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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 5

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

fifth Earl of Wemyss , and was born on the 31 st of January 1719 . In 1780 he was chosen member of Parliament , and on his father's succession to the Earldom of Wemyss , in May , 1787 , Mr . Charteris succeeded as Lord Eleho . He was an active and influential member of the House of Commons , and succeeded in carrying through it some important measures . In later years he devoted his attention to agricultural pursuitswhich he

, studied minutely , and in which he became proficient . History does not tell us when or where he was initiated into Freemasonry , but he was a very active and zealous member . Ho was prominent as the Master ofthe St . John's Lodge , Haddington ; and on the 3 rd of March , 1779 , he became a member of the Canongate Kilwinning , " where he carried a motion to the effect that all members of the Haddington Lodge should , while

in the Canongate Kilwinning , be full members thereof , and vice versa . " This was a very singular motion , and it is more singular still that it was adopted ; but government in Masonry was not then reduced to such order as at present , and usages and practices were then tolerated which would not be at the present time . Lord Elcho was elected Grand Master on the 30 th of

November , 1786 , " and visited most of the lodges in Edinburgh in the course of the winter , beginning with the Cannongate Kilwinningon the 7 th December . " He was re-elected Grand Master on the 30 th of November , 1787 . " He bore the highest character for amiable manners , benevolence , generosity , and marked kindness to the lower classes ; and he endeared himself to all who were honoured wifcli his acquaintance , the whole tenour of his life being a series of kindness , friendship , and philantrophy : "—an honorable testimony to a worthy man and zealous Mason .

Loan TOEPXCHEH Was initiated in the Cannongate Kilwinning Lodge on the evening of the 7 th of December , 1786 , being the night of Burns ' first visit . He was soon after nominated in the Grand Lodge as Deputy Grand Master , but we believe never rose to the " chief command , " in that body . In June , 1787 , he was elected Master of the Cannongate Kilwinning Lodge , but we are unable

to state how long be served as such . His name was James Sandilands , was born on the 15 th of November , 1759 , and succeeded to his father ' s title in 1765 . He was an officer in the 21 st Regiment of Foot , or Royal Scots Fusiliers ; he served under Burgoyne in our Revolutionary war , and " was one of those who had to pile arms at Saratoga . " He afterwards served in the Coldstream Guards , where he rose to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel . In 1790 he was chosen one of the representative

peers of Scotland , but died without issue in 1815 . One of his ancestors , Sir James Sandilands of Calder , " on account of his learning , and serving at Malta , was appointed Preceptor of the Knights Hospitallers of St . John of Jerusalem . Lord Torphichen was a warm friend to the Poet , was present at his coronation as Poet-Laureate of the lodge , and Burns calls him " a higher brother in Freemasonry . "

AKCUIBAID ( ELEVENTH ) EAEL OI ? EGMJTIOS- . "' Twas in that place o' Scotland ' s Isle That hears the namo o' Auld King Coil . "—Burnt . The tenth Earl of Eglinton ( Alexander ) , was killed in a dispute about a fowling-piece in 1769 , and dying unmarried , the honors devolved on his brother Archibald , who figures in the painting of "crowning the hard . " He . was a military officer , and served in a Hihland regiment in AmericaHe was asked

g . by his mother , on his return , to recount the dangers he had passed and the sufferings he had endured ,- he informed her that his chief endurance was from the sting of the vegetable nettle , and the animal muskito on his kilted houchs . He died in 1796 , and having no son ( though twice married ) the title devolved on his kinsman , and another friend of Burns , Hugh Montgomerie , of Coilsfield . This was the Colonel Montgomerie in whose

service Highland Mary was employed as a dairy maid ivhen Burns became her lover . The " palace o' Montgomerie" was near Tarbolton , and near it the trysting tree ofthe lovers , and the brook—the scene of their final pledge and parting . Archibald , tho eleventh Earl ,-was horn in 1740 , and died in 1819 . He entered the army in 1755 , and rose to the rank of Colonel . He was in America with Sir Ralh Abercromb On

p y . one occasion , in assaulting a fort , the troops met with such a terrible five as to compel them to halt . He was behind , turned round as the smoke was clearing away , and exclaimed in the hearing ^ of the Captain , " What ! am I to take the place myself ? " The question was met by a British hurrah , and the fort was carried .

At the time Burns came to Edinburgh , Hugh Montgomerie was a member of Parliament for Ayrshire . Burns alludes to his services as soldier and statesman , in his usual free and easy manner : —¦ " Tiie soger Hugh , my watchman stentcd . If bardies e ' er are represented . 1 ken if that ye ' rc sword were wanted , Ye'd fend yc ' re hand ; Cut when there ' s aught to say anent it , - Ye ' re at a stand . "

Archibald , the eleventh Earl of Eglington , was a great admirer of Burns' poetry , and evinced his estimation ofthe Poet by extending a liberal patronage to him;—he subscribed for forty-two copies of the first Edinburgh edition of the poems . THE EAEI , OF GXEXCA . ^ . The bridegroom forget the bride

" may Was made his wedded wife yestreen , The monarch , may forget tho erown That on his head an hour has been ; The mother may forget the child That smiles sae sweetly on the knee : J ! itt I'll remember the , Glencairn , And all that thou hast done for me . "—Burns ;

Few , among the many Masonic friends of Burns , made such during that winter—are more frequently mentioned , or mentioned in more grateful terms , than the Earl of Glencairn . He seems to have become acquainted with the Poet soon after his arrival in Edinburgh , and became at once a very sincere and valuable friend;—his name , his influence , and his purse were ever readto aid the Ayrshire Bardby whom his memory was

y , gratefully cherished by his protege to the close of life . James Cunningham , Earl of Glencairn , was born in 1749 , and succeeded in 1775 as fourteenth Earl . In 1778 he served as Captain in Lord Frederick Campbell ' s Regiment of Fencibles , and subsequently took orders in the Church of England . He married , in 1785 , Lady Isabella Erskine , daughter of David Henry , tenth Earl of Buchan , and so was the brother-in-law of

the Earl of Buchan and of the Hon . H . Erskine . Having no children , the title became extinct on his death , which took place near Edinburgh , on the 21 th September , 1791 . ' Burns looked upon his Lordship as his best friend , and often alludes to him in his writings . His factor on the Finlayson estate , Ayrshire , Mr . Dalziel , laid the first edition of Burns ' Poems , before his Lordship , and he ( says Cromek ) declared that its merits exceeded his expectations . He took it with him iu

November , 1786 , as a literary curiosity , and communicated , through Dalziel , that he wished to know ' in what way or manner he could forward his interest . ' Meantime Burns also had reached Edinburgh ; and there , in a few days , he says , — ' I have found a worthy warm friend in Mr . Dalrymple of Orangefield , who introduced me to Lord Glencairn , a man whose worth and brotherly kindness to me I shall remember when thne shall

be no more . By his interest it has passed in the Caledonian Hunt that they are to take each a copy of the second edition , for which they are to pay one guinea . ' " Mr . Creech was induced [ by his Lordship ^ to undertake the publication of tiie second edition ; and thus Burns found a ready publisher , and the means of bringing his work before the Edinburgh public . He seems to have been a man of great kindness of heart , and a very devoted member of the mystic brotherhood .

THE EABI , OE BUCHAN . "Praise from thy lips- 'tis mine with joy to boast , They best can give it who deserve it most . "—Burns . David , Earl of Bnchan , is a historical personage , both in the annals of Masonry and freedom . He was born in 1742 , and died in 1829 . On finishing his education at the Glasgow University , he joined the army , and was appointed Secretary to

to the British Embassy in Spain in 1776 . His father dying the next year , he succeed to the title and estates , and returned to Scotland . 'He aided in the formation of the Antiquarian Society , and contributed to its lectures . He subsequently published a volume of Essays on the lives of Fletcher and Saltonn , and of James Thomson , the poet ; and was also a contributor to the various periodicals of the day . " We are not advised as to the time whenor the place where he was initiated

, into Masonry ; hut he was elected Grand Master of Masons on tho 30 th of November , 1782 , and re-elected on 1 st of December , 1783 . He frequently visited the Canongate Kilwinning Lodge . He usually wore the Jewel of a Past Grand Master . He was present at the inauguration of Burns as Poet-Laureate . During the evening he addressed a note to the Poet ,

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-04-05, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_05041862/page/5/.
  • 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
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

fifth Earl of Wemyss , and was born on the 31 st of January 1719 . In 1780 he was chosen member of Parliament , and on his father's succession to the Earldom of Wemyss , in May , 1787 , Mr . Charteris succeeded as Lord Eleho . He was an active and influential member of the House of Commons , and succeeded in carrying through it some important measures . In later years he devoted his attention to agricultural pursuitswhich he

, studied minutely , and in which he became proficient . History does not tell us when or where he was initiated into Freemasonry , but he was a very active and zealous member . Ho was prominent as the Master ofthe St . John's Lodge , Haddington ; and on the 3 rd of March , 1779 , he became a member of the Canongate Kilwinning , " where he carried a motion to the effect that all members of the Haddington Lodge should , while

in the Canongate Kilwinning , be full members thereof , and vice versa . " This was a very singular motion , and it is more singular still that it was adopted ; but government in Masonry was not then reduced to such order as at present , and usages and practices were then tolerated which would not be at the present time . Lord Elcho was elected Grand Master on the 30 th of

November , 1786 , " and visited most of the lodges in Edinburgh in the course of the winter , beginning with the Cannongate Kilwinningon the 7 th December . " He was re-elected Grand Master on the 30 th of November , 1787 . " He bore the highest character for amiable manners , benevolence , generosity , and marked kindness to the lower classes ; and he endeared himself to all who were honoured wifcli his acquaintance , the whole tenour of his life being a series of kindness , friendship , and philantrophy : "—an honorable testimony to a worthy man and zealous Mason .

Loan TOEPXCHEH Was initiated in the Cannongate Kilwinning Lodge on the evening of the 7 th of December , 1786 , being the night of Burns ' first visit . He was soon after nominated in the Grand Lodge as Deputy Grand Master , but we believe never rose to the " chief command , " in that body . In June , 1787 , he was elected Master of the Cannongate Kilwinning Lodge , but we are unable

to state how long be served as such . His name was James Sandilands , was born on the 15 th of November , 1759 , and succeeded to his father ' s title in 1765 . He was an officer in the 21 st Regiment of Foot , or Royal Scots Fusiliers ; he served under Burgoyne in our Revolutionary war , and " was one of those who had to pile arms at Saratoga . " He afterwards served in the Coldstream Guards , where he rose to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel . In 1790 he was chosen one of the representative

peers of Scotland , but died without issue in 1815 . One of his ancestors , Sir James Sandilands of Calder , " on account of his learning , and serving at Malta , was appointed Preceptor of the Knights Hospitallers of St . John of Jerusalem . Lord Torphichen was a warm friend to the Poet , was present at his coronation as Poet-Laureate of the lodge , and Burns calls him " a higher brother in Freemasonry . "

AKCUIBAID ( ELEVENTH ) EAEL OI ? EGMJTIOS- . "' Twas in that place o' Scotland ' s Isle That hears the namo o' Auld King Coil . "—Burnt . The tenth Earl of Eglinton ( Alexander ) , was killed in a dispute about a fowling-piece in 1769 , and dying unmarried , the honors devolved on his brother Archibald , who figures in the painting of "crowning the hard . " He . was a military officer , and served in a Hihland regiment in AmericaHe was asked

g . by his mother , on his return , to recount the dangers he had passed and the sufferings he had endured ,- he informed her that his chief endurance was from the sting of the vegetable nettle , and the animal muskito on his kilted houchs . He died in 1796 , and having no son ( though twice married ) the title devolved on his kinsman , and another friend of Burns , Hugh Montgomerie , of Coilsfield . This was the Colonel Montgomerie in whose

service Highland Mary was employed as a dairy maid ivhen Burns became her lover . The " palace o' Montgomerie" was near Tarbolton , and near it the trysting tree ofthe lovers , and the brook—the scene of their final pledge and parting . Archibald , tho eleventh Earl ,-was horn in 1740 , and died in 1819 . He entered the army in 1755 , and rose to the rank of Colonel . He was in America with Sir Ralh Abercromb On

p y . one occasion , in assaulting a fort , the troops met with such a terrible five as to compel them to halt . He was behind , turned round as the smoke was clearing away , and exclaimed in the hearing ^ of the Captain , " What ! am I to take the place myself ? " The question was met by a British hurrah , and the fort was carried .

At the time Burns came to Edinburgh , Hugh Montgomerie was a member of Parliament for Ayrshire . Burns alludes to his services as soldier and statesman , in his usual free and easy manner : —¦ " Tiie soger Hugh , my watchman stentcd . If bardies e ' er are represented . 1 ken if that ye ' rc sword were wanted , Ye'd fend yc ' re hand ; Cut when there ' s aught to say anent it , - Ye ' re at a stand . "

Archibald , the eleventh Earl of Eglington , was a great admirer of Burns' poetry , and evinced his estimation ofthe Poet by extending a liberal patronage to him;—he subscribed for forty-two copies of the first Edinburgh edition of the poems . THE EAEI , OF GXEXCA . ^ . The bridegroom forget the bride

" may Was made his wedded wife yestreen , The monarch , may forget tho erown That on his head an hour has been ; The mother may forget the child That smiles sae sweetly on the knee : J ! itt I'll remember the , Glencairn , And all that thou hast done for me . "—Burns ;

Few , among the many Masonic friends of Burns , made such during that winter—are more frequently mentioned , or mentioned in more grateful terms , than the Earl of Glencairn . He seems to have become acquainted with the Poet soon after his arrival in Edinburgh , and became at once a very sincere and valuable friend;—his name , his influence , and his purse were ever readto aid the Ayrshire Bardby whom his memory was

y , gratefully cherished by his protege to the close of life . James Cunningham , Earl of Glencairn , was born in 1749 , and succeeded in 1775 as fourteenth Earl . In 1778 he served as Captain in Lord Frederick Campbell ' s Regiment of Fencibles , and subsequently took orders in the Church of England . He married , in 1785 , Lady Isabella Erskine , daughter of David Henry , tenth Earl of Buchan , and so was the brother-in-law of

the Earl of Buchan and of the Hon . H . Erskine . Having no children , the title became extinct on his death , which took place near Edinburgh , on the 21 th September , 1791 . ' Burns looked upon his Lordship as his best friend , and often alludes to him in his writings . His factor on the Finlayson estate , Ayrshire , Mr . Dalziel , laid the first edition of Burns ' Poems , before his Lordship , and he ( says Cromek ) declared that its merits exceeded his expectations . He took it with him iu

November , 1786 , as a literary curiosity , and communicated , through Dalziel , that he wished to know ' in what way or manner he could forward his interest . ' Meantime Burns also had reached Edinburgh ; and there , in a few days , he says , — ' I have found a worthy warm friend in Mr . Dalrymple of Orangefield , who introduced me to Lord Glencairn , a man whose worth and brotherly kindness to me I shall remember when thne shall

be no more . By his interest it has passed in the Caledonian Hunt that they are to take each a copy of the second edition , for which they are to pay one guinea . ' " Mr . Creech was induced [ by his Lordship ^ to undertake the publication of tiie second edition ; and thus Burns found a ready publisher , and the means of bringing his work before the Edinburgh public . He seems to have been a man of great kindness of heart , and a very devoted member of the mystic brotherhood .

THE EABI , OE BUCHAN . "Praise from thy lips- 'tis mine with joy to boast , They best can give it who deserve it most . "—Burns . David , Earl of Bnchan , is a historical personage , both in the annals of Masonry and freedom . He was born in 1742 , and died in 1829 . On finishing his education at the Glasgow University , he joined the army , and was appointed Secretary to

to the British Embassy in Spain in 1776 . His father dying the next year , he succeed to the title and estates , and returned to Scotland . 'He aided in the formation of the Antiquarian Society , and contributed to its lectures . He subsequently published a volume of Essays on the lives of Fletcher and Saltonn , and of James Thomson , the poet ; and was also a contributor to the various periodicals of the day . " We are not advised as to the time whenor the place where he was initiated

, into Masonry ; hut he was elected Grand Master of Masons on tho 30 th of November , 1782 , and re-elected on 1 st of December , 1783 . He frequently visited the Canongate Kilwinning Lodge . He usually wore the Jewel of a Past Grand Master . He was present at the inauguration of Burns as Poet-Laureate . During the evening he addressed a note to the Poet ,

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