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The Masonic Illustrated, March 1, 1901: Page 7

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    Article Especial Grand Lodge. Page 1 of 1
Page 7

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

Especial Grand Lodge.

Especial Grand Lodge .

AN Especial Meeting of Grand Lodge was held at the Queen ' s Hall , Langham Place , on Friday , the 15 th February , tor the threefold purpose of voting " a loyal and dutiful address to His Majesty the King , tendering the respectful sympathy of the Craft on the death of Her late Majesty Queen Victoria , and further offering the respectful

and fraternal congratulations of the Fraternity to His Majesty on his accession to the Throne ; to receive the resignation of His Majesty as Grand Master ; and to nominate a successor to the office . " Nearly 3000 brethren were present , including representatives from the Irish , Scotch , and other jurisdictions , the Irish Grand Lodge being represented by the M . W .

Grand Master , the Duke of Abercorn , and Scotland by the M . W . Grand Master , the Hon . James Hozier , M . P . The Grand Secretary , Bro . E . Letchworth , having read the notice convening the meeting ,

MAV . Bro . Earl Amherst , Pro Grand Master , said : — Brethren , it becomes my duty now to move a loyal and dutiful address to His Majesty the King , sympathising with him on the death of the late Queen , and congratulating him on his accession to the Throne . I need not , I think , on such an occasion as this , delay Grand Lodge with any praises of Her late Majesty ,

otto make long reference to either of the sections into which the proposed address is divided . Those praises have been sounded in the Houses of Parliament , in the Pulpit , in the Press , and by all sorts and conditions of men , and I think no words of mine are necessary to express the great loss we have sustained . But this I may remind you of under the

circumstances in which we meet , that Her late Majesty was a most gracious and generous Patroness and supporter of the Charities of our Order , and Her Majesty was an encourager of our Fraternity by allowing her sons and her grandsons to become members of it , and take upon themselves high office in it , greatly to the advantage of our Ancient Fraternity .

At a time like this when the King has the privilege to take great burdens upon him as have not fallen upon many men , the loss he has sustained is very severe , but , of course , when a mother has attained the years Her late Most Gracious Majesty did , beyond the limit alloted to man , and there having been the premonitory symptons that the end was approaching , all

these signs tend to lighten the shock and to render the blow less heavy . However , such a bereavement is a great shock to the feelings , and when the blow falls it falls heavily , and the first part of our address is to offer our respectful and profound sympathy with our Grand Master , who is now our King , in the great misfortune which has befallen him . It is also our earnest desire to extend our dutiful and fraternal

congratulations to His Majesty on his succession to the Throne . Brethren , I do not claim for the Masons of England that they are more loyal than any other section of His Majesty ' s subjects , but I do say this that they are second to none in their loyalty and without any exclusive loyalty . I am sure that of all the addresses voted

throughout the country to His Majesty , none will be more heartily voted to him than that by this Grand Lodge . His Majesty the King has succeeded to no light heritage . He has succeeded to an Empire hardly to be measured , he succeeds to the greatest Empire ; His Majesty the King has to follow a Sovereign who had endeared herself to all her

subjects , and a heavy burden has fallen upon his shoulders , and I am sure we all pray the Great Architect of the Universe that " as his day is , so may his strength be . " Brethren , the communication I shall shortly have to read to you is that His Majesty has determined to retire from the office of Grand Master . Howeverhe has not entirely left us . Following a

, precedent he will assume the position and title of Protector of English Masons . Brethren , His Majesty's connection with the English Craft as its bead for twenty-seven years , has been of such advantage to our Order that I am sure we shall rejoice that we shall not entirely lose him . I need not recall to your minds the great services he has rendered to the Craft

by taking the chair for the Charities , notwithstanding the many calls on his time , the amount of subscriptions on each occasion being large , but culminating in the case of the Boys ' School Centenary in the sum of / . * 144 , 000 . His services to the Craft are many . His services to the Craft as Grand Master are more . Contrast the position of Masonry when he

first assumed the apron and collar of Most Worshipful Grand Master with the position the Craft is in now , and that will be sufficient to let us know what we owe to His Majesty as Grand Master . That you will find is dealt with in a part of our address . I have now the honour formally to move this address :

TO THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY . MAV IT PLEASE YOUR M . UI . STV , We , the- members of the Fraternity known as the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of England ( including the Supreme Order of the Holy Koyal Arch ) , by our Representatives in Especial Grand Lodge assembled , do venture humbly to express our respectful and profound

sympathy with Your Majesty in the sorrow caused by the death of her late Majesty Queen Victoria , whose memory is cherished in our hearts . We further tender our dutiful and fraternal congratulations to Your Majestv on your accession to the Throne ; and beg to express our fervent hope that Your Majesty may be long spared to reign over ( he Kingdom and Empire under Divine Providence confided to Your Majestv . It is with much thankfulness that we have received Your Majesty ' s

gracious intimation that you will be pleased to assume the position and title of Protector of English Freemasons ; and we feel assured that under such auspices the Fraternity will continue to enjoy that prosperity which attended Your Majesty ' s connection with the Order , for upwards of a quarter of a century , as Most Worshipful Grand Master .

Given under the Seal of the Grand Lodge of England this 15 th clay of February , 1901 . Bro . the Right Hon . W . W . B . Beach , Acting Deputy Grand Master : Most Worshipful Pro Grand Master and brethren , —In the absence of the Deputy Grand Master , the Earl of WarwickI am called on to second the motion which

, had just been so ably submitted to you , and I avail myself of that privilege with very great pleasure . We as Freemasons regret the profound sorrow which has come upon us all by the death of Her late Majesty , and we share the sorrow in company with all classes of Englishmen . No more will the time-honoured toast of "The Queen and the Craft " be

heard at our banquets . We know that the Queen for the long time she has ruled over us was enshrined in the hearts of her people , and it has been very difficult for us to adequately realise the fact and to place another in her stead . But the Grand Master of our Order has done his utmost to maintain the high position which the late Queen had won for the

Throne . In old time Princes of Wales had won renown by foreign war , by entering into successful enterprises , and had enshrined themselves in the hearts of the people . But His

Majesty the King , the late Prince of Wales , had not done that , but he had prepared himself for his position by many graceful deeds . He had visited that magnificent portion of the Empire of India , and had commended himself to the hearts of Freemasons , and impressed the Oriental mind . He might refer to the importance of his support of Charities ; this had

endeared him very much to the hearts of the people ; they knew that what he had done for the Masonic Charities had appealed strongly to their Masonic sympathies ; and not only so but he had endeared himself by many acts of courtesy and of kindness . The manner in which he had presided over the Masonic Charities had had

the most powerful effect in promoting their success . He regretted very much that His Majesty would no more preside over Grand Lodge as Grand Master ; but still he would not be entirely cut off from the brethren . Let them hope that he would retain his interest in Freemasonry although not presiding as Grand Master . He had the greatest

pleasure in seconding this proposition , and he trusted that their late Grand Master might be blessed with health and strength to reign over a loyal and united people .

The Duke of Abercorn , the Hon . James Hozier , M . P ., and Bro . George Richards ( District Grand Master of the Transvaal ) also addressed the assembly , and the motion was carried in silence , the brethren standing . The Pro Grand Master then read a communication from His Majesty the King resigning the office of M . W . Grand

Master and conveying His Majesty ' s consent to assume the position of Protector . His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught was then , on the motion of Bro . Vesey-Fitzgeruld , K . C ., nominated as Most Worshipful Grand Master , and Grand Lodge was closed in ample form .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1901-03-01, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01031901/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
GRAND MASTERS OF THE 19Th CENTURY. Article 2
Untitled Article 3
Untitled Article 4
Untitled Article 5
The late Bro. Thomas Fenn, P.G.W. Article 6
Especial Grand Lodge. Article 7
Grand Mark Lodge. Article 8
The Dedication of King Solomon's Temple. Article 8
The Grand Secretary of Scotland. Article 9
Lodge La France, No. 2060. Article 10
A Masonic New Century Banquet. Article 10
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Article 12
Untitled Ad 12
The King and the Craft. Article 12
Untitled Article 13
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 14
Untitled Ad 17
Untitled Ad 17
Untitled Ad 17
Untitled Ad 17
Untitled Ad 18
Bro. Colonel James G. Stowe. Article 19
Freemasonry in Cardiff. Article 20
Untitled Article 21
Festival of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution. Article 22
Famous F.M. Songs. Article 22
Untitled Ad 23
Margate Masonic Hall. Article 24
A South African Relic. Article 24
Untitled Ad 24
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Especial Grand Lodge.

Especial Grand Lodge .

AN Especial Meeting of Grand Lodge was held at the Queen ' s Hall , Langham Place , on Friday , the 15 th February , tor the threefold purpose of voting " a loyal and dutiful address to His Majesty the King , tendering the respectful sympathy of the Craft on the death of Her late Majesty Queen Victoria , and further offering the respectful

and fraternal congratulations of the Fraternity to His Majesty on his accession to the Throne ; to receive the resignation of His Majesty as Grand Master ; and to nominate a successor to the office . " Nearly 3000 brethren were present , including representatives from the Irish , Scotch , and other jurisdictions , the Irish Grand Lodge being represented by the M . W .

Grand Master , the Duke of Abercorn , and Scotland by the M . W . Grand Master , the Hon . James Hozier , M . P . The Grand Secretary , Bro . E . Letchworth , having read the notice convening the meeting ,

MAV . Bro . Earl Amherst , Pro Grand Master , said : — Brethren , it becomes my duty now to move a loyal and dutiful address to His Majesty the King , sympathising with him on the death of the late Queen , and congratulating him on his accession to the Throne . I need not , I think , on such an occasion as this , delay Grand Lodge with any praises of Her late Majesty ,

otto make long reference to either of the sections into which the proposed address is divided . Those praises have been sounded in the Houses of Parliament , in the Pulpit , in the Press , and by all sorts and conditions of men , and I think no words of mine are necessary to express the great loss we have sustained . But this I may remind you of under the

circumstances in which we meet , that Her late Majesty was a most gracious and generous Patroness and supporter of the Charities of our Order , and Her Majesty was an encourager of our Fraternity by allowing her sons and her grandsons to become members of it , and take upon themselves high office in it , greatly to the advantage of our Ancient Fraternity .

At a time like this when the King has the privilege to take great burdens upon him as have not fallen upon many men , the loss he has sustained is very severe , but , of course , when a mother has attained the years Her late Most Gracious Majesty did , beyond the limit alloted to man , and there having been the premonitory symptons that the end was approaching , all

these signs tend to lighten the shock and to render the blow less heavy . However , such a bereavement is a great shock to the feelings , and when the blow falls it falls heavily , and the first part of our address is to offer our respectful and profound sympathy with our Grand Master , who is now our King , in the great misfortune which has befallen him . It is also our earnest desire to extend our dutiful and fraternal

congratulations to His Majesty on his succession to the Throne . Brethren , I do not claim for the Masons of England that they are more loyal than any other section of His Majesty ' s subjects , but I do say this that they are second to none in their loyalty and without any exclusive loyalty . I am sure that of all the addresses voted

throughout the country to His Majesty , none will be more heartily voted to him than that by this Grand Lodge . His Majesty the King has succeeded to no light heritage . He has succeeded to an Empire hardly to be measured , he succeeds to the greatest Empire ; His Majesty the King has to follow a Sovereign who had endeared herself to all her

subjects , and a heavy burden has fallen upon his shoulders , and I am sure we all pray the Great Architect of the Universe that " as his day is , so may his strength be . " Brethren , the communication I shall shortly have to read to you is that His Majesty has determined to retire from the office of Grand Master . Howeverhe has not entirely left us . Following a

, precedent he will assume the position and title of Protector of English Masons . Brethren , His Majesty's connection with the English Craft as its bead for twenty-seven years , has been of such advantage to our Order that I am sure we shall rejoice that we shall not entirely lose him . I need not recall to your minds the great services he has rendered to the Craft

by taking the chair for the Charities , notwithstanding the many calls on his time , the amount of subscriptions on each occasion being large , but culminating in the case of the Boys ' School Centenary in the sum of / . * 144 , 000 . His services to the Craft are many . His services to the Craft as Grand Master are more . Contrast the position of Masonry when he

first assumed the apron and collar of Most Worshipful Grand Master with the position the Craft is in now , and that will be sufficient to let us know what we owe to His Majesty as Grand Master . That you will find is dealt with in a part of our address . I have now the honour formally to move this address :

TO THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY . MAV IT PLEASE YOUR M . UI . STV , We , the- members of the Fraternity known as the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of England ( including the Supreme Order of the Holy Koyal Arch ) , by our Representatives in Especial Grand Lodge assembled , do venture humbly to express our respectful and profound

sympathy with Your Majesty in the sorrow caused by the death of her late Majesty Queen Victoria , whose memory is cherished in our hearts . We further tender our dutiful and fraternal congratulations to Your Majestv on your accession to the Throne ; and beg to express our fervent hope that Your Majesty may be long spared to reign over ( he Kingdom and Empire under Divine Providence confided to Your Majestv . It is with much thankfulness that we have received Your Majesty ' s

gracious intimation that you will be pleased to assume the position and title of Protector of English Freemasons ; and we feel assured that under such auspices the Fraternity will continue to enjoy that prosperity which attended Your Majesty ' s connection with the Order , for upwards of a quarter of a century , as Most Worshipful Grand Master .

Given under the Seal of the Grand Lodge of England this 15 th clay of February , 1901 . Bro . the Right Hon . W . W . B . Beach , Acting Deputy Grand Master : Most Worshipful Pro Grand Master and brethren , —In the absence of the Deputy Grand Master , the Earl of WarwickI am called on to second the motion which

, had just been so ably submitted to you , and I avail myself of that privilege with very great pleasure . We as Freemasons regret the profound sorrow which has come upon us all by the death of Her late Majesty , and we share the sorrow in company with all classes of Englishmen . No more will the time-honoured toast of "The Queen and the Craft " be

heard at our banquets . We know that the Queen for the long time she has ruled over us was enshrined in the hearts of her people , and it has been very difficult for us to adequately realise the fact and to place another in her stead . But the Grand Master of our Order has done his utmost to maintain the high position which the late Queen had won for the

Throne . In old time Princes of Wales had won renown by foreign war , by entering into successful enterprises , and had enshrined themselves in the hearts of the people . But His

Majesty the King , the late Prince of Wales , had not done that , but he had prepared himself for his position by many graceful deeds . He had visited that magnificent portion of the Empire of India , and had commended himself to the hearts of Freemasons , and impressed the Oriental mind . He might refer to the importance of his support of Charities ; this had

endeared him very much to the hearts of the people ; they knew that what he had done for the Masonic Charities had appealed strongly to their Masonic sympathies ; and not only so but he had endeared himself by many acts of courtesy and of kindness . The manner in which he had presided over the Masonic Charities had had

the most powerful effect in promoting their success . He regretted very much that His Majesty would no more preside over Grand Lodge as Grand Master ; but still he would not be entirely cut off from the brethren . Let them hope that he would retain his interest in Freemasonry although not presiding as Grand Master . He had the greatest

pleasure in seconding this proposition , and he trusted that their late Grand Master might be blessed with health and strength to reign over a loyal and united people .

The Duke of Abercorn , the Hon . James Hozier , M . P ., and Bro . George Richards ( District Grand Master of the Transvaal ) also addressed the assembly , and the motion was carried in silence , the brethren standing . The Pro Grand Master then read a communication from His Majesty the King resigning the office of M . W . Grand

Master and conveying His Majesty ' s consent to assume the position of Protector . His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught was then , on the motion of Bro . Vesey-Fitzgeruld , K . C ., nominated as Most Worshipful Grand Master , and Grand Lodge was closed in ample form .

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