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  • Feb. 9, 1861
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  • PROVINCIAL.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Feb. 9, 1861: Page 9

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Provincial.

affairs which is observed at the present time . ( Hear . ) No one could be more rejoiced than he was at the satisfactory establishment of their ancient charter , and he most sincerely congratulated them all on their success , and could only hope that those who came after them would in a hundred years more celebrate another centenary , and the lodge continue to flourish without interruption . ( Applause . ) Bro . FLEMING also returned thanks for the handsome acknowledgment of his attendance on that occasion . He congratulated

them all most sincerely upon the festival they were that day met to celebrate , and it was most gratifying to him to be one amongst them . The honoured brother concluded by expressing his earnest wish that the assembled brethren mi ght prosper in all their aims , and that the Lodge of ( Economy , now so numerous , might continue to increase in numbers and influence , and succeed in all it endeavoured to carry out . ( Applause . ) Bro . NAISH then proposed a vote of thanks to the officiating Past

Masters in the ceremony of the installation , complimenting those brethren on the able manner in which they had performed their duties . Bro . HIGGS seconded the motion , which being unanimously carried , Bro . BIGGS acknowledged the compliment , assuring the brethren that at any time when the lodge could find use for their services they ivould be only too happy to render them . The AVorshipful Master having announced that the banquet would be at half-past five o'clock , tlie lodge was closed in due form , ancl the brethren for a short time separated .

THE BANQUET took place in the Assembly Room of the Black Swan Hotel , adjacent to the lodge . It was of the most elegant description , and served most excellently ; indeed , it need merely be said that that energetic host and Mason , Bro . Sherry , was the caterer . Exactly sixty brethren remained for this appropriate finale to the day's proceedings , and the company enjoyed an evening , the comfort and unalloyed pleasures of which will long be treasured in their memories .

The Worshipful Master presided , and as soon as the cloth had been cleared and the dessert set upon the table , the toasts of "The Queen and the Craft , " "The Prince Consort , Prince of AVales , Prince Alfred ; and the rest of the Royal Family , " " The M . W . G . M . of England , the ¦ Earl of Zetland , " and "The Deputy G . _ VI . mid Officers of Grand- Lodge , " were giyen in succession , and honoured in that especial manner peculiar to Freemasonry . The W . M . next rose to propose "The Health of the Prov . G . M .

of Hants , " which drew forth a loud round of cheering from the -festive board . He said , for a comparatively young Mason like himself to attempt to dilate upon this toast would be altogether out of place . They all , more or less , knew the honours it demanded , and it was only to be wished that the worthy subject of it was oftener amongst them . He most gratefully tendered the thanks of the members of the Lodge of ( Economy to the worthy

Admiral for coming there that clay and summoning his Grand Officers to attend on so interesting an occasion . They all knew or had heard of the unflagging zeal of Sir Lucius in the cause of Masonry . It was only for them to go to the Grand Lodge , ancl the first they would see there would be their Prov . G . M . He ( the chairman ) had been there some half-dozen times , and amongst those present he had ever recognised the Prov . G . M . of Hampshire . Without further remark , he asked the company to drink with all Masonic honours to "The Health of Admiral Sir Lucius Curtis Bart . "

The toast was honoured with the most enthusiastic applause of the company . The PEOV . G . M . said he rose to return his thanks for the very kind manner in whicli the AA . M . had proposed tlie toast , and the very flattering manner in which the company had received it . He really could not have resisted , though a ssvere cold had confined him to his house for the last four or five tliysthe leasure ancl honour of them that to

., p coining among day , participate in the celebration of the Centenary of their lodge . * An e .-a such as the present could not often happen ; and it was the iirst of the kind in the Province of Hampshire . He must confess that he felt a very great interest in their celebration , because the fact of their holding such a festival tended in itself so much to show how well the lodge . had been conducted—for it bad gone on for 100 years , never relapsing in its meetings . ( Hear . ) As far as regarded

himself , he could truly say , that during the time he had been Prov . Master of tint district , he had always found the Lodge of ffieonorny of AVinchester conducted in that excellent manner ^ reflecting the greatest credit on the AV . M . on the lodge as a whole , and every individual member . ( Hear . ) He had not experienced a single difficulty with them , and such unanimit 3 ' , such fraternal and brotherl y love , had existed- among them , that he held it up to the notice of every lodge in this and other provinces . ( Hear . ) He feared that cold water had ' at first been thrown upon their pretentions , founded on their claim to the honour of lavi : i : r arrived at thoir

Centenary . His attention had been brought to the matter , and he had joined in the correspondence with Grand Lodge on the subject in dispute . After Bro . Stebhing ' s appearance before the Board o £ General Purposes , it gave him great pleasure to receive a letter from , him announcing that the lodge were confirmed in their claim to date from the original warrant ; and he had also received a letter from the . Grand Secretary to the same effect . He felt great pleasure in being there that day , because it was an important era

that might not again happen during his life , though there might he another lodge in the province the hundredth year of the existence of which was nearly approaching . He believed the Royal Gloucester Lodge had been founded in 1764 . [ Bro . Stebbing : "The Royal Gloucester in 1762 , and the Itingwood Lodge , 1764 " ] He trusted that in the lodge minutes it would be recorded that they installed their Master on the day of their Centenary , and that a large number of the brethren of the province was present to join in the

celebration festival . He thanked them all for their attention ; he wished them all prosperity and happiness , and drank to each of their healths . ( Applause . ) Bro . AV . AV . B . BEACH , ALP ., said the AA . M . had kindly permitted him to propose the next toast , and he did so with a great amount of pleasure . He had to ask them to honour one who ruled over a neighbouring province ( cheers ) , a province with which they had

always been on the most amicable and friendly relations . They had heard of no internal disunion in the Isle of AAlght lodges , bat all had gone on with the most friendly and Masonic intercourse . No slight credit was due to the Master of a- " province when such was the case , and they could not be surprised at the present instance , for many of them had witnessed the manner in which the Prov . G . M . of the Isle of AA'ight discharged his duties . He trusted that

there were many around him at that moment who would feel disposed to make a return for the way in which Bro . Fleming had come amongst them that day , and pay him a return visit to the Isle of Wight . He thought he might fairly say that Bro . Fleminghad shown high qualities in his position as G . M . He had shown himself to possess great abilities , ancl had , in exercising his

authority , always blended courtesy with firmness . AVhen they saw the brethren under his rule hearing respect such as the brethren of the Isle of Wight did , they could only congratulate the brethren upon having such a Master . He thanked Bro . Fleming in the name of the company for coming amongst them that day , and taking part in the ceremonies of such an interesting occasion . He hoped they should all soon meet again in friendly Masonic intercourse , and he would now ask them to give Bro . Fleming such a ;

greeting as should show their appreciation of his present kind visit , ( Cheers . ) The toast was " The Prov . G . M . of the Isle of AVight " The . toast having been drank with a good deal of cheering , Bro . FLEMING said , he was sure it would require no ordinary amount of eloquence on his part to return due thanks for the complimentary manner in which Bro . Beach had mentioned his name to them . Bro . Beach had spoken of the perfect unity in which the brethren of thetwo provinces were accustomed to meet . It was

his great wish that the good feeling should never be dissolved , and it was not likely to be so ; on the contrary , the more they met the more they liked each other , and the greater was the happiness they experienced in each other ' s society . ( Hear . ) It had been a great pleasure to him to meet the brethren of the Hampshire province that day . He had an old friend in their honoured Master , and his father also had experienced in him an old and valued friend , commending his respect . He had entertained the hope of seeing the

brethren of thc Hampshire province in the Island during the pass year , but circumstances hud prevented an opportunity being seized . A gathering had been contemplated at C ' owes or Ryde , but at one period the weather had rendered it politic to put it off ; at another time the publicans and hotel-keepers had been too busy with the Yachting Company to enable them to secure proper catering ; and later in the year he had been prevented entering into it , and had left the matter with his deputy , and the time had passed away

If , on the return of spring , and they should ever get fine weather again , he hoped they would all meet together in the Island , and . not part until after having enjoyed many hours in each other's society . ( Cheers . ) The GiiAiiiMAis - next proposed thc toast of " The Army , Navy , and Volunteers , " introducing the same with a few eulogistic remarks , and coupling with it the names of Admiral Sir L . Curtis , Capt . Macdonald , and Major Fleming . The toast was received and drank

with rapturous applause . Bro . Capt . JAIACDOUALD said it devolved upon him to respond to this sentiment , and he thanked the company for the compliment they had paid to the service to which he had the honour to belong . He was sorry , however , the task had not fallen into other and abler hands ; but he must perform it in the best way he could , as those of his profession had done in many other and worse cases . ( Hear . ) He was very glad to see so great an interest exhibited in the wellbeing of the army ; he remembered the tin e when they were corns-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-02-09, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_09021861/page/9/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XL. Article 1
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 3
Literature. Article 4
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 7
METROPOLITAN. Article 7
PROVINCIAL. Article 7
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 15
COLONIAL. Article 17
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Provincial.

affairs which is observed at the present time . ( Hear . ) No one could be more rejoiced than he was at the satisfactory establishment of their ancient charter , and he most sincerely congratulated them all on their success , and could only hope that those who came after them would in a hundred years more celebrate another centenary , and the lodge continue to flourish without interruption . ( Applause . ) Bro . FLEMING also returned thanks for the handsome acknowledgment of his attendance on that occasion . He congratulated

them all most sincerely upon the festival they were that day met to celebrate , and it was most gratifying to him to be one amongst them . The honoured brother concluded by expressing his earnest wish that the assembled brethren mi ght prosper in all their aims , and that the Lodge of ( Economy , now so numerous , might continue to increase in numbers and influence , and succeed in all it endeavoured to carry out . ( Applause . ) Bro . NAISH then proposed a vote of thanks to the officiating Past

Masters in the ceremony of the installation , complimenting those brethren on the able manner in which they had performed their duties . Bro . HIGGS seconded the motion , which being unanimously carried , Bro . BIGGS acknowledged the compliment , assuring the brethren that at any time when the lodge could find use for their services they ivould be only too happy to render them . The AVorshipful Master having announced that the banquet would be at half-past five o'clock , tlie lodge was closed in due form , ancl the brethren for a short time separated .

THE BANQUET took place in the Assembly Room of the Black Swan Hotel , adjacent to the lodge . It was of the most elegant description , and served most excellently ; indeed , it need merely be said that that energetic host and Mason , Bro . Sherry , was the caterer . Exactly sixty brethren remained for this appropriate finale to the day's proceedings , and the company enjoyed an evening , the comfort and unalloyed pleasures of which will long be treasured in their memories .

The Worshipful Master presided , and as soon as the cloth had been cleared and the dessert set upon the table , the toasts of "The Queen and the Craft , " "The Prince Consort , Prince of AVales , Prince Alfred ; and the rest of the Royal Family , " " The M . W . G . M . of England , the ¦ Earl of Zetland , " and "The Deputy G . _ VI . mid Officers of Grand- Lodge , " were giyen in succession , and honoured in that especial manner peculiar to Freemasonry . The W . M . next rose to propose "The Health of the Prov . G . M .

of Hants , " which drew forth a loud round of cheering from the -festive board . He said , for a comparatively young Mason like himself to attempt to dilate upon this toast would be altogether out of place . They all , more or less , knew the honours it demanded , and it was only to be wished that the worthy subject of it was oftener amongst them . He most gratefully tendered the thanks of the members of the Lodge of ( Economy to the worthy

Admiral for coming there that clay and summoning his Grand Officers to attend on so interesting an occasion . They all knew or had heard of the unflagging zeal of Sir Lucius in the cause of Masonry . It was only for them to go to the Grand Lodge , ancl the first they would see there would be their Prov . G . M . He ( the chairman ) had been there some half-dozen times , and amongst those present he had ever recognised the Prov . G . M . of Hampshire . Without further remark , he asked the company to drink with all Masonic honours to "The Health of Admiral Sir Lucius Curtis Bart . "

The toast was honoured with the most enthusiastic applause of the company . The PEOV . G . M . said he rose to return his thanks for the very kind manner in whicli the AA . M . had proposed tlie toast , and the very flattering manner in which the company had received it . He really could not have resisted , though a ssvere cold had confined him to his house for the last four or five tliysthe leasure ancl honour of them that to

., p coining among day , participate in the celebration of the Centenary of their lodge . * An e .-a such as the present could not often happen ; and it was the iirst of the kind in the Province of Hampshire . He must confess that he felt a very great interest in their celebration , because the fact of their holding such a festival tended in itself so much to show how well the lodge . had been conducted—for it bad gone on for 100 years , never relapsing in its meetings . ( Hear . ) As far as regarded

himself , he could truly say , that during the time he had been Prov . Master of tint district , he had always found the Lodge of ffieonorny of AVinchester conducted in that excellent manner ^ reflecting the greatest credit on the AV . M . on the lodge as a whole , and every individual member . ( Hear . ) He had not experienced a single difficulty with them , and such unanimit 3 ' , such fraternal and brotherl y love , had existed- among them , that he held it up to the notice of every lodge in this and other provinces . ( Hear . ) He feared that cold water had ' at first been thrown upon their pretentions , founded on their claim to the honour of lavi : i : r arrived at thoir

Centenary . His attention had been brought to the matter , and he had joined in the correspondence with Grand Lodge on the subject in dispute . After Bro . Stebhing ' s appearance before the Board o £ General Purposes , it gave him great pleasure to receive a letter from , him announcing that the lodge were confirmed in their claim to date from the original warrant ; and he had also received a letter from the . Grand Secretary to the same effect . He felt great pleasure in being there that day , because it was an important era

that might not again happen during his life , though there might he another lodge in the province the hundredth year of the existence of which was nearly approaching . He believed the Royal Gloucester Lodge had been founded in 1764 . [ Bro . Stebbing : "The Royal Gloucester in 1762 , and the Itingwood Lodge , 1764 " ] He trusted that in the lodge minutes it would be recorded that they installed their Master on the day of their Centenary , and that a large number of the brethren of the province was present to join in the

celebration festival . He thanked them all for their attention ; he wished them all prosperity and happiness , and drank to each of their healths . ( Applause . ) Bro . AV . AV . B . BEACH , ALP ., said the AA . M . had kindly permitted him to propose the next toast , and he did so with a great amount of pleasure . He had to ask them to honour one who ruled over a neighbouring province ( cheers ) , a province with which they had

always been on the most amicable and friendly relations . They had heard of no internal disunion in the Isle of AAlght lodges , bat all had gone on with the most friendly and Masonic intercourse . No slight credit was due to the Master of a- " province when such was the case , and they could not be surprised at the present instance , for many of them had witnessed the manner in which the Prov . G . M . of the Isle of AA'ight discharged his duties . He trusted that

there were many around him at that moment who would feel disposed to make a return for the way in which Bro . Fleming had come amongst them that day , and pay him a return visit to the Isle of Wight . He thought he might fairly say that Bro . Fleminghad shown high qualities in his position as G . M . He had shown himself to possess great abilities , ancl had , in exercising his

authority , always blended courtesy with firmness . AVhen they saw the brethren under his rule hearing respect such as the brethren of the Isle of Wight did , they could only congratulate the brethren upon having such a Master . He thanked Bro . Fleming in the name of the company for coming amongst them that day , and taking part in the ceremonies of such an interesting occasion . He hoped they should all soon meet again in friendly Masonic intercourse , and he would now ask them to give Bro . Fleming such a ;

greeting as should show their appreciation of his present kind visit , ( Cheers . ) The toast was " The Prov . G . M . of the Isle of AVight " The . toast having been drank with a good deal of cheering , Bro . FLEMING said , he was sure it would require no ordinary amount of eloquence on his part to return due thanks for the complimentary manner in which Bro . Beach had mentioned his name to them . Bro . Beach had spoken of the perfect unity in which the brethren of thetwo provinces were accustomed to meet . It was

his great wish that the good feeling should never be dissolved , and it was not likely to be so ; on the contrary , the more they met the more they liked each other , and the greater was the happiness they experienced in each other ' s society . ( Hear . ) It had been a great pleasure to him to meet the brethren of the Hampshire province that day . He had an old friend in their honoured Master , and his father also had experienced in him an old and valued friend , commending his respect . He had entertained the hope of seeing the

brethren of thc Hampshire province in the Island during the pass year , but circumstances hud prevented an opportunity being seized . A gathering had been contemplated at C ' owes or Ryde , but at one period the weather had rendered it politic to put it off ; at another time the publicans and hotel-keepers had been too busy with the Yachting Company to enable them to secure proper catering ; and later in the year he had been prevented entering into it , and had left the matter with his deputy , and the time had passed away

If , on the return of spring , and they should ever get fine weather again , he hoped they would all meet together in the Island , and . not part until after having enjoyed many hours in each other's society . ( Cheers . ) The GiiAiiiMAis - next proposed thc toast of " The Army , Navy , and Volunteers , " introducing the same with a few eulogistic remarks , and coupling with it the names of Admiral Sir L . Curtis , Capt . Macdonald , and Major Fleming . The toast was received and drank

with rapturous applause . Bro . Capt . JAIACDOUALD said it devolved upon him to respond to this sentiment , and he thanked the company for the compliment they had paid to the service to which he had the honour to belong . He was sorry , however , the task had not fallen into other and abler hands ; but he must perform it in the best way he could , as those of his profession had done in many other and worse cases . ( Hear . ) He was very glad to see so great an interest exhibited in the wellbeing of the army ; he remembered the tin e when they were corns-

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