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  • Jan. 19, 1861
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 19, 1861: Page 14

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    Article PROVINCIAL. ← Page 3 of 4 →
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Provincial.

severally occupying the position I Avas ambitious for , and have now attained . But I must tell them they will have to ivork , for I see a determination in the lodge only to put in office such brethren as they have strong reason to believe v .-ill perform the duties of any office efficiently , and to avoid such brethren as wiaild be content merely ivith " rule of thumb" ceremonies , such as opening and closing , and leaving the higher and more important duties of their office to the past

masters , or to our brother Secretary , who , until the last three or four years , AVUS accustomed to do nearly the Avhole of the work . I very much applaud this disposition of the lodge ; for I think , if Freemasonry he a good thing ( as I do not doubt ) , and there be . anything in Freemasonry worth doing at all , it most certainly is -worth doing well . Let this he understood , then , that those officers who do not attend to the performance of their duties are , to say tbe least , betraying trusts reposed in them , and are not the fit and

proper men to hold office in St . Peter ' s , or in any other JIasonic lodge . I thank you , R . AA ' . Sir , for the kind manner you have introduced the toast to the lodge , and to you , brethren , for your cordial support and reception of me . —The next toast ivas proposed by Bro . Dr . EDAA ' ARDS , P . JI . AA ' alsall , and was that of "The D . Prov . G . AI ., and other Grand Oiliceis of the Province , " and he said ¦ that Dr . Burton , the new D . Prov . G . JI ., AVUS the right brother in the right jihice—a round man in a round hole , and not a round

man in a square hole . —Bro . DRAKE , P . JI . of Stafford , responded for himself and other Provincial Grand Officers . —Then folloived tbe toasts of " The P . M . s of G 07 ; " " 'Tlie new Initiate , Bro . Pratt ;" "" The Treasurer , and other Officers ;"" The Visiting- Brethren ;" " Bro . Gough , Installing JIaster ; " —responded to by Bro . Lewis , P . JI . ; " The Health of Bro . T . AA ' . Cooper , " ivho bad performed efficiently the duties of S . AA ' ., and had voluntarily withdraw- ]! his claim for tivelve months to the AA' . JI . ' s chair , was proposed by Pro .

Newnham , and responded to . " The AA ' . JI . of 7 G 9 "—responded to by Bro . Humphreys . —Bro . AA ' arner proposed " The Army , Navy , and Volunteers , " and eulogised the services of Bro . Captain Gough , and the credit he thereby reflected upon Freemasonry . " The Host , Bro . Trigger , " and the Tiler ' s toast concluded the list , and the brethren shortly afteriviu-ds separated , having spent a very agreeable evening . AA ' e should not omit to mention that Bro . 'Trigger and several other brethren amused the company ivith some admirable soncs .

YORKSHIRE ( AVEST ) . BAILEY CAUR , DEIYSUIJRY . —St . John ' s Lodge ( No . 1129 ) . —The a-eguhu- meeting of this lodge was held on Jlonday , the 31 st -December , I 860 , when the AA ' . JI ., Bro . Richard Reed Nelson , and -other officers and brethren ivere present . Bros . Jonathan Day and Tom Chadivick ivere raised to the sublime degree of JIaster Jlasons . The ceremony was performed b y the AA ' . JI . in that able and impressive manner which characterises all his JIasonic proceedingsafter

, ¦ which he gave the lecture on the tracing-board . The business ! being concluded , the brethren adjourned to refreshment . AA ' AKEi-iEi . n . — Wakefield Lodge { No 727 ) . —The brethren of this lodge met on Tuesday , the 8 th instant , under tho presidency of their newly elected and highly respected AA ' orshipful Alaster , Pro . Thomas Senior , when a worthy candidate ivas balloted for , unanimously approved , and duly initiated into the mysteries of our Order .

A communication from the Prov . G . Secretary having been read , ordering mourning to be worn for three months for the liitrht Hon . the Earl of Mexborough , the late R . AV . Prov . G . JI . of AVest Yorkshire , ivho died on tho 25 th December , after liaving presided over the province above 37 years , he being installed at Wakefield , April 3 , 1823 , it was thought that as this ivas the first meeting of the lodge since the afflictive event took place , and especially as the Hon . and Rev . Philip York Savilc , P . Prov . G . C . was a member of the

AA ' akeiiehl Lodge , that it ivould be a pleasing and graceful act on the part of the lodge to pass a resolution of condolence Avith their . Hon . and Rev . Brother . It ivas therefore moved bv Pro . the llev . Dr . Senior , P . Prov . G . C . seconded by Bro . AA'illiam flatter , P . Prov . S . G . AA ' ., and carried unanimously , —That the AA ' orshipfiil JIaster , Ofiicers , and Brethren of tho AA ' akefield Lodge , 727 , do hereby tender to their beloved brother , the Hon . and Rev . Phili p York Savilc , thensincere and hearty condolence on the afflictive bereavement , ivhich

he , as a son and brother , and they , as brethren of the Province of AVest Yorkshire , have sustained in the loss of their revered Sire and Gi-. md Alaster , the Rig ht Hon . the , ' Earl of Mcxboi-ouorli . And earnestly do they pray that the special blessing ofthe ( uA . O . T . U . may rest upon their brother , and upon every member of his respected family , and that this and every chastening providence of their Heavenl y Father may teach every brother in the province to prepare the more earnestl y for admission into that glorious Loilge on high , into ivhich fhey trust that their departed In-other and Grand JIaster has now entered . The secretary , Pro . Dr . Senior , was directed to transmit the resolution to the Hon

and Rev . P . A " . Savilc , ivith the best wishes and kindest regarife' of all the brethren . Another candidate for our ancient rite was ' then proposed , after which fche lodge ,, was closed in perfect peace and harmony . Riroy . — Earl de Grey and Fipon Lodge . — The second monthly meeting of this neivty-establishcd lodge took place on Friday , the 5 th ult ., when there was a goodly muster of the Craft . '

There being two passings , the ceremony wasvery impressively performed by P . JI . Bro . Clark , P . Prov . G . S . D ., AA ' orcestershire , ' P . JI . of the Harmonic Lodge ( 313 ) , Dudley ; there ivas also tivo propositions for the next evening , and as this lodge is a revival of the old Lodge of A ' erity , held in Ripon many years ago , it is pleasing to hear that the old members of the Craft are rall ying round the young blood that is being infused in the spirit of Masonry in this

locality . There is also an old chapter in abeyance connected wifch the defunct lodge , and it is to be hoped that , ere long , sufficient vital elements of that exalted degree will be found to resuscitate Arch JIasonry also in this very ancient city and once stronghold of Freemasonry . Amongst the visitors and members present were P . JI . Bros . Clark , of Lodge 313 ; P . JI . Bishop , the AA ' . JI . ; AA ' ordall , S . AA ' . ; Burlhison , Collinson , Morton , Dauby , . loting , Stephenson , and others . After the business of the evening was overthe

, brethren repaired from labour to refreshment , and spent a very harmonious and truly JIasonic evening . A resolution ivas unanimously carried to avail themselves of the FREEHASONS JIAGAZINE , a copy of that valuable periodical having been submitted to the approval of the officers of the lodge .

. SIIEI'V 1 E 1 , D . —Britannia Lodge { No . 1 G 2 ) . —The regular monthly meeting of this lodge ivas held in the lodge-room at tlie Jlusic Hall , on Thursday , January 10 th , under the presidency of the AA' . JL , Bro . AA'illiam AA'hite , jun . There was a large attendance of the brethren . The lodge having been opened , and the minutes of the last regular lodge and the lodge of emergency having been read and confirmed , Bro . AA'illiam Ibbotson was examined , and , proving proficient , was duly passed to the degree of a Felloiv Craft . The

AA' . JI . ably performed the ceremony , and gave the lecture on the tracing-board , and Bro . AA ' ebster delivered the charge . The lodge ii-as then resumed in the first degree , and Jlr . AA'illiam Tomlhison was admitted to the mysteries and privileges of Ancient Freemasonry . The whole ceremony of initiation , including the charge and the lecture on the tracing-board , being performed in a very impressive manner by the AA ' . JL , who then made a powerful appeal to the brethren for support for the various JIasonic charities ; and

. said that , as he had the privilege of being appointed to serve as Steivard at the approaching Festival of the Royal JIasonic Benevolent Institution , he trusted they ivould maintain the hi gh character ivhich the province of AA ' est Yorkshire at present enjoyed by placing such a sum in his hands as ivould reflect credit upon so prosperous a lodge , and prove that , amidst all the pleasures of this life , they did not forget the tears of the ividoiv and the misfortunes of age . A lecture AVUS then delivered b y Bro . E . AA ' . Shaw , C . E .,

J . AA ' . 382 , Leeds , " On Jlasons' Marks . " The object of the lecturer was to prove , by means of Jlasons' marks , the antiquity of Freemasonry , and also to SIIOAV that , in medncval and modern times , similar marks were , and still are , used by Jlasons . Beautifully

executed drawings of upivards of 1500 marks ivere exhibited ; the oldest being from the pyramids of Gizeh , ivhich ivere built upivards of 1200 years ago ; many were from AI Hadhr , in Jlesopotiimia , a circular town or city , called by Ainsivorth the "Astronomical Citv , " and supposed to have been built b y the Chaldicans about 1500 B . C .: there ivere also a number from AA ' asa i ' ada and other eastern places , those from Eski Kahn in Lycia hearing a strong resemblance to Runic characters . Some very curious marks from the " Cistern

of 1001 Columns" at Constantinople ivcrealso shoivn . Bro . Shaw , after describing IIOAV the Jlasons employed in the building of the 'Temple on Jlount Moriah at Jerusalem were divided into classes , and hoiv the stones ivere "heivn , squared , marked , and numbered " in the quarries , proceeded to give some particulars respecting the wages of the workmen , more especially alluding to the Avages of the AIark Jlasons of the Felloivcraf ' ts , who received half a shekel of silver per day—equivalent to about l . v . l . V

fee now paid at Bradford , Keighley , and other places by the Felloivcrafts on taking their marks . On the completion of the Temple , tho brethren dispersed into various countries , carrying with them their ceremonies , signs , tokens , and words . In the year 7 . 1 . 1 ls . c ., Numa l'oiup ' ilius formed the Roman artificers into separate companies or guilds , according to their different trades ; and the system appears to have been introduced into Britain early in the lirst century , as is evidenced b y the fact of a votive inscription discovered some

years ago in the remains of the ancient city of Coriniuin , near Cirencester , in AA-hich the " College of Jlasons " dedicate a temple to Neptune and Jlinerva , and to the safety of the family of Claudius Cesar , A . D ., 50 . Bro . Shaw exhibited marks from Herculaneum , from Hadrian ' s AA ' all , A . D . 125 , from the Multangular Tower at

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-01-19, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_19011861/page/14/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 1
VISIT TO STRATFORD-ON-AVON AND ITS VICINAGE. Article 2
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
"THE VOICE OF MASONRY." Article 10
A STRANGE PROCEEDING. Article 10
TEE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 16
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 16
COLONIAL. Article 17
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 18
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Provincial.

severally occupying the position I Avas ambitious for , and have now attained . But I must tell them they will have to ivork , for I see a determination in the lodge only to put in office such brethren as they have strong reason to believe v .-ill perform the duties of any office efficiently , and to avoid such brethren as wiaild be content merely ivith " rule of thumb" ceremonies , such as opening and closing , and leaving the higher and more important duties of their office to the past

masters , or to our brother Secretary , who , until the last three or four years , AVUS accustomed to do nearly the Avhole of the work . I very much applaud this disposition of the lodge ; for I think , if Freemasonry he a good thing ( as I do not doubt ) , and there be . anything in Freemasonry worth doing at all , it most certainly is -worth doing well . Let this he understood , then , that those officers who do not attend to the performance of their duties are , to say tbe least , betraying trusts reposed in them , and are not the fit and

proper men to hold office in St . Peter ' s , or in any other JIasonic lodge . I thank you , R . AA ' . Sir , for the kind manner you have introduced the toast to the lodge , and to you , brethren , for your cordial support and reception of me . —The next toast ivas proposed by Bro . Dr . EDAA ' ARDS , P . JI . AA ' alsall , and was that of "The D . Prov . G . AI ., and other Grand Oiliceis of the Province , " and he said ¦ that Dr . Burton , the new D . Prov . G . JI ., AVUS the right brother in the right jihice—a round man in a round hole , and not a round

man in a square hole . —Bro . DRAKE , P . JI . of Stafford , responded for himself and other Provincial Grand Officers . —Then folloived tbe toasts of " The P . M . s of G 07 ; " " 'Tlie new Initiate , Bro . Pratt ;" "" The Treasurer , and other Officers ;"" The Visiting- Brethren ;" " Bro . Gough , Installing JIaster ; " —responded to by Bro . Lewis , P . JI . ; " The Health of Bro . T . AA ' . Cooper , " ivho bad performed efficiently the duties of S . AA ' ., and had voluntarily withdraw- ]! his claim for tivelve months to the AA' . JI . ' s chair , was proposed by Pro .

Newnham , and responded to . " The AA ' . JI . of 7 G 9 "—responded to by Bro . Humphreys . —Bro . AA ' arner proposed " The Army , Navy , and Volunteers , " and eulogised the services of Bro . Captain Gough , and the credit he thereby reflected upon Freemasonry . " The Host , Bro . Trigger , " and the Tiler ' s toast concluded the list , and the brethren shortly afteriviu-ds separated , having spent a very agreeable evening . AA ' e should not omit to mention that Bro . 'Trigger and several other brethren amused the company ivith some admirable soncs .

YORKSHIRE ( AVEST ) . BAILEY CAUR , DEIYSUIJRY . —St . John ' s Lodge ( No . 1129 ) . —The a-eguhu- meeting of this lodge was held on Jlonday , the 31 st -December , I 860 , when the AA ' . JI ., Bro . Richard Reed Nelson , and -other officers and brethren ivere present . Bros . Jonathan Day and Tom Chadivick ivere raised to the sublime degree of JIaster Jlasons . The ceremony was performed b y the AA ' . JI . in that able and impressive manner which characterises all his JIasonic proceedingsafter

, ¦ which he gave the lecture on the tracing-board . The business ! being concluded , the brethren adjourned to refreshment . AA ' AKEi-iEi . n . — Wakefield Lodge { No 727 ) . —The brethren of this lodge met on Tuesday , the 8 th instant , under tho presidency of their newly elected and highly respected AA ' orshipful Alaster , Pro . Thomas Senior , when a worthy candidate ivas balloted for , unanimously approved , and duly initiated into the mysteries of our Order .

A communication from the Prov . G . Secretary having been read , ordering mourning to be worn for three months for the liitrht Hon . the Earl of Mexborough , the late R . AV . Prov . G . JI . of AVest Yorkshire , ivho died on tho 25 th December , after liaving presided over the province above 37 years , he being installed at Wakefield , April 3 , 1823 , it was thought that as this ivas the first meeting of the lodge since the afflictive event took place , and especially as the Hon . and Rev . Philip York Savilc , P . Prov . G . C . was a member of the

AA ' akeiiehl Lodge , that it ivould be a pleasing and graceful act on the part of the lodge to pass a resolution of condolence Avith their . Hon . and Rev . Brother . It ivas therefore moved bv Pro . the llev . Dr . Senior , P . Prov . G . C . seconded by Bro . AA'illiam flatter , P . Prov . S . G . AA ' ., and carried unanimously , —That the AA ' orshipfiil JIaster , Ofiicers , and Brethren of tho AA ' akefield Lodge , 727 , do hereby tender to their beloved brother , the Hon . and Rev . Phili p York Savilc , thensincere and hearty condolence on the afflictive bereavement , ivhich

he , as a son and brother , and they , as brethren of the Province of AVest Yorkshire , have sustained in the loss of their revered Sire and Gi-. md Alaster , the Rig ht Hon . the , ' Earl of Mcxboi-ouorli . And earnestly do they pray that the special blessing ofthe ( uA . O . T . U . may rest upon their brother , and upon every member of his respected family , and that this and every chastening providence of their Heavenl y Father may teach every brother in the province to prepare the more earnestl y for admission into that glorious Loilge on high , into ivhich fhey trust that their departed In-other and Grand JIaster has now entered . The secretary , Pro . Dr . Senior , was directed to transmit the resolution to the Hon

and Rev . P . A " . Savilc , ivith the best wishes and kindest regarife' of all the brethren . Another candidate for our ancient rite was ' then proposed , after which fche lodge ,, was closed in perfect peace and harmony . Riroy . — Earl de Grey and Fipon Lodge . — The second monthly meeting of this neivty-establishcd lodge took place on Friday , the 5 th ult ., when there was a goodly muster of the Craft . '

There being two passings , the ceremony wasvery impressively performed by P . JI . Bro . Clark , P . Prov . G . S . D ., AA ' orcestershire , ' P . JI . of the Harmonic Lodge ( 313 ) , Dudley ; there ivas also tivo propositions for the next evening , and as this lodge is a revival of the old Lodge of A ' erity , held in Ripon many years ago , it is pleasing to hear that the old members of the Craft are rall ying round the young blood that is being infused in the spirit of Masonry in this

locality . There is also an old chapter in abeyance connected wifch the defunct lodge , and it is to be hoped that , ere long , sufficient vital elements of that exalted degree will be found to resuscitate Arch JIasonry also in this very ancient city and once stronghold of Freemasonry . Amongst the visitors and members present were P . JI . Bros . Clark , of Lodge 313 ; P . JI . Bishop , the AA ' . JI . ; AA ' ordall , S . AA ' . ; Burlhison , Collinson , Morton , Dauby , . loting , Stephenson , and others . After the business of the evening was overthe

, brethren repaired from labour to refreshment , and spent a very harmonious and truly JIasonic evening . A resolution ivas unanimously carried to avail themselves of the FREEHASONS JIAGAZINE , a copy of that valuable periodical having been submitted to the approval of the officers of the lodge .

. SIIEI'V 1 E 1 , D . —Britannia Lodge { No . 1 G 2 ) . —The regular monthly meeting of this lodge ivas held in the lodge-room at tlie Jlusic Hall , on Thursday , January 10 th , under the presidency of the AA' . JL , Bro . AA'illiam AA'hite , jun . There was a large attendance of the brethren . The lodge having been opened , and the minutes of the last regular lodge and the lodge of emergency having been read and confirmed , Bro . AA'illiam Ibbotson was examined , and , proving proficient , was duly passed to the degree of a Felloiv Craft . The

AA' . JI . ably performed the ceremony , and gave the lecture on the tracing-board , and Bro . AA ' ebster delivered the charge . The lodge ii-as then resumed in the first degree , and Jlr . AA'illiam Tomlhison was admitted to the mysteries and privileges of Ancient Freemasonry . The whole ceremony of initiation , including the charge and the lecture on the tracing-board , being performed in a very impressive manner by the AA ' . JL , who then made a powerful appeal to the brethren for support for the various JIasonic charities ; and

. said that , as he had the privilege of being appointed to serve as Steivard at the approaching Festival of the Royal JIasonic Benevolent Institution , he trusted they ivould maintain the hi gh character ivhich the province of AA ' est Yorkshire at present enjoyed by placing such a sum in his hands as ivould reflect credit upon so prosperous a lodge , and prove that , amidst all the pleasures of this life , they did not forget the tears of the ividoiv and the misfortunes of age . A lecture AVUS then delivered b y Bro . E . AA ' . Shaw , C . E .,

J . AA ' . 382 , Leeds , " On Jlasons' Marks . " The object of the lecturer was to prove , by means of Jlasons' marks , the antiquity of Freemasonry , and also to SIIOAV that , in medncval and modern times , similar marks were , and still are , used by Jlasons . Beautifully

executed drawings of upivards of 1500 marks ivere exhibited ; the oldest being from the pyramids of Gizeh , ivhich ivere built upivards of 1200 years ago ; many were from AI Hadhr , in Jlesopotiimia , a circular town or city , called by Ainsivorth the "Astronomical Citv , " and supposed to have been built b y the Chaldicans about 1500 B . C .: there ivere also a number from AA ' asa i ' ada and other eastern places , those from Eski Kahn in Lycia hearing a strong resemblance to Runic characters . Some very curious marks from the " Cistern

of 1001 Columns" at Constantinople ivcrealso shoivn . Bro . Shaw , after describing IIOAV the Jlasons employed in the building of the 'Temple on Jlount Moriah at Jerusalem were divided into classes , and hoiv the stones ivere "heivn , squared , marked , and numbered " in the quarries , proceeded to give some particulars respecting the wages of the workmen , more especially alluding to the Avages of the AIark Jlasons of the Felloivcraf ' ts , who received half a shekel of silver per day—equivalent to about l . v . l . V

fee now paid at Bradford , Keighley , and other places by the Felloivcrafts on taking their marks . On the completion of the Temple , tho brethren dispersed into various countries , carrying with them their ceremonies , signs , tokens , and words . In the year 7 . 1 . 1 ls . c ., Numa l'oiup ' ilius formed the Roman artificers into separate companies or guilds , according to their different trades ; and the system appears to have been introduced into Britain early in the lirst century , as is evidenced b y the fact of a votive inscription discovered some

years ago in the remains of the ancient city of Coriniuin , near Cirencester , in AA-hich the " College of Jlasons " dedicate a temple to Neptune and Jlinerva , and to the safety of the family of Claudius Cesar , A . D ., 50 . Bro . Shaw exhibited marks from Herculaneum , from Hadrian ' s AA ' all , A . D . 125 , from the Multangular Tower at

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