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  • July 1, 1858
  • Page 172
  • OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 1, 1858: Page 172

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Our Architectural Chapter

though such si museum as ours is the most fitting depository for such records , and our committee could be ofthe utmost service in directing the work . Our collection , in its mediaeval branch , Avould , moreover , be most imperfect if it represented only the arts of our own country . If gothic architecture is to be thoroughly studied , it must be vieAA ed as a whole , and its productions in other countries demand equal attention Avith those of our oavu . Such has

been the spirit in which Ave have from the first carried on our work . We have been the first to collect , on any great scale , casts from the magnificent Avorks of the thirteenth century in France . But when we make our architectural tours in that country , AAdiat inexhaustible riches do we find France was , in a certain sense , the birthplace and central focus of gothic architecture . She Avas the very heart and lifespring of the hearts and energies of mediaeval Europe ; and no field in Avhich we can labour is so

gloriously , ^ so astoundingly rich in objects of the very highest importance to the architectural student . This , then , should be next to , or equally Avith , our oavu country , the great seat of our labours . No one can conceive the exhaustless treasures to be qirocured from this source ; and if this alone Avere to-be our field of operations , Ave should claim all the support which all the promoters of our art could afford . Here , too , our facilities are even greater than at home ; for through the kindness of the architects in charge

of French cathedrals avc rrave every possible opportunity of carrying out our objects . Whyy then , it may be asked , do we not follow up an ohjectso magnificent , and avail ourselves of such rich treasures of art , and of such facilities for procuring them ? Why , for the very unfortunate but very obvious reason that Ave cannot afford to do so . Our first endeavours paralyzed and saddled us Avith a debt Avhich , though sloAvly diminishing , we have never been able to get rid of , while the expense of our necessary machinery nearly exhausts our annual income . If Ave once show ourselves active and

in earnest m pressing fonvard Avith our great Avork , I feel not the slightest doubt that Ave shall be met by corresponding aid on the part of the Department of Fine Arts . They have already deposited in our museum several very valuable and costly objects , and they have formally consented to our making periodical recommendations to them of Avhat objects we Avould adAise them to procure . It may , hoAvever , be asked Avhy we should not make over our work lvholly to the government . I Avould reply that ,

though it is a Avork Avhich , beyond all doubt , they ought to have initiated , we hold that , excepting only in the item of funds , it is better in the hands of those Avho , from actually themselves feeling the Avant , come forAvard voluntarily to -supply it . We feel that it is a Avork Avhich requires such a knowledge of architecture as none but practical architects are likely to possess . I will now do no more than state a feAV of the transactions of our Society during the past year . First , the numerous attendance of students during

the year . 1 may next mention that the following gentlemen have allowed us to add their names to our committee : —John Euskin , Esq . ; Edmund Beckett Denisou , Esq . ; C . C . Nelson , Esq ., lion , secretary to the Royal Institute of British Architects ; T . A . Tefft , Esq ., of New York , as corresponding member ; Alfred Stevens , Esq ., and T . G . Hubbard , Esq . In the museum itself , the principal work going on has been the re-arrangement of

the specimens , which will be followed by a new edition of the catalogue . The additions made to our catalogue have been as follows : — u 1 st . The depositing in our museum of complete casts ofthe magnificent monument of Archbishop Grey , from York Minster , and of several architectural specimens of great interest from the same cathedral , Avhich have all been prepared expressly for the purpose , at the cost of the Fine Arts Department .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1858-07-01, Page 172” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01071858/page/172/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Ad 1
MASONIC APPOINTMENTS FOR OCTOBER. Article 2
TO 0UR READERS. Article 3
THE CRAFT IN NEW YORK. Article 4
THE CHEMISTRY OF COMMON THINGS, Article 5
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 10
TIDINGS FROM THE CRAFT IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 14
CHARITY. Article 16
REVIEWS OF HEW BOOKS Article 17
MUSIC Article 19
CORRESPONDENCE, Article 20
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 22
PROVINCIAL. Article 24
SCOTLAND. Article 33
ROYAL ORDER. Article 37
IRELAND , Article 38
COLONIAL Article 38
AMERICA. Article 40
THE WEEK Article 47
NOTICES. Article 50
THE HISTORICAL DEGREES; Article 51
OUR ARCHITECTURAL. CHAPTER. Article 62
ELIZA'S DEATH. Article 66
COERESPONDENCE. Article 67
MASONIC HALLS. Article 69
THE MASOIIC MIRROR. Article 73
PROVINCIAL. Article 75
ROYAL ARCH. Article 92
IRELAND. Article 93
THE WEEK. Article 95
NOTICES. Article 98
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGES. Article 99
AKOLO-SAXON HISTORY AS ILLUSTRATED BY TOPOGRAPHICAL NOMENCLATURE. Article 101
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 105
GOD'S LIVING TEMPLE. Article 109
TIDINGS FROM THE CRAFT IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 115
THE LEEDS ORGAN. Article 118
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 124
ORIGINAL TRANSLATIONS, Article 129
CORRESPONDENCE Article 130
THE LATE BEOTHER KANE Article 132
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 133
METROPOLITAN. Article 134
PROVINCIAL Article 135
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 138
ROYAL ARCH Article 140
AMERICA Article 140
THE WEEK Article 141
Untitled Article 146
THE HISTORIACAL DEGREES; Article 147
BIOGRAPHICAL SKECTOHES OF EMINENT (DECEASED) Article 153
ANGLO-SAXON HISTORY AS ILLUSTRATED BY TOPOGRAPHICAL NOMENCLATURE. Article 164
ODE. Article 170
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER Article 171
CORRESPODENCE. Article 174
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 175
METROPOLITAN. Article 175
provincial. Article 178
ROYAL ARCH. Article 187
COLONIAL. Article 188
THE WEEK. Article 189
NOTICES. Article 194
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Page 172

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

Our Architectural Chapter

though such si museum as ours is the most fitting depository for such records , and our committee could be ofthe utmost service in directing the work . Our collection , in its mediaeval branch , Avould , moreover , be most imperfect if it represented only the arts of our own country . If gothic architecture is to be thoroughly studied , it must be vieAA ed as a whole , and its productions in other countries demand equal attention Avith those of our oavu . Such has

been the spirit in which Ave have from the first carried on our work . We have been the first to collect , on any great scale , casts from the magnificent Avorks of the thirteenth century in France . But when we make our architectural tours in that country , AAdiat inexhaustible riches do we find France was , in a certain sense , the birthplace and central focus of gothic architecture . She Avas the very heart and lifespring of the hearts and energies of mediaeval Europe ; and no field in Avhich we can labour is so

gloriously , ^ so astoundingly rich in objects of the very highest importance to the architectural student . This , then , should be next to , or equally Avith , our oavu country , the great seat of our labours . No one can conceive the exhaustless treasures to be qirocured from this source ; and if this alone Avere to-be our field of operations , Ave should claim all the support which all the promoters of our art could afford . Here , too , our facilities are even greater than at home ; for through the kindness of the architects in charge

of French cathedrals avc rrave every possible opportunity of carrying out our objects . Whyy then , it may be asked , do we not follow up an ohjectso magnificent , and avail ourselves of such rich treasures of art , and of such facilities for procuring them ? Why , for the very unfortunate but very obvious reason that Ave cannot afford to do so . Our first endeavours paralyzed and saddled us Avith a debt Avhich , though sloAvly diminishing , we have never been able to get rid of , while the expense of our necessary machinery nearly exhausts our annual income . If Ave once show ourselves active and

in earnest m pressing fonvard Avith our great Avork , I feel not the slightest doubt that Ave shall be met by corresponding aid on the part of the Department of Fine Arts . They have already deposited in our museum several very valuable and costly objects , and they have formally consented to our making periodical recommendations to them of Avhat objects we Avould adAise them to procure . It may , hoAvever , be asked Avhy we should not make over our work lvholly to the government . I Avould reply that ,

though it is a Avork Avhich , beyond all doubt , they ought to have initiated , we hold that , excepting only in the item of funds , it is better in the hands of those Avho , from actually themselves feeling the Avant , come forAvard voluntarily to -supply it . We feel that it is a Avork Avhich requires such a knowledge of architecture as none but practical architects are likely to possess . I will now do no more than state a feAV of the transactions of our Society during the past year . First , the numerous attendance of students during

the year . 1 may next mention that the following gentlemen have allowed us to add their names to our committee : —John Euskin , Esq . ; Edmund Beckett Denisou , Esq . ; C . C . Nelson , Esq ., lion , secretary to the Royal Institute of British Architects ; T . A . Tefft , Esq ., of New York , as corresponding member ; Alfred Stevens , Esq ., and T . G . Hubbard , Esq . In the museum itself , the principal work going on has been the re-arrangement of

the specimens , which will be followed by a new edition of the catalogue . The additions made to our catalogue have been as follows : — u 1 st . The depositing in our museum of complete casts ofthe magnificent monument of Archbishop Grey , from York Minster , and of several architectural specimens of great interest from the same cathedral , Avhich have all been prepared expressly for the purpose , at the cost of the Fine Arts Department .

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