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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • March 18, 1865
  • Page 4
  • FOR THE LAST TWENTY YEARS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 18, 1865: Page 4

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    Article FOR THE LAST TWENTY YEARS. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article FOR THE LAST TWENTY YEARS. Page 2 of 2
    Article SAVILE HOUSE: WHY WAS IT BURNT? Page 1 of 3 →
Page 4

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

For The Last Twenty Years.

death . * Captain Hillier , 14 th Light Dragoons , aide-de-camp for many years at Government House , and a general favourite in society here ; poor Sweetenham , of the 16 tk Lancers , who died a soldier ' s death in the glorious charge at Alliwal , and a tablet to whose memory is in the anteroom of the third

floor of our Masonic Hall ; Major Boileau , well known in our Masonic literature as A . H . E . B ., and as the immediate predecessor in the Provincial Grand Master's chair of R . W . Bro . Sandeman ; Arthur Sanders , and other military men—what a lot of military officers we had iu those days ! Then

Dr . Wallich , superintendent of the Botanical Gardens , an old man in years before he became a Mason , but as young in heart and thought as any Entered Apprentice before or after him . Wallich was , if I mistake not , greatly on the wrong side of fifty when he was initiated , two or three years after

I was ; but , as he himself told me , he felt he had neglected all his previous time in keeping out of Masonry . f As soon as he entered it , he did indeed make up for lost time in the love and zeal he showed for the Craft . He was a perfect child in his ardour for Masoniy , and there was no act of kindness which he would not have done , if it lay in his power to do it , for a distressed brother . No worthier Mason ever lived than Dr . Wallich .

He , too , has gone to his long home ; but we may well hope that he will be found where his kind old Danish heart will be glad to re-welcome those it was haijpy to mingle with in lodge . We had also John King , for many years chief clerk and afterwards judge of the Small Cause Court . To

his memory , also , a tablet hangs in our Mosonic Hall . Again , another tablet hanging there reminds us of poor George Newman , of the then firm of Leach , Kettlewell , and Co ., who was cut off by cholera—a very young man , and with excellent prospectsand for a while he was Master of Lodge

, Industry and Perseverance . For many years a personal friend of nay own , I cannot venture to say much , of him , lest I should write somewhat extravagantly on the subject . I will say this much of George Newman , that I do not believe it was j ) ossible for him to make an enemy , and no one who

knew him failed to be his friend . Charles Huffnagle , the American Consul , doctor , and merchant , known to all his friends as Huffy , was Junior Warden in Industry when I was Senior , with Ilbery as our Master . Iu those days we had many American brethren among us , and many of

my brethren will recal the duets of Torry and Tuckerman , and the strong . lungs of Wilmer { " Biler , " as he was universally called ) when he shouted out is favourite song" 0 ! carry me back to old Yirginny , To old Virginia ' s shore . " If report speaks true , "Biler" finds that the

For The Last Twenty Years.

Britisher's peaceful and pleasant island home is a better place just now than old Virginny . Poor Amory , also , was au American . He , too , died a sudden death by cholera , to the sincere regret of all who knew him . But I cannot name all of our Masonic friends who have left us during the

last twenty years : there are too many . * But often and often in lodge do I think of them , and the memory of each haunts me like

" The phantom of a silent song That comes and goes a thousand times . " And now , in closing my subject , let me say that , for the last twenty years , I have , in Masonry , made many and many a friend , and have never once found an enemy or met with ill-will ; and it is zny

happiness still to mix with Freemasons , and my hope is that the same happiness may be accorded to me for the next twemjy years . Though it has been my good fortune never , in my own case , to have had to appeal for assistance " as a brother in distress , " I sincerely believe , in fact I know , that much kindness and consideration have often been

shown to me ( as always is the case in Masonry ) , and my many shortcomings have been gently thought of , owing to my connection with the Craft . Need I therefore say to any reader of this letter , who is not a Freemason , that I heartily commend him to become and continue one , for a man cannot

aspire to anything worthier in life than to be a good Mason . As such , a man may well possess the hope so beautifully expressed by Tennyson , in words very slightly altered by me" To pass ere life her light withdraws , Not void of righteous self-applause ,

Nor in a merely selfish cause , In some good cause , not all his own , To pass his life , ere helpless grown , Then perish , wept for , honoured , known . "

To which I would make my own poor addition—And thus , while weeping brethren shed Their tears around his dying bed , Of him to have this requiem said"' Through weal and woe , from morn to e ' en , Throughout life ' s long and chequered scene , A true Freemason he has been , " W . H . A .

Savile House: Why Was It Burnt?

SAVILE HOUSE : WHY WAS IT BURNT ?

[ Whilst we are building , and ere it is too late , we would commend the following observations from the Builder to our Building Committee , though we believe every precaution is being taken to make our New Hall as safe as possible ] : —¦ The accounts of the destruction of Saville

House by fire have omitted notice of circumstances that would deserve to be remembered in any efforts to develop a system of construction less productive of danger than that which now prevails . Something has been written , iu our own pages especially , concerning the system which allows each house—or in the mojority of cases . —to be as

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-03-18, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_18031865/page/4/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE ADMISSION OF HINDOOS AS FREEMASONS. Article 1
A TALE OF THE OLDEN TIME. Article 2
FOR THE LAST TWENTY YEARS. Article 3
SAVILE HOUSE: WHY WAS IT BURNT? Article 4
GREAT TRIENNIAL HANDEL FESTIVAL. CRYSTAL PALACE, JUNE, 1865. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH. Article 13
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 13
AMERICA. Article 14
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 15
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. LYCEUM THEATRE. Article 15
Poetry. Article 16
THE WEEK. Article 16
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

For The Last Twenty Years.

death . * Captain Hillier , 14 th Light Dragoons , aide-de-camp for many years at Government House , and a general favourite in society here ; poor Sweetenham , of the 16 tk Lancers , who died a soldier ' s death in the glorious charge at Alliwal , and a tablet to whose memory is in the anteroom of the third

floor of our Masonic Hall ; Major Boileau , well known in our Masonic literature as A . H . E . B ., and as the immediate predecessor in the Provincial Grand Master's chair of R . W . Bro . Sandeman ; Arthur Sanders , and other military men—what a lot of military officers we had iu those days ! Then

Dr . Wallich , superintendent of the Botanical Gardens , an old man in years before he became a Mason , but as young in heart and thought as any Entered Apprentice before or after him . Wallich was , if I mistake not , greatly on the wrong side of fifty when he was initiated , two or three years after

I was ; but , as he himself told me , he felt he had neglected all his previous time in keeping out of Masonry . f As soon as he entered it , he did indeed make up for lost time in the love and zeal he showed for the Craft . He was a perfect child in his ardour for Masoniy , and there was no act of kindness which he would not have done , if it lay in his power to do it , for a distressed brother . No worthier Mason ever lived than Dr . Wallich .

He , too , has gone to his long home ; but we may well hope that he will be found where his kind old Danish heart will be glad to re-welcome those it was haijpy to mingle with in lodge . We had also John King , for many years chief clerk and afterwards judge of the Small Cause Court . To

his memory , also , a tablet hangs in our Mosonic Hall . Again , another tablet hanging there reminds us of poor George Newman , of the then firm of Leach , Kettlewell , and Co ., who was cut off by cholera—a very young man , and with excellent prospectsand for a while he was Master of Lodge

, Industry and Perseverance . For many years a personal friend of nay own , I cannot venture to say much , of him , lest I should write somewhat extravagantly on the subject . I will say this much of George Newman , that I do not believe it was j ) ossible for him to make an enemy , and no one who

knew him failed to be his friend . Charles Huffnagle , the American Consul , doctor , and merchant , known to all his friends as Huffy , was Junior Warden in Industry when I was Senior , with Ilbery as our Master . Iu those days we had many American brethren among us , and many of

my brethren will recal the duets of Torry and Tuckerman , and the strong . lungs of Wilmer { " Biler , " as he was universally called ) when he shouted out is favourite song" 0 ! carry me back to old Yirginny , To old Virginia ' s shore . " If report speaks true , "Biler" finds that the

For The Last Twenty Years.

Britisher's peaceful and pleasant island home is a better place just now than old Virginny . Poor Amory , also , was au American . He , too , died a sudden death by cholera , to the sincere regret of all who knew him . But I cannot name all of our Masonic friends who have left us during the

last twenty years : there are too many . * But often and often in lodge do I think of them , and the memory of each haunts me like

" The phantom of a silent song That comes and goes a thousand times . " And now , in closing my subject , let me say that , for the last twenty years , I have , in Masonry , made many and many a friend , and have never once found an enemy or met with ill-will ; and it is zny

happiness still to mix with Freemasons , and my hope is that the same happiness may be accorded to me for the next twemjy years . Though it has been my good fortune never , in my own case , to have had to appeal for assistance " as a brother in distress , " I sincerely believe , in fact I know , that much kindness and consideration have often been

shown to me ( as always is the case in Masonry ) , and my many shortcomings have been gently thought of , owing to my connection with the Craft . Need I therefore say to any reader of this letter , who is not a Freemason , that I heartily commend him to become and continue one , for a man cannot

aspire to anything worthier in life than to be a good Mason . As such , a man may well possess the hope so beautifully expressed by Tennyson , in words very slightly altered by me" To pass ere life her light withdraws , Not void of righteous self-applause ,

Nor in a merely selfish cause , In some good cause , not all his own , To pass his life , ere helpless grown , Then perish , wept for , honoured , known . "

To which I would make my own poor addition—And thus , while weeping brethren shed Their tears around his dying bed , Of him to have this requiem said"' Through weal and woe , from morn to e ' en , Throughout life ' s long and chequered scene , A true Freemason he has been , " W . H . A .

Savile House: Why Was It Burnt?

SAVILE HOUSE : WHY WAS IT BURNT ?

[ Whilst we are building , and ere it is too late , we would commend the following observations from the Builder to our Building Committee , though we believe every precaution is being taken to make our New Hall as safe as possible ] : —¦ The accounts of the destruction of Saville

House by fire have omitted notice of circumstances that would deserve to be remembered in any efforts to develop a system of construction less productive of danger than that which now prevails . Something has been written , iu our own pages especially , concerning the system which allows each house—or in the mojority of cases . —to be as

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