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  • March 21, 1863
  • Page 6
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 21, 1863: Page 6

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    Article METROPOLITAN DISFIGUREMENTS. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article METROPOLITAN DISFIGUREMENTS. Page 2 of 2
    Article SENSATION INCIDENT IN FREEMASONRY. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 6

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

Metropolitan Disfigurements.

It has been calculated that , if at the beginning , a regular system of railway communication had been devised , we should now possess , twofold the amount of accommodation , at half the cost of the present redundant and competing network ; a glance at the railway map will show lines running almost parallel , and eompeting for the scanty traffic of the same district . In France we see the advantage of following a totally different system , and treating the question as a whole from the outset . There the

lines were laid down as parts of one plan , to satisfy the traffic requirements of the whole empire . True , there were occasional departures to satisfy tbe greed of capitalists , who could operate on the Bourse in political crises , or to corrupt constituencies , as in the case of the line from Paris to Calais . Nevertheless , the wisdom of the French railway policy is established beyond all doubt . Thus , whilst shares in our railways are , iu the great

majority of instances , at a discount , and the highest premium of a main line is 24 per cent ., in France there are three main lines , whose shares are at 156 , 135 , and 125 per cent , premium respectively . Possessing cheaper fuel , cheaper engines , and cheaper rails , better organization of labour , and larger traffic , English railways ought to yield more profit than French ones , notwithstanding the extravagance of promoters in preliminary expenses ; instead of whichthey hardlaverage a dividend of

, y 2 £ per cent . One would have thought that the bitter experience acquired since 1846 would have taught the community the folly of immoderate competition , which has depreciated railway property to upwards of 180 millions sterling at the present day . Nothing of the kind ; so far from experience teaching wisdom , never were foolssince tbe days of Solomonmore faithful to their

, , folly . If they themselves only suffered , there would be no cause for interference ; but , unfortunately , they inflict injury upon society at large , and ounht , therefore , to be pnt under control . In tbe case of the metropolis , the evil has reached to such a head that the Legislature has been compelled by public

opinion to take the matter up in both Houses . There are some thirty schemes for constructing railway extensions into the metropolis , stimulated hy the success of the Metropolitan Railway . Those who know anything of London , especially in the suburbs , will be convinced that not a tithe of them is needed . Indeed , when those which are in the course of execution are completed , there will be more than are wanted or than can possibly prove remunerative . For instancecontinental

, traffic through Dover and Folkestone , and Newhaven , has , or shortly will have , five termini in a distance of 2-J- miles as the crow flies . There are , moreover , stations on these lines within the metropolitan area , which must assuredly provide ample accommodation . Now , what difference can it make to a traveller from the Continent , whether he alight in Cannon-street or Blackfriars ? The railways from the north and west have a terminus

in Farringdon-street , and will soon have two others—one in Smithfield and the other in Finsbury Pavement ; besides which they are to be connected with the southern railways , by the hideous disfigurement of a viaduct acrass Ludgate-hill . The Great Eastern Railway is promoting a scheme for appropriating Finsbury Circus as a site for a new station , which is very properly resisted , for it crosses the North London lineand i \ onld run

, parallel to an extension of the North London that is to have a terminus within 200 yards of the one which tbe Great Eastern is to obtain by building on tbe Circus . A map with the lines existing , authorised and projected , laid down , will convince the most sceptical or the most sanguine that the thing is overdone , is not requisite , and cannot pay . We have the authority of Mr . Heywardthe City engineerfor saying thatif common

, , , sense and an equitable understanding between the companies had influenced the laying down the present lines , a station might have been provided within half a mile of every man's dwelling . What more is required it is difficult to say , unless Londoners are to be treated as too sluggish or too debilitated to walk for six or seven minutes .

It is high time to have determined what is to be done with London ; to have it ascertained if people will be permitted to dwell and carry on business within the metropolis , or if it is to converted into a mere day encampment and grand central station for all British railways . The architectural appearance of the capital is already so disfigured as to become hideous in parts ; and what it will be ten years hence , if railways are suffered to proceed as hitherto , can be better imagined than described . The money expeuded on improvements and embellishments is wasted , and our public monuments rendered totally ineffective . London-bridge has its southern approach completely

Metropolitan Disfigurements.

spoiled ; and St . Mary Overies—the relict of an age in which men were not so brutalized as to be insensible to beauty in art , and were not such money-grubbers as to make the accumulation of riches the sole object of their lives—is shut out from view b y the railway works . . . . Mr , Disraeli suggested we should burn an architect if we desired good works . It might , perhaps , tend to prevent the destruction of architectural monuments , if Parliament were to compel the authors of disfigurements to the metropolis to affix tablets of infamy in conspicuous positions on their works , which would record their names and doings ; or if it were to oblige them to contribute their busts to a Temple of Shame .

Railway concoctors do not for a moment allow it to be suspected that they are aware London is a place of habitation , and that if the architectural character of the capital may be sacrificedto utility , or rather to speculation , the health and convenience of the inhabitants have paramount claims to consideration . Itis of all things essential to maintain free circulation of currents , of air in the streets in order to preserve public health and attain . a satisfactory sanitary standard . Butwith numerous railway

, viaducts crossing our thoroughfares , it is impossible to do so , forthey convert them into mere culs de sac , wherein the air stagnates and becomes vitiated . In many parts of the southern and north- western districts there are areas enclosed by railways and . thereby converted into so many cells as it were . It is unfortunately impossible to remedy this sad state of things , which must in the end injuriously affect public health ; but we can prevent

the mischief from extending . With this view the Metropolitan-Board of Works is to be allowed to appear before Committees ; but we are inclined to believe that the Board possesses far greater powers than is supposed , and that it can veto the erection of bridges over streets with the area placed under its jurisdiction " In our second volume , pp . 743 , 766 , and 776 , it was reported that the Law Clerk to the Board showed that bridges could not

be constructed by private individuals over public thoroughfares , without the consent of the Board , which , in accordance with this showing , prohibited the erection of an iron bridge between two warehouses over Thomas-street , St . George's-in-the-East , and of a timber one at Rotlierhithe . If the Board could exercise , in virtue of the Act of Parliament , such control over individuals , we cannot see that it is so powerless in the presence of railway

companies as it seems to have fancied it is . At all events , it should have raised the question , which , whatever might have been the decision in the law courts , would have secured for it a status before parliamentary committees on every bill for theextension of railways into the metropolis . This status has justbeen conceded ; and if the Board will do its duty fearlessly and honestly to its constituents , further injury to public health and disfigurement of the metropolis may be effectually prevented . —Buitdiny News .

Sensation Incident In Freemasonry.

SENSATION INCIDENT IN FREEMASONRY .

The late gallant Commander J . A . P ., R . K , when employed on the coast of Africa in the suppression of the slave trade , rendered important services to his country by his daring and successful capture of slavers . On one occasion off the dreaded Bight of Benin ( where it is said , in reference to the fearful mortality from fever which prevails there , " a hundred come out where a thousand go

in" ) , H . M . S . W 7 ihove to and lowered two boats , each containing fifteen seamen and marines , for the purpose of boarding a suspicious looking barque-rigged vessel , then , under full sail , and steering directly out of the Big ht . Commander P ., then a lieutenant , had charge of the two boats—they nearcd the dark sides of the rakish craft and hailed her captain to heave to , but were answered with

a shoAver of musketry bullets , which wounded three of the crew of each boat—the wind lulled almost immediately into a calm ( another remarkable scientific mystery of these climes , perhaps the concussion or report of thefirearms having something to do with it ) . Amid the unwelcome salutation the stern clear voice of the lieutenantwas heard "board her , boys , starboard and port" ( which ,

means one boat to each side ) the crews bent to their oars , and ere thoy reached the sides a broadside from the * slaver commander passed harmlessly over their heads— - and cutlass in hand , with a dash and spontaneous Britishi

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-03-21, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_21031863/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 1
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 2
METROPOLITAN DISFIGUREMENTS. Article 5
SENSATION INCIDENT IN FREEMASONRY. Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
ANTIQUITY OF MASONIC DEGREES. Article 8
THE BOY'S SCHOOL. Article 9
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 9
FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE COMPANY. Article 10
TEE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 11
IRELAND. Article 13
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 15
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 16
POLYGRAPHIC HALL. 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.

Metropolitan Disfigurements.

It has been calculated that , if at the beginning , a regular system of railway communication had been devised , we should now possess , twofold the amount of accommodation , at half the cost of the present redundant and competing network ; a glance at the railway map will show lines running almost parallel , and eompeting for the scanty traffic of the same district . In France we see the advantage of following a totally different system , and treating the question as a whole from the outset . There the

lines were laid down as parts of one plan , to satisfy the traffic requirements of the whole empire . True , there were occasional departures to satisfy tbe greed of capitalists , who could operate on the Bourse in political crises , or to corrupt constituencies , as in the case of the line from Paris to Calais . Nevertheless , the wisdom of the French railway policy is established beyond all doubt . Thus , whilst shares in our railways are , iu the great

majority of instances , at a discount , and the highest premium of a main line is 24 per cent ., in France there are three main lines , whose shares are at 156 , 135 , and 125 per cent , premium respectively . Possessing cheaper fuel , cheaper engines , and cheaper rails , better organization of labour , and larger traffic , English railways ought to yield more profit than French ones , notwithstanding the extravagance of promoters in preliminary expenses ; instead of whichthey hardlaverage a dividend of

, y 2 £ per cent . One would have thought that the bitter experience acquired since 1846 would have taught the community the folly of immoderate competition , which has depreciated railway property to upwards of 180 millions sterling at the present day . Nothing of the kind ; so far from experience teaching wisdom , never were foolssince tbe days of Solomonmore faithful to their

, , folly . If they themselves only suffered , there would be no cause for interference ; but , unfortunately , they inflict injury upon society at large , and ounht , therefore , to be pnt under control . In tbe case of the metropolis , the evil has reached to such a head that the Legislature has been compelled by public

opinion to take the matter up in both Houses . There are some thirty schemes for constructing railway extensions into the metropolis , stimulated hy the success of the Metropolitan Railway . Those who know anything of London , especially in the suburbs , will be convinced that not a tithe of them is needed . Indeed , when those which are in the course of execution are completed , there will be more than are wanted or than can possibly prove remunerative . For instancecontinental

, traffic through Dover and Folkestone , and Newhaven , has , or shortly will have , five termini in a distance of 2-J- miles as the crow flies . There are , moreover , stations on these lines within the metropolitan area , which must assuredly provide ample accommodation . Now , what difference can it make to a traveller from the Continent , whether he alight in Cannon-street or Blackfriars ? The railways from the north and west have a terminus

in Farringdon-street , and will soon have two others—one in Smithfield and the other in Finsbury Pavement ; besides which they are to be connected with the southern railways , by the hideous disfigurement of a viaduct acrass Ludgate-hill . The Great Eastern Railway is promoting a scheme for appropriating Finsbury Circus as a site for a new station , which is very properly resisted , for it crosses the North London lineand i \ onld run

, parallel to an extension of the North London that is to have a terminus within 200 yards of the one which tbe Great Eastern is to obtain by building on tbe Circus . A map with the lines existing , authorised and projected , laid down , will convince the most sceptical or the most sanguine that the thing is overdone , is not requisite , and cannot pay . We have the authority of Mr . Heywardthe City engineerfor saying thatif common

, , , sense and an equitable understanding between the companies had influenced the laying down the present lines , a station might have been provided within half a mile of every man's dwelling . What more is required it is difficult to say , unless Londoners are to be treated as too sluggish or too debilitated to walk for six or seven minutes .

It is high time to have determined what is to be done with London ; to have it ascertained if people will be permitted to dwell and carry on business within the metropolis , or if it is to converted into a mere day encampment and grand central station for all British railways . The architectural appearance of the capital is already so disfigured as to become hideous in parts ; and what it will be ten years hence , if railways are suffered to proceed as hitherto , can be better imagined than described . The money expeuded on improvements and embellishments is wasted , and our public monuments rendered totally ineffective . London-bridge has its southern approach completely

Metropolitan Disfigurements.

spoiled ; and St . Mary Overies—the relict of an age in which men were not so brutalized as to be insensible to beauty in art , and were not such money-grubbers as to make the accumulation of riches the sole object of their lives—is shut out from view b y the railway works . . . . Mr , Disraeli suggested we should burn an architect if we desired good works . It might , perhaps , tend to prevent the destruction of architectural monuments , if Parliament were to compel the authors of disfigurements to the metropolis to affix tablets of infamy in conspicuous positions on their works , which would record their names and doings ; or if it were to oblige them to contribute their busts to a Temple of Shame .

Railway concoctors do not for a moment allow it to be suspected that they are aware London is a place of habitation , and that if the architectural character of the capital may be sacrificedto utility , or rather to speculation , the health and convenience of the inhabitants have paramount claims to consideration . Itis of all things essential to maintain free circulation of currents , of air in the streets in order to preserve public health and attain . a satisfactory sanitary standard . Butwith numerous railway

, viaducts crossing our thoroughfares , it is impossible to do so , forthey convert them into mere culs de sac , wherein the air stagnates and becomes vitiated . In many parts of the southern and north- western districts there are areas enclosed by railways and . thereby converted into so many cells as it were . It is unfortunately impossible to remedy this sad state of things , which must in the end injuriously affect public health ; but we can prevent

the mischief from extending . With this view the Metropolitan-Board of Works is to be allowed to appear before Committees ; but we are inclined to believe that the Board possesses far greater powers than is supposed , and that it can veto the erection of bridges over streets with the area placed under its jurisdiction " In our second volume , pp . 743 , 766 , and 776 , it was reported that the Law Clerk to the Board showed that bridges could not

be constructed by private individuals over public thoroughfares , without the consent of the Board , which , in accordance with this showing , prohibited the erection of an iron bridge between two warehouses over Thomas-street , St . George's-in-the-East , and of a timber one at Rotlierhithe . If the Board could exercise , in virtue of the Act of Parliament , such control over individuals , we cannot see that it is so powerless in the presence of railway

companies as it seems to have fancied it is . At all events , it should have raised the question , which , whatever might have been the decision in the law courts , would have secured for it a status before parliamentary committees on every bill for theextension of railways into the metropolis . This status has justbeen conceded ; and if the Board will do its duty fearlessly and honestly to its constituents , further injury to public health and disfigurement of the metropolis may be effectually prevented . —Buitdiny News .

Sensation Incident In Freemasonry.

SENSATION INCIDENT IN FREEMASONRY .

The late gallant Commander J . A . P ., R . K , when employed on the coast of Africa in the suppression of the slave trade , rendered important services to his country by his daring and successful capture of slavers . On one occasion off the dreaded Bight of Benin ( where it is said , in reference to the fearful mortality from fever which prevails there , " a hundred come out where a thousand go

in" ) , H . M . S . W 7 ihove to and lowered two boats , each containing fifteen seamen and marines , for the purpose of boarding a suspicious looking barque-rigged vessel , then , under full sail , and steering directly out of the Big ht . Commander P ., then a lieutenant , had charge of the two boats—they nearcd the dark sides of the rakish craft and hailed her captain to heave to , but were answered with

a shoAver of musketry bullets , which wounded three of the crew of each boat—the wind lulled almost immediately into a calm ( another remarkable scientific mystery of these climes , perhaps the concussion or report of thefirearms having something to do with it ) . Amid the unwelcome salutation the stern clear voice of the lieutenantwas heard "board her , boys , starboard and port" ( which ,

means one boat to each side ) the crews bent to their oars , and ere thoy reached the sides a broadside from the * slaver commander passed harmlessly over their heads— - and cutlass in hand , with a dash and spontaneous Britishi

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