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  • The Freemason
  • Dec. 2, 1896
  • Page 39
  • Warrants with Inaccurate Recitals. &c.
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The Freemason, Dec. 2, 1896: Page 39

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

Wrecked.

Slowly the Captain read the letter , read it with the unflinching heroism of the soldier . Jack saw his face blanch and his lips quiver , and he left him alone in his solicitude and with his sorrow after he had told him all . " And now I will call on Lilian , " Jack said , sadly , " she returns

from her honeymoon to-day . The greeting on Lilian's part was most loving , but Jack looked weary and sad , and did not return her affectionate embrace . " Jack , " she asked , " what has happened ? " " You look ill , " said Sir Richard Marchester .

" To-day I have been to see Harold , the first visitor he has had since he was thrown out of a cab , the day after your visit to the club . I took him up your letter , and 1 told him all . You know now about my forgery , 1 will tell you of your husband's duplicity . " " Sir Richard Marchester , " he began , huskily , " I told you that Harold was playing with me to save me from ruin . I gave my word of honour that it should only be for a week . I had fallen on evil

companions , but Hastings saved me and the forged bill was met . You took Lilian to that club , knowing all this , and laid my ruin at Hastings' door . You scoundrel , " he said , ' ! I deserve imprisonment , you deserve hanging . Better that my life should have 'been ruined than— " In his excitement he was slightly incoherent . ' " Is this true , Richard ? " Lilian gasped , interrupting . " I did it all for love of you , " was the cool reply .

Lady Marchester sank into a chair , the beauty of her cheeks blanched away—the grey eyes were looking down an imaginary vista , far into the future , she saw the happiness of her life fleetin "' away , on and on , leaving a desert waste behind . Remorse was shrivelling up her heartstrings , the great mistake of her life , would find no atonement this side of eternity—love was lost , life was " Wrecked . "

Warrants With Inaccurate Recitals. &C.

Warrants with Inaccurate Recitals . & c .

||||| Ipi | MONGST the varied " curiosities" which Masonic tw /^ M I Students occasionally meet with , may be included ffl , L __ i numerous Warrants , Charters , or Dispensations , which , iwfeS & lS I not infrequently , contain a considerable amount of ^ U ; rj ; jx ^ 5 l error . In the pursuit of that branch of Masonic archaeology to which my studies have been more

especially directed , many of these peculiar documents have required and received the most careful and critical examination , and often enough what they stated as facts proved to be very much at variance with what was known to bo correct , according to unimpeachable sources . It may , perhaps , interest the readers of the Freemason if I advert to a few of these .

I . The first to which I would direct attention is a so-called " Warrant , " held by an old London Lodge ( its number and name for obvious reasons are not disclosed ) , which was constituted duriii" - the first half of the eighteenth century , and probablj 7 never had any other " authority " to meet and work than the then usual " Certificate

of Constitution , " which would have been endorsed upon , or annexed to , the written petition or request for constitution of the Lodge . Somehow , and at some period ( very likely in the early part of the present century ) , a Brother finding that the Lodge had no proper or regular Warrant " obtained " the Warrant of a defunct Lodge , dated or constituted 1 st March , 1760 , which Lodge was erased on 10 th April ,

1782 , and then ' adapted " the text so as to do duty for the present Lodge , by altering some portions of it , notably the name and signature of the Grand Master , and the date at the foot of the Warrant , thus seeking to make it harmonise in some essential particulars with the period when the existing Lodge was constituted , but leaving unaltered the numerous titles of the Grand Master of the year 1769

Warrants With Inaccurate Recitals. &C.

( thus producing an incongruous jumble ) , together with the original place of meeting and other particulars . A scrutiny thereof proved the Document did not relate to the present Lodge at all , but to the old Lodge which was erased more than a century ago . Doubtless , the matter will receive attention from the authorities in due course , but I note it here to indicate the perpetration of a wicked forgery ,

committed apparently by one of the members of the Lodge nearly a century ago , whereby all the subsequent members have unwittingly been working down to the present time by virtue of a Document which , to put it mildly , is not and never was in accordance with the Book of Constitutions . Of course , one must acquit the present

members from any knowledge of , or complicity in , such deceit , but there can be no doubt whatever that the document in question is not a proper and sufficient " authority , " under which any Lodge could legitimately meet and work , inasmuch as the same is erroneous and fraudulent from beginning to end .

II . The following are cited as samples of other errors , The first is a recital from a Warrant of Confirmation of the present Globe Lodge , No . 23 , issued ( without date of day or month ) , in 1828 . " Whereas it appears by the " Records of our Grand Lodge that a

Warrant bearing date tiie 18 tli September , 1723 , was issued under the Seal of Masonry enabling certain Brethren therein named to open and hold a Lodge of Tree Masons at the then Anchor , Duchy Lane , Strand , London , to be called the Globe Lodge , which was then No . 23 , "

This recital contains no less than five inaccuracies , namely , ( a ) The Lodge never had a Warrant at the period named . It was doubtless personally constituted by the Grand Master ( or his Deputy ) on the written petition of certain brethren , and the Constituting Officer would simply give his " Certificate of

Constitution , " in accordance with the then usual practice , that the necessary work had been regularly done . ( b ) There would be no Seal upon this Certificate of Constitution . ( c ) The place of Constitution was the "Half Moon , Cheapside , " and not the " Anchor , Dutchy Lane , in the Strand , " and the Lodge never met at the latter place .

( d ) The Lodge had no name in 1723 . Forty-five years afterwards , i . e ., in the year 1768 , it took the name " Globe Lodge , " having been meeting at the " Globe " in Fleet Street , from 1766 to 1768 , when it removed to the Crown and Rolls in Chancery Lane .

( c ) The Lodge had no number in 1723 . In fact , Lodges had no distinctive numbers until the first enumeration of 1729 , when this Lodge was numbered 23 . By a series of coincidences it happened to be the twenty-third Lodge on the Engraved Lists of 1723-4 , and it bears the same No . 23 , at the present time .

In a somewhat similar manner the Warrant of Confirmation , dated 16 th September , 1787 , of the Royal Kent Lodge of Antiquity , now No . 20 , states that a Warrant bearing date the 23 th March , 1723 , was issued under the Seal of Masonry enabling certain Brethren therein named to open and jhold a Lodge at the Crown , Cripplegate , London , under called or known by the Number 13 . Now , the Lodge never met at that place but was constituted at the " Anchor , Dutchy

Lane , m the Strand , ' and the only possible explanation of the error I can offer is tho fact that the thirteenth Lodge in the unnumbered List of 1723 , met , at the " Crown , near Cripplegate , fourth Thursday in every month . " But that List was not arranged in order of Seniority . Precedence , according to position or place in the Engraved Lists , dates from 1729 only . The reference to a Warrant and Seal is , for the same reasons , as incorrect as that of the Globe Lodge above mentioned .

A further form of error is also found in the recitals of old Warrants . Thus , in the Warrant of Confirmation of the Royal York Lodge of Perseverance , now No . 7 , constituted at the Sun Tavern ' , Ludgate Hill , in 1769 , as No . 4 , reference is made to the Lodge having been constituted at that place on 17 th July , 1751 . This was not so . An older Lodge , bearing the same number 4 ( Ancients ) , was warranted on 17 th July , 1751 , but it then met at the Cannon , Water Lane , Fleet Street , and never got so far eastward as Ludeate Hill . fa

Ad03903

CITY OF LONDON TRUSS SOCIETY 35 , FI 1 VSBURY SQUARE , B . C . INSTITUTED 1807 . Patron—H . R . H . THE PRINCE OF WALES , K . G . TREASURER—JOHN NORBURY , ESQ . BANKERS—LLOYDS' BANK , LIMITED , 72 , Lombard' Street . The OBJECT OF THIS CIIAUITV is to gratuitously relieve Poor Ruptured Persons , recommended by Governors , by furnishing Trusses for every kind of Rupture , and Bandages and necessary Instruments for all cases of Prolapsus , and by performing every necessary operation . About 10 , 000 Sufferers arc annually supplied with the Instruments required for their relief . SINCE THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SOCIETY OVER HALF A MILLION PATIENTS HAVE BEEN BENEFITED Additional Funds are greatly needed to meet the increasing demands on the Charitij . Premises , recently enlarged , now provide a long-needed separate entrance and waiting-room for female patients , and there is a female attendant for them . AN AXJTUAI , SUUSCRII-TION OF ONE GUINEA entitles to Four Letters of Recommendation . A LIKE SUUSCIUPTIOX OF FIVE GUINEAS entitles to Two Letters annually ; and TEN GUINEAS , Four Letters . Donations , Subscriptions and Bequests are earnestly solicited , and will be gratefully received by the Bankers , LLOYDS' BANK , Limited , 72 , Lombard Street ; or by the Secretary , at the Offices of the Society . JOHN WHITTINGTON , Secretary . FORM OF BEQUEST . — 'I give to TIIE CITY OF LONDON TRUSS SOCIETY , Finsbury Square , London , the sum of , free ot Legacy Duty , to be paid out of such part of my Estate as I may bequeath to charitable uses , as soon as may be possible after my decease . '

“The Freemason: 1896-12-02, Page 39” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_02121896/page/39/.
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Title Category Page
THE CATENARIAN ARCH. Article 1
Untitled Ad 1
THE HOTEL CECIL. Article 2
Contents. Article 3
Untitled Ad 4
Freemasonry in 1896. Article 5
The Royal Masonic Institution for Girls. Article 14
Untitled Article 16
The Vision of Evil. A Story of Old Paris. Article 17
Masonic Bibliography of Hughan. Article 23
A Philosophic Glance at Freemasonry. Article 24
Untitled Article 25
The Mason's Church. Article 26
The Light of the Sun to Rule the Lodge. Article 26
Bro. George S. Graham. Article 27
Masons' Marks on the Stones of Stretford Aqueduct. Article 28
Untitled Article 29
Some Rare Certificates. Article 30
Wrecked. Article 32
Untitled Ad 33
Untitled Ad 34
Untitled Ad 35
Untitled Ad 36
Untitled Ad 37
Untitled Ad 38
Warrants with Inaccurate Recitals. &c. Article 39
Untitled Ad 39
Under Supervision. Article 40
Untitled Ad 40
Untitled Ad 41
London to the Riviera by Sea. Article 42
Untitled Ad 42
Old Billy. Article 43
Untitled Ad 43
Women as Freemasons. Article 44
Untitled Ad 44
A Christmas Observance. Article 45
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The Two Angels. Article 46
Untitled Ad 46
Occurrences of the Year. Article 47
Untitled Ad 47
Untitled Ad 47
Untitled Ad 48
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Untitled Ad 50
Untitled Ad 51
The Druidical Lodge at Rotherham. Article 52
Untitled Ad 52
Order of the Secret Monitor. Article 53
Untitled Ad 53
Untitled Ad 54
Sutton Masonic Hall. Article 55
Untitled Ad 55
On the Square. Article 56
Untitled Ad 56
The Royal Kent Bodies at New= castle=on=Tyne. Article 57
Untitled Ad 57
Untitled Ad 58
Provincial Grand Masters Under the Grand Lodge of England. Article 59
Untitled Ad 59
Untitled Ad 60
Untitled Ad 61
Untitled Ad 62
Untitled Ad 63
Untitled Ad 66
Our Brother's Bed. Article 67
BRITISH PRODUCE SUPPLY ASSOCIATION (LIMITED). Article 67
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Tower Stairs to the Vosges. Article 68
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Untitled Article 72
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Page 39

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

Wrecked.

Slowly the Captain read the letter , read it with the unflinching heroism of the soldier . Jack saw his face blanch and his lips quiver , and he left him alone in his solicitude and with his sorrow after he had told him all . " And now I will call on Lilian , " Jack said , sadly , " she returns

from her honeymoon to-day . The greeting on Lilian's part was most loving , but Jack looked weary and sad , and did not return her affectionate embrace . " Jack , " she asked , " what has happened ? " " You look ill , " said Sir Richard Marchester .

" To-day I have been to see Harold , the first visitor he has had since he was thrown out of a cab , the day after your visit to the club . I took him up your letter , and 1 told him all . You know now about my forgery , 1 will tell you of your husband's duplicity . " " Sir Richard Marchester , " he began , huskily , " I told you that Harold was playing with me to save me from ruin . I gave my word of honour that it should only be for a week . I had fallen on evil

companions , but Hastings saved me and the forged bill was met . You took Lilian to that club , knowing all this , and laid my ruin at Hastings' door . You scoundrel , " he said , ' ! I deserve imprisonment , you deserve hanging . Better that my life should have 'been ruined than— " In his excitement he was slightly incoherent . ' " Is this true , Richard ? " Lilian gasped , interrupting . " I did it all for love of you , " was the cool reply .

Lady Marchester sank into a chair , the beauty of her cheeks blanched away—the grey eyes were looking down an imaginary vista , far into the future , she saw the happiness of her life fleetin "' away , on and on , leaving a desert waste behind . Remorse was shrivelling up her heartstrings , the great mistake of her life , would find no atonement this side of eternity—love was lost , life was " Wrecked . "

Warrants With Inaccurate Recitals. &C.

Warrants with Inaccurate Recitals . & c .

||||| Ipi | MONGST the varied " curiosities" which Masonic tw /^ M I Students occasionally meet with , may be included ffl , L __ i numerous Warrants , Charters , or Dispensations , which , iwfeS & lS I not infrequently , contain a considerable amount of ^ U ; rj ; jx ^ 5 l error . In the pursuit of that branch of Masonic archaeology to which my studies have been more

especially directed , many of these peculiar documents have required and received the most careful and critical examination , and often enough what they stated as facts proved to be very much at variance with what was known to bo correct , according to unimpeachable sources . It may , perhaps , interest the readers of the Freemason if I advert to a few of these .

I . The first to which I would direct attention is a so-called " Warrant , " held by an old London Lodge ( its number and name for obvious reasons are not disclosed ) , which was constituted duriii" - the first half of the eighteenth century , and probablj 7 never had any other " authority " to meet and work than the then usual " Certificate

of Constitution , " which would have been endorsed upon , or annexed to , the written petition or request for constitution of the Lodge . Somehow , and at some period ( very likely in the early part of the present century ) , a Brother finding that the Lodge had no proper or regular Warrant " obtained " the Warrant of a defunct Lodge , dated or constituted 1 st March , 1760 , which Lodge was erased on 10 th April ,

1782 , and then ' adapted " the text so as to do duty for the present Lodge , by altering some portions of it , notably the name and signature of the Grand Master , and the date at the foot of the Warrant , thus seeking to make it harmonise in some essential particulars with the period when the existing Lodge was constituted , but leaving unaltered the numerous titles of the Grand Master of the year 1769

Warrants With Inaccurate Recitals. &C.

( thus producing an incongruous jumble ) , together with the original place of meeting and other particulars . A scrutiny thereof proved the Document did not relate to the present Lodge at all , but to the old Lodge which was erased more than a century ago . Doubtless , the matter will receive attention from the authorities in due course , but I note it here to indicate the perpetration of a wicked forgery ,

committed apparently by one of the members of the Lodge nearly a century ago , whereby all the subsequent members have unwittingly been working down to the present time by virtue of a Document which , to put it mildly , is not and never was in accordance with the Book of Constitutions . Of course , one must acquit the present

members from any knowledge of , or complicity in , such deceit , but there can be no doubt whatever that the document in question is not a proper and sufficient " authority , " under which any Lodge could legitimately meet and work , inasmuch as the same is erroneous and fraudulent from beginning to end .

II . The following are cited as samples of other errors , The first is a recital from a Warrant of Confirmation of the present Globe Lodge , No . 23 , issued ( without date of day or month ) , in 1828 . " Whereas it appears by the " Records of our Grand Lodge that a

Warrant bearing date tiie 18 tli September , 1723 , was issued under the Seal of Masonry enabling certain Brethren therein named to open and hold a Lodge of Tree Masons at the then Anchor , Duchy Lane , Strand , London , to be called the Globe Lodge , which was then No . 23 , "

This recital contains no less than five inaccuracies , namely , ( a ) The Lodge never had a Warrant at the period named . It was doubtless personally constituted by the Grand Master ( or his Deputy ) on the written petition of certain brethren , and the Constituting Officer would simply give his " Certificate of

Constitution , " in accordance with the then usual practice , that the necessary work had been regularly done . ( b ) There would be no Seal upon this Certificate of Constitution . ( c ) The place of Constitution was the "Half Moon , Cheapside , " and not the " Anchor , Dutchy Lane , in the Strand , " and the Lodge never met at the latter place .

( d ) The Lodge had no name in 1723 . Forty-five years afterwards , i . e ., in the year 1768 , it took the name " Globe Lodge , " having been meeting at the " Globe " in Fleet Street , from 1766 to 1768 , when it removed to the Crown and Rolls in Chancery Lane .

( c ) The Lodge had no number in 1723 . In fact , Lodges had no distinctive numbers until the first enumeration of 1729 , when this Lodge was numbered 23 . By a series of coincidences it happened to be the twenty-third Lodge on the Engraved Lists of 1723-4 , and it bears the same No . 23 , at the present time .

In a somewhat similar manner the Warrant of Confirmation , dated 16 th September , 1787 , of the Royal Kent Lodge of Antiquity , now No . 20 , states that a Warrant bearing date the 23 th March , 1723 , was issued under the Seal of Masonry enabling certain Brethren therein named to open and jhold a Lodge at the Crown , Cripplegate , London , under called or known by the Number 13 . Now , the Lodge never met at that place but was constituted at the " Anchor , Dutchy

Lane , m the Strand , ' and the only possible explanation of the error I can offer is tho fact that the thirteenth Lodge in the unnumbered List of 1723 , met , at the " Crown , near Cripplegate , fourth Thursday in every month . " But that List was not arranged in order of Seniority . Precedence , according to position or place in the Engraved Lists , dates from 1729 only . The reference to a Warrant and Seal is , for the same reasons , as incorrect as that of the Globe Lodge above mentioned .

A further form of error is also found in the recitals of old Warrants . Thus , in the Warrant of Confirmation of the Royal York Lodge of Perseverance , now No . 7 , constituted at the Sun Tavern ' , Ludgate Hill , in 1769 , as No . 4 , reference is made to the Lodge having been constituted at that place on 17 th July , 1751 . This was not so . An older Lodge , bearing the same number 4 ( Ancients ) , was warranted on 17 th July , 1751 , but it then met at the Cannon , Water Lane , Fleet Street , and never got so far eastward as Ludeate Hill . fa

Ad03903

CITY OF LONDON TRUSS SOCIETY 35 , FI 1 VSBURY SQUARE , B . C . INSTITUTED 1807 . Patron—H . R . H . THE PRINCE OF WALES , K . G . TREASURER—JOHN NORBURY , ESQ . BANKERS—LLOYDS' BANK , LIMITED , 72 , Lombard' Street . The OBJECT OF THIS CIIAUITV is to gratuitously relieve Poor Ruptured Persons , recommended by Governors , by furnishing Trusses for every kind of Rupture , and Bandages and necessary Instruments for all cases of Prolapsus , and by performing every necessary operation . About 10 , 000 Sufferers arc annually supplied with the Instruments required for their relief . SINCE THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SOCIETY OVER HALF A MILLION PATIENTS HAVE BEEN BENEFITED Additional Funds are greatly needed to meet the increasing demands on the Charitij . Premises , recently enlarged , now provide a long-needed separate entrance and waiting-room for female patients , and there is a female attendant for them . AN AXJTUAI , SUUSCRII-TION OF ONE GUINEA entitles to Four Letters of Recommendation . A LIKE SUUSCIUPTIOX OF FIVE GUINEAS entitles to Two Letters annually ; and TEN GUINEAS , Four Letters . Donations , Subscriptions and Bequests are earnestly solicited , and will be gratefully received by the Bankers , LLOYDS' BANK , Limited , 72 , Lombard Street ; or by the Secretary , at the Offices of the Society . JOHN WHITTINGTON , Secretary . FORM OF BEQUEST . — 'I give to TIIE CITY OF LONDON TRUSS SOCIETY , Finsbury Square , London , the sum of , free ot Legacy Duty , to be paid out of such part of my Estate as I may bequeath to charitable uses , as soon as may be possible after my decease . '

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