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  • Sept. 24, 1859
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 24, 1859: Page 11

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 2 of 2
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Page 11

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

of our late Bro . Stephen Jones . Perhaps it may not be deemed out of place to supplement Bro . How ' s communication with some further facts which are gathered from various obituary notices . Bro . Stephen Jones was the son of Mr . Giles Jones , formerly secretary to the York Buildings Water Company , was educated at St . Paul's School , and afterwards placed under an eminent sculptor , hut ou account of some difference he was removed from that

situation and apprenticed to a printer in Fetter-lane . On the expiration of his articles he was engaged as corrector of the press by Mr . Strahan , the king's printer , and ivhere he was brought into close and daily intercourse with our late Bro . William Preston , a junior partner in that establishment . At the end of four years lie removed to the office of Mr . Thomas AVri ght , in Peterboroughcourt , ivhere he remained till the death of his employer in March ,

1797 , an event which terminated Mr . Jones's immediate connection ivith the printing business . He then became the editor of the Whitehall Evening Post , hut on the decline of that paper he was appointed to the management , and became part proprietor of the General Evening Post . This paper , too , he was destined to see gradually fall in circulation till it merged in its contemporary the St . James ' s Chronicle . Bro . Jones became also , on the death of

Mr . Isaac Kced , the editor ofthe European . Magazine , and was for some time the conductor of the first issue of the Freemasons ' Magazine . Iu the Masonic Craft Bro . Jones was very ... deeply versed . He was a man of genial sympathies and a . great pro- _ moter of social gatherings , and it is to he regretted that , in common with the times in which he lived , his habits were inconsistent with that strict attention to business that can onl y secure a competence to those connected with the press . He

was a man ot considerable talent in his day , and his Biographical Dictionary , in miniature , ran through many editions . He also republished Keed ' s Biographia Drama tica , in four volumes , and was most unmercifull y attacked by an article on it in the Quarterly Review , his critic censuring him for retaining many of the entries that had appeared in the previous edition , and not giving him credit for the very large mass of new matter which he

had incorporated into the later performance . This attack caused him to print a pamphlet , entitled llgpercriticism Exposed ; in a Letter to the Readers ofthe Quarterly Review , Svo ., 1812 ; but , it is said , this was the most unfortunate ' step he could have taken , as he never prospered afterwards . From 1799 , for many years , he selected an annual volume from the newspapers , under the title of TheSpirit of the Public Journals . His other works arcAn

^ , Abridgment of Burke's Reflections on the French Revolution , 12 mo ., 1791 ; Monthly Beauties , 8 vo ., 1793 ; An Abridgment of Ward ' s Natural History , 3 vols ., 12 mo ., 1793 ; A History of Poland , Svo ., 1795 ; Dodd ' s Beauties of History , Enlarged , 12 mo ., 179 G ; An Abridgment , of Donald Campbell ' s Journey ' to India , 12 mo ., 179 G ; Masonic Miscellanies , 12 mo ., 1797 , of which there were several editions

, the last being in 1813 ; A Pronouncing and Explanal . org Dictionary of the English Language , Svo ., 1798 ; Gray ' s Poetical Works ( Illustrated ) , Svo . 1798 ; Burton ' s Anatomy of MelanclioliL 2 vols ., 1800 : Blair ' s Chronology Continued , fob , 1803 ; Davies ' s Life of Garrick ( new edition , with additions ) , 2 vols ., 8 vo ., 1808 ; Preston ' s Illustrations of Masonry ( with additions ) , 8 vo ., 1821 . w-o . Stephen Jones departed this life on the 20 th of December , 1828 , in King-street , Holborn , having heen for some time a sufferer from dropsy . He was in his sixty-fifth year at the time of his decease . —MATTHEW COOKE .

AIIASUEP . US FROMANTIEL . Who was Ahasuerus Fromantiel ? He is mentioned in some old books and pamphlets of the seventeenth century as a most '" genious mechanick . " Was he a Mason ?—SENEC .

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

__ <^ L-lnE EDITOR does not hold himself responsible for any opinions entertained by Correspondents . ' ] UNIFORMITY OF WORKING . THE EDITOR OI ? THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZIXE AND MASONIC MIRROR . j ' VR SIR AND BROTHER —I deem it a subject of legitimate

n ; , in re l at ? ifferences i if an }' . exist in our universal brotherhood an j ™ 1- ites and ceremonies ; and your valuable Magazine , is ofintii- nd ver . V appropriate medium for the dissemination iiteiugence that will aid in the examination of this subject , are in V t 0 he lrnportant determining whether the landmarks danger—whether they have already been invaded , and il

so , where and how far—and thus enable thinking Masons to take measures for the restoration of all deliciences , and the abrogation of all excrescences . Though restrained in a communication intended for publication , from going into details , I will be as explicit as prudence and justice will permit , 1 desire to set on foot an inquiry as to what changes in ritual exist , where they orig inated , and to what extent

they have spread ? Among the many writers on the subject of Freemasonry , there are but few who show a desire to examine the subject , except upon a basis which is circumscribed by our oral lectures and the jurisprudence of the Order . I fear that too many of our brethren are not aware of the extent or even the nature of that "Antient Hidden Freemasonry " to ivhieh allusion used to be made in the lectures ancl teachings of the institution in days that are past , and to which Hutchinson , Preston and others have so forcibly alluded in their writings .

Our Grand Lodge , at its annual session in June last , reviewed the working of the Grand Lecturer ; and by a re-election of Bro . Drew who holds that responsible office showed their approval oi his work— - yet it differs in many trilling points from the working as taught in times past . Now is it not of importance that we should trace these and other discrepancies to their origin , and thus arrive at the best and most reliable remedy for the evils with which we are threatened ?

\ JIt does not follow that Bro . Drew's system is not legitimate or antieut , because it differs from that which has prevailed " from time immemorial , " in some sections of the globe ; nor is it to be received as a standard without examination and comparison . With what?—wh y with the landmarks of the institution as developed in the designs drawn upon our Masonic tressel board . Nor does the state of New York stand alone in this respect ,

many other state jurisdictions are pursuing similar means to enforce peculiar S 3 'stems of work , denouncing all others , and awakening strife and contention , where amity and union should exist unbroken and impregnable . This evil is not confined to the United States of North America —your own Grand Lodge can furnish clear and undeniable proofs on the subject to which I am referring , and to which I refer at

this time to lead to inquiry , as before stated , on the point of danger , to be effected by the deviation from any of the landmarks of antient hidden Freemasonry . Are ive not , as a body , too negligent of those antient landmarks—are not our Lodges , universally , remiss in the study and development of them—are we doing our duty to the fullest extent b y inducting our members into the mysteries of godliness

and the development of the true interpretation and exposition of the esoteric system of ethics , morality , and truth , which lies concealed in our symbolism ? I do not expect that these inquiries will be fully met in the columns of your Magazine , but I do hope to elicit attention and arouse those who can exert influence to awaken a desire to know

these mysteries ; for I am persuaded in my own mind that ivhere there is an honest desire for information and enlightenment for pure and legitimate purposes , that enlightenment will be afforded b y the G . A . O . T . U ., who will illuminate every mind that is a fit receptacle for the mysteries . Should you deem these remarks suitable and likel y to awaken thought on this important subject referred toI trust your

Maga-, zine will be made a medium for the diffusion of such illustrative remarks as may occur to any of your readers , or to yourself . I see , by your issue of the 9 th Jul y , that you have changed the form—this I regard as an improvement , and . trust you will find a corresponding disposition to be liberal on the part of your readers .

I also see that Bro . Elisha D . Cooke is in your midst , and although I am not personall y intimate with him , yet , from his connexion with Bro . Rob Morris , of the "Voice of Masonry , " I am pleased to find he is received with that attention wliich should always exist among the fraternity ; and I do hope he will be granted all the facilities our English , Scotch , ancl Irish brethren possess to acquire information in regard to the history and

principles of Masonry , as no one is better calculated to lay such matters before the Craft universally than the editor of the " Voice , " for whom Bro . Cooke is acting . The fraternity in the state of New York is again united , and there is now but one Grand Lodge in this jurisdiction . The process of " healing" the illegitimates will , ere this reaches you , he fully consummated upon honourable and truly Masonic principles . The General Grand Chapter of the United States will hold its triennial session in September ; as will also the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar , when many subjects will be acted upon

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-09-24, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_24091859/page/11/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
BETHEL-EBENEZER. Article 1
INTERNAL TEMPERATURE OF THE EARTH. Article 2
ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 4
Literature. Article 5
Portry. Article 9
A NYMPH'S PASSION. Article 9
THE PASSING BELL. Article 9
IN PRAISE OF ALE. Article 9
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
MASONRY IN THE PUNJAUB. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
COLONIAL. Article 16
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
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.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

of our late Bro . Stephen Jones . Perhaps it may not be deemed out of place to supplement Bro . How ' s communication with some further facts which are gathered from various obituary notices . Bro . Stephen Jones was the son of Mr . Giles Jones , formerly secretary to the York Buildings Water Company , was educated at St . Paul's School , and afterwards placed under an eminent sculptor , hut ou account of some difference he was removed from that

situation and apprenticed to a printer in Fetter-lane . On the expiration of his articles he was engaged as corrector of the press by Mr . Strahan , the king's printer , and ivhere he was brought into close and daily intercourse with our late Bro . William Preston , a junior partner in that establishment . At the end of four years lie removed to the office of Mr . Thomas AVri ght , in Peterboroughcourt , ivhere he remained till the death of his employer in March ,

1797 , an event which terminated Mr . Jones's immediate connection ivith the printing business . He then became the editor of the Whitehall Evening Post , hut on the decline of that paper he was appointed to the management , and became part proprietor of the General Evening Post . This paper , too , he was destined to see gradually fall in circulation till it merged in its contemporary the St . James ' s Chronicle . Bro . Jones became also , on the death of

Mr . Isaac Kced , the editor ofthe European . Magazine , and was for some time the conductor of the first issue of the Freemasons ' Magazine . Iu the Masonic Craft Bro . Jones was very ... deeply versed . He was a man of genial sympathies and a . great pro- _ moter of social gatherings , and it is to he regretted that , in common with the times in which he lived , his habits were inconsistent with that strict attention to business that can onl y secure a competence to those connected with the press . He

was a man ot considerable talent in his day , and his Biographical Dictionary , in miniature , ran through many editions . He also republished Keed ' s Biographia Drama tica , in four volumes , and was most unmercifull y attacked by an article on it in the Quarterly Review , his critic censuring him for retaining many of the entries that had appeared in the previous edition , and not giving him credit for the very large mass of new matter which he

had incorporated into the later performance . This attack caused him to print a pamphlet , entitled llgpercriticism Exposed ; in a Letter to the Readers ofthe Quarterly Review , Svo ., 1812 ; but , it is said , this was the most unfortunate ' step he could have taken , as he never prospered afterwards . From 1799 , for many years , he selected an annual volume from the newspapers , under the title of TheSpirit of the Public Journals . His other works arcAn

^ , Abridgment of Burke's Reflections on the French Revolution , 12 mo ., 1791 ; Monthly Beauties , 8 vo ., 1793 ; An Abridgment of Ward ' s Natural History , 3 vols ., 12 mo ., 1793 ; A History of Poland , Svo ., 1795 ; Dodd ' s Beauties of History , Enlarged , 12 mo ., 179 G ; An Abridgment , of Donald Campbell ' s Journey ' to India , 12 mo ., 179 G ; Masonic Miscellanies , 12 mo ., 1797 , of which there were several editions

, the last being in 1813 ; A Pronouncing and Explanal . org Dictionary of the English Language , Svo ., 1798 ; Gray ' s Poetical Works ( Illustrated ) , Svo . 1798 ; Burton ' s Anatomy of MelanclioliL 2 vols ., 1800 : Blair ' s Chronology Continued , fob , 1803 ; Davies ' s Life of Garrick ( new edition , with additions ) , 2 vols ., 8 vo ., 1808 ; Preston ' s Illustrations of Masonry ( with additions ) , 8 vo ., 1821 . w-o . Stephen Jones departed this life on the 20 th of December , 1828 , in King-street , Holborn , having heen for some time a sufferer from dropsy . He was in his sixty-fifth year at the time of his decease . —MATTHEW COOKE .

AIIASUEP . US FROMANTIEL . Who was Ahasuerus Fromantiel ? He is mentioned in some old books and pamphlets of the seventeenth century as a most '" genious mechanick . " Was he a Mason ?—SENEC .

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

__ <^ L-lnE EDITOR does not hold himself responsible for any opinions entertained by Correspondents . ' ] UNIFORMITY OF WORKING . THE EDITOR OI ? THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZIXE AND MASONIC MIRROR . j ' VR SIR AND BROTHER —I deem it a subject of legitimate

n ; , in re l at ? ifferences i if an }' . exist in our universal brotherhood an j ™ 1- ites and ceremonies ; and your valuable Magazine , is ofintii- nd ver . V appropriate medium for the dissemination iiteiugence that will aid in the examination of this subject , are in V t 0 he lrnportant determining whether the landmarks danger—whether they have already been invaded , and il

so , where and how far—and thus enable thinking Masons to take measures for the restoration of all deliciences , and the abrogation of all excrescences . Though restrained in a communication intended for publication , from going into details , I will be as explicit as prudence and justice will permit , 1 desire to set on foot an inquiry as to what changes in ritual exist , where they orig inated , and to what extent

they have spread ? Among the many writers on the subject of Freemasonry , there are but few who show a desire to examine the subject , except upon a basis which is circumscribed by our oral lectures and the jurisprudence of the Order . I fear that too many of our brethren are not aware of the extent or even the nature of that "Antient Hidden Freemasonry " to ivhieh allusion used to be made in the lectures ancl teachings of the institution in days that are past , and to which Hutchinson , Preston and others have so forcibly alluded in their writings .

Our Grand Lodge , at its annual session in June last , reviewed the working of the Grand Lecturer ; and by a re-election of Bro . Drew who holds that responsible office showed their approval oi his work— - yet it differs in many trilling points from the working as taught in times past . Now is it not of importance that we should trace these and other discrepancies to their origin , and thus arrive at the best and most reliable remedy for the evils with which we are threatened ?

\ JIt does not follow that Bro . Drew's system is not legitimate or antieut , because it differs from that which has prevailed " from time immemorial , " in some sections of the globe ; nor is it to be received as a standard without examination and comparison . With what?—wh y with the landmarks of the institution as developed in the designs drawn upon our Masonic tressel board . Nor does the state of New York stand alone in this respect ,

many other state jurisdictions are pursuing similar means to enforce peculiar S 3 'stems of work , denouncing all others , and awakening strife and contention , where amity and union should exist unbroken and impregnable . This evil is not confined to the United States of North America —your own Grand Lodge can furnish clear and undeniable proofs on the subject to which I am referring , and to which I refer at

this time to lead to inquiry , as before stated , on the point of danger , to be effected by the deviation from any of the landmarks of antient hidden Freemasonry . Are ive not , as a body , too negligent of those antient landmarks—are not our Lodges , universally , remiss in the study and development of them—are we doing our duty to the fullest extent b y inducting our members into the mysteries of godliness

and the development of the true interpretation and exposition of the esoteric system of ethics , morality , and truth , which lies concealed in our symbolism ? I do not expect that these inquiries will be fully met in the columns of your Magazine , but I do hope to elicit attention and arouse those who can exert influence to awaken a desire to know

these mysteries ; for I am persuaded in my own mind that ivhere there is an honest desire for information and enlightenment for pure and legitimate purposes , that enlightenment will be afforded b y the G . A . O . T . U ., who will illuminate every mind that is a fit receptacle for the mysteries . Should you deem these remarks suitable and likel y to awaken thought on this important subject referred toI trust your

Maga-, zine will be made a medium for the diffusion of such illustrative remarks as may occur to any of your readers , or to yourself . I see , by your issue of the 9 th Jul y , that you have changed the form—this I regard as an improvement , and . trust you will find a corresponding disposition to be liberal on the part of your readers .

I also see that Bro . Elisha D . Cooke is in your midst , and although I am not personall y intimate with him , yet , from his connexion with Bro . Rob Morris , of the "Voice of Masonry , " I am pleased to find he is received with that attention wliich should always exist among the fraternity ; and I do hope he will be granted all the facilities our English , Scotch , ancl Irish brethren possess to acquire information in regard to the history and

principles of Masonry , as no one is better calculated to lay such matters before the Craft universally than the editor of the " Voice , " for whom Bro . Cooke is acting . The fraternity in the state of New York is again united , and there is now but one Grand Lodge in this jurisdiction . The process of " healing" the illegitimates will , ere this reaches you , he fully consummated upon honourable and truly Masonic principles . The General Grand Chapter of the United States will hold its triennial session in September ; as will also the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar , when many subjects will be acted upon

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