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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • April 1, 1902
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The Masonic Illustrated, April 1, 1902: Page 4

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    Article Freemasonry in Victoria (Ausfralia). ← Page 3 of 5 →
Page 4

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

Freemasonry In Victoria (Ausfralia).

Lodge can be considered constitutionally formed , or entitled to recognition as a regular and lawful Masonic bod } - , unless the whole , or at least a great majority of the constituent lodges formerly working under Sister Constitutions , agree to throw in their lot with a new Grand Lodge . This regrettable and undesirable state of affairs continued

in Victorian Masonry for well on to five years , and the situation engendered , it may readily be imagined , a bitterness of feeling and personal rancour—frequently between old friends—that could scarcely be conceived at this end of

MASONIC llALfi , MEI . IiOURNE .

the world . But an end to the vcndciia was bound to come sooner or later , and the visit of the late Earl of Carnarvonat that time M . W . Pro Grand Master of England—tn Australia , fortunately paved the way to a happier regime . Beginning first with New South Wales and finishing with Victoria , the opposing Masonic elements in both Colonies ,

one in the year 1888 and the other the year following , consolidated their forces , and formed the United Grand Lodges of New South Wales and Victoria respectively , with Lord Carrhigton and Sir William Clarke as the first M . W . G . Masters . Kit pussniii a Grand Lodge had before this been

started in South Australia on the British basis , which , of course , was recognised at once , and now Victoria followed New South Wales in the happy consummation and the burying of the hatchet . The United Grand Lodge of Victoria started on its successful career with a total of one hundred and forty-one lodges , ninety-four of them hailing

from the English , sixteen from the Irish , thirteen from the Scottish , and eighteen from the hitherto unrecognised Victorian Constitution . Two English lodges held aloof from the movement , namely , the Meridian Lodge of St .

John , No . 729 , of which Bro . Colonel Brownrigg , P . G . D ., at that time Commandant of the Victorian Military forces , was W . M ., and the Combermere Lodge , No . 752 , both in Melbourne . The refusal of these two lodges to join the new body was in consonance with one of the conditions under which the Grand Lodge of England grants

recognition to a Grand Lodge formed out of a body of its constituent lodges . The Meridian Lodge of St . John not long after joined the new Grand Lodge , but is now extinct ; whilst the Combermere Lodge—warranted , by the bye , in 1858 , and named after Viscount Combermere , the

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1902-04-01, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01041902/page/4/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Freemasonry in Victoria (Ausfralia). Article 2
United Grand Lodge of England. Article 6
Grand Mark Lodge. Article 7
Installation Meeting of the Eyre Lodge, No. 2742. Article 7
Emulation Lodge of Improvement. Article 8
Untitled Ad 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Physical Disability. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Consecration of the Westminster City Council Lodge, No. 2882. Article 14
Consecration of the Willing Lodge, No. 2893. Article 14
"Are you a Mason?" Article 15
Installation Meeting of the Yorick Lodge, No. 2771. Article 16
"In Praise of Friendship." Article 17
Untitled Ad 17
History of the Emulation Lodge ofImprovement , No. 256.—— (Continued). Article 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasonry In Victoria (Ausfralia).

Lodge can be considered constitutionally formed , or entitled to recognition as a regular and lawful Masonic bod } - , unless the whole , or at least a great majority of the constituent lodges formerly working under Sister Constitutions , agree to throw in their lot with a new Grand Lodge . This regrettable and undesirable state of affairs continued

in Victorian Masonry for well on to five years , and the situation engendered , it may readily be imagined , a bitterness of feeling and personal rancour—frequently between old friends—that could scarcely be conceived at this end of

MASONIC llALfi , MEI . IiOURNE .

the world . But an end to the vcndciia was bound to come sooner or later , and the visit of the late Earl of Carnarvonat that time M . W . Pro Grand Master of England—tn Australia , fortunately paved the way to a happier regime . Beginning first with New South Wales and finishing with Victoria , the opposing Masonic elements in both Colonies ,

one in the year 1888 and the other the year following , consolidated their forces , and formed the United Grand Lodges of New South Wales and Victoria respectively , with Lord Carrhigton and Sir William Clarke as the first M . W . G . Masters . Kit pussniii a Grand Lodge had before this been

started in South Australia on the British basis , which , of course , was recognised at once , and now Victoria followed New South Wales in the happy consummation and the burying of the hatchet . The United Grand Lodge of Victoria started on its successful career with a total of one hundred and forty-one lodges , ninety-four of them hailing

from the English , sixteen from the Irish , thirteen from the Scottish , and eighteen from the hitherto unrecognised Victorian Constitution . Two English lodges held aloof from the movement , namely , the Meridian Lodge of St .

John , No . 729 , of which Bro . Colonel Brownrigg , P . G . D ., at that time Commandant of the Victorian Military forces , was W . M ., and the Combermere Lodge , No . 752 , both in Melbourne . The refusal of these two lodges to join the new body was in consonance with one of the conditions under which the Grand Lodge of England grants

recognition to a Grand Lodge formed out of a body of its constituent lodges . The Meridian Lodge of St . John not long after joined the new Grand Lodge , but is now extinct ; whilst the Combermere Lodge—warranted , by the bye , in 1858 , and named after Viscount Combermere , the

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