Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Aug. 1, 1902
  • Page 11
  • At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar
Current:

The Masonic Illustrated, Aug. 1, 1902: Page 11

  • Back to The Masonic Illustrated, Aug. 1, 1902
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Page 1 of 4 →
Page 11

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

At The Sign Of The Perfect Ashlar

At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar

The compilation of a list of distinguished men in any department of life from which the names of well-known Freemasons svere absent svould , sve imagine , prove a difficult task ; and it is pleasing to be able to notice in the recent Coronation Honours so many leading Craftsmen , to an account of whom we would wish to devote more space than

our columns allow of . To begin with , H . R . H . the Duke of Connaught , Most Worshipful Grand Master , has been promoted to the rank of Field Marshal , and amongst the appointments to the nesv Order of Merit appear the names of R . W . Bros . Earl Roberts , Viscount Wblseley , and Viscount Kitchener of Khartoum , Past Grand Wardens .

© ©• «> Of the new peers , the Right Hon . W . L . Jackson , M . P ., who is the well known Provincial Grand Master of West Yorkshire and its Grand Superintendent in the Royal Arch , is in public life the Chairman of the Great Northern Railway Company . Previously he filled the office of Chief Secretary

for Ireland , and more recently acted as President of the jameson Raid Commission . R . W . Bro . Sir Francis Knollys , G . C . V . O ., K . C . B ., K . C . M . G ., is well known to the Craft as the King ' s Private Secretary . He svas initiated in the Westminster and Keystone Lodge , No . 10 , and ss'as appointed a Past Grand Warden in 1887 .

In the list of new baronets may be noticed the Lord Mayor , R . W . Bro . Sir J . C . Dimsdale , M . P ., svho has been fittingly selected this year by the Grand Master for promotion to the rank of Past Grand Warden . Bro . Sir W . E . Tomlinson , M . P ., Avas appointed a Senior Grand Deacon and Principal Grand Sojourner in the Royal Arch in 18 9 6 . Among

the knights may be observed the name of Bro . Sir Horace Brooks Marshall , M . A ., LL . D ., Past Grand Treasurer , some account of svhose career by Bro . Thomas Catling appeared in a former issue . Bro . Sir Alfred Cooper , F . R . C . S ., who was surgeon to the late Duke of Saxe Coburg Gotha , is a Past

Grand Deacon and Past Assistant Grand Sojourner . Bro . Sir Joseph Firbank , the well known railway contractor , is a Past Grand Deacon , and Bro . Sir Ralph Littler , C . B ., K . C , svhose services to London as Chairman of the Middlesex County Council have been of no mean order , is a Past Deputy

Grand Registrar . & «¦< € > It may also be noticed that a C . B . has been bestowed on Bro . Sir Prior Goldney , Bart ., Past Grand Deacon and Past Assistant Grand Sojourner , the City Remembrancer , and on Bro . Lieut-General Fletcher Owen , Past District Grand Master for Malta .

<* « S ? # > Amongst other well known brethren to be congratulated on well deserved honours are Sir Conan Doyle , the distinguished author , and Sir Joseph Lawrence . It is hardly possible that there are not some members of the Craft in the list who have escaped our notice , and to whom also we would wish to extend our congratulations .

< S / ' O < 8 " A gap svhich svill be much regretted has been left in the ranks of the rulers of the Craft by the death of R . W . Bro . Lord Henniker , Provincial Grand Master for Suffolk as Avell as for the Isle of Man . His late lordship was born in 1842 , and as Baron Hartismere , represented East Suffolk in the

House of Commons from 1866 to 1870 , when he entered the Upper House on his succession to the Barony . The late Lord Henniker was on four occasions Lord-in-Waiting to Her late Majesty Queen Victoria , by whom he was held in high esteem .

It svas in 1885 , while Deputy-Lieutenant of Norfolk and Suffolk and Chairman of the East Suffolk County Council , that our late distinguished brother was appointed Provincial Grand Master for Suffolk , having previously held the highest office in the Mark Degree as Most Worshipful Grand Master . In 18 95 he was appointed Governor of the Isle of Manand

, in 18 99 succeeded the late R . W . Bro . Major J . S . Goldie Taubman as Provincial Grand Master of that Island . That great authority of Manxland , Mr . Hall Caine , lias said that the late Lord Henniker meant svell for the nation over which he presided ; that he aimed at nothing but the good of the

Manx people , and had no selfish interests to serve . «&¦ «¦ & " From Entered Apprentice to Grand Master " is not an incorrect title for the Masonic career of New Zealand ' s distinguished Premier , R . W . Bro . the Right Hon . R . J-

Sedclon , svhose Masonry is no less unique than his public life , of which much has been told us since his arrival in London some tsvo months ago .

BUG . THK BIGHT II 0 X . R . J . SKDDOX . Born at Eccleston Hill in Lancashire in 18 45 , he left home at the age of fourteen to apprentice himself to an engineering firm at St . Helens . While still a lad he worked his way out

to Australia to try his hand at gold digging in Victoria . Meeting svith but poor results , the year 186 4 found him in Nesv Zealand , where , in again trying the gold diggings , he met with no little success , and may be said to have there made the beginning of his fortune .

< s > < s »

, he tilled the chair of Junior Warden . Our esteemed brother had now established himself as a mining engineer in Kumara , and a short time afterwards was chosen as Wellington ' s representative in the Nesv Zealand Parliament . His force of will , sterling common sense , and appreciation of his

country ' s needs , soon won for him a foremost place in Colonial politics . o o ^> His acceptance of the Premiership of New Zealand was but a matter of time . It svas after his appointment to this

high office in 18 99 , twenty-four years after his initiation into Freemasonry , that he svas invited to be the first Grand Master of the newly formed Grand Lodge of Nesv Zealand , over which he presides with such distinction at the present time .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1902-08-01, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01081902/page/11/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Cornwall. Article 2
The New Past Grand Officers.—(Provincial.) Article 5
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Lodges and Members. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Consecration of the Southern Cross Lodge, No. 2918. Article 14
Consecration of the East Anglian Lodge, No. 2920. Article 15
Consecration of the Marcians Chapter, No. 2648, Article 17
History of the Emulation Lod ge of Improvemen t, No. 256.——(Continued). Article 18
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

1 Article
Page 3

Page 3

1 Article
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

2 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

1 Article
Page 9

Page 9

1 Article
Page 10

Page 10

5 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

1 Article
Page 12

Page 12

1 Article
Page 13

Page 13

1 Article
Page 14

Page 14

2 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

2 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

1 Article
Page 17

Page 17

2 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

1 Article
Page 20

Page 20

1 Article
Page 11

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

At The Sign Of The Perfect Ashlar

At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar

The compilation of a list of distinguished men in any department of life from which the names of well-known Freemasons svere absent svould , sve imagine , prove a difficult task ; and it is pleasing to be able to notice in the recent Coronation Honours so many leading Craftsmen , to an account of whom we would wish to devote more space than

our columns allow of . To begin with , H . R . H . the Duke of Connaught , Most Worshipful Grand Master , has been promoted to the rank of Field Marshal , and amongst the appointments to the nesv Order of Merit appear the names of R . W . Bros . Earl Roberts , Viscount Wblseley , and Viscount Kitchener of Khartoum , Past Grand Wardens .

© ©• «> Of the new peers , the Right Hon . W . L . Jackson , M . P ., who is the well known Provincial Grand Master of West Yorkshire and its Grand Superintendent in the Royal Arch , is in public life the Chairman of the Great Northern Railway Company . Previously he filled the office of Chief Secretary

for Ireland , and more recently acted as President of the jameson Raid Commission . R . W . Bro . Sir Francis Knollys , G . C . V . O ., K . C . B ., K . C . M . G ., is well known to the Craft as the King ' s Private Secretary . He svas initiated in the Westminster and Keystone Lodge , No . 10 , and ss'as appointed a Past Grand Warden in 1887 .

In the list of new baronets may be noticed the Lord Mayor , R . W . Bro . Sir J . C . Dimsdale , M . P ., svho has been fittingly selected this year by the Grand Master for promotion to the rank of Past Grand Warden . Bro . Sir W . E . Tomlinson , M . P ., Avas appointed a Senior Grand Deacon and Principal Grand Sojourner in the Royal Arch in 18 9 6 . Among

the knights may be observed the name of Bro . Sir Horace Brooks Marshall , M . A ., LL . D ., Past Grand Treasurer , some account of svhose career by Bro . Thomas Catling appeared in a former issue . Bro . Sir Alfred Cooper , F . R . C . S ., who was surgeon to the late Duke of Saxe Coburg Gotha , is a Past

Grand Deacon and Past Assistant Grand Sojourner . Bro . Sir Joseph Firbank , the well known railway contractor , is a Past Grand Deacon , and Bro . Sir Ralph Littler , C . B ., K . C , svhose services to London as Chairman of the Middlesex County Council have been of no mean order , is a Past Deputy

Grand Registrar . & «¦< € > It may also be noticed that a C . B . has been bestowed on Bro . Sir Prior Goldney , Bart ., Past Grand Deacon and Past Assistant Grand Sojourner , the City Remembrancer , and on Bro . Lieut-General Fletcher Owen , Past District Grand Master for Malta .

<* « S ? # > Amongst other well known brethren to be congratulated on well deserved honours are Sir Conan Doyle , the distinguished author , and Sir Joseph Lawrence . It is hardly possible that there are not some members of the Craft in the list who have escaped our notice , and to whom also we would wish to extend our congratulations .

< S / ' O < 8 " A gap svhich svill be much regretted has been left in the ranks of the rulers of the Craft by the death of R . W . Bro . Lord Henniker , Provincial Grand Master for Suffolk as Avell as for the Isle of Man . His late lordship was born in 1842 , and as Baron Hartismere , represented East Suffolk in the

House of Commons from 1866 to 1870 , when he entered the Upper House on his succession to the Barony . The late Lord Henniker was on four occasions Lord-in-Waiting to Her late Majesty Queen Victoria , by whom he was held in high esteem .

It svas in 1885 , while Deputy-Lieutenant of Norfolk and Suffolk and Chairman of the East Suffolk County Council , that our late distinguished brother was appointed Provincial Grand Master for Suffolk , having previously held the highest office in the Mark Degree as Most Worshipful Grand Master . In 18 95 he was appointed Governor of the Isle of Manand

, in 18 99 succeeded the late R . W . Bro . Major J . S . Goldie Taubman as Provincial Grand Master of that Island . That great authority of Manxland , Mr . Hall Caine , lias said that the late Lord Henniker meant svell for the nation over which he presided ; that he aimed at nothing but the good of the

Manx people , and had no selfish interests to serve . «&¦ «¦ & " From Entered Apprentice to Grand Master " is not an incorrect title for the Masonic career of New Zealand ' s distinguished Premier , R . W . Bro . the Right Hon . R . J-

Sedclon , svhose Masonry is no less unique than his public life , of which much has been told us since his arrival in London some tsvo months ago .

BUG . THK BIGHT II 0 X . R . J . SKDDOX . Born at Eccleston Hill in Lancashire in 18 45 , he left home at the age of fourteen to apprentice himself to an engineering firm at St . Helens . While still a lad he worked his way out

to Australia to try his hand at gold digging in Victoria . Meeting svith but poor results , the year 186 4 found him in Nesv Zealand , where , in again trying the gold diggings , he met with no little success , and may be said to have there made the beginning of his fortune .

< s > < s »

, he tilled the chair of Junior Warden . Our esteemed brother had now established himself as a mining engineer in Kumara , and a short time afterwards was chosen as Wellington ' s representative in the Nesv Zealand Parliament . His force of will , sterling common sense , and appreciation of his

country ' s needs , soon won for him a foremost place in Colonial politics . o o ^> His acceptance of the Premiership of New Zealand was but a matter of time . It svas after his appointment to this

high office in 18 99 , twenty-four years after his initiation into Freemasonry , that he svas invited to be the first Grand Master of the newly formed Grand Lodge of Nesv Zealand , over which he presides with such distinction at the present time .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 10
  • You're on page11
  • 12
  • 20
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy