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  • Oct. 24, 1863
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 24, 1863: Page 17

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    Article AUSTRALIA. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. Page 1 of 1
Page 17

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Australia.

was duly proposed , seconded , balloted for , and admitted as a candidate for initiation . The lodge was then opened in the Fellow Craft Degree , and Bros . Howingan , Phillips , and Resdaile were tested as to the proficiency made b y them in their former degrees , and , having answered satisfactorily , the lodge was opened in the third degree , and those brethren were raised to the high and sublime degree of Master Masons . Some

general business having been gone through , the lodge was closed in harmony . FOREST CREEK . —St . John ' s Tradesman's Lodge ( No . 391 , 1 . C . ) —The regular monthly meeting of this lodge was held on the 29 th July , at the Chewton Hall , Cbewton . Bros . Lucas , Pringle , and Brunier were examined by the W . M . as to their proficiency in the E . A . degreeprevious to their being passed to

, that of craftsmen . Having satisfactorily passed their examination they were asked to retire . The lodge was then passed to the second degree , when they were re-admitted , and the ceremony of passing was ably performed by the AV . M ., assisted by Bro . Ustiek , P . M . Application from Mr . A . Kerr , Oriental Bank , Chiltern , asking for clearance , granted ; the lodge unanimously expressed their regret that they had lost such a valuable

member as Bro . Kerr , and desired the Secretary to give him a recommendation to any lodge he may wish to join . MELBOURNE . —St . Clair Lodge . —The regular meeting of this lodge was held on Thursdaj-, the 6 th August , in the Masonic Booms , St . Patrick ' s Hall . The lodge was opened at a quarter to eight o'clock . Mr . W . M . Turnbnll , who had been duly proposed , balloted for , and accented , was duly initiated into the

ancient mysteries of the E . A . degree . The lodge ivas then opened in the second degree , and Bro . George Simpson having passed the required examination , retired , and the lodge was opened in the third degree , and Bro . Simpson was raised to the high and sublime degree of a M . M . A communication from the proposed Grand Lodge Committee , requesting a contribution to defray the expenses of that committee , was then read , and the sum of £ 2 2 s . was ordered to be paid for that purpose .

Hotliam Lodge ( No . 429 , 1 . C . )—The monthly meeting of this lodge was held on Monday evening , 10 th August , at the lodgerooms , Errol-street , Hotham , Bro . G . Davidson , AV . M ., in the chair . Mr . Henry John Bollen was then balloted for , and being in attendance outside the lodge , was subsequently admitted , and received the Entered Apprentice Degree . Bros . John Stewart , James O'Shea , and James Foot Dow , were passed to the degree

of Fellow Craft . Bro . William Henry Kiug ' was raised to the high and sublime degree of a Master Mason . COLLINGWOOD . —Combermere Lodge ( No . 1054 ) . — -The regular meeting of this lodge was held at their lodge-room , Swan Hotel , Gertrude-street , Collingwood , on Monday , 10 th August . Lodge ivas opened at half-past seven . Mr . C . Blake was duly elected and initiated . Applications for relief were received from Bro . Douglas and another brother , and both applicants were relieved . A candidate was proposed for initiation .

MELBOURNE . —Australia Felix Lodge ( No . 697 ) . —The regular meeting of this lodge was held at the lodge-room , St . Patrick ' s Hall , on Monday , August 10 . The lodge was opened in the first degree , —Bros . Noon , AV . M . ; Delmbtt ., S . AV . ; Edwards , as J . W . A communication was received from the proposed Grand Lodge Committee . The AA . M . permitted it to be read , but would not allow any proposition to be made on the subject .

Australasian Kilwinning Lodge ( No . 337 ) . — The regularmeeting of this lodge was held at the Masonic rooms , St . Patrick's Hall , on Tuesday , the 11 th August . Lodge opened in the first degree at half-past seven—Bros . Baines , AV . M . ; Thomson , P . M . ; Elms , S . W . ; Blanchard , J . W . After the confirmation of the minutes of the former meeting , the lodge was opened in the third degreeand the ballot was taken for two gentlemen

, , who were unanimously accepted . Lodge was then resumed in tho third degree , and Mr . Hector J . Cuttford , who had been regularly proposed and accepted , was initiated into Freemasonry by the AV . M . Bro . Lynch , who had served his full time as an Entered Apprentice , having proved himself worthy of further enlightenment , the W . M . opened a Fellow Craft lodge , and Bro . Lynch was advanced to the degree of F . C .

SANDRIDGE . — Sandridge Marine Lodge . — An emergency meeting of the Sandridge Marine Lodge , was held at the Masonic Hall , Sandridge , on Tuesday , 11 th August , at high noon , Bro . Beresford , W . M . The lodge was called for the purpose of laying the foundation-stone of the Presbyterian Church , Sanddridge , which ceremony was performed by the brethren of the lodge , assisted by upwards of fifty visitors .

Cape Of Good Hope.

CAPE OF GOOD HOPE .

PORT ELIZABETH . St . John's day ( June 24 th ) was a gay and important day for the Freemasons of Port Elizabeth . A new Freemasons' Hall on the Hill , which had been for sometime in course of erection , was opened with a procession , and tho day being especially genial , a large number of the population , the fair sex

predominating , assembled all along the line to witness it . A correspondent of the Anglo-Africa , published at Grahams Town , "Who styles himself Flos Cuculi , thus describes the proceedings . This auspicious day set in with a hot sun and keen piercing wind , but such inconveniences only stimulate on this occasion the votaries of gridirons and mallets . How many anxieties

were there the previous eve , to render the celebration of this day more imposing than heretofore . Recruits were beat up from all quarters ; one ardent square worshipper purposedly travelled from outlandish regions for the occasion . Others got-themselves put through the degrees , so as to master pieces . Insignia were furbished up , aprons aired , rosettes fresh plaited . At the

mystic hour might be seen sundry black-robed members of the "Craft , " all filled with that grand principle ivhich should actuate every one , " Loving one's neighbour or brother as one ' s self . " There were grey-bearded , bald-headed , wrinkled personages , and youths with just the gloss of manhood about them , all repairing to the mysterious upstair room , so closely guarded , and therefore denominated a "lodge , " or lock-up . After due deliberation upon forms and ceremonies , the Craft in

skilfularray , headed by a hand , in front of which danced black girls , variously attired , and processed to church , there to hear the bell toll forth from the last of the prophets . " Locusts and wild honey , " " the wilderness , " how realised in a sumptuous after dinner ! But this is the . only practical way of realising the truth of an illustration , as vide our Bishops , whose scrip and staff are the substance of what in gospellie periods stood a shadow . We live in enlihtened timesand if Adam ancl Eve

g , preferred fruit , and St . John locusts , we of the 19 th century have an established preference to the solids of life , nor can we live on allegory alone . The sermon was like all such discourses , to the point , —within the circle ; parabolic sweeps were carefully avoided ; the " nines" strongly impressed , —strengthened in their inner men , the band of sworn brothers dispersed until the refectory timeto the calls of which all responded within

, its hearing . And what a sight ! those long tables set by the plumb line and square , those three branched candelabra , afterwards replaced by characteristic pillars and mundane shafts ; the wedged mallets , the plumb line , chisel , square , and the like ; the ten commandments duly labelled on the mantelpiece , as if fresh from the banks of tbe Moselle ; the platters , all marvellous to behold to Johnean eyes ; the knives and forks were

only to deceive vulgar gaze . The hour for dining arrives , each "fellow craft" girds on his apron , sticks a rosette in his breast ; now the outer doors are closed , the knives and forks are displaced , and trowels and compasses supply their want , the royal arehes ( not those of the Adelphi ) , keystones to the structure before them , strike their circles , the AV . M . just installed see all square , then

Tooth to flesh , and lips to wine , Of all joys , a good feed's divine . " Enlivened by the strains of music they drown royalty in bumpers , and float the navy in the " Bay of Biscay , " the Craft from high to low their share receive , and 'prentices are shown the virtues of a Craft that brings all men to one level . Work warms all menand in eagerness they declared they would not "

, go home till morning , " ivhich is a truth nobody can deny . With the cloth , the body removed their cloth , and as jolly bricks all keystones in their way , showed how man should love his brother as himself . Thus ended the evening of the 24 th of June , far different from that whose name it bears . His brotherhood was the universe , his craft to fit all men as bricks in the grand temple , his princile no secresy . But in the 19 th century it would be

p wrong to cast pearls—away . Knowledge is to the few ; and if Masonry , Freemasonry will make men honest in their dealings , charitable towards all , truthful in their speech , then may it flourish , may it gather strength and uproot the evil that lurketh in secret places , and may it ever enjoy the 24 tb of June .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-10-24, Page 17” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_24101863/page/17/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 1
FREEMASONRY ILLUSTRATED AND APPLIED. Article 1
MATTER FOR THE HISTORY OF THE REVIVAL OF GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE. Article 4
Untitled Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
ON THE CHRISTIANITY OF MASONRY. Article 8
Untitled Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 9
METROPOLITAN. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 15
INDIA. Article 15
AUSTRALIA. Article 16
CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Australia.

was duly proposed , seconded , balloted for , and admitted as a candidate for initiation . The lodge was then opened in the Fellow Craft Degree , and Bros . Howingan , Phillips , and Resdaile were tested as to the proficiency made b y them in their former degrees , and , having answered satisfactorily , the lodge was opened in the third degree , and those brethren were raised to the high and sublime degree of Master Masons . Some

general business having been gone through , the lodge was closed in harmony . FOREST CREEK . —St . John ' s Tradesman's Lodge ( No . 391 , 1 . C . ) —The regular monthly meeting of this lodge was held on the 29 th July , at the Chewton Hall , Cbewton . Bros . Lucas , Pringle , and Brunier were examined by the W . M . as to their proficiency in the E . A . degreeprevious to their being passed to

, that of craftsmen . Having satisfactorily passed their examination they were asked to retire . The lodge was then passed to the second degree , when they were re-admitted , and the ceremony of passing was ably performed by the AV . M ., assisted by Bro . Ustiek , P . M . Application from Mr . A . Kerr , Oriental Bank , Chiltern , asking for clearance , granted ; the lodge unanimously expressed their regret that they had lost such a valuable

member as Bro . Kerr , and desired the Secretary to give him a recommendation to any lodge he may wish to join . MELBOURNE . —St . Clair Lodge . —The regular meeting of this lodge was held on Thursdaj-, the 6 th August , in the Masonic Booms , St . Patrick ' s Hall . The lodge was opened at a quarter to eight o'clock . Mr . W . M . Turnbnll , who had been duly proposed , balloted for , and accented , was duly initiated into the

ancient mysteries of the E . A . degree . The lodge ivas then opened in the second degree , and Bro . George Simpson having passed the required examination , retired , and the lodge was opened in the third degree , and Bro . Simpson was raised to the high and sublime degree of a M . M . A communication from the proposed Grand Lodge Committee , requesting a contribution to defray the expenses of that committee , was then read , and the sum of £ 2 2 s . was ordered to be paid for that purpose .

Hotliam Lodge ( No . 429 , 1 . C . )—The monthly meeting of this lodge was held on Monday evening , 10 th August , at the lodgerooms , Errol-street , Hotham , Bro . G . Davidson , AV . M ., in the chair . Mr . Henry John Bollen was then balloted for , and being in attendance outside the lodge , was subsequently admitted , and received the Entered Apprentice Degree . Bros . John Stewart , James O'Shea , and James Foot Dow , were passed to the degree

of Fellow Craft . Bro . William Henry Kiug ' was raised to the high and sublime degree of a Master Mason . COLLINGWOOD . —Combermere Lodge ( No . 1054 ) . — -The regular meeting of this lodge was held at their lodge-room , Swan Hotel , Gertrude-street , Collingwood , on Monday , 10 th August . Lodge ivas opened at half-past seven . Mr . C . Blake was duly elected and initiated . Applications for relief were received from Bro . Douglas and another brother , and both applicants were relieved . A candidate was proposed for initiation .

MELBOURNE . —Australia Felix Lodge ( No . 697 ) . —The regular meeting of this lodge was held at the lodge-room , St . Patrick ' s Hall , on Monday , August 10 . The lodge was opened in the first degree , —Bros . Noon , AV . M . ; Delmbtt ., S . AV . ; Edwards , as J . W . A communication was received from the proposed Grand Lodge Committee . The AA . M . permitted it to be read , but would not allow any proposition to be made on the subject .

Australasian Kilwinning Lodge ( No . 337 ) . — The regularmeeting of this lodge was held at the Masonic rooms , St . Patrick's Hall , on Tuesday , the 11 th August . Lodge opened in the first degree at half-past seven—Bros . Baines , AV . M . ; Thomson , P . M . ; Elms , S . W . ; Blanchard , J . W . After the confirmation of the minutes of the former meeting , the lodge was opened in the third degreeand the ballot was taken for two gentlemen

, , who were unanimously accepted . Lodge was then resumed in tho third degree , and Mr . Hector J . Cuttford , who had been regularly proposed and accepted , was initiated into Freemasonry by the AV . M . Bro . Lynch , who had served his full time as an Entered Apprentice , having proved himself worthy of further enlightenment , the W . M . opened a Fellow Craft lodge , and Bro . Lynch was advanced to the degree of F . C .

SANDRIDGE . — Sandridge Marine Lodge . — An emergency meeting of the Sandridge Marine Lodge , was held at the Masonic Hall , Sandridge , on Tuesday , 11 th August , at high noon , Bro . Beresford , W . M . The lodge was called for the purpose of laying the foundation-stone of the Presbyterian Church , Sanddridge , which ceremony was performed by the brethren of the lodge , assisted by upwards of fifty visitors .

Cape Of Good Hope.

CAPE OF GOOD HOPE .

PORT ELIZABETH . St . John's day ( June 24 th ) was a gay and important day for the Freemasons of Port Elizabeth . A new Freemasons' Hall on the Hill , which had been for sometime in course of erection , was opened with a procession , and tho day being especially genial , a large number of the population , the fair sex

predominating , assembled all along the line to witness it . A correspondent of the Anglo-Africa , published at Grahams Town , "Who styles himself Flos Cuculi , thus describes the proceedings . This auspicious day set in with a hot sun and keen piercing wind , but such inconveniences only stimulate on this occasion the votaries of gridirons and mallets . How many anxieties

were there the previous eve , to render the celebration of this day more imposing than heretofore . Recruits were beat up from all quarters ; one ardent square worshipper purposedly travelled from outlandish regions for the occasion . Others got-themselves put through the degrees , so as to master pieces . Insignia were furbished up , aprons aired , rosettes fresh plaited . At the

mystic hour might be seen sundry black-robed members of the "Craft , " all filled with that grand principle ivhich should actuate every one , " Loving one's neighbour or brother as one ' s self . " There were grey-bearded , bald-headed , wrinkled personages , and youths with just the gloss of manhood about them , all repairing to the mysterious upstair room , so closely guarded , and therefore denominated a "lodge , " or lock-up . After due deliberation upon forms and ceremonies , the Craft in

skilfularray , headed by a hand , in front of which danced black girls , variously attired , and processed to church , there to hear the bell toll forth from the last of the prophets . " Locusts and wild honey , " " the wilderness , " how realised in a sumptuous after dinner ! But this is the . only practical way of realising the truth of an illustration , as vide our Bishops , whose scrip and staff are the substance of what in gospellie periods stood a shadow . We live in enlihtened timesand if Adam ancl Eve

g , preferred fruit , and St . John locusts , we of the 19 th century have an established preference to the solids of life , nor can we live on allegory alone . The sermon was like all such discourses , to the point , —within the circle ; parabolic sweeps were carefully avoided ; the " nines" strongly impressed , —strengthened in their inner men , the band of sworn brothers dispersed until the refectory timeto the calls of which all responded within

, its hearing . And what a sight ! those long tables set by the plumb line and square , those three branched candelabra , afterwards replaced by characteristic pillars and mundane shafts ; the wedged mallets , the plumb line , chisel , square , and the like ; the ten commandments duly labelled on the mantelpiece , as if fresh from the banks of tbe Moselle ; the platters , all marvellous to behold to Johnean eyes ; the knives and forks were

only to deceive vulgar gaze . The hour for dining arrives , each "fellow craft" girds on his apron , sticks a rosette in his breast ; now the outer doors are closed , the knives and forks are displaced , and trowels and compasses supply their want , the royal arehes ( not those of the Adelphi ) , keystones to the structure before them , strike their circles , the AV . M . just installed see all square , then

Tooth to flesh , and lips to wine , Of all joys , a good feed's divine . " Enlivened by the strains of music they drown royalty in bumpers , and float the navy in the " Bay of Biscay , " the Craft from high to low their share receive , and 'prentices are shown the virtues of a Craft that brings all men to one level . Work warms all menand in eagerness they declared they would not "

, go home till morning , " ivhich is a truth nobody can deny . With the cloth , the body removed their cloth , and as jolly bricks all keystones in their way , showed how man should love his brother as himself . Thus ended the evening of the 24 th of June , far different from that whose name it bears . His brotherhood was the universe , his craft to fit all men as bricks in the grand temple , his princile no secresy . But in the 19 th century it would be

p wrong to cast pearls—away . Knowledge is to the few ; and if Masonry , Freemasonry will make men honest in their dealings , charitable towards all , truthful in their speech , then may it flourish , may it gather strength and uproot the evil that lurketh in secret places , and may it ever enjoy the 24 tb of June .

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