Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • March 11, 1865
  • Page 20
Current:

The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 11, 1865: Page 20

  • Back to The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 11, 1865
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article THE WEEK. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article THE WEEK. Page 3 of 3
    Article TO CORRESPONDENTS. Page 1 of 1
Page 20

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

The Week.

Hussars , which Lord Lucan gives up . Lieut .-General Hail succeeds to the 19 th Hussars , vacant by the death of General Pattlc ; Major-General Sabine becomes Colonel Commandant of the Artillery in the place of General Cobbe , deceased ; and Lieut .-General Sir II . R . Ferguson Davis succeeds to the 73 rd Foot , vacant by the death of Lieut .-General Jones .

The Duke of Devonshire , Lord Donoughmore , Lord Stanley , Mr . lAwe , Mr . Roebuck , Mr . Horsfall , Mr . G . C . Glynn , Mr . Dalglish , Mr . Leveson Gower , Mr . Ayrton , Sir Rowland Hill , Captain Galton , Mr . Maclean ( President of the Institution of Civil Engineers ) , and Mr . Edward Hamilton are the Commissioners appointed to inquire into the working of the

railway system of the United Kingdom . The winter meeting of the National Rifle Association was held at Willis ' s Rooms on Saturday , the Duke of Cambridge in the chair . The report was read , after which his Royal Highness addressed the meeting , congratulating them on the flourishing condition of the Association . Their funds were more prosperous ,

and their members more numerous than ever . The branch associations had also increased , and there was every prospect hat , largo as was tho sum spent in prizes at the hist Wimbledon meeting , the sum for the ensuing year would be larger still . The resolutions prpposed were unanimously agreed to , and his Royal Highness having been again elected president ,

the meeting adjourned . A most graceful tribute to the value of the services rendered to the country by Sir Rowland Hill was paid on Tuesday evening . A deputation of gentlemen representing the merchants and shipowners of Liverpool presented to Sir Rowland , at his own house , three pictures as a testimonial of the high estimation iu which they hold his improvements iu tno postal arrangements of the country . Sir Rowland had heen consulted on the form which he would

desire the testimonial to take , and selected pictures by StansReld , Creswick , and Cook . An interesting meeting was held at Lambeth Palace on AA ednesdny last—the Bishop of Winchester in the chair—to concert measures for the increase of church accommodation in the diocese , more especially in the three rural deaneries of Southwark , Lambeth , and Streatham . The Bishop , in his address , stated the amount of church

extension that had taken place since his accession to the see , and the need there was for still greater extension . He pointed out the rapid increase in the population , and the wants of wealthy residents among them , showing the need for help from the outer districts . The meeting ivas also addressed by the Archbishop of Canterbury , Air . Cubit ' , M . P ., the Hon . Mr . Broderick , and

others , and at the close a handsome subscription was raised , including £ 2 , 000 from the bishop himself . The Rev . W . L . Thornton , president of the A \ esleyan Methodist Conference , died in London on Sunday . The suit instituted by the Bishop of Norwich against the Rector of Claydon for officiating at Brother Ignatius ' s monastery— -an unlicensed and

unconsecrated place—was terminated in the Court of Arches on Monday . The reverend defendant has been condemned to pay the costs , and " admonished" not to repeat the offence . A singular case was decided on Tuesday in tho Court of Vice-Chancellor Sir J . Stuart . A Mr . Bailey had an account with the Messrs . AAllsons , bankers , in the midland counties . Mr .

Bailey ' s son was started in business , and it is alleged that he forged his father ' s name to bills to the extent of between £ 6 , 000 and £ 7 , 000 . On these being shown to the father ho expressed great alarm , and gave tho bankers an assignment over his estate on condition—so it was alleged—that his son should not be prosecuted . Mr . Bailey now sought to cancel this assignment on the ground that it was extorted from him by undue pressure , and the A ice-Chancellor taking

The Week.

that view of the case , ordered the deed to be cancelled . The Messrs . Barry and their workmen , who have been in custody for some weeks , and several times examined , on a charge of attempting to defraud various insurance offices , were againbrought before Mr . Alderman Stone , when several of the witnesses were recalled to complete their former testimony , and some new evidence was taken . At the close a further remand

was asked for , and then for the first time the magistrate entertained the application to admit them to bail , exacting , however , heavy sureties . The prisoners charged with the great City burglaries were again brought up before the Lord Mayor on Tuesday . The evidence as to their capture was repeated , and various articles of jewellery , which had been disposed of

in different quarters and recovered by the police , were nowproduced and recognised by their owners . The prisoners were again remanded , the Lord Mayor refusing an application for the discharge of two of the women . Two more gold watches , were recovered from the river on Saturday , which were recognised by Mr . AValker as part of the property stolen from

hisshop in Cornhill . The police have arrested another man charged with being concerned in the robberies . He now calls himself Johnson , but he has passed under various other names , and . among the thieves he has long been known as " Carroty Fred . " When told that he was charged with being concerned iu the late jewel robberies , he replied , " I know nothing about them ; I . have done nothing of tho kind for the last ten months . Thetrial of Gregorio Mogul for the manslaughter of Harrington , of

whose murder Pelizzioni had already been convicted , took place in the Central Criminal Court , before Mr . Justice Byles . The evidence given even hy the same witnesses differed in some degree from that which was given on the former trial , and a remarkable feature in the case was that the condemned manwas himself brought forward as a witness . His statement was thathe was knocked down by the English party directly heentered

the room , and he did not know who used the knife , but certainly ho did not . The jury found the prisoner guilty , and the judge sentenced him to penal servitude for five years . Pelizzioni has been reproved , and is to receive a free pardon . Atkinson , the Durham pitman , who beat his wife to death in a manner which excited so much horror at the time , was found

guilty of wilful murder at the Durham assises on Saturday last , and sentenced to death . The Irish papers report the shocking death of Mr . Edward Senior , the Irish Poor-law Commissioner , who was killed ou Tuesday afternoon in attempting to cross the Great Midland Railway , at a level crossing , about two and a half miles from Dublin . It is painful to add that

the catastrophe was owing to the indiscretion of the unfortunate gentleman himself , who was warned that a train was due , but he persisted in crossing , and even pushed the porter aside whoattempted to stop him . He was caught by the advancing train , and was shockingly mangled . Death , of course , was instantaneous . Mr . Senior was in his fifty-eighth year , and had . been connected with the administration of the Irish Poor-law since its first introduction inco the country .

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

R . S . —AVill please forward us his name in confidence . J . AV . —According to recent decisions , all degrees must bo conferred by , or in the presence of , an installed Master . M . M . —We believe not . G . S . —AVe don't believe that there is any truth in the report . J . S . —Certainly not . AV . M . —Next week .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-03-11, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_11031865/page/20/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 1
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 1
DEATH AND FUNERAL OF BROTHER P. J. PROUDHON. Article 2
FREEMASONRY IN CHINA. Article 3
HAMILTON PLACE, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 9
METROPOLITAN. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
BAHAMAS. Article 15
CHINA. Article 15
INDIA. Article 16
Obituary. Article 17
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 17
MR. AND MRS. GERMAN REED. Article 17
LITERARY EXTRACTS. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
Page 1

Page 1

3 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

3 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

3 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

3 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

3 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

1 Article
Page 9

Page 9

1 Article
Page 10

Page 10

4 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

1 Article
Page 12

Page 12

1 Article
Page 13

Page 13

1 Article
Page 14

Page 14

3 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

5 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

1 Article
Page 17

Page 17

6 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

1 Article
Page 20

Page 20

3 Articles
Page 20

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

The Week.

Hussars , which Lord Lucan gives up . Lieut .-General Hail succeeds to the 19 th Hussars , vacant by the death of General Pattlc ; Major-General Sabine becomes Colonel Commandant of the Artillery in the place of General Cobbe , deceased ; and Lieut .-General Sir II . R . Ferguson Davis succeeds to the 73 rd Foot , vacant by the death of Lieut .-General Jones .

The Duke of Devonshire , Lord Donoughmore , Lord Stanley , Mr . lAwe , Mr . Roebuck , Mr . Horsfall , Mr . G . C . Glynn , Mr . Dalglish , Mr . Leveson Gower , Mr . Ayrton , Sir Rowland Hill , Captain Galton , Mr . Maclean ( President of the Institution of Civil Engineers ) , and Mr . Edward Hamilton are the Commissioners appointed to inquire into the working of the

railway system of the United Kingdom . The winter meeting of the National Rifle Association was held at Willis ' s Rooms on Saturday , the Duke of Cambridge in the chair . The report was read , after which his Royal Highness addressed the meeting , congratulating them on the flourishing condition of the Association . Their funds were more prosperous ,

and their members more numerous than ever . The branch associations had also increased , and there was every prospect hat , largo as was tho sum spent in prizes at the hist Wimbledon meeting , the sum for the ensuing year would be larger still . The resolutions prpposed were unanimously agreed to , and his Royal Highness having been again elected president ,

the meeting adjourned . A most graceful tribute to the value of the services rendered to the country by Sir Rowland Hill was paid on Tuesday evening . A deputation of gentlemen representing the merchants and shipowners of Liverpool presented to Sir Rowland , at his own house , three pictures as a testimonial of the high estimation iu which they hold his improvements iu tno postal arrangements of the country . Sir Rowland had heen consulted on the form which he would

desire the testimonial to take , and selected pictures by StansReld , Creswick , and Cook . An interesting meeting was held at Lambeth Palace on AA ednesdny last—the Bishop of Winchester in the chair—to concert measures for the increase of church accommodation in the diocese , more especially in the three rural deaneries of Southwark , Lambeth , and Streatham . The Bishop , in his address , stated the amount of church

extension that had taken place since his accession to the see , and the need there was for still greater extension . He pointed out the rapid increase in the population , and the wants of wealthy residents among them , showing the need for help from the outer districts . The meeting ivas also addressed by the Archbishop of Canterbury , Air . Cubit ' , M . P ., the Hon . Mr . Broderick , and

others , and at the close a handsome subscription was raised , including £ 2 , 000 from the bishop himself . The Rev . W . L . Thornton , president of the A \ esleyan Methodist Conference , died in London on Sunday . The suit instituted by the Bishop of Norwich against the Rector of Claydon for officiating at Brother Ignatius ' s monastery— -an unlicensed and

unconsecrated place—was terminated in the Court of Arches on Monday . The reverend defendant has been condemned to pay the costs , and " admonished" not to repeat the offence . A singular case was decided on Tuesday in tho Court of Vice-Chancellor Sir J . Stuart . A Mr . Bailey had an account with the Messrs . AAllsons , bankers , in the midland counties . Mr .

Bailey ' s son was started in business , and it is alleged that he forged his father ' s name to bills to the extent of between £ 6 , 000 and £ 7 , 000 . On these being shown to the father ho expressed great alarm , and gave tho bankers an assignment over his estate on condition—so it was alleged—that his son should not be prosecuted . Mr . Bailey now sought to cancel this assignment on the ground that it was extorted from him by undue pressure , and the A ice-Chancellor taking

The Week.

that view of the case , ordered the deed to be cancelled . The Messrs . Barry and their workmen , who have been in custody for some weeks , and several times examined , on a charge of attempting to defraud various insurance offices , were againbrought before Mr . Alderman Stone , when several of the witnesses were recalled to complete their former testimony , and some new evidence was taken . At the close a further remand

was asked for , and then for the first time the magistrate entertained the application to admit them to bail , exacting , however , heavy sureties . The prisoners charged with the great City burglaries were again brought up before the Lord Mayor on Tuesday . The evidence as to their capture was repeated , and various articles of jewellery , which had been disposed of

in different quarters and recovered by the police , were nowproduced and recognised by their owners . The prisoners were again remanded , the Lord Mayor refusing an application for the discharge of two of the women . Two more gold watches , were recovered from the river on Saturday , which were recognised by Mr . AValker as part of the property stolen from

hisshop in Cornhill . The police have arrested another man charged with being concerned in the robberies . He now calls himself Johnson , but he has passed under various other names , and . among the thieves he has long been known as " Carroty Fred . " When told that he was charged with being concerned iu the late jewel robberies , he replied , " I know nothing about them ; I . have done nothing of tho kind for the last ten months . Thetrial of Gregorio Mogul for the manslaughter of Harrington , of

whose murder Pelizzioni had already been convicted , took place in the Central Criminal Court , before Mr . Justice Byles . The evidence given even hy the same witnesses differed in some degree from that which was given on the former trial , and a remarkable feature in the case was that the condemned manwas himself brought forward as a witness . His statement was thathe was knocked down by the English party directly heentered

the room , and he did not know who used the knife , but certainly ho did not . The jury found the prisoner guilty , and the judge sentenced him to penal servitude for five years . Pelizzioni has been reproved , and is to receive a free pardon . Atkinson , the Durham pitman , who beat his wife to death in a manner which excited so much horror at the time , was found

guilty of wilful murder at the Durham assises on Saturday last , and sentenced to death . The Irish papers report the shocking death of Mr . Edward Senior , the Irish Poor-law Commissioner , who was killed ou Tuesday afternoon in attempting to cross the Great Midland Railway , at a level crossing , about two and a half miles from Dublin . It is painful to add that

the catastrophe was owing to the indiscretion of the unfortunate gentleman himself , who was warned that a train was due , but he persisted in crossing , and even pushed the porter aside whoattempted to stop him . He was caught by the advancing train , and was shockingly mangled . Death , of course , was instantaneous . Mr . Senior was in his fifty-eighth year , and had . been connected with the administration of the Irish Poor-law since its first introduction inco the country .

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

R . S . —AVill please forward us his name in confidence . J . AV . —According to recent decisions , all degrees must bo conferred by , or in the presence of , an installed Master . M . M . —We believe not . G . S . —AVe don't believe that there is any truth in the report . J . S . —Certainly not . AV . M . —Next week .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 19
  • You're on page20
  • 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