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  • March 24, 1877
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  • GRAND LODGE VIRGINIA.
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The Rights Of Worshipful Masters.

ours . Oliver , indeed , has noted this in his Masonic Jurisprudence , but by mere accident the question was lately brought under onr notice in turning over the pages of an old American Masonic newspaper , the American Freemason , Louisville and New York , bearing date 1 st November 1855 .

Herein a writer had culled , from the pages of our Freemasons' Quarterly Review , the opinions of that journal on different points of Masonic Law . He then contrasts , where desirable , the practice adopted in America . Among the points noted , occurs a case in which our English editor had

evidently been consulted as to some of the powers possessed by the Master of a Lodge , for he is quoted as saying —we havo reproduced the words as given in the American journal— " No Mason below the rank of an Installed Master can initiate , pass , or raise . The pretence of a

Warden ' s power to initiate in front of the pedestal , is a breach of Masonic law as regards the party so offending ; and , in our opinion , any Past Masters present are equally guilty , and , the act not being legal , confers no privilege on those who are the objects of the fault . " ( 1837 p . 554 ; also ,

1841 p . 128 ) . In commenting on this , the American Freemason says , " that this is contrary to the Ancient Rulewe refer , of course , to Lodges under the jurisdiction of Grand Lodges in the United States , for with the most of these we are well acquainted "—will be immediately remarked , if the formulas used in the Installation Services are borne in mind .

They all attribute to a Warden all the powers of the Master when presiding in his absence . " The writer then goes on to wonder how the fact of a brother being a P . M . will enable him to fulfil any one of these ceremonies better . He also objects to the spirit of our law , by which he , on whom

tbe degree is thus conferred , is in no wise benefited . Oliver ' s statement agrees with this in all essential particulars , though he mentions a more ancient rule in America , which provided that , in such cases , the Master ' s authority ought to revert to the last Past Master who is present , and also that

the Wardens , as a matter of courtesy , will generally invite a Past Master to take the chair , on account of his experience and skill in conducting the business of a Lodge . However ,

we have said enough as to the contrast between the law in the two countries , for this is of less importance than the interpretation we put upon our own law . What this latter is we have already shown above .

Grand Lodge Virginia.

GRAND LODGE VIRGINIA .

WE acknowledge with hearty thanks the receipt of Proceedings at the Annual Communication of this Grand Body held in the City of Richmond , on the 11 th , 12 th , and 13 th December 1876 . Bro . Taliaferro , the Grand Master , presided , and was supported by Bro . Richard

Parker , Deputy Grand Master , Bros . Beverley R . Wellford jun . aud Peyton S . Coles , S . and J . Grand Wardens respectively , other of the Grand Officers , the

representatives of most of the Lodges in the jurisdiction , certain Past Grand Masters , District D . G . Masters , and others , together with the representatives of the Grand Lodges of Nebraska , Ireland , Dacotah and Canada . The Grand

Master delivered the customary address , in which he touched , in brief , but appropriate terms , on all the leading incidents of the past year . His allusion to the loss sustained by the Grand Lodge through the deaths of the late Grand Secretary Dove , Grand Treasurer Thomas W . Dudlev . and

Grand Lecturer James R . Dowell , was couched in language befitting the occasion . We have already included in our columns a short sketch of the late estimable Bro . Dove , who , at the time of his death , was the oldest Grand Sec . in the world , having filled the ohice uninterruptedly from

the year 1835 . The other two Grand Officers were younger than Bro . Dove , both as men and Masons ; Bro . Dudley having attained the age of sixty-eight only , and havinoserved the office of G . Treasurer for a quarter of a century , while Bro . Dowell , the Grand Lecturer , was younger still ,

being _ only in his fifty-fifth year , and having discharged his very important functions for only a few years . It rarely happens that a Grand Lodge sustains such serious losses within the brief period of a few months . WB avmnniJii ' sfi

deeply with our Virginian brethren in their present sorrow . The Grand Master then dwelt on the antiquity of Freemasonry , its inestimable value as an Instifcu ion , and the need there is that all who profess it should most reli-

Grand Lodge Virginia.

giously observe the precepts set down for their guidance . Among other matters passed under review , Bro . Taliaferro announced that he had withheld approval , for reasons which commend themselves to us , as to him , to the holding of " Lodges of Sorrow . " Ho likewise announced the

interchange of representatives with the Grand Lodges of New York , Louisiana , and Nevada , that a communication relative to the new Grand Lodge of Cuba would be submitted for the consideration of the brethren , and that he proposed to reject the petition of the so called Grand Lodge of Ontario ,

for recognition and the interchange of representatives . Ho congratulated those present on the steady progress of the Craft . He urged on them the necessity of preparing historical sketches of their several Lodges , as material for a general history of the Fraternit y in Virginia , and also to

use all speed in preparing a new edition of the Virginia Text-book , the last edition , compiled by the late Bro . Dove , having been exhausted more than twelve months since . Having invoked their sympathy and support on behalf of the " Masonic Widows' and Orphans' Home , " which , we

regret to hear , is not in so flourishing a condition as it should be , and having enumerated the various decisions he had felt called upon to make daring the year , on questions submitted for his judgment , the Grand Master brought his remarks to a conclusion , and , as usual , the address was

referred to a Committee for their report . The standing Committee having been appointed , and other business transacted , the Grand Lodge was closed till the following morning , when the Grand Working Committee " exemplified the work of the three degrees by questions and answers . "

In the evening Grand Lodge again met under the Presidency of the Grand Master , when the election of Grand Officers was proceeded with , the following being chosen to fill tho principal offices , namely : Bros . W . Parker as G . Master , B . R . Wellford jun . as Dep . G . M ., Peyton

Coles and Reuben M . Page Senior and Junior Grand Wardens respectively , P . M . Marshall G . Treasurer , and Wm . B . Isaacs G . Secretary . Those who were present having been introduced and installed , the Grand Master appointed Bro . James Evans as Grand Lecturer . A

resolution having been adopted , authorising the Committee on Finance and Investment to make arrangements with the trustees of the Masonic Temple Associatiou for the occupancy of the room in which they were then assembled , at the " annual and emergent meetings " of Grand Lodge , a

brief adjournment took place ; after which the Committee on Dispensations and Charters submitted its report , which was adopted , and Grand Lodge closed . Afc the morning session on the third day , the Grand Lecturer , assisted by members of the Grand Working Committee ,

exemplified the third degree of Masonry . In the evening , a series of very elaborate reports was submitted , among them that of the Committee on the proceedings of Grand Officers , those of the District Deputy Grand Masters on the

condition of the Craft in their several districts , and also that on Masonic Jurisprudence , in which sundry of Past Grand Master Taliaferro ' s judgments were not endorsed . The financial Report showed a balance as yet undetermined , owing to the recent death of tho Grand Treasurer . The Committee on

the Grand Master ' s address having delivered their report , and the Deputy Grand Masters having been appointed for the several districts , Grand Lodge was closed till the second Monday in December 1877 , unless sooner convened by the Grand Master . Then follows a variety of important

statistical information . The sum paid to the Grand Treasurer by Lodges afc this Communication amounted to 4 , 260 dollars , the sum yet due from the same being 1 , 896 dols . 50 c . Then , in a most minute report , are given the rolls of the several Lodges in this jurisdiction , arranged , in the first

place , under their respective districts , in order to show the strength of each , and then tabularly and in alphabetical order , with other statistical matter , in order to show the strength of the Graft during the year , and its present status . As many Lodges appear to have made no return , the

figures represent imperfectl y the numerical strength of the Craft ; but the result , as regards those which have furnished the needful information , exhibits the following results : — There are in the forty-one districts into which the Jurisdiction is divided , 231 Lodges , with an aggregate membership

of 8 , 992 . The reinstatements during the year amounted to 23 , the suspensions to 207 , the expulsions to seven , and the deaths to 109 . In the Appendix is a list of the general regulations adopted by this Grand Lodge , and the affirmed decisions of successive Grand Masters from the year 1866 to this last yew both inclusive . An Index to tha

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1877-03-24, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_24031877/page/2/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE RIGHTS OF WORSHIPFUL MASTERS. Article 1
GRAND LODGE VIRGINIA. Article 2
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 3
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE Article 3
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 4
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. &c Article 4
BOMBAY Article 5
REVIEWS. Article 6
BEGINNING A LODGE Article 7
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 8
OUR WEEKLY BUDGET Article 8
Old Warrants. Article 10
CONSECRATION OF THE GOSFORTH LODGE, No. 1664. Article 10
CHESHIRE EDUCATIONAL MASONIC INSTITUTION. Article 10
DIARY FOR THE WEEK Article 11
WEST YORKSHIRE Article 11
EDINBURGH DISTRICT Article 11
GLASGOW AND THE WEST OF SCOTLAND Article 11
NOTICES OF MEETINGS Article 11
THE DRAMA Article 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Rights Of Worshipful Masters.

ours . Oliver , indeed , has noted this in his Masonic Jurisprudence , but by mere accident the question was lately brought under onr notice in turning over the pages of an old American Masonic newspaper , the American Freemason , Louisville and New York , bearing date 1 st November 1855 .

Herein a writer had culled , from the pages of our Freemasons' Quarterly Review , the opinions of that journal on different points of Masonic Law . He then contrasts , where desirable , the practice adopted in America . Among the points noted , occurs a case in which our English editor had

evidently been consulted as to some of the powers possessed by the Master of a Lodge , for he is quoted as saying —we havo reproduced the words as given in the American journal— " No Mason below the rank of an Installed Master can initiate , pass , or raise . The pretence of a

Warden ' s power to initiate in front of the pedestal , is a breach of Masonic law as regards the party so offending ; and , in our opinion , any Past Masters present are equally guilty , and , the act not being legal , confers no privilege on those who are the objects of the fault . " ( 1837 p . 554 ; also ,

1841 p . 128 ) . In commenting on this , the American Freemason says , " that this is contrary to the Ancient Rulewe refer , of course , to Lodges under the jurisdiction of Grand Lodges in the United States , for with the most of these we are well acquainted "—will be immediately remarked , if the formulas used in the Installation Services are borne in mind .

They all attribute to a Warden all the powers of the Master when presiding in his absence . " The writer then goes on to wonder how the fact of a brother being a P . M . will enable him to fulfil any one of these ceremonies better . He also objects to the spirit of our law , by which he , on whom

tbe degree is thus conferred , is in no wise benefited . Oliver ' s statement agrees with this in all essential particulars , though he mentions a more ancient rule in America , which provided that , in such cases , the Master ' s authority ought to revert to the last Past Master who is present , and also that

the Wardens , as a matter of courtesy , will generally invite a Past Master to take the chair , on account of his experience and skill in conducting the business of a Lodge . However ,

we have said enough as to the contrast between the law in the two countries , for this is of less importance than the interpretation we put upon our own law . What this latter is we have already shown above .

Grand Lodge Virginia.

GRAND LODGE VIRGINIA .

WE acknowledge with hearty thanks the receipt of Proceedings at the Annual Communication of this Grand Body held in the City of Richmond , on the 11 th , 12 th , and 13 th December 1876 . Bro . Taliaferro , the Grand Master , presided , and was supported by Bro . Richard

Parker , Deputy Grand Master , Bros . Beverley R . Wellford jun . aud Peyton S . Coles , S . and J . Grand Wardens respectively , other of the Grand Officers , the

representatives of most of the Lodges in the jurisdiction , certain Past Grand Masters , District D . G . Masters , and others , together with the representatives of the Grand Lodges of Nebraska , Ireland , Dacotah and Canada . The Grand

Master delivered the customary address , in which he touched , in brief , but appropriate terms , on all the leading incidents of the past year . His allusion to the loss sustained by the Grand Lodge through the deaths of the late Grand Secretary Dove , Grand Treasurer Thomas W . Dudlev . and

Grand Lecturer James R . Dowell , was couched in language befitting the occasion . We have already included in our columns a short sketch of the late estimable Bro . Dove , who , at the time of his death , was the oldest Grand Sec . in the world , having filled the ohice uninterruptedly from

the year 1835 . The other two Grand Officers were younger than Bro . Dove , both as men and Masons ; Bro . Dudley having attained the age of sixty-eight only , and havinoserved the office of G . Treasurer for a quarter of a century , while Bro . Dowell , the Grand Lecturer , was younger still ,

being _ only in his fifty-fifth year , and having discharged his very important functions for only a few years . It rarely happens that a Grand Lodge sustains such serious losses within the brief period of a few months . WB avmnniJii ' sfi

deeply with our Virginian brethren in their present sorrow . The Grand Master then dwelt on the antiquity of Freemasonry , its inestimable value as an Instifcu ion , and the need there is that all who profess it should most reli-

Grand Lodge Virginia.

giously observe the precepts set down for their guidance . Among other matters passed under review , Bro . Taliaferro announced that he had withheld approval , for reasons which commend themselves to us , as to him , to the holding of " Lodges of Sorrow . " Ho likewise announced the

interchange of representatives with the Grand Lodges of New York , Louisiana , and Nevada , that a communication relative to the new Grand Lodge of Cuba would be submitted for the consideration of the brethren , and that he proposed to reject the petition of the so called Grand Lodge of Ontario ,

for recognition and the interchange of representatives . Ho congratulated those present on the steady progress of the Craft . He urged on them the necessity of preparing historical sketches of their several Lodges , as material for a general history of the Fraternit y in Virginia , and also to

use all speed in preparing a new edition of the Virginia Text-book , the last edition , compiled by the late Bro . Dove , having been exhausted more than twelve months since . Having invoked their sympathy and support on behalf of the " Masonic Widows' and Orphans' Home , " which , we

regret to hear , is not in so flourishing a condition as it should be , and having enumerated the various decisions he had felt called upon to make daring the year , on questions submitted for his judgment , the Grand Master brought his remarks to a conclusion , and , as usual , the address was

referred to a Committee for their report . The standing Committee having been appointed , and other business transacted , the Grand Lodge was closed till the following morning , when the Grand Working Committee " exemplified the work of the three degrees by questions and answers . "

In the evening Grand Lodge again met under the Presidency of the Grand Master , when the election of Grand Officers was proceeded with , the following being chosen to fill tho principal offices , namely : Bros . W . Parker as G . Master , B . R . Wellford jun . as Dep . G . M ., Peyton

Coles and Reuben M . Page Senior and Junior Grand Wardens respectively , P . M . Marshall G . Treasurer , and Wm . B . Isaacs G . Secretary . Those who were present having been introduced and installed , the Grand Master appointed Bro . James Evans as Grand Lecturer . A

resolution having been adopted , authorising the Committee on Finance and Investment to make arrangements with the trustees of the Masonic Temple Associatiou for the occupancy of the room in which they were then assembled , at the " annual and emergent meetings " of Grand Lodge , a

brief adjournment took place ; after which the Committee on Dispensations and Charters submitted its report , which was adopted , and Grand Lodge closed . Afc the morning session on the third day , the Grand Lecturer , assisted by members of the Grand Working Committee ,

exemplified the third degree of Masonry . In the evening , a series of very elaborate reports was submitted , among them that of the Committee on the proceedings of Grand Officers , those of the District Deputy Grand Masters on the

condition of the Craft in their several districts , and also that on Masonic Jurisprudence , in which sundry of Past Grand Master Taliaferro ' s judgments were not endorsed . The financial Report showed a balance as yet undetermined , owing to the recent death of tho Grand Treasurer . The Committee on

the Grand Master ' s address having delivered their report , and the Deputy Grand Masters having been appointed for the several districts , Grand Lodge was closed till the second Monday in December 1877 , unless sooner convened by the Grand Master . Then follows a variety of important

statistical information . The sum paid to the Grand Treasurer by Lodges afc this Communication amounted to 4 , 260 dollars , the sum yet due from the same being 1 , 896 dols . 50 c . Then , in a most minute report , are given the rolls of the several Lodges in this jurisdiction , arranged , in the first

place , under their respective districts , in order to show the strength of each , and then tabularly and in alphabetical order , with other statistical matter , in order to show the strength of the Graft during the year , and its present status . As many Lodges appear to have made no return , the

figures represent imperfectl y the numerical strength of the Craft ; but the result , as regards those which have furnished the needful information , exhibits the following results : — There are in the forty-one districts into which the Jurisdiction is divided , 231 Lodges , with an aggregate membership

of 8 , 992 . The reinstatements during the year amounted to 23 , the suspensions to 207 , the expulsions to seven , and the deaths to 109 . In the Appendix is a list of the general regulations adopted by this Grand Lodge , and the affirmed decisions of successive Grand Masters from the year 1866 to this last yew both inclusive . An Index to tha

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