK .

THE COURT . —During the early part of the week , her Majest y and family have been dispensing the usual hospitalities of Windsor , and Mr . Lock , who brought the despatches from China , where he was one of the prisoners , has harl tho honour of joining the Royal circle at dinner . On New Year ' s-day the band of the Royal Horse Guards played a selection of favourite airs ou the East Terrace . Her Majesty ' s annual distribution of food and clothing to about GGO poor persons of the Windsor and Clewer parishes took place on in the of

Wednesday , Biding . House the Castle . The Queen and Prince Consort , accompanied by the Prince of AVales ^ Princess Alice , Prince Arthur , Prince Leopold , and the Princesses Helena , Louisa , and Beatrice , left AVindsor b y a special train for Osborne ! Prince Alfred has proceeded on a visit to Germany . GEXERAT , HOME NRWS . — -An increased rate ' of mortalit" is shown by the metropolitan returns for last week , attributable to the severity of the weather . From 1260 in thc previous week- the number of deaths '

rose to 1-107 . Of births there wove durin . " tho same period 1188—731 being boys and 751 girls . A proper idea of the unusual degree of cold may be had from the fact that the mean temperature of the air was 11 ° below the average of the same week

in 13 years . The lowest point reached by the thermometer was S ,. which happened at seven o ' clock on the morning of Christmas-day , Heavy snow and intense cold are reported from various quarters of the kingdom ; cold , indeed , to a degree such as has , perhaps , never been chronicled in our country ' s meteorological records . As muchas 45 degrees of frost , or 13 below zero , has been registered by the thermometer in some situations . In the western counties the snoivfall has been very great , and in consequence of the obstruction

caused to traffic several mails were delayed , and the Post-office announced the non-arrival of sixty in one day . On Sunday there was a fearful storm , accompanied by the breaking-up of the frost ,. AA-hich has made itself felt on the coast , antVmarked its passage by a considerable amount of damage to both life and property afloat ; The French sloop , Jean Baplisie , with a valuable cargo , was driven on shore under the South Foreland . All hands were got safely on shore with the exception of . the captain , who , unfortunately ,

was drowned . In Cawsand Bay a schooner was wrecked , the captain , mate , and three men losing their lives . At Portland Bay a Swedish ship called the Irene ivas driven against the neiv breakwater , when the pilot ivho had chargeof her was drowned . Another storm passed over the metropolis on Monday night and Tuesday morning ' , which told Avith disastrous effect in the * Channel , where its violence Avas experienced to a fearful degree . Serious losses , both of life and property , have been the result . On Neiv Year ' s

morning a large French barque ivas wrecked on the GoodAviu Sa ' nds . Of the ' crew tho fate is uncertain , it being only knoivn that they succeeded in getting into their boats . Another large vessel , belonging to Hamburgh , was also wrecked on the south part of the same sands . In this instance , also , it is to be feared the unfortunate creiv have perished . The opposite French coast appears to have been the scene of even more numerous casualties than our OAvn , the gale having raged there with extreme fury . The frost

has since returned with tho utmost severity . A serious boiler explosion happened in the building of the School of Medicine and Surgery , Manchester , on AVednesday , through the pipes having become frozen up . Much damage ivas done to the house , and some of the students narrowly escaped ivith their lives . At the Surrey Sessions a youth named George Lingham was charged with obtaining 10 s . fraudulently . He had gone into a public-house where the prosecutor , a female , was standing at the bar , and offered lier a " gulrl watch " for a pound . S ! ie , however , not satisfied AA-ith such a decided bargain , agreed to pay half the sum demanded .

Soon after , on examining her purchase , she found it to consist of a brass locket . The prisoner was found guilty , and sentenced to tAvelve months' hard labour . In the Court of Queen's Bench an action against the Eastern Counties Raihvay Company , arising out of an accident at Tottenham , by which a gentleman named Stokes lost his life , and ivhieh has been protracted through six days , the jury found that there was no evidence to prove the ivelding of the defective tire by the company—that the weld was a proper one

—that the defect could not have been discovered by inspectionthat there ivas an insufficiency of break poiver , but had there been more the nature of the accident would not have been altered . A verdict ivas accordingly entered for the defendants . A bill of exceptions was tendered to his lordship ' s summing up on behalf ot the plaintiff . A young man named Lot Ivanson Leather , who shot a girl at Bury a tew days ago , ivas brought before the magistrates on Friday , charged with attempted murder . It ivas

sliOAi-n that the girl , Jane Mooney , had refused to receive the prisoner as her suitor , which moved him to commit the crime . After firing a pistol at her and wounding her he made several successive attempts upon his oivn life—hy shooting , hanging , droAvning , and ultimately cut his throat with a knife . He ivas committed for trial . At a coroner ' s inquest , held in the Hut Barracks , Woolwich Common , on Saturday , a verdict of manslaughter was returned against a soldier , named May , for causing the death of his

comrade . Immediately after tho occurrence May absconded , and had succeeded in defeating the efforts of the pickets to discover his whereabouts . Ou AVednesday , lioivever , he turned up amongst a batch of ruffians who were charged at AVestminster police-court with perpetrating a series of dastardly outrages in Chelsea ; showing by his subsequent conduct how little the fate of his poor comrade had affected his mind . TAVO farmers of Somerton have been committed for trial at the assizes on a charge of cutting aivay a

portion of the bank of the River Barrett . Their object is stated to have been to benefit a portion of their own land by the deposit from the river water thus made to overfloAv ; but the effect to others is represented as likely to be very disastrous . An explosion of gas has taken place at the South-Western Railway Station , Glasgow , ivhieh , although fortunately not attended with loss of life , has caused a serious destruction of propertj * . The gas had accumulated in the cellars underneath , and ignited upon the door being opened . Doors aud windows Avere bloAvn out , the floor of the booking-office was lifted up and sent into the street , whilst a huge iron gate , several tons in weight , was shattered to pieces . Of

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