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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • July 21, 1866
  • Page 6
  • ALL IN THE OLDEN TIME.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 21, 1866: Page 6

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    Article ALL IN THE OLDEN TIME. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article ALL IN THE OLDEN TIME. Page 2 of 2
    Article RECOLLECTIONS OF THE LODGE OF FREEMASONS AT THORNHILL. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 6

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

All In The Olden Time.

Impressed with the wandering spirit that infects his nation , Gillespie Avas making his way from the Sabine to Austin ' s settlements , on the Brazos , when he ivas attacked by fever . He had barely reached Morton ' s house as he succumbed to its

influence . There he lay for a considerable period , sinking under the disease until he died . He had contrived , hoAvever , to make himself known to Morton as a " brother of the mystic tie , " and by this means had aroused a spirit in that true heart

which prompted every effort to save the life of his guest . But all in vain . Although he sent his Mexican riders more than eighty miles eastAvard to bring a physician for his dying friend ; although he sent others clear to Galveston Island , for

oranges , Avine , and spirits for stimulus and refreshments , and watched unwearied by his bedside attentive to his faintest call , all in vain . He greAV weaker and Aveaker , and at last yielded up his spirit upon the breast of his kind host , whose

lamentations at his departure Avereloud and real . That very afternoon—for in that climate decay sets in at once—Morton caused his servants to

dig a grave beneath the old trees . There , when the shades of darkness arrived , he took the body of his Masonic brother , and alone , amidst the solemn silence of the night , he buried it . What ceremonies he used , what prayers he uttered , \ vhat

funeral rites he performed can best be conjectured by those to whom the funeral duties of the brethren are entrusted . If the spirit of the departed lingered at all on earth it must have vieived with complaisance these evidences of Masonic attachment , and communicated a portion of its oivn peace to the soul of that faithful man .

Upon the grave thus hallowed hy the double mystery of death aud the Masonic ceremonial , Morton built a brick monument ivith his OAVU hands . This pile still stands , the earliest relic of Masonic history in Texas . In process of time the

toAvn of Richmond was laid out upon the old hacienda of William Morton , but he did not live to see it . HOAV or Avhen he died there is no record to show . No brother was by to receive his dyingwords or to bestoiv the solemn rites upon him

which he had so cheerfully yielded to another . Yet he ivas not forgotten ; the principal street in the city Avas called after his name . . In 1849 the place contained about 100 people , among them a feiv Masons . These , after much deliberation , concluded , by concert with those of the Craft who resided in the vicinity , and by borrow-

All In The Olden Time.

ing from neighbouring lodges , to establish one of their OAvn . At the Grand Lodge meeting of 1850 it was chartered as Morton Lodge ( No . 72 ) . The hall Avas built upon the very ground consecrated by that burial scene .

Should the reader visit Richmond on the Brazos the first object that Avill attract his gaze is a large three-story brick edifice on Morton-street . It is the Masonic Hall , erected in 1865 , and is one of the finest edifices iu the State of Texas . In

dimensions it is forty by sixty feet—the apartments used by the Masons being in the third story , forty feet square . He will not forget the pathetic incident Ave have HOAV perpetuated ; for there , right by the side of the building , is that unpretending

pile of bricks—each one of which is stamped , invisibly , with a ' signet more noble than the bricks of Babylon or Nineveh—Avhich make up the monument of Robert Gillespie . Does not Propertius say truly :

Quod si deficianfc vires , audacia certe Laus erifc : in magnis et voluisse sat est . " Boldness shall have its praise , though strength may fail . " The effort , puny as it may have appeared to William Morton , to honour the memory

of that unknown Scotchman has resulted in honour to the builder . Just so it Avas in in the erection of the first temple . Wall , ancl pillar , and pilaster are gone . Even the checkered pavement is torn up , and not a block remains . Yet the memory of

the operative Grand Master abides and will abide as the recollections of all good deeds ; they are immortal . —Masonic Eclectic .

Recollections Of The Lodge Of Freemasons At Thornhill.

RECOLLECTIONS OF THE LODGE OF FREEMASONS AT THORNHILL .

By D . MURRAY LYON , one of the Grand Stewards in the Grand Lodge of Scotland . ( Continued from page 5 . ) Having thus far , Avith little regard to regularit y of arrangement , passed under revieAv the major

part of the outstanding and othenvise interesting events in the history of St . John ' s—without , Ave hope , at all rupturing the lattice-work of symbolism which separates the Order from other human institutions—ive shall noiv take note of the setting

up of a landmark which for half a century to come Avill form a conspicuous object in the lodge ' s retrospection of its Avork . The Jubilee of St . John ' s Avas celebrated on the 22 nd July , 1864 , under circumstances of a

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1866-07-21, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_21071866/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE CITY OF JERUSALEM.—ORIGIN OF THE TEMPLARS. Article 1
THE CONTINENTAL WAR. Article 3
ORANGE AND RIBBON. Article 4
QUALIFICATIONS FOR MEMBERSHIP. Article 4
ALL IN THE OLDEN TIME. Article 5
RECOLLECTIONS OF THE LODGE OF FREEMASONS AT THORNHILL. Article 6
Untitled Article 8
THE CONSTITUTION , RULES, ORDERS, AND REGULATIONS, OF THE ABERDEEN MASON LODGE. Article 9
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 11
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
SAFETY GATES FOR THE LEVEL CROSSINGS OF RAILWAYS. Article 11
FIRE INSURANCE DUTY. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
MASONIC MEM . Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 16
RED CROSS KNIGHTS. Article 16
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 16
INDIA. Article 16
REVIEWS. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 19
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Page 6

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

All In The Olden Time.

Impressed with the wandering spirit that infects his nation , Gillespie Avas making his way from the Sabine to Austin ' s settlements , on the Brazos , when he ivas attacked by fever . He had barely reached Morton ' s house as he succumbed to its

influence . There he lay for a considerable period , sinking under the disease until he died . He had contrived , hoAvever , to make himself known to Morton as a " brother of the mystic tie , " and by this means had aroused a spirit in that true heart

which prompted every effort to save the life of his guest . But all in vain . Although he sent his Mexican riders more than eighty miles eastAvard to bring a physician for his dying friend ; although he sent others clear to Galveston Island , for

oranges , Avine , and spirits for stimulus and refreshments , and watched unwearied by his bedside attentive to his faintest call , all in vain . He greAV weaker and Aveaker , and at last yielded up his spirit upon the breast of his kind host , whose

lamentations at his departure Avereloud and real . That very afternoon—for in that climate decay sets in at once—Morton caused his servants to

dig a grave beneath the old trees . There , when the shades of darkness arrived , he took the body of his Masonic brother , and alone , amidst the solemn silence of the night , he buried it . What ceremonies he used , what prayers he uttered , \ vhat

funeral rites he performed can best be conjectured by those to whom the funeral duties of the brethren are entrusted . If the spirit of the departed lingered at all on earth it must have vieived with complaisance these evidences of Masonic attachment , and communicated a portion of its oivn peace to the soul of that faithful man .

Upon the grave thus hallowed hy the double mystery of death aud the Masonic ceremonial , Morton built a brick monument ivith his OAVU hands . This pile still stands , the earliest relic of Masonic history in Texas . In process of time the

toAvn of Richmond was laid out upon the old hacienda of William Morton , but he did not live to see it . HOAV or Avhen he died there is no record to show . No brother was by to receive his dyingwords or to bestoiv the solemn rites upon him

which he had so cheerfully yielded to another . Yet he ivas not forgotten ; the principal street in the city Avas called after his name . . In 1849 the place contained about 100 people , among them a feiv Masons . These , after much deliberation , concluded , by concert with those of the Craft who resided in the vicinity , and by borrow-

All In The Olden Time.

ing from neighbouring lodges , to establish one of their OAvn . At the Grand Lodge meeting of 1850 it was chartered as Morton Lodge ( No . 72 ) . The hall Avas built upon the very ground consecrated by that burial scene .

Should the reader visit Richmond on the Brazos the first object that Avill attract his gaze is a large three-story brick edifice on Morton-street . It is the Masonic Hall , erected in 1865 , and is one of the finest edifices iu the State of Texas . In

dimensions it is forty by sixty feet—the apartments used by the Masons being in the third story , forty feet square . He will not forget the pathetic incident Ave have HOAV perpetuated ; for there , right by the side of the building , is that unpretending

pile of bricks—each one of which is stamped , invisibly , with a ' signet more noble than the bricks of Babylon or Nineveh—Avhich make up the monument of Robert Gillespie . Does not Propertius say truly :

Quod si deficianfc vires , audacia certe Laus erifc : in magnis et voluisse sat est . " Boldness shall have its praise , though strength may fail . " The effort , puny as it may have appeared to William Morton , to honour the memory

of that unknown Scotchman has resulted in honour to the builder . Just so it Avas in in the erection of the first temple . Wall , ancl pillar , and pilaster are gone . Even the checkered pavement is torn up , and not a block remains . Yet the memory of

the operative Grand Master abides and will abide as the recollections of all good deeds ; they are immortal . —Masonic Eclectic .

Recollections Of The Lodge Of Freemasons At Thornhill.

RECOLLECTIONS OF THE LODGE OF FREEMASONS AT THORNHILL .

By D . MURRAY LYON , one of the Grand Stewards in the Grand Lodge of Scotland . ( Continued from page 5 . ) Having thus far , Avith little regard to regularit y of arrangement , passed under revieAv the major

part of the outstanding and othenvise interesting events in the history of St . John ' s—without , Ave hope , at all rupturing the lattice-work of symbolism which separates the Order from other human institutions—ive shall noiv take note of the setting

up of a landmark which for half a century to come Avill form a conspicuous object in the lodge ' s retrospection of its Avork . The Jubilee of St . John ' s Avas celebrated on the 22 nd July , 1864 , under circumstances of a

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