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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Feb. 1, 1903
  • Page 15
  • An Oration to the Members of the Whitsan Lodge.
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The Masonic Illustrated, Feb. 1, 1903: Page 15

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    Article Bro. C. Christian Silberbauer. Page 1 of 1
    Article An Oration to the Members of the Whitsan Lodge. Page 1 of 1
Page 15

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

Bro. C. Christian Silberbauer.

Bro . C . Christian Silberbauer .

BRO . C . Christian Silberbauer , yvhose portrait yve reproduce , is on a brief visit to the old country . He is a member of the Cape Legislature , representing the large and important territory of Tembuland in the House of Assembly . Bro . Silberbauer first became associated yvith the Craft as a

member of the Lodge De Goede Hoop , yvhich yvas established in the east of Cape Toyvn as far back as 1772 , No . 12 on the roll of the Netherlands , and the mother lodge of

BRO . V . CHRISTIAN SILBERBAUER . South Africa . He is also a founder of St . George ' s Lodge , Cape Toyvn ( English Constitution ) , and of the Alfred Milner Lodge , Muizenberg , a charming seaside resort in the

Cape Peninsula , well known to South Africans as the " Brighton of the Cape . " Bro . Silberbauer is District Grand Master for South Africa for the high Degrees of our Order under the Constitution of the Netherlands , its colonies , and other countries . He is a Past Master of the Lodge De Goede

Hoop ; a life member of the General Masonic Education Fund for all South African Provinces ; a Companion of the British Royal Arch Chapter ; and a P . M . W . S . of the Rose Croix Chapter of De Goede Hoop . It is interesting to note that one of Bro . Silberbauer ' s ancestors , Abraham de Smidt , landed at the Cape as a young

lieutenant of a Dutch yvarship , which , in order to avoid capture by the British , was run ashore at Saldanha Bay . Subsequently Lieutenant de Smidt settled in the Cape district , and became the founder of one of the most respected Dutch families in South Africa , yvhose name is a household

word from the Zambesi to Table Bay . This ancestor of our illustrious brother yvas initiated in the Lodge De Goede Hoop shortly after its formation , and ultimately occupied the chair of Worshipful Master in the earliest years of the last century , a position yvhich in those days yvas equivalent to that of District Grand Master .

Bro . Silberbauer is exceedingly hopeful of the benignant inlluences of Freemasonry in South Africa , and points yvith pride and gratification to the fact that , amidst all the

bitterness and turmoil of the war , racial and political dillerences yvere unknown within the temples of the Fraternity . In the small up-country toyvns of Cape Colony Freemasonry is undoubtedly nourishing , and the lodges in Tembuland are efficiently worked , the territory- being under the jurisdiction of Bro . Egan , District Grand Master for the Eastern Division ,

yvhose name is agreeably familiar in connection with all matters of the technical and Masonic Orient of Cape Colony . It yvill be remembered by many of our readers that the late Bro . Cecil Rhodes yvas a member of the Apollo Lodge , Oxford . Bro . Silberbauer has in his possession a Masonic apron , yvhich , by permission of the great South African

stateman ' s relatives , yvas placed upon the coffin at the memorable obsequies in Cape Town as a token of sorrow from the Apollo Lodge . The relatives of the late Right Hon . Cecil Rhodes also permitted Bro . Frederick Silberbauer ( brother of the subject of this sketch ) to pay the last Masonic honours to the distinguished colonist before the coffin yvas

finall y sealed for its journey to the lonely Mattoppo Hills in far Rhodesia . We understand it is Bro . C . C . Silberbauer ' s intention to present this apron to the Apollo Lodge as a memento of one of England ' s sons yvhose name is yvrit large in South African history , as a member of our Order who , by his munificent testamentary benefactions , has rendered so priceless a service to the cause of education .

An Oration To The Members Of The Whitsan Lodge.

An Oration to the Members of the Whitsan Lodge .

AT the consecration of the Whitsan Lodge at Bristol recently the Provincial Grand Chaplain delivered an eloquent oration on the nature and principles of the Institution . He pointed out that the lodge bore the name of one of Bristol ' s great philanthropists . They did not profess to be a religious

brotherhood , but Masonry yvas of a distinctly religious character . Within the four yvalls of the lodge they kneyv nothing of political or religious difficulties , of inequalities arising from race or colour , or mere distinctions of rank and wealth . Their one great watchword yvas Charity , not in the

narroyv restricted sense of bestowing money on the poor and distressed , but Charity in its first and truest sense of Brotherly Love . No society more consistently , more unobtrusively , more effectively , carried out in practice this greatest of all virtues than Freemasonry . It fed the hungry , clothed the naked , relieved the poor and distressed , and

educated thousands of boys and girls in its great schools , sending them forth fitted to play their part in the rough battle of life as faithful servants , good and loyal subjects of the

King , and useful citizens of the country . It had cheered and brightened the declining days of thousands of their poorer brethren yvho , through no fault of their own , had drunk deeply of the cup of adversity . This briefly yvas the splendid yvork yvhich had been and was being done b y the

great Masonic body . They must not forged , hoyvever , that a body consisted of many parts and many members , and that the generally healthy condition of the several parts mainl y depended upon the yvell-being and usefulness of the whole . They commonly spoke of a great society like Freemasonry

as a personal being with a personal existence , yvith a real , not a metaphorical soul , but , after all , yvhat yvas such a society but a collection of individuals , all bound by certain fixed rules and regulations , and all in their corporate capacity acting together . The greatest of human institutions might

in time pass ayvay , but the units yvhich composed it , and whose good useful work made it famous , yvere never forgotten—their names became household yvords .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1903-02-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01021903/page/15/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Consecration of the Holden Lodge, No. 2946. Article 2
The Province of Dor set . In stallation of the Ri ght Hon. the Earl of Shaftesbury as Provincial Grand Master . Article 3
Installation Meeting of the Khartoum Lodge, No, 2877. Article 4
Installation Meeting of the Emblematic Lodge, No. 1321. Article 5
London Rifle Brigade Lodge, No. 1962. Article 5
Empire Lodge, No . 8. In stallation of Bro. Sidney T sift as Worshipful Master. Article 6
Installation Meeting of the Aldershot Camp Lodge, No. 1331. Article 8
Installation Meeting of the Sefton Lodge, No. 680. Article 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
The Roman Hierarchy and Masonry from 1814 to the Present Time. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Untitled Article 13
Bro. C. Christian Silberbauer. Article 15
An Oration to the Members of the Whitsan Lodge. Article 15
The Lodge and the Craft. Article 16
Untitled Article 16
Untitled Article 17
Histo ry of the Emulation Lod ge of Improvement , No . 256.——(Continued). Article 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Bro. C. Christian Silberbauer.

Bro . C . Christian Silberbauer .

BRO . C . Christian Silberbauer , yvhose portrait yve reproduce , is on a brief visit to the old country . He is a member of the Cape Legislature , representing the large and important territory of Tembuland in the House of Assembly . Bro . Silberbauer first became associated yvith the Craft as a

member of the Lodge De Goede Hoop , yvhich yvas established in the east of Cape Toyvn as far back as 1772 , No . 12 on the roll of the Netherlands , and the mother lodge of

BRO . V . CHRISTIAN SILBERBAUER . South Africa . He is also a founder of St . George ' s Lodge , Cape Toyvn ( English Constitution ) , and of the Alfred Milner Lodge , Muizenberg , a charming seaside resort in the

Cape Peninsula , well known to South Africans as the " Brighton of the Cape . " Bro . Silberbauer is District Grand Master for South Africa for the high Degrees of our Order under the Constitution of the Netherlands , its colonies , and other countries . He is a Past Master of the Lodge De Goede

Hoop ; a life member of the General Masonic Education Fund for all South African Provinces ; a Companion of the British Royal Arch Chapter ; and a P . M . W . S . of the Rose Croix Chapter of De Goede Hoop . It is interesting to note that one of Bro . Silberbauer ' s ancestors , Abraham de Smidt , landed at the Cape as a young

lieutenant of a Dutch yvarship , which , in order to avoid capture by the British , was run ashore at Saldanha Bay . Subsequently Lieutenant de Smidt settled in the Cape district , and became the founder of one of the most respected Dutch families in South Africa , yvhose name is a household

word from the Zambesi to Table Bay . This ancestor of our illustrious brother yvas initiated in the Lodge De Goede Hoop shortly after its formation , and ultimately occupied the chair of Worshipful Master in the earliest years of the last century , a position yvhich in those days yvas equivalent to that of District Grand Master .

Bro . Silberbauer is exceedingly hopeful of the benignant inlluences of Freemasonry in South Africa , and points yvith pride and gratification to the fact that , amidst all the

bitterness and turmoil of the war , racial and political dillerences yvere unknown within the temples of the Fraternity . In the small up-country toyvns of Cape Colony Freemasonry is undoubtedly nourishing , and the lodges in Tembuland are efficiently worked , the territory- being under the jurisdiction of Bro . Egan , District Grand Master for the Eastern Division ,

yvhose name is agreeably familiar in connection with all matters of the technical and Masonic Orient of Cape Colony . It yvill be remembered by many of our readers that the late Bro . Cecil Rhodes yvas a member of the Apollo Lodge , Oxford . Bro . Silberbauer has in his possession a Masonic apron , yvhich , by permission of the great South African

stateman ' s relatives , yvas placed upon the coffin at the memorable obsequies in Cape Town as a token of sorrow from the Apollo Lodge . The relatives of the late Right Hon . Cecil Rhodes also permitted Bro . Frederick Silberbauer ( brother of the subject of this sketch ) to pay the last Masonic honours to the distinguished colonist before the coffin yvas

finall y sealed for its journey to the lonely Mattoppo Hills in far Rhodesia . We understand it is Bro . C . C . Silberbauer ' s intention to present this apron to the Apollo Lodge as a memento of one of England ' s sons yvhose name is yvrit large in South African history , as a member of our Order who , by his munificent testamentary benefactions , has rendered so priceless a service to the cause of education .

An Oration To The Members Of The Whitsan Lodge.

An Oration to the Members of the Whitsan Lodge .

AT the consecration of the Whitsan Lodge at Bristol recently the Provincial Grand Chaplain delivered an eloquent oration on the nature and principles of the Institution . He pointed out that the lodge bore the name of one of Bristol ' s great philanthropists . They did not profess to be a religious

brotherhood , but Masonry yvas of a distinctly religious character . Within the four yvalls of the lodge they kneyv nothing of political or religious difficulties , of inequalities arising from race or colour , or mere distinctions of rank and wealth . Their one great watchword yvas Charity , not in the

narroyv restricted sense of bestowing money on the poor and distressed , but Charity in its first and truest sense of Brotherly Love . No society more consistently , more unobtrusively , more effectively , carried out in practice this greatest of all virtues than Freemasonry . It fed the hungry , clothed the naked , relieved the poor and distressed , and

educated thousands of boys and girls in its great schools , sending them forth fitted to play their part in the rough battle of life as faithful servants , good and loyal subjects of the

King , and useful citizens of the country . It had cheered and brightened the declining days of thousands of their poorer brethren yvho , through no fault of their own , had drunk deeply of the cup of adversity . This briefly yvas the splendid yvork yvhich had been and was being done b y the

great Masonic body . They must not forged , hoyvever , that a body consisted of many parts and many members , and that the generally healthy condition of the several parts mainl y depended upon the yvell-being and usefulness of the whole . They commonly spoke of a great society like Freemasonry

as a personal being with a personal existence , yvith a real , not a metaphorical soul , but , after all , yvhat yvas such a society but a collection of individuals , all bound by certain fixed rules and regulations , and all in their corporate capacity acting together . The greatest of human institutions might

in time pass ayvay , but the units yvhich composed it , and whose good useful work made it famous , yvere never forgotten—their names became household yvords .

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