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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Sept. 1, 1906
  • Page 9
  • The Queensland Question.
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The Masonic Illustrated, Sept. 1, 1906: Page 9

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    Article The Queensland Question. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article Candidates for Office of Grand Treasurer. Page 1 of 1
Page 9

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The Queensland Question.

the Grand Lodge of Queensland , was on the 29 th August , 1905 , when there was brought under my notice the Report of the Grand Committee of Scotland of the 20 th July , 1905 , and I received a few days later a circular direct from Scotland ( post marked Edinburgh , 3 rd August , ) covering the report on his case , dated 2 nd March , 1905 . I thereupon wrote the

Grand Master of Queensland , asking him if he knew anything as to the truth of the charge of which I had just learned , lie replied that until receipt of a printed copy of the Expulsion Proceedings , sent him anonymously in April , 1905 , he had no knowledge that there was any difference between the charges made against the expelled Brother , and those

against other Brethren who had been suspended for taking part , either directly or indirectly , in the formation of the Grand Lodge of Queensland . He went on to quote the Brother ' s defence , if he had had a fair hearing , which left the impression that in this case the crime had been made to fit the punishment . My statement that this Brother is not ,

and never was , an officer of the Grand Lodge of Queensland , was simply a repetition of its Grand Master ' s statement to me , but it appears to me to be strictly- correct , as I understand both he and another Brother , since suspended by the Grand Lodge of Scotland , purposely refrained from

candidature for oflice to avoid cause of offence . He claimed Past Rank , but that was b y virtue of his former Scottish Commission , as indicated by the letters ( S . C . ) after his name , which Bro . Strachan has apparently failed to notice .

7 . This paragraph needs no comment . Our Grand Lodge ' s action has been misinterpreted , but we cannot help that ; we did right according to our lights . 8 . This paragraph traverses all our ideas of the formation of the Grand Lodge of Western Australia , about which it was believed the Grand Lodge of New South Wates knew

more than any other Grand Lodge ; we recognised it on 1 st February , 1900 ; England not till live weeks later . It is useless arguing further , but I may however point out that the Grand Lodge of New South Wales did not recognise the Grand Lodge of Queensland as having ' sole

jurisdiction ' any more than the Grand Lodge of England did the Grand Lodge of Western Australia . In conclusion , while thoroughly agreeing with Grand Registrar Strachan as to there being no difficulty about having a Grand Lodge embracing all the Lodges of Queensland ,

which is probably what he means by a ' Regular Sovereign Grand Lodge , ' I differ altogether with his proposed methods , and here at least he will surely allow Australian experience to carry some weight . In the light of past experience in this part of the world , I am confident that the only practicable course is for the existing Grand Lodge to meet the District Grand Lodges on an equality by each appointing representatives to consult and agree upon a Basis of Union .

'What happened in New South Wales was that the swelling tide of a brotherly desire for Unity proved too strong for even life-long prejudice , and our old District Grand Master early in 1 SS 8 expressed to Lord Carnavon . then Pro-Grand Master of England , who was at that time in Sydney , his willingness to resign his position , which he subsequently did , hoping to

be succeeded as District Grand Master by His Excellency Lord Carrington , even though he knew that distinguished Freemason had also been nominated as Grand Master of the old Grand Lodge of New South Wales with the expressed intention of bringing about a Union of the Craft , which was consummated a few months later with even greater success

and with completer unanimity than its most sanguine advocates had ventured to anticipate . Exactly the same circumstances are hardly likely to occur here '

This is what I said at Brisbane twenty months ago . But they have occurred . Lord Chelmsford , Governor of the State , has been elected Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Queensland , and is zealous for union . Unless I greatl y mistake the feeling of the Brethren , that sentiment will be

as generally acclaimed as it was in New South Wales eighteen years ago . A heavy responsibility will lie at the door of any who set up artificial barriers to prevent the spreading over the land of a brotherly desire for Unity . ( Signed ) J . C . REMINGTON , Past Grand Master . "

Candidates For Office Of Grand Treasurer.

Candidates for Office of Grand Treasurer .

11 HO . THOMAS FHASKK . MHO . A UGi ; . STl * . S AU- 'I'I-: /* FHIGOUT . Proposed at the last meeting of Grand Lodge . ( For qualifications see Grand Lodge Report , page 4 / 8 ) .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1906-09-01, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01091906/page/9/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
United Grand Lodge. Article 2
The Lord Mayor in Wales. Article 3
Untitled Article 4
Masonic Nomenclature and profanes. Article 5
Masonry over the Border. Article 6
The New language for Freemasons. Article 7
The Queensland Question. Article 8
Candidates for Office of Grand Treasurer. Article 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
A Masonic Congress. Article 10
To Our Readers. Article 11
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Provincial Grand Lodge of Cheshire. Article 15
Rostrum Lodge, No. 3037. Article 15
Untitled Article 15
Female Freemasonry. Article 16
Untitled Ad 16
"He began to build the House of the Lord. '' Article 17
Untitled Article 17
History of the Lod ge of Emulation, No . 21. Article 18
Untitled Ad 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Queensland Question.

the Grand Lodge of Queensland , was on the 29 th August , 1905 , when there was brought under my notice the Report of the Grand Committee of Scotland of the 20 th July , 1905 , and I received a few days later a circular direct from Scotland ( post marked Edinburgh , 3 rd August , ) covering the report on his case , dated 2 nd March , 1905 . I thereupon wrote the

Grand Master of Queensland , asking him if he knew anything as to the truth of the charge of which I had just learned , lie replied that until receipt of a printed copy of the Expulsion Proceedings , sent him anonymously in April , 1905 , he had no knowledge that there was any difference between the charges made against the expelled Brother , and those

against other Brethren who had been suspended for taking part , either directly or indirectly , in the formation of the Grand Lodge of Queensland . He went on to quote the Brother ' s defence , if he had had a fair hearing , which left the impression that in this case the crime had been made to fit the punishment . My statement that this Brother is not ,

and never was , an officer of the Grand Lodge of Queensland , was simply a repetition of its Grand Master ' s statement to me , but it appears to me to be strictly- correct , as I understand both he and another Brother , since suspended by the Grand Lodge of Scotland , purposely refrained from

candidature for oflice to avoid cause of offence . He claimed Past Rank , but that was b y virtue of his former Scottish Commission , as indicated by the letters ( S . C . ) after his name , which Bro . Strachan has apparently failed to notice .

7 . This paragraph needs no comment . Our Grand Lodge ' s action has been misinterpreted , but we cannot help that ; we did right according to our lights . 8 . This paragraph traverses all our ideas of the formation of the Grand Lodge of Western Australia , about which it was believed the Grand Lodge of New South Wates knew

more than any other Grand Lodge ; we recognised it on 1 st February , 1900 ; England not till live weeks later . It is useless arguing further , but I may however point out that the Grand Lodge of New South Wales did not recognise the Grand Lodge of Queensland as having ' sole

jurisdiction ' any more than the Grand Lodge of England did the Grand Lodge of Western Australia . In conclusion , while thoroughly agreeing with Grand Registrar Strachan as to there being no difficulty about having a Grand Lodge embracing all the Lodges of Queensland ,

which is probably what he means by a ' Regular Sovereign Grand Lodge , ' I differ altogether with his proposed methods , and here at least he will surely allow Australian experience to carry some weight . In the light of past experience in this part of the world , I am confident that the only practicable course is for the existing Grand Lodge to meet the District Grand Lodges on an equality by each appointing representatives to consult and agree upon a Basis of Union .

'What happened in New South Wales was that the swelling tide of a brotherly desire for Unity proved too strong for even life-long prejudice , and our old District Grand Master early in 1 SS 8 expressed to Lord Carnavon . then Pro-Grand Master of England , who was at that time in Sydney , his willingness to resign his position , which he subsequently did , hoping to

be succeeded as District Grand Master by His Excellency Lord Carrington , even though he knew that distinguished Freemason had also been nominated as Grand Master of the old Grand Lodge of New South Wales with the expressed intention of bringing about a Union of the Craft , which was consummated a few months later with even greater success

and with completer unanimity than its most sanguine advocates had ventured to anticipate . Exactly the same circumstances are hardly likely to occur here '

This is what I said at Brisbane twenty months ago . But they have occurred . Lord Chelmsford , Governor of the State , has been elected Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Queensland , and is zealous for union . Unless I greatl y mistake the feeling of the Brethren , that sentiment will be

as generally acclaimed as it was in New South Wales eighteen years ago . A heavy responsibility will lie at the door of any who set up artificial barriers to prevent the spreading over the land of a brotherly desire for Unity . ( Signed ) J . C . REMINGTON , Past Grand Master . "

Candidates For Office Of Grand Treasurer.

Candidates for Office of Grand Treasurer .

11 HO . THOMAS FHASKK . MHO . A UGi ; . STl * . S AU- 'I'I-: /* FHIGOUT . Proposed at the last meeting of Grand Lodge . ( For qualifications see Grand Lodge Report , page 4 / 8 ) .

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