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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Aug. 1, 1904
  • Page 4
  • Provincial Grand Lodge of Surrey.
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The Masonic Illustrated, Aug. 1, 1904: Page 4

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

Provincial Grand Lodge Of Surrey.

the Surrey Province . There had been great changes , he need hardly say , in that time , more than had fallen to the lot of the majority of the provinces . He had , indeed , witnessed the entrances and exits of four Grand Masters . None of their reigns , although of short duration , had been inglorious . There had been much trepidation when Sir Thomas Bucknill

SUTTON MASONIC HALL . — ( Hi , permutioii of " The Surrey Count : / JIwilil . " )

had been approached in connection with the Provincial Grand Mastership , for it was well known that he had many great claims on his time , and it was also known that Bro . Bucknill would not take the position if he could not give it his time . But all ended well , and brethren were now able

to see the fruits of their Provincial Grand Master ' s first year of office . Geniality of manner , easiness of address , justice tempered by mercy , and wisdom guided by benevolence ,

WOKIXG ORIENTAL INSTITUTE . were all represented in their Provincial Grand Master . It had been no easy matter to take up the reins of office at a time when there was a vacancy in the Deputy Grand

Mastership of the Province , and their old and valued Provincial Grand Secretary , Bro . Tyler , was laid on a bed of sickness ; but they would agree with him that those difficulties had been so well surmounted that the province stood well at the end of Bro . Bucknill's first year of office . In his choice of a deputy how well had their Provincial Grand Master ' s wisdom been exemplified . He trusted he

( Bro . Bucknill ) would not but feel impressed by the number of brethren present that evening , the more so that he knew that he had their unbounded loyalty , founded on the warmest feelings of respect and love . R . W . Bro . Sir Thomas Bucknill , who was received with an ovation , said he met them with different feelings than

those which filled him a year ago . Then he looked to them , expecting something the nature of which he had not proved , and they looked towards him also as a doubtful quantity . But now all this was changed . They could depend on him to do his best , and he had found in them a body of willing

helpers only too ready to prove their loyalty . Theirs was one common purpose , the furthering of Freemasonry in Surrey , and so long as they were so good to him , Masonry would , he believed , continue to thrive there . No Provincial Grand Master could be a failure with such assistance as they

had given him . The lodges he had already visited had been very generous to him , and they had received him not from personal regard , but with the regard of brethren to their Provincial Grand Master . To those lodges he had not yet been able to witness the working of , he would say he was

coming ! Anyhow , they had been able to do something during the year . They had formed a Senior Grand Officers ' mess . He had heard laughter proceeding from one quarter of the room . Let them not misunderstand the mission of that Grand Officers' mess . It had been formed as a place of meeting where the Senior Officers could talk over at

leisure the affairs of the province . Let all the brethren qualify themselves for membership of that mess . When he was a poor briefless barrister as his son now was , he looked forward to the time when he should become , well—something else . So it was when he was in a humbler position in

Masonry . But it was not altogether selfish , this wish for preferment , for there was a time in the life of every man when his connection , however humble with society , brought about some good . A matter of great importance had arisen during the past year , the appointment of a Deputy Provincial

Grand Master . He hoped that office had been filled to their satisfaction . Well , he for his part felt very well satisfied with affairs in the province . Having done his best during the past year , he felt he should be able to continue to do so . He felt in a very happy state of mind regarding their future .

Let them live with an idea in being happy and in communicating that happiness . If they did that , their account , when they came to render it , would compare favourably with those who had not that gospel . Let them remember they were

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1904-08-01, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01081904/page/4/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Provincial Grand Lodge of Surrey. Article 2
Consecration of the Camden Place Lodge, No. 3042. Article 6
A Family of Freemasons. Article 7
The Cornubian Lodge. Article 7
Untitled Ad 7
The New Commercial Travellers' Schools at Pinner. Article 8
Provincial Grand Lodge of Essex. Article 9
Untitled Ad 9
Untitled Ad 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Masonic Certificates. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Untitled Article 13
Untitled Article 14
The Surgical Aid Society. Article 15
Untitled Article 15
Robert Burns as a Freemason. Article 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 17
Emulation Lodge of Improvement. Article 18
Untitled Ad 18
Freemasonry in India. Article 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Provincial Grand Lodge Of Surrey.

the Surrey Province . There had been great changes , he need hardly say , in that time , more than had fallen to the lot of the majority of the provinces . He had , indeed , witnessed the entrances and exits of four Grand Masters . None of their reigns , although of short duration , had been inglorious . There had been much trepidation when Sir Thomas Bucknill

SUTTON MASONIC HALL . — ( Hi , permutioii of " The Surrey Count : / JIwilil . " )

had been approached in connection with the Provincial Grand Mastership , for it was well known that he had many great claims on his time , and it was also known that Bro . Bucknill would not take the position if he could not give it his time . But all ended well , and brethren were now able

to see the fruits of their Provincial Grand Master ' s first year of office . Geniality of manner , easiness of address , justice tempered by mercy , and wisdom guided by benevolence ,

WOKIXG ORIENTAL INSTITUTE . were all represented in their Provincial Grand Master . It had been no easy matter to take up the reins of office at a time when there was a vacancy in the Deputy Grand

Mastership of the Province , and their old and valued Provincial Grand Secretary , Bro . Tyler , was laid on a bed of sickness ; but they would agree with him that those difficulties had been so well surmounted that the province stood well at the end of Bro . Bucknill's first year of office . In his choice of a deputy how well had their Provincial Grand Master ' s wisdom been exemplified . He trusted he

( Bro . Bucknill ) would not but feel impressed by the number of brethren present that evening , the more so that he knew that he had their unbounded loyalty , founded on the warmest feelings of respect and love . R . W . Bro . Sir Thomas Bucknill , who was received with an ovation , said he met them with different feelings than

those which filled him a year ago . Then he looked to them , expecting something the nature of which he had not proved , and they looked towards him also as a doubtful quantity . But now all this was changed . They could depend on him to do his best , and he had found in them a body of willing

helpers only too ready to prove their loyalty . Theirs was one common purpose , the furthering of Freemasonry in Surrey , and so long as they were so good to him , Masonry would , he believed , continue to thrive there . No Provincial Grand Master could be a failure with such assistance as they

had given him . The lodges he had already visited had been very generous to him , and they had received him not from personal regard , but with the regard of brethren to their Provincial Grand Master . To those lodges he had not yet been able to witness the working of , he would say he was

coming ! Anyhow , they had been able to do something during the year . They had formed a Senior Grand Officers ' mess . He had heard laughter proceeding from one quarter of the room . Let them not misunderstand the mission of that Grand Officers' mess . It had been formed as a place of meeting where the Senior Officers could talk over at

leisure the affairs of the province . Let all the brethren qualify themselves for membership of that mess . When he was a poor briefless barrister as his son now was , he looked forward to the time when he should become , well—something else . So it was when he was in a humbler position in

Masonry . But it was not altogether selfish , this wish for preferment , for there was a time in the life of every man when his connection , however humble with society , brought about some good . A matter of great importance had arisen during the past year , the appointment of a Deputy Provincial

Grand Master . He hoped that office had been filled to their satisfaction . Well , he for his part felt very well satisfied with affairs in the province . Having done his best during the past year , he felt he should be able to continue to do so . He felt in a very happy state of mind regarding their future .

Let them live with an idea in being happy and in communicating that happiness . If they did that , their account , when they came to render it , would compare favourably with those who had not that gospel . Let them remember they were

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