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  • Aug. 13, 1859
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  • MASONRY IN AFRICA.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 13, 1859: Page 1

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Masonry In Africa.

MASONRY IN AFRICA .

LONDON , 8 ATl'nDAr , AL'Gl'ST 13 , 1559 .

IN Africa , twelve Lodges under the constitution of the Grand Lodgo of England arc in active existence ; their mimbcr bearing Imt little proportion to the white population of so vast a division of the world ; four of these are situated on . the AVest Coast , and the remaining eight at tho southern settlements , usually called the Cape of Good . llovic . At present

thoy are all under tho direct control of the Grand Master ; for though some years ago a Provincial Grand Master exercised authority in Southern Africa , the office is , and lias been for a considerable period , vacant . Few of our colonial possessions stand more in need of resident Masonic government ; independently of the laxity and want of discipline which

is likely to occur without the constant supervision of a regularly constituted authority , the remoteness from England , more especially of the southern settlements , renders the necessary correspondence with the Grand Secretary , on every slight and unimportant subject not specially provided for in the Constitutions a vexatious and irksome task ; nob that

the Masons in Africa would suffer by a comparison witli brethren in other colonies ; and as far as the Carjc itself is concerned there avc few countries , if any , under the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of England where Masonry is better acted up to , either in theory or practice ; if the next meeting ofthe . British LodgoNo . 419 ( Cape Town ) wore to bo held

, , in London , and favoured by a numerous attendance of our metropolitan . Past Masters , wc question , from what we hear , whether even those veterans in the Craft would discover any irregularity or deviation from the established ritual . It will however be admitted that inconvenience , to use no harsher wordoccasionally arises from the absence of a local court of

, appeal . Dispensations , certificates for erratic brethren , warrants for new Lodges , and complaints of a Masonic nature , which will sometimes demand redress even in the best regulated communities , are causes sufficient in themselves to call

for provincial government . Frequent correspondence with Freemasons' Hall , . London , more particularly to brethren located in the eastern provinces of the Cape colony , is a matter of grave moment . The mail steamer leaves England on tho Gth of each month , arriving at Capo Town about the 21 st of the following month , returning thence with the home mail

after the lapse of a few days ; letters despatched to Cape Town can thus be answered b y the return mail , but any addressed to the frontier towns cannot bo replied to until the following month . To give an instance of possible procrastination : — let it be supposed that Bro . TV " . Gray Clarke , Grand Secretary , writes to the AVorshipful Master of No . 987 Fordyce Lodge

, , ( meeting at King William ' s Town ) , in the eastern frontier ; the letter leaves England on the 6 ' th of January , arrives at Cape Town on the 21 st of February , and is received at King-William ' s Town on the 26 th ; the Worshi pful Master of No . 987 cannot transmit a reply to our Very Worshipful Brother until about the 25 th of Marchancl the Grand Secretary is

, not in possession of the required information before May ; so that although it maybe of a very urgent nature , Bro . Clarke has nothing for it but to wait patiently the four months . On the West Coast things are not quite so bad , and though provincial government is required , the Masons there are not subjected to equal inconvenience with their more distant

brethren at the Cape . To the want of vigour whicli . such a state must necessarily generate is to be attributed the tardy progress of Masonry in Africa ; and a possible decadence looms iu the future . Able and energetic rulers , vested with proper authority , and assisted as they would be by nearl Mason in their districts

y every , could do much to revive the drooping spirits of unsuccessful brethren , men who hitherto have laboured for the cause alone and unsupported , ancl naturally feel discontented at the barren result .

Masonry In Africa.

Africa requires two District Grand Lodgen , which for the present will suffice , though in a few years the spread of Masonry may bo such as to demand additional provinces . They should be called tho Provinces of AVestern and Southern Africa ; the former to comprise Nos . SG 7 , 4-10 , 500 , and 468 ; ancl the latter , Nos . 419 . 4-73 , 515 , 871 , 884 , 987 , 1 , 013 , and

. 1 , 040 . The Provincial Grand Master of Western Africa should be resident at Cape Coast Castle , and his Deputy at Sierra Leone , the latter having authority to grant dispensations , & e ., delegated to him . A Capo Town brother should preside over the province of Southern Africa , and a Deputy Provincial Grand Master ought to be by him selected from

amongst the most experienced Masons living on tho eastern frontier j for example , at Graham ' s Town , King William ' s Town , or Beaufort , in whom should be vested the discretionary power of granting dispensations , warrants , etc . Lodge No . 1 , 040 , situate at Port Natal , would certainly be somewhat isolated , if these arrangements woro carried into effect ,

though even it would profit by the change ; communication with Capo Town is not a matter of many days , ancl when the brethren at Pioter Maritzburg and D'lJrban shall have added a few mora Lodges to the present roll , which will in all probability soon be done , they will bo justly entitled to a province of their own . At no very distant date , it is to be hoped that Southern Africa will be divided into four Masonic provinces , viz ., Capo Town , Albany , British Kafir-aria , and Natal .

lhe establishment of District Grand Lodges would be a great boon to Masons in Africa , and our colonial brethren might then enjoy the advantages of provincial rank ; and a permanent and grateful feeling of regard feu- the piarcnt Grand Lodge—which , whilst vigilantly watching over the interests of the Graft in the mother country does not disdain to extend a fostering care to her far distant progeny—ivould be tho

natural consequence . It is to bo hoped that the legislators of tho Craft may see the necessity of an extended system of provincial , government ; and iu the event of such an occurrence , we trust that the claims of African Lodges will not bo overlooked .

Fallacious Views Of The Graft.

FALLACIOUS VIEWS OF THE GRAFT .

THE newspaper press of the present clay , from its intrinsic literary merits , as well as from the beneficial influence which it exercises upon our social system—alternately by its fearless censure , exposure , ancl satire of that which is corrupt and evil , or by advice , encouragement , ancl praise , judiciously bestowed where they are deserved—has fairly earned the

enormous influence which it undeniably possesses over the actions , ancl even the thoughts of a large portion of our countrymen . The daily ancl weekly journals of this metropolis comprise among the ranks of their contributors a bod y of essayists of ability ancl information for which we may in . vain search the previous history of literature to find a parallel ;

the spirit of the age indeed demands this , for so improved and so extended has education become of late years that the public is now too enlightened to accept with favour the efforts of inferior writers ; and any journal which omits to secure the highest talent available for its means must inevitably be thrust aside and passed in the race ivith so

mairybrilliant contemporaries . So universally acknowledged , are this ability and this great power for good and for evil , that the praise , or the strictures of " the fourth estate" cannot noiv pass' unregarded b y any rank or power in the state however exalted or however strong in themselves . If it bo possible to make any exception ,

to this rule it would be in the case of our venerable Order , which from its peculiar constitution and its extended sway over the whole surface of the inhabited globe , might well look with indifference upon any expression of the opinion of the outer world , taking a local or ( if that were possible ) even a national form . Foremost among the princi ples ofthe brethren

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-08-13, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_13081859/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
MASONRY IN AFRICA. Article 1
FALLACIOUS VIEWS OF THE GRAFT. Article 1
A TRIP FIVE THOUSAND MILES OFF. Article 4
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 7
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 10
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
Poetry. Article 11
FROM THE SEA. Article 11
FRAGMENTS OF SONG. Article 11
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 16
SCOTLAND. Article 16
CANADA. Article 17
COLONIAL. Article 17
SOUTH AMERICA. Article 17
AMERICAN MEMS. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 19
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonry In Africa.

MASONRY IN AFRICA .

LONDON , 8 ATl'nDAr , AL'Gl'ST 13 , 1559 .

IN Africa , twelve Lodges under the constitution of the Grand Lodgo of England arc in active existence ; their mimbcr bearing Imt little proportion to the white population of so vast a division of the world ; four of these are situated on . the AVest Coast , and the remaining eight at tho southern settlements , usually called the Cape of Good . llovic . At present

thoy are all under tho direct control of the Grand Master ; for though some years ago a Provincial Grand Master exercised authority in Southern Africa , the office is , and lias been for a considerable period , vacant . Few of our colonial possessions stand more in need of resident Masonic government ; independently of the laxity and want of discipline which

is likely to occur without the constant supervision of a regularly constituted authority , the remoteness from England , more especially of the southern settlements , renders the necessary correspondence with the Grand Secretary , on every slight and unimportant subject not specially provided for in the Constitutions a vexatious and irksome task ; nob that

the Masons in Africa would suffer by a comparison witli brethren in other colonies ; and as far as the Carjc itself is concerned there avc few countries , if any , under the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of England where Masonry is better acted up to , either in theory or practice ; if the next meeting ofthe . British LodgoNo . 419 ( Cape Town ) wore to bo held

, , in London , and favoured by a numerous attendance of our metropolitan . Past Masters , wc question , from what we hear , whether even those veterans in the Craft would discover any irregularity or deviation from the established ritual . It will however be admitted that inconvenience , to use no harsher wordoccasionally arises from the absence of a local court of

, appeal . Dispensations , certificates for erratic brethren , warrants for new Lodges , and complaints of a Masonic nature , which will sometimes demand redress even in the best regulated communities , are causes sufficient in themselves to call

for provincial government . Frequent correspondence with Freemasons' Hall , . London , more particularly to brethren located in the eastern provinces of the Cape colony , is a matter of grave moment . The mail steamer leaves England on tho Gth of each month , arriving at Capo Town about the 21 st of the following month , returning thence with the home mail

after the lapse of a few days ; letters despatched to Cape Town can thus be answered b y the return mail , but any addressed to the frontier towns cannot bo replied to until the following month . To give an instance of possible procrastination : — let it be supposed that Bro . TV " . Gray Clarke , Grand Secretary , writes to the AVorshipful Master of No . 987 Fordyce Lodge

, , ( meeting at King William ' s Town ) , in the eastern frontier ; the letter leaves England on the 6 ' th of January , arrives at Cape Town on the 21 st of February , and is received at King-William ' s Town on the 26 th ; the Worshi pful Master of No . 987 cannot transmit a reply to our Very Worshipful Brother until about the 25 th of Marchancl the Grand Secretary is

, not in possession of the required information before May ; so that although it maybe of a very urgent nature , Bro . Clarke has nothing for it but to wait patiently the four months . On the West Coast things are not quite so bad , and though provincial government is required , the Masons there are not subjected to equal inconvenience with their more distant

brethren at the Cape . To the want of vigour whicli . such a state must necessarily generate is to be attributed the tardy progress of Masonry in Africa ; and a possible decadence looms iu the future . Able and energetic rulers , vested with proper authority , and assisted as they would be by nearl Mason in their districts

y every , could do much to revive the drooping spirits of unsuccessful brethren , men who hitherto have laboured for the cause alone and unsupported , ancl naturally feel discontented at the barren result .

Masonry In Africa.

Africa requires two District Grand Lodgen , which for the present will suffice , though in a few years the spread of Masonry may bo such as to demand additional provinces . They should be called tho Provinces of AVestern and Southern Africa ; the former to comprise Nos . SG 7 , 4-10 , 500 , and 468 ; ancl the latter , Nos . 419 . 4-73 , 515 , 871 , 884 , 987 , 1 , 013 , and

. 1 , 040 . The Provincial Grand Master of Western Africa should be resident at Cape Coast Castle , and his Deputy at Sierra Leone , the latter having authority to grant dispensations , & e ., delegated to him . A Capo Town brother should preside over the province of Southern Africa , and a Deputy Provincial Grand Master ought to be by him selected from

amongst the most experienced Masons living on tho eastern frontier j for example , at Graham ' s Town , King William ' s Town , or Beaufort , in whom should be vested the discretionary power of granting dispensations , warrants , etc . Lodge No . 1 , 040 , situate at Port Natal , would certainly be somewhat isolated , if these arrangements woro carried into effect ,

though even it would profit by the change ; communication with Capo Town is not a matter of many days , ancl when the brethren at Pioter Maritzburg and D'lJrban shall have added a few mora Lodges to the present roll , which will in all probability soon be done , they will bo justly entitled to a province of their own . At no very distant date , it is to be hoped that Southern Africa will be divided into four Masonic provinces , viz ., Capo Town , Albany , British Kafir-aria , and Natal .

lhe establishment of District Grand Lodges would be a great boon to Masons in Africa , and our colonial brethren might then enjoy the advantages of provincial rank ; and a permanent and grateful feeling of regard feu- the piarcnt Grand Lodge—which , whilst vigilantly watching over the interests of the Graft in the mother country does not disdain to extend a fostering care to her far distant progeny—ivould be tho

natural consequence . It is to bo hoped that the legislators of tho Craft may see the necessity of an extended system of provincial , government ; and iu the event of such an occurrence , we trust that the claims of African Lodges will not bo overlooked .

Fallacious Views Of The Graft.

FALLACIOUS VIEWS OF THE GRAFT .

THE newspaper press of the present clay , from its intrinsic literary merits , as well as from the beneficial influence which it exercises upon our social system—alternately by its fearless censure , exposure , ancl satire of that which is corrupt and evil , or by advice , encouragement , ancl praise , judiciously bestowed where they are deserved—has fairly earned the

enormous influence which it undeniably possesses over the actions , ancl even the thoughts of a large portion of our countrymen . The daily ancl weekly journals of this metropolis comprise among the ranks of their contributors a bod y of essayists of ability ancl information for which we may in . vain search the previous history of literature to find a parallel ;

the spirit of the age indeed demands this , for so improved and so extended has education become of late years that the public is now too enlightened to accept with favour the efforts of inferior writers ; and any journal which omits to secure the highest talent available for its means must inevitably be thrust aside and passed in the race ivith so

mairybrilliant contemporaries . So universally acknowledged , are this ability and this great power for good and for evil , that the praise , or the strictures of " the fourth estate" cannot noiv pass' unregarded b y any rank or power in the state however exalted or however strong in themselves . If it bo possible to make any exception ,

to this rule it would be in the case of our venerable Order , which from its peculiar constitution and its extended sway over the whole surface of the inhabited globe , might well look with indifference upon any expression of the opinion of the outer world , taking a local or ( if that were possible ) even a national form . Foremost among the princi ples ofthe brethren

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