Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 5, 1862
  • Page 2
Current:

The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 5, 1862: Page 2

  • Back to The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 5, 1862
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article THE GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article MASONIC FACTS. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 2

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

The Grand Lodge Property.

rates , -which , in that case , should include warehouse room . Every lodge would , of course , provide its own jewels , and would be accommodated with proper lock-up cupboards in which to keep them , and , if they so wished it , the books of the lodge .

"We think our own scheme to be the one which may be the most readily and the most economically carried out , but we are aware that there is another in contemplation , which is not without its advantages , viz ., for Grand Lodge to build on the western portion of

the property ( which we have proposed to lease for a tavern ) a new building for the purposes of the Craft ; combining all the accommodation requisite , which we hold to be sine qua non in any arrangement ; and to let the present tavern and Grand Secretary ' s offices , for the purposes of a large and improved

tavern , having no nearer connection with the Ereemasons' Hall , or whatever it may be called , than that of being next door to it , with the privilege of supplying it with such refreshments the brethren may require , but this we believe will involve the

destruction of the temple , certainly as it now stands one of the most useless and inconvenient rooms in the whole building , and which is not used more than twice or three times a month , two thirds of the times when it is occupied being for want of a convenient Board Boom for the various committees to meet in .

" Whether either of these schemes or any other should be ultimately adopted , we trust that the nextsix months will not be frittered away as the last three or four years have been , but that before we enter another year a well defined plan will be adopted , which will ensure to the Craft the possession of a large

central building devoted entirely to Masonic purposes , open alike to the Masons of the metropolis and the provinces , and where brethren from all parts of the world may alwa 3 s receive a cordial aud fraternal welcome , whilst the accommodation provided iu the way of refreshments ( which is always found to be a

necessary adjunct of every place of public resort , from the Great Exhibition to the humblest concert room ) shall be placed on a footing second to none in the kingdom . There is another part of the question , and that not the least important , the financial , which we propose to treat of at another opportunity .

Our country towns are rapidly doing honour to their illustrious townsmen hy erecting monuments to them . The other day we recorded that a statue of Sir II . Davy is to be erected afc Penzance , and now Paisley purposes perpetuating the memory of her townsman , Wilson , by putting up a statue of that eminent ornithologist iu his native town . It will bo in bronze , a little larger than life , and will represent him examining a bird , that he has just shot . The statue , which is designed by Jlr . Mossland of Glasgow , willreston apedestal of Aberdeen granite , nine feet in height .

Masonic Facts.

MASONIC FACTS .

( Continued from $ age % 4 Q . ) 164 . Extracts from tlie Fabric Bolls of Westminster Abbey , Sfc . Pipe Moll 56 , Senry 3 rd , AB . 1271-72 . —Account of the works of the church at "Westminster , and the King's houses therefrom the Eeast of the

, Purification of the Virgin in this year , to the Eeast of St . Edmund the King and Martyr ( November 20 ) next following , before the king was buried , by Master Bobert de Beverley , mason , and by the vicar of Adam de Stratton , Clerk of the Exchequer . Eeceipts , £ 1212 Is . 0 sd ., and in marble freestone , as

well from Caen as Beigate , flints , & e ., £ 205 6 s . 10 M . ¦ timber , & c , £ 13 14 s . Id . ; lead , & c , £ 20 13 s . sld . , - tiles , £ 8 5 s . QcL , and for three wooden , angels made by task work , and placed in the aforesaid church , 20 s . And for wages of certain pavior masons , making the pavements before various altars in the said church , carpenters , painters , and other workmen , " and of a certain workman making a clock by task work , " £ 648 12 s . Sd .

Boll 15 JEdioard Srd , 1342 . — Eour stones bought for making capitals , 4 s . "Wages of a Mason for repairing bays of windows for one week , 2 s . 6 cl . Making 4 stone capitals , 2 s . Sd . Hire of a Mason for lid . a day for placing said

capitals , aud repairing columns , 1 \ d . 11 corbels of stone bought , 5 s . 4 id . "Wages of two masons clearing drains , and making and placing the said corbels , 21 days , 10 s . Sd . Paid to "Walter de Bole , mason , for the repair and making- of four windows and one great pillar b y

special agreement , £ 20 . His wages for making parapets , 60 s . Dress , boots , gloves , and food found . Boll 18 Mioarcl 3 rd ( 1345 ) . —Wages of two bedders of stone , also bread and ale given to the masons , abbots' men , and many others working on Monday that they might better expedite the work on account of water in the foundation , 7 jcZ .

Account of Brother John de Mordone for the wort of the new cloister , 23 to 26 Edward 3 rd ( 1350-1353 ) . Receipts , £ 71 6 s . 5 d . "Wages of two masons from Eeast of St . Michael to February 23 ( 21 weeks ) 70 s ., when a new agreement was made with them on account of flesh time , whereby each had M . a week

more , viz ., 2 s . a week from Eeb . 23 to Michaelmas . To one of litem as Master of tlie icorh , 26 s . Sd . over Ms wages , and for liis dress , 13 s . 4 > d . ; for two pair of shoes , 3 s . , and to their hoy , 12 d . "Wages of Adam de Wytteneye , a bedder of stone , for 34 weeks , from the Eeast of tlie Purification ,

66 s . Sd . ; his servant , 48 s . 63 carfc-loads of stone from the quarry to Battersea , £ 4 14 s . Qd . ; carriage of same from Battersea to "Westminster by water , 7 s . 10 k £ . ; carriage of same from the water to the church , nothing , because in the sacrist ' s carts , but in expenses of those helping to load the carts 2 s . ; from

cement for joining the stones ; 6 cl , besides wax the sacrist . Making masons' tools for the year , 4 s . Sd . ; two bundles of steel for tools for the quarry , 20 < Z . ; putting on the steel and sharpening the tool , 6 s . ; two boat loads of rag stone , 22 s .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-04-05, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_05041862/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 1
MASONIC FACTS. Article 2
THE ROYAL MASONIC SOLAR CHURCH SOCIETY. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 4
REVIEWS. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
THE HIGH GRADES. Article 9
RECENT INNOVATIONS IN MASONRY. Article 10
MASONRY AND POLITICS. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
ROYAL BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED MASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 14
Obituary. Article 16
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRA. Article 16
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 16
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

2 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

1 Article
Page 4

Page 4

2 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

1 Article
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

2 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

2 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

4 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

3 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

3 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

4 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

2 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

3 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

1 Article
Page 16

Page 16

5 Articles
Page 17

Page 17

2 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

1 Article
Page 20

Page 20

3 Articles
Page 2

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

The Grand Lodge Property.

rates , -which , in that case , should include warehouse room . Every lodge would , of course , provide its own jewels , and would be accommodated with proper lock-up cupboards in which to keep them , and , if they so wished it , the books of the lodge .

"We think our own scheme to be the one which may be the most readily and the most economically carried out , but we are aware that there is another in contemplation , which is not without its advantages , viz ., for Grand Lodge to build on the western portion of

the property ( which we have proposed to lease for a tavern ) a new building for the purposes of the Craft ; combining all the accommodation requisite , which we hold to be sine qua non in any arrangement ; and to let the present tavern and Grand Secretary ' s offices , for the purposes of a large and improved

tavern , having no nearer connection with the Ereemasons' Hall , or whatever it may be called , than that of being next door to it , with the privilege of supplying it with such refreshments the brethren may require , but this we believe will involve the

destruction of the temple , certainly as it now stands one of the most useless and inconvenient rooms in the whole building , and which is not used more than twice or three times a month , two thirds of the times when it is occupied being for want of a convenient Board Boom for the various committees to meet in .

" Whether either of these schemes or any other should be ultimately adopted , we trust that the nextsix months will not be frittered away as the last three or four years have been , but that before we enter another year a well defined plan will be adopted , which will ensure to the Craft the possession of a large

central building devoted entirely to Masonic purposes , open alike to the Masons of the metropolis and the provinces , and where brethren from all parts of the world may alwa 3 s receive a cordial aud fraternal welcome , whilst the accommodation provided iu the way of refreshments ( which is always found to be a

necessary adjunct of every place of public resort , from the Great Exhibition to the humblest concert room ) shall be placed on a footing second to none in the kingdom . There is another part of the question , and that not the least important , the financial , which we propose to treat of at another opportunity .

Our country towns are rapidly doing honour to their illustrious townsmen hy erecting monuments to them . The other day we recorded that a statue of Sir II . Davy is to be erected afc Penzance , and now Paisley purposes perpetuating the memory of her townsman , Wilson , by putting up a statue of that eminent ornithologist iu his native town . It will bo in bronze , a little larger than life , and will represent him examining a bird , that he has just shot . The statue , which is designed by Jlr . Mossland of Glasgow , willreston apedestal of Aberdeen granite , nine feet in height .

Masonic Facts.

MASONIC FACTS .

( Continued from $ age % 4 Q . ) 164 . Extracts from tlie Fabric Bolls of Westminster Abbey , Sfc . Pipe Moll 56 , Senry 3 rd , AB . 1271-72 . —Account of the works of the church at "Westminster , and the King's houses therefrom the Eeast of the

, Purification of the Virgin in this year , to the Eeast of St . Edmund the King and Martyr ( November 20 ) next following , before the king was buried , by Master Bobert de Beverley , mason , and by the vicar of Adam de Stratton , Clerk of the Exchequer . Eeceipts , £ 1212 Is . 0 sd ., and in marble freestone , as

well from Caen as Beigate , flints , & e ., £ 205 6 s . 10 M . ¦ timber , & c , £ 13 14 s . Id . ; lead , & c , £ 20 13 s . sld . , - tiles , £ 8 5 s . QcL , and for three wooden , angels made by task work , and placed in the aforesaid church , 20 s . And for wages of certain pavior masons , making the pavements before various altars in the said church , carpenters , painters , and other workmen , " and of a certain workman making a clock by task work , " £ 648 12 s . Sd .

Boll 15 JEdioard Srd , 1342 . — Eour stones bought for making capitals , 4 s . "Wages of a Mason for repairing bays of windows for one week , 2 s . 6 cl . Making 4 stone capitals , 2 s . Sd . Hire of a Mason for lid . a day for placing said

capitals , aud repairing columns , 1 \ d . 11 corbels of stone bought , 5 s . 4 id . "Wages of two masons clearing drains , and making and placing the said corbels , 21 days , 10 s . Sd . Paid to "Walter de Bole , mason , for the repair and making- of four windows and one great pillar b y

special agreement , £ 20 . His wages for making parapets , 60 s . Dress , boots , gloves , and food found . Boll 18 Mioarcl 3 rd ( 1345 ) . —Wages of two bedders of stone , also bread and ale given to the masons , abbots' men , and many others working on Monday that they might better expedite the work on account of water in the foundation , 7 jcZ .

Account of Brother John de Mordone for the wort of the new cloister , 23 to 26 Edward 3 rd ( 1350-1353 ) . Receipts , £ 71 6 s . 5 d . "Wages of two masons from Eeast of St . Michael to February 23 ( 21 weeks ) 70 s ., when a new agreement was made with them on account of flesh time , whereby each had M . a week

more , viz ., 2 s . a week from Eeb . 23 to Michaelmas . To one of litem as Master of tlie icorh , 26 s . Sd . over Ms wages , and for liis dress , 13 s . 4 > d . ; for two pair of shoes , 3 s . , and to their hoy , 12 d . "Wages of Adam de Wytteneye , a bedder of stone , for 34 weeks , from the Eeast of tlie Purification ,

66 s . Sd . ; his servant , 48 s . 63 carfc-loads of stone from the quarry to Battersea , £ 4 14 s . Qd . ; carriage of same from Battersea to "Westminster by water , 7 s . 10 k £ . ; carriage of same from the water to the church , nothing , because in the sacrist ' s carts , but in expenses of those helping to load the carts 2 s . ; from

cement for joining the stones ; 6 cl , besides wax the sacrist . Making masons' tools for the year , 4 s . Sd . ; two bundles of steel for tools for the quarry , 20 < Z . ; putting on the steel and sharpening the tool , 6 s . ; two boat loads of rag stone , 22 s .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • You're on page2
  • 3
  • 20
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy