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The Freemason's Chronicle, March 11, 1882: Page 5

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    Article CORRESPONDENCE. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE BURIAL PLACE OF LAFAYETTE. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 5

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

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

All Letters must bear the name anl address of the Writer , not necessarily for publication , but as a guarantee of good faith . We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions of our Cor respondents . We cannot undertake to return rejected communications .

THE GRANT TO THE ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —I have studied with much interest the Tabular Statement , exhibiting the Receipts and Expenditure of the Board of General Purposes for the two years ended 30 th September 1881 , and published in yonr columns last week . Bnt surely you

must labour under some mistake ! Is it psssible that the Board can have spared some thousands of pounds for investment in Government Stocks , to say nothing of the amount it has expended in " Extension of Premises , " out of an income of £ 500 per annum ? The compiler of your Table must have been misinformed , or else he must

have been guilty of an egregious error . Are you—or rather is he—quite certain thafc there has been an acquisition of over £ 6 , 000 additional Stock in the two years recorded ? Is ifc really the case that , with an income of £ 500 per annum , there was a balance to the good of over £ 4 , 000 ? Snrely you must have

been dreaming in stamping with your editorial sanction a statement of figures so simple , and get so complete and apparently so accurate . I am not one of those who pin their faith to figures , yet it is impossible to overlook the amazing discrepancy between Bro . Philbriok ' s notion of the available income of the Board of General Purposes

and its actual income as shown by you , without coming to the con - elusion that one of you must have been guilty of a most tremendous error . If the Board of General Purposes can expend in two years over £ 6 , 000 in fche purchase of stock , and is able to point to a balance in its favour of over £ 4 , 000 , ifc must be well-circumstanced , and possess more than £ 500 per annum .

Fraternally yours , Q-[ Our Table was compiled from the Quarterly Statements of Account . —ED . E . G . ]

WILLIAM PRESTON LODGE OF INSTRUCTION , No . 166 .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —YOU deserve the thanks of the Masonic community for having brought the flagrant conduct of certain members of this Lodge under public notice . I gather from the tenour of your report of the proceedings on the 10 th February ult ., that the members of the Lodge did not work together harmoniously .

It was stated then thafc when the Officers were present , the members were absent ; and vice versa , thafc when the latter were in great force , the former were conspicuous by their absence . But a lack of harmony by no means justifies the adoption of strong and nn-Masonio measures . The brethren who passed the resolution dissolving the Lodge , had no right whatever to do so . It is a remarkable feature about a Lodge of Freemasons that , even if a majority of the members are desirous of severing their connection with ifc , tne

minority retain their power of continuing the Lodge in full working order . The whole body of members must resign if the Lod ge is to cease to exist . As this was , notoriously , not the case with the William Preston Lodge of Instruction , it is clear that it st-H exists , and if all goes forward as ifc has done these last few weeks , ifc will doubtless remain a bright and instructive luminary of the Craft . Fraternally yours , HONORARY MEMBER or SEVERAL LODGES OF INSTRUCTION .

OCCASIONAL PAPERS .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . tW SlR AND BKOMEK . —It was with very great pleasure I noted ""« a paper was read last week in the Royal Union Lodge of In . BMuct ion , Usbvidge , by Bro . W . W . Morgan , iu tho presence of tho £ •**• Bro . Sir Francis Burdett Prov . G . M . Middlesex , and that the

for f Was Plea 30 < J to express tho pleasure ho experienced at tho inmation it contained , especially as he was in a position to cororate that portion of it which related to his relativn . tlm " Rnrnnooa

nrclett-Coutts . I think the efforts of Bro . Morgan deserve at least but l , £ * ' ' He haa not only advocated this system of lectures , lpctnr e 1 , kewise gi ? en effect to his advocacy by delivering shall « i ^ eral interest lo the Craft . I trust , after this , thafc we Rramm « u " 0 ccasional Lectures " a part of the regular proe mme of business in our Lodges of Instruction . We shall get on Uh our work far better if that is the case . I am , yours fraternally , STUDENT .

ol < i ' Wi ' nwtod ma ^* ' YL * Merchant ( Experts and Valuers ) . Well fermented eaann . matured Spirits . 2 Albert Mansions , Victoria-street , London , S . W .

The Burial Place Of Lafayette.

THE BURIAL PLACE OF LAFAYETTE .

FROM THE LIBERAL FREEMASON . DURING his visit to Europe last summer , W . Bro . A . A . Folsom , Past Master of Columbian Lodge , of Boston , visited several places of Masonic interest , some of which deserve more than a mere passing notice . Because of the pleasant relations existing between the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts and that of Sweden , the description of his visit to the Masonio Temple in Stockholm , given as a

reminiscence , has proved particularly gratifying , and so has thafc of his Masonic intercourse in Vienna ; but it is doubtful if any one of them excites a more lively interest than that of the grave of Lafayette , whose high Masonic character is deeply respected in the United States . A portrait of Lafayette adorns the walls of Sutton Hall , in the Masonic Temple , in Boston , and fche following account

of his burial place as given by Edward King in the Boston Journal , cannot fail to be interesting to Freemasons . The private cemetery where the remains of Lafayette are deposited is in the Rue de Picpus , No . 15 , afc tho extremity of the Faubourg Saint Antoine , in Paris . The entrance is through a spacious court , the buildings of which are occupied by a religions community , and at

the bottom of which is a modest-looking chapel . A large garden , covered with fruit trees , shrubs and plants , is next crossed , and a long alley of lime trees , bordered with v hedge of yoke-elm trees , then leads to the inclosure reserved for the cemetery . The latter is surrounded with walls , ancl represents an oblong square , into which there are three entrances by as many gates . It contains but two

rows of mausoleums , belonging to distinguished families—those of de Noailles , de Grammont , de Montaign , Destilliere , Freteaux , Guoyd'Arsy , Rosambo , Lamoignon , de Perigord , & c . The two rows of tombs are separated by a gravel path , at the extremity of which is a stone cross . At tho south-east angle of the ground is the place reserved for Lafayette and his family . The tomb of Lafayette , which is surrounded with an iron railing ,

s but little higher than the ground , and is composed of two large black marble tablets , slightly inclined and forming a very oblique angle . Upon this angle is a little cross , the lateral branches of which extend on both sides of the monument that covers the remains of both husband and wife as with a roof . The following is the arrangement of the tablets , with the inscriptions on them , in letters of gold :

M . J . P . R . Y . G . D . ' M . A . F . Lafayette De Noailles Nee a Paris le XI Novembre Lieutenant-general membre MDCCLIX de la Chambre des Deputes Mariee le XI Avril no a Chavaniao Haute-MDCCLXXIY Loire , le VI Septembre

A MDCCLVII , marie le M . J . P . R . Y . G . D . XI Avril MDCCLXXIV Lafayette A M . A . F . Decedee h Paris le XXIV de Noailles Decembre MDCCCVII ^ Decode a Paris le XX Mai Requiescat in pace MDCCCXXXIV

Requiescat in pace The ground reserved for Lafayette's family also contains the tomb of Colonel Lasteyrie , the General ' s son-in-law , and thafc of Mde . Grammont ' s sons . A slab of white marble placed on tho wall at the bottom bears an inscription relative to the death of one of Lafayette's

grandchildren , Madame de Peron , whose maiden name was Maubourg . Behind the wall next to Lafayettj's tomb aro cypresses , and some poplars . One of the latter , the emblem of death , seems to abandon its withered branches to the wind ; tb . ua adding to the melancholy

aspect of this field of rest . The soil on which these trees stand covers the remains of a number of victims of the reign of terror , amongst whom are some of Madame Lafayette ' s nearest relatives . Madame Lafayette having expressed a desire to be buried in this spot , her wishes were respected , and the observance of them ultimately decided the burial place of her husband .

The tomb of Lafayette , unostentatious like those of his friends , Washington and Franklin , is daily visited by many who hononr his memory , by strangers who have known him , and by those who regret that they wore deprived of that happiness . A register , which is deposited with the porter of the cemetery , is filled with the names of the visitors .

It is gratifying to know that our Jewish brethren are exerting themselves manfully to relieve tlie distress of their persecuted co-reli g ionists in Russia . We have pleasure in announcing that Bro . D . Moss has succeeded in procuring the following amounts for the Mansion House Relief

Fund : — £ s d Israel Lodge of Instruction - - - - 3 3 0 Egyptian , No . 27 2 6 0

Prosperity , No . 65 110 Tredegar Lodge of Instruction - - - 1 10 0 Bro . Pearcy 0 15 0 Dnke of Connaught 0 15 0 Bro . Clynes , Upton 0 5 0 £ 10 1 0

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1882-03-11, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_11031882/page/5/.
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Title Category Page
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 1
OCCASIONAL PAPERS.—No. VIII. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
WHAT IS THE PRACTICAL WORTH OF MASONRY. Article 3
MR. TENNYSON'S NEW POEM. Article 4
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 5
THE BURIAL PLACE OF LAFAYETTE. Article 5
THE OWL CLUB. Article 6
W. LANCASHIRE MASONIC EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION. Article 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
THE FIFTEEN SECTIONS Article 7
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Untitled Article 8
THE INSTITUTIONS. Article 8
PROV. GRAND LODGE OF GLASGOW. Article 9
REVIEWS. Article 9
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 10
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 11
VITRUVIAN LODGE, No. 87. Article 11
ROYAL YORK LODGE, No. 315. Article 12
TEMPLE LODGE, No. 558, FOLKESTONE. Article 13
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

All Letters must bear the name anl address of the Writer , not necessarily for publication , but as a guarantee of good faith . We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions of our Cor respondents . We cannot undertake to return rejected communications .

THE GRANT TO THE ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —I have studied with much interest the Tabular Statement , exhibiting the Receipts and Expenditure of the Board of General Purposes for the two years ended 30 th September 1881 , and published in yonr columns last week . Bnt surely you

must labour under some mistake ! Is it psssible that the Board can have spared some thousands of pounds for investment in Government Stocks , to say nothing of the amount it has expended in " Extension of Premises , " out of an income of £ 500 per annum ? The compiler of your Table must have been misinformed , or else he must

have been guilty of an egregious error . Are you—or rather is he—quite certain thafc there has been an acquisition of over £ 6 , 000 additional Stock in the two years recorded ? Is ifc really the case that , with an income of £ 500 per annum , there was a balance to the good of over £ 4 , 000 ? Snrely you must have

been dreaming in stamping with your editorial sanction a statement of figures so simple , and get so complete and apparently so accurate . I am not one of those who pin their faith to figures , yet it is impossible to overlook the amazing discrepancy between Bro . Philbriok ' s notion of the available income of the Board of General Purposes

and its actual income as shown by you , without coming to the con - elusion that one of you must have been guilty of a most tremendous error . If the Board of General Purposes can expend in two years over £ 6 , 000 in fche purchase of stock , and is able to point to a balance in its favour of over £ 4 , 000 , ifc must be well-circumstanced , and possess more than £ 500 per annum .

Fraternally yours , Q-[ Our Table was compiled from the Quarterly Statements of Account . —ED . E . G . ]

WILLIAM PRESTON LODGE OF INSTRUCTION , No . 166 .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —YOU deserve the thanks of the Masonic community for having brought the flagrant conduct of certain members of this Lodge under public notice . I gather from the tenour of your report of the proceedings on the 10 th February ult ., that the members of the Lodge did not work together harmoniously .

It was stated then thafc when the Officers were present , the members were absent ; and vice versa , thafc when the latter were in great force , the former were conspicuous by their absence . But a lack of harmony by no means justifies the adoption of strong and nn-Masonio measures . The brethren who passed the resolution dissolving the Lodge , had no right whatever to do so . It is a remarkable feature about a Lodge of Freemasons that , even if a majority of the members are desirous of severing their connection with ifc , tne

minority retain their power of continuing the Lodge in full working order . The whole body of members must resign if the Lod ge is to cease to exist . As this was , notoriously , not the case with the William Preston Lodge of Instruction , it is clear that it st-H exists , and if all goes forward as ifc has done these last few weeks , ifc will doubtless remain a bright and instructive luminary of the Craft . Fraternally yours , HONORARY MEMBER or SEVERAL LODGES OF INSTRUCTION .

OCCASIONAL PAPERS .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . tW SlR AND BKOMEK . —It was with very great pleasure I noted ""« a paper was read last week in the Royal Union Lodge of In . BMuct ion , Usbvidge , by Bro . W . W . Morgan , iu tho presence of tho £ •**• Bro . Sir Francis Burdett Prov . G . M . Middlesex , and that the

for f Was Plea 30 < J to express tho pleasure ho experienced at tho inmation it contained , especially as he was in a position to cororate that portion of it which related to his relativn . tlm " Rnrnnooa

nrclett-Coutts . I think the efforts of Bro . Morgan deserve at least but l , £ * ' ' He haa not only advocated this system of lectures , lpctnr e 1 , kewise gi ? en effect to his advocacy by delivering shall « i ^ eral interest lo the Craft . I trust , after this , thafc we Rramm « u " 0 ccasional Lectures " a part of the regular proe mme of business in our Lodges of Instruction . We shall get on Uh our work far better if that is the case . I am , yours fraternally , STUDENT .

ol < i ' Wi ' nwtod ma ^* ' YL * Merchant ( Experts and Valuers ) . Well fermented eaann . matured Spirits . 2 Albert Mansions , Victoria-street , London , S . W .

The Burial Place Of Lafayette.

THE BURIAL PLACE OF LAFAYETTE .

FROM THE LIBERAL FREEMASON . DURING his visit to Europe last summer , W . Bro . A . A . Folsom , Past Master of Columbian Lodge , of Boston , visited several places of Masonic interest , some of which deserve more than a mere passing notice . Because of the pleasant relations existing between the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts and that of Sweden , the description of his visit to the Masonio Temple in Stockholm , given as a

reminiscence , has proved particularly gratifying , and so has thafc of his Masonic intercourse in Vienna ; but it is doubtful if any one of them excites a more lively interest than that of the grave of Lafayette , whose high Masonic character is deeply respected in the United States . A portrait of Lafayette adorns the walls of Sutton Hall , in the Masonic Temple , in Boston , and fche following account

of his burial place as given by Edward King in the Boston Journal , cannot fail to be interesting to Freemasons . The private cemetery where the remains of Lafayette are deposited is in the Rue de Picpus , No . 15 , afc tho extremity of the Faubourg Saint Antoine , in Paris . The entrance is through a spacious court , the buildings of which are occupied by a religions community , and at

the bottom of which is a modest-looking chapel . A large garden , covered with fruit trees , shrubs and plants , is next crossed , and a long alley of lime trees , bordered with v hedge of yoke-elm trees , then leads to the inclosure reserved for the cemetery . The latter is surrounded with walls , ancl represents an oblong square , into which there are three entrances by as many gates . It contains but two

rows of mausoleums , belonging to distinguished families—those of de Noailles , de Grammont , de Montaign , Destilliere , Freteaux , Guoyd'Arsy , Rosambo , Lamoignon , de Perigord , & c . The two rows of tombs are separated by a gravel path , at the extremity of which is a stone cross . At tho south-east angle of the ground is the place reserved for Lafayette and his family . The tomb of Lafayette , which is surrounded with an iron railing ,

s but little higher than the ground , and is composed of two large black marble tablets , slightly inclined and forming a very oblique angle . Upon this angle is a little cross , the lateral branches of which extend on both sides of the monument that covers the remains of both husband and wife as with a roof . The following is the arrangement of the tablets , with the inscriptions on them , in letters of gold :

M . J . P . R . Y . G . D . ' M . A . F . Lafayette De Noailles Nee a Paris le XI Novembre Lieutenant-general membre MDCCLIX de la Chambre des Deputes Mariee le XI Avril no a Chavaniao Haute-MDCCLXXIY Loire , le VI Septembre

A MDCCLVII , marie le M . J . P . R . Y . G . D . XI Avril MDCCLXXIV Lafayette A M . A . F . Decedee h Paris le XXIV de Noailles Decembre MDCCCVII ^ Decode a Paris le XX Mai Requiescat in pace MDCCCXXXIV

Requiescat in pace The ground reserved for Lafayette's family also contains the tomb of Colonel Lasteyrie , the General ' s son-in-law , and thafc of Mde . Grammont ' s sons . A slab of white marble placed on tho wall at the bottom bears an inscription relative to the death of one of Lafayette's

grandchildren , Madame de Peron , whose maiden name was Maubourg . Behind the wall next to Lafayettj's tomb aro cypresses , and some poplars . One of the latter , the emblem of death , seems to abandon its withered branches to the wind ; tb . ua adding to the melancholy

aspect of this field of rest . The soil on which these trees stand covers the remains of a number of victims of the reign of terror , amongst whom are some of Madame Lafayette ' s nearest relatives . Madame Lafayette having expressed a desire to be buried in this spot , her wishes were respected , and the observance of them ultimately decided the burial place of her husband .

The tomb of Lafayette , unostentatious like those of his friends , Washington and Franklin , is daily visited by many who hononr his memory , by strangers who have known him , and by those who regret that they wore deprived of that happiness . A register , which is deposited with the porter of the cemetery , is filled with the names of the visitors .

It is gratifying to know that our Jewish brethren are exerting themselves manfully to relieve tlie distress of their persecuted co-reli g ionists in Russia . We have pleasure in announcing that Bro . D . Moss has succeeded in procuring the following amounts for the Mansion House Relief

Fund : — £ s d Israel Lodge of Instruction - - - - 3 3 0 Egyptian , No . 27 2 6 0

Prosperity , No . 65 110 Tredegar Lodge of Instruction - - - 1 10 0 Bro . Pearcy 0 15 0 Dnke of Connaught 0 15 0 Bro . Clynes , Upton 0 5 0 £ 10 1 0

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