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  • The Masonic Mirror
  • Sept. 1, 1855
  • Page 23
  • MASONIC INTELLIGENCE.
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The Masonic Mirror, Sept. 1, 1855: Page 23

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    Article MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. ← Page 4 of 6 →
Page 23

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Masonic Intelligence.

Zetland , and the result of their united efforts was the laying of the corner-stone of the Sussex Wing of the Royal Free Hospital . In the course of the observations which he had already addressed to the company , he had alluded to the propriety of their endowing the hospital , and he had now to annovmce that he had already received £ 52 towards a fund for that purpose . The Chairman then said , that the next toast on his list was one which needed no words of his to recommend it to them . It was all very well to toast an individual or

an institution when either of them were at the top of the tree ; but the merits by which they obtained that position should never be overlooked . The Royal Free Hospital had commenced with small beginnings , and hacl indefatigably battled for the high position which it at present enjoyed , and what noble charitable institution , he would ask , had not similarly originated and succeeded ? When , however , they looked upon them ancl the good they did , they were too apt to forget those who had commenced themwhose hand had plied the labouring oarand who hacl stood the brunt

, , of opposition , determined to overcome all difficulties . On the present occasion such should not be the case , for they would recollect that it was owing to the untiring exertions of his friend , Dr . Marsden , ancl no profession had done more than the medical for the benefit of mankind—that , despite of all opposition , the institution he had referred to had been firmly established . He should , therefore , ask them to pay him that mark of respect which he deserved at their hands , and drink his health , in conjunction with that of the Hospital Committee . —( Cheers . )

Dr . Marsden—who , on rising , was loudly applauded—in replying to tbe compliment said that , it -was due to those gentleman who knew little or nothing of the Royal Free Hospital that he should give them a short history of that institution . The condition of the Medical charities of London 27 years since , had been totally different from what it was at the present time . At that time , and he spoke especially of the "three richest endowed of those institutions , no patient could secure medical or surgical treatment without a letter of a governor , and in the wealthiest of them— -St . Bartholomew ' s—until very recently such had been the c . ise . If the wretched patient was

suffering from a loathsome disease , the letter was not accounted sufficient without an undertaking from a householder , thatiu case the unfortunate sufferer died , he would receive the corpse for interment . There was also for such a case exacted from the ' parient or from the patient's friends , a fee of £ 2 2 s . per month , so long as the case remained in the hospital . These regulations were a practical denial of relief to that particular class of patients , ancl the consequence had been that those thus excluded from the hospitals , contaminated othersand so propagated disease . Rules of a similar character

regu-, lated the relief afforded at the Bloomsbury Dispensary , and nowhere was the principle of free admission recognised . About that period , he being then a young man , was returning home late one evening from Bartholomew fair , when he found a poor sick girl on the steps of St . Andrew ' s Church , Holborn , in a dying state . Not having been able to get her into St . Bartholomew ' s Hospital at once , he had her taken care of for the night , and in the morning procured her a letter of admission into

that institution , where she died two days afterwards , without her name ever becoming known . That was the circumstance which had led him to endeavour to found the Royal Free Hospital , as it convinced him of the necessity which existed for such afl institution , that those sunk in depravity might not be permitted , un-cared for , to spread the seeds of disease , and that those who were destitute and in want of assistance might obtain it for the mere asking . The establishment of that institution had completely broken down the old exclusive system , for the other hospitals had gradually

relaxed their rules . That was in itself a great public advantage , and was sufficient if the establishment of the Royal Free Hospital had led to no other good , to satisfy the aspirations of its promoters ; but he found that it gave in the year relief to a larger number of patients than any similar institution in the metropolis , as they had only to walk in , state their complaint , and ask for medical or surgical treatment . At the time that the Hospital was opened , tlie College of Surgeons issued a circular , refusing to recognise any institution as a * Medical School , which had not a certain volume of atmosphere for each patient , and as its wards were not large enough to afford the number of cubic feet of atmosphere required by the College , the founders had been

“The Masonic Mirror: 1855-09-01, Page 23” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mir/issues/mmg_01091855/page/23/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE "SUSSEX WING" OF THE ROYAL FREE HOSPITAL. Article 1
THE MARK DEGREE. Article 3
FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. Article 4
BROTHERLY LOVE. Article 11
FORGET-ME-NOT. Article 19
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 20
LONDON LODGES Article 25
PROVINCIAL LODGES. Article 26
ROYAL ARCH. Article 46
THE HIGH DEGREES. Article 47
THE COLONIES. Article 48
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 49
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR AUGUST. Article 51
Untitled Article 59
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 60
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Intelligence.

Zetland , and the result of their united efforts was the laying of the corner-stone of the Sussex Wing of the Royal Free Hospital . In the course of the observations which he had already addressed to the company , he had alluded to the propriety of their endowing the hospital , and he had now to annovmce that he had already received £ 52 towards a fund for that purpose . The Chairman then said , that the next toast on his list was one which needed no words of his to recommend it to them . It was all very well to toast an individual or

an institution when either of them were at the top of the tree ; but the merits by which they obtained that position should never be overlooked . The Royal Free Hospital had commenced with small beginnings , and hacl indefatigably battled for the high position which it at present enjoyed , and what noble charitable institution , he would ask , had not similarly originated and succeeded ? When , however , they looked upon them ancl the good they did , they were too apt to forget those who had commenced themwhose hand had plied the labouring oarand who hacl stood the brunt

, , of opposition , determined to overcome all difficulties . On the present occasion such should not be the case , for they would recollect that it was owing to the untiring exertions of his friend , Dr . Marsden , ancl no profession had done more than the medical for the benefit of mankind—that , despite of all opposition , the institution he had referred to had been firmly established . He should , therefore , ask them to pay him that mark of respect which he deserved at their hands , and drink his health , in conjunction with that of the Hospital Committee . —( Cheers . )

Dr . Marsden—who , on rising , was loudly applauded—in replying to tbe compliment said that , it -was due to those gentleman who knew little or nothing of the Royal Free Hospital that he should give them a short history of that institution . The condition of the Medical charities of London 27 years since , had been totally different from what it was at the present time . At that time , and he spoke especially of the "three richest endowed of those institutions , no patient could secure medical or surgical treatment without a letter of a governor , and in the wealthiest of them— -St . Bartholomew ' s—until very recently such had been the c . ise . If the wretched patient was

suffering from a loathsome disease , the letter was not accounted sufficient without an undertaking from a householder , thatiu case the unfortunate sufferer died , he would receive the corpse for interment . There was also for such a case exacted from the ' parient or from the patient's friends , a fee of £ 2 2 s . per month , so long as the case remained in the hospital . These regulations were a practical denial of relief to that particular class of patients , ancl the consequence had been that those thus excluded from the hospitals , contaminated othersand so propagated disease . Rules of a similar character

regu-, lated the relief afforded at the Bloomsbury Dispensary , and nowhere was the principle of free admission recognised . About that period , he being then a young man , was returning home late one evening from Bartholomew fair , when he found a poor sick girl on the steps of St . Andrew ' s Church , Holborn , in a dying state . Not having been able to get her into St . Bartholomew ' s Hospital at once , he had her taken care of for the night , and in the morning procured her a letter of admission into

that institution , where she died two days afterwards , without her name ever becoming known . That was the circumstance which had led him to endeavour to found the Royal Free Hospital , as it convinced him of the necessity which existed for such afl institution , that those sunk in depravity might not be permitted , un-cared for , to spread the seeds of disease , and that those who were destitute and in want of assistance might obtain it for the mere asking . The establishment of that institution had completely broken down the old exclusive system , for the other hospitals had gradually

relaxed their rules . That was in itself a great public advantage , and was sufficient if the establishment of the Royal Free Hospital had led to no other good , to satisfy the aspirations of its promoters ; but he found that it gave in the year relief to a larger number of patients than any similar institution in the metropolis , as they had only to walk in , state their complaint , and ask for medical or surgical treatment . At the time that the Hospital was opened , tlie College of Surgeons issued a circular , refusing to recognise any institution as a * Medical School , which had not a certain volume of atmosphere for each patient , and as its wards were not large enough to afford the number of cubic feet of atmosphere required by the College , the founders had been

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