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  • Feb. 1, 1902
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The Masonic Illustrated, Feb. 1, 1902: Page 13

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

At The Sign Of The Perfect Ashlar

R . W . Bro . his Grace the Duke of Portland , Provincial 'Grand Master for Nottinghamshire , has recently presented a site in Sherwood Forest for the establishment of a fullyequipped sanatorium for combatting the disease of consumption . The interest taken in this subject by His Majesty ( he King is well known , and it is a matter for congratulation

that he should be well supported by distinguished members of our Order .

The departure for South Africa of R . W . Bro . George Richards , District Grand Master for the Transvaal , on the ist February , cannot but be regarded as a happy omen in connection with the resuscitation of Freemasonry in the affected districts in that country . Although none but the most optimistic will care to predict that the Craft can for a

considerable time to come resume its normal aspect there , Bro . George Richards ' s presence will do not a little to assist the turn for the better which affairs are taking in South Africa . We learn that he will be ( he bearer of warrants for two new lodges in the Transvaal , which have been granted by the M . W . " Grand Master .

W W ¦' v '' Bro . Hermann Klein , P . G . Org ., whose trip to America was referred to in our last issue , has lost no time in transmitting home an account of his experiences . It is interesting 1 o learn that our worthy brother was fortunate enough to

have as his travelling companions Bro . J . P . Sousa , " the March King , " and his band , and that his experiences Avere of a decidedly pleasant kind . " The bond of sympathy , " Avrites Bro . Klein , " between Britain and America is stronger 1 han it was when I visited this country six years ago , and for ¦ every man who then thought of an Englishman as a brother , "there are now a hundred . "

• 3 a ¦<§¦ . ¦; - > Imitation , it is said , is the sincerest form of flattery , and "the " New Woman" of the United States may be congratulated on the tribute paid in this sense to the " mere man " by the establishment of the Order of the Eastern Star ,

Avhich , as our readers are aware , is founded on Masonic lines , and is composed entirely of the gentler sex . Much ¦ encouragement and , in some cases , recognition is accorded to them , but our American brethren do not appear to be all of one mind in this matter , and the Grand Lodge of Kentucky has taken a firm stand in connection with the relations of the Eastern Star to Masonry .

The American Tyler is pleased to notice that the Grand Lodge of Kentucky , at its recent session , took a very sensible view of the relations of the Eastern Star to Masonry . A resolution was submitted providing that each subordinate lodge be requested by the Grand Lodge to establish within its jurisdiction a chapter of the Eastern Star of the ladies of

Masonry . The resolution called forth a long discussion , and was finally referred to the Committee on Jurisprudence . Past Grand Master J . Soule Smith , Chairman of this Committee , reported against the resolution . The Committee took the ground that the Grand Lodge could not assume jurisdiction

over the Order of the Eastern Star . A sharp debate followed and when the vote was finally put , the report of the Committee was adopted and the resolution defeated by an overwhelming majority .

• s » ¦«> «& Our contemporary remarks that ( he action of the Grand Lodge was just what it should have been . No matter how friendly a grand body of Masonry may feel towards the Eastern Star , no matter how much it

wishes to encourage it , it certainly has no right to seek to extend it by its official action , or to assume any jurisdiction over it whatever . The Eastern Star may be a very desirable auxiliary to Masonry , but it forms no part of it . Zealous brothers are sometimes apt to forget this , but it is , nevertheless , an unavoidable fact .

We imagine it will be a very long time before any supreme or subordinate body in this country will arrive at the stage of suggesting even that the Eastern Star " maybe a desirable auxiliary to Masonry , " but then we move so slowly in the old world and are apt to regard the injunction to suffer no innovation in ( lie body ot" Masonry as a binding obligation on all loyal members of the Craft .

We have received several communications in response to our invitations to Secretaries of lodges to furnish us with items of Masonic interest for insertion in our columns , but not in time for the present number . In future issues we hope to devote a page or two to these matters , and in the

meantime desire to point out that preference will be given to such communications as lend themselves to pictorial illustrations .

Bro . T . Harrison Roberts , P . M . 2502 , whose notice of motion was , so to say , swallowed up in the general discussion on the subject of the Warden ' s service at the last meeting of Grand Lodge , is well known to the outside world as the editor and proprietor of Il / nslraled Bils , the popular penny weekly . His philanthropic services in the organisation of his

Balaclava Fund are proofs of his benevolent spirit , and it is not unsafe to predict that the Craft has not yet seen the conclusion of Bro . Roberts' Masonic activities .

« 2 » ¦ £ » « £ > The inaugural meeting of the All Saints' Chapter of Improvement will take place at the Bow Vestry Hall , Bow Road , E ., on Monday , the 3 rd of February , at 6 . 30 p . m . The ceremony of exaltation will be rehearsed by E . Comp .

T . Griffiths , P . Z ., after which the companions will dine together at the " Bow Bells . " Comp . F . Thornton , of 4 , Park Terrace , Devons Road , E ., has undertaken the duties of Secretary .

Bro . A . Smith , S . D . of the Coborn Lodge , No . 1804 , who is leaving England to take up an important appointment in New Zealand in connection with the All British Pacific Telegraph Company , was the recipient of a gift from his brethren of a solid gold combination match and sovereign box at a meeting held on Wednesday , the 15 th of January .

The presentation was made by the Worshipful Master , Bro . J . Butcher , who , in the name of the lodge , conveyed the hearty good wishes of the brethren for his success in his new sphere .

The manner in which the events of the moment are occasionally crystalized in the names of newly-warranted Freemasons' lodges ( says the Westminster Budget ) , has escaped the notice of the historian , but it is curiously interesting nevertheless . In the course of 1900 , for instance , among the many fresh lodges established under the warrant

of the Grand Lodge of England , one called after Lord Roberts , was founded at Somerset , as well as the Alfred Milner Lodge at Muizenberg , both in South Africa , while the Cecil Rhodes Lodge at Bulawayo was a fruit of the previous year , as was the Lord Kitchener Lodge , at

Greenwich . Victorious generals have been recognised in this fashion , indeed , for a century and a half . The Marquis of Granby so distinguished himself at the Battle of Minden in 1759 , that he was made Commander-in-Chief , and in 1763 , a Marquis of Granby Lodge was founded , which still exists .

Later in the eighteenth century a Nelson of the Nile Lodge attested at Batley the popular admiration for a naval hero , as a Wellington , warranted at Rye in 1814 , did for that Military victor , while the Wolseley Lodge at Manchester in 188 3 , carried out the tradition , and honoured the late Commander-in-Chief very speedily after his success at Tel-el-Kebir . And not the least interesting of such crystalization is the Prince Frederick William Lodge , founded in

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1902-02-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01021902/page/13/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Derbyshire. Article 2
Imperial Masonic Federation. Article 6
Consecration of the Khartoum Lodge, No. 2877. Article 8
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
The Multiplication of London Lodges. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
The Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution. Article 14
IMPORTANT. Article 14
Untitled Ad 14
Battle Abbey and its New Owner. Article 15
Consecration of the Chingford Lodge, No. 2859. Article 16
Robert Burns Lodge, No. 25. Article 16
Guildhall School of Music Lodge, No. 2454. Article 17
White Rose of York Lodge, No. 2840. Article 17
The St. Bride Lodge of Instruction. Article 17
Untitled Ad 17
History of the Emulation lodge of Improvement, No. 256.—– (Continued). Article 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

At The Sign Of The Perfect Ashlar

R . W . Bro . his Grace the Duke of Portland , Provincial 'Grand Master for Nottinghamshire , has recently presented a site in Sherwood Forest for the establishment of a fullyequipped sanatorium for combatting the disease of consumption . The interest taken in this subject by His Majesty ( he King is well known , and it is a matter for congratulation

that he should be well supported by distinguished members of our Order .

The departure for South Africa of R . W . Bro . George Richards , District Grand Master for the Transvaal , on the ist February , cannot but be regarded as a happy omen in connection with the resuscitation of Freemasonry in the affected districts in that country . Although none but the most optimistic will care to predict that the Craft can for a

considerable time to come resume its normal aspect there , Bro . George Richards ' s presence will do not a little to assist the turn for the better which affairs are taking in South Africa . We learn that he will be ( he bearer of warrants for two new lodges in the Transvaal , which have been granted by the M . W . " Grand Master .

W W ¦' v '' Bro . Hermann Klein , P . G . Org ., whose trip to America was referred to in our last issue , has lost no time in transmitting home an account of his experiences . It is interesting 1 o learn that our worthy brother was fortunate enough to

have as his travelling companions Bro . J . P . Sousa , " the March King , " and his band , and that his experiences Avere of a decidedly pleasant kind . " The bond of sympathy , " Avrites Bro . Klein , " between Britain and America is stronger 1 han it was when I visited this country six years ago , and for ¦ every man who then thought of an Englishman as a brother , "there are now a hundred . "

• 3 a ¦<§¦ . ¦; - > Imitation , it is said , is the sincerest form of flattery , and "the " New Woman" of the United States may be congratulated on the tribute paid in this sense to the " mere man " by the establishment of the Order of the Eastern Star ,

Avhich , as our readers are aware , is founded on Masonic lines , and is composed entirely of the gentler sex . Much ¦ encouragement and , in some cases , recognition is accorded to them , but our American brethren do not appear to be all of one mind in this matter , and the Grand Lodge of Kentucky has taken a firm stand in connection with the relations of the Eastern Star to Masonry .

The American Tyler is pleased to notice that the Grand Lodge of Kentucky , at its recent session , took a very sensible view of the relations of the Eastern Star to Masonry . A resolution was submitted providing that each subordinate lodge be requested by the Grand Lodge to establish within its jurisdiction a chapter of the Eastern Star of the ladies of

Masonry . The resolution called forth a long discussion , and was finally referred to the Committee on Jurisprudence . Past Grand Master J . Soule Smith , Chairman of this Committee , reported against the resolution . The Committee took the ground that the Grand Lodge could not assume jurisdiction

over the Order of the Eastern Star . A sharp debate followed and when the vote was finally put , the report of the Committee was adopted and the resolution defeated by an overwhelming majority .

• s » ¦«> «& Our contemporary remarks that ( he action of the Grand Lodge was just what it should have been . No matter how friendly a grand body of Masonry may feel towards the Eastern Star , no matter how much it

wishes to encourage it , it certainly has no right to seek to extend it by its official action , or to assume any jurisdiction over it whatever . The Eastern Star may be a very desirable auxiliary to Masonry , but it forms no part of it . Zealous brothers are sometimes apt to forget this , but it is , nevertheless , an unavoidable fact .

We imagine it will be a very long time before any supreme or subordinate body in this country will arrive at the stage of suggesting even that the Eastern Star " maybe a desirable auxiliary to Masonry , " but then we move so slowly in the old world and are apt to regard the injunction to suffer no innovation in ( lie body ot" Masonry as a binding obligation on all loyal members of the Craft .

We have received several communications in response to our invitations to Secretaries of lodges to furnish us with items of Masonic interest for insertion in our columns , but not in time for the present number . In future issues we hope to devote a page or two to these matters , and in the

meantime desire to point out that preference will be given to such communications as lend themselves to pictorial illustrations .

Bro . T . Harrison Roberts , P . M . 2502 , whose notice of motion was , so to say , swallowed up in the general discussion on the subject of the Warden ' s service at the last meeting of Grand Lodge , is well known to the outside world as the editor and proprietor of Il / nslraled Bils , the popular penny weekly . His philanthropic services in the organisation of his

Balaclava Fund are proofs of his benevolent spirit , and it is not unsafe to predict that the Craft has not yet seen the conclusion of Bro . Roberts' Masonic activities .

« 2 » ¦ £ » « £ > The inaugural meeting of the All Saints' Chapter of Improvement will take place at the Bow Vestry Hall , Bow Road , E ., on Monday , the 3 rd of February , at 6 . 30 p . m . The ceremony of exaltation will be rehearsed by E . Comp .

T . Griffiths , P . Z ., after which the companions will dine together at the " Bow Bells . " Comp . F . Thornton , of 4 , Park Terrace , Devons Road , E ., has undertaken the duties of Secretary .

Bro . A . Smith , S . D . of the Coborn Lodge , No . 1804 , who is leaving England to take up an important appointment in New Zealand in connection with the All British Pacific Telegraph Company , was the recipient of a gift from his brethren of a solid gold combination match and sovereign box at a meeting held on Wednesday , the 15 th of January .

The presentation was made by the Worshipful Master , Bro . J . Butcher , who , in the name of the lodge , conveyed the hearty good wishes of the brethren for his success in his new sphere .

The manner in which the events of the moment are occasionally crystalized in the names of newly-warranted Freemasons' lodges ( says the Westminster Budget ) , has escaped the notice of the historian , but it is curiously interesting nevertheless . In the course of 1900 , for instance , among the many fresh lodges established under the warrant

of the Grand Lodge of England , one called after Lord Roberts , was founded at Somerset , as well as the Alfred Milner Lodge at Muizenberg , both in South Africa , while the Cecil Rhodes Lodge at Bulawayo was a fruit of the previous year , as was the Lord Kitchener Lodge , at

Greenwich . Victorious generals have been recognised in this fashion , indeed , for a century and a half . The Marquis of Granby so distinguished himself at the Battle of Minden in 1759 , that he was made Commander-in-Chief , and in 1763 , a Marquis of Granby Lodge was founded , which still exists .

Later in the eighteenth century a Nelson of the Nile Lodge attested at Batley the popular admiration for a naval hero , as a Wellington , warranted at Rye in 1814 , did for that Military victor , while the Wolseley Lodge at Manchester in 188 3 , carried out the tradition , and honoured the late Commander-in-Chief very speedily after his success at Tel-el-Kebir . And not the least interesting of such crystalization is the Prince Frederick William Lodge , founded in

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