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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • June 23, 1860
  • Page 18
  • AUSTRALIA.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, June 23, 1860: Page 18

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Australia.

Bro . 11 . AV . Lowry fill the chair , a proposition which was seconded by Bro . Read , and carried unanimously . Bro . AVhite then proposed that Bro . Read be Secretary pro lem . Seconded by Bro . Lcwellen , and carried . The chairman opened the business of the evening by calling upon the Secretary to read the circular convening the present meetiug ; after which he made a brief statement setting forth the general views of tho promoters of the present scheme in reference to tho paramount

importance of a building devoted wholly to Alasonic usages and rites . He dwelt in a brief but forcible manner on the evils attendant on the present necessity for holding Mason ' s Lodges in rooms connected with "public houses , " and the consequent stigma attaching to the Masonic name amongst the uninitiated . Ho said that feeling strongly the evils consequent upon the want of Jlasouic halls devoted to Alasonic uses only , ( ni'iro especially in a metropolitan centre such as Melbourne ) , ho had , iu conjunction with a few other brethren , taken the initiative by forming

a provisional committee to consider the best means of providing a remedy for the existing state of things , and ho would now lay before them the result of their deliberations . Aftor a careful consideration the committee were , of opinion that a Masonic hall , in connection with a Alasonic club and proper dormitories , will not only bo tho greatest desideratum , but will also command the best prospects of success ; for not only is the want of a hall felt , but country brethren , on their arrival in town , require some establishment of the kind where pecuniary consideration ,-,- would not be the only

qualification ; and the committee were assured that such a project would meet with the warmest support from country Lodges , ivho without such consideration could scarcely be expected to feel so extensive au interest iu a metropolitan hall , only the influence of which , for good on the Craft generally , is of a more iutangoable character . After careful inquiry the committee found their choice of eligible sites but a limited one , but they have been fortunate enough to receive an offer of a piece of land on reasonable terms , which they consider combines the

greatest advantages in respect to situation , size , and price . The laud has a frontage G' 5 feet to Cillin ' s-street East , by a depth south of 149 J feet , aud situate nearly opposite to the New Alelbourne Club . The tonus offered are as follows : — £ 1000 for the land , the payments to be made at the rate of £ 100 per mouth . The first instalment being made upon the completion of the hall ; no interest to be charged except for non-payments of the monthly instalments as they fall due , when interest will be charged at the rate of ten per cent . The committee has

also obtained from a competent authority au estimate of cost for the erection of a suitable building , the amount of which if £ 10 , 000 , this being exclusive of the laud . The revenue has been estimated as follows , namely : — Rental for the use of the Hall by the several Alasonic bodies in Melbourne £ 4 f . O 0 0 Subscriptions of Club Members estimated at £ -200 , at £ 2 2 s . per annum 525 0 0 The Rental from the Club 1000 0 0

Gross Total £ 13 S 5 0 0 From this amount a deduction of ten per cent , is made for rates , taxes , and repairs , leaving a balance of £ 1 , 700 , ivhich amount , after paying ten per cent , interest on the capital of £ 10 , 000 , would leave a balance of £ 700 per annum towards the land . From this estimate the brethren will perceive that if viewed as a commercial speculation only , the outlay is a prudent one , independent of its

merits in a moral point of view . The committee believe the estimates as submitted are exceedingly moderate and trustworthy . AVith these few prefatory remarks he would leave the question for the serious consideration of brethren , but he would strongly impress npon them that nothing had been done conclusively , and that the whole question was an open one in every point , the committee having abstained even from the usual course of preparing resolutions beforehand to enable the brethren to speak without prejudice to the several questions before

them , and wishing that any movement emanating from this meeting should bo a spontaneous one . Bro . Rawliiison called attention to the circumstance that no allusion had been made to entrance fees for admission to the club , which he thought an important item , as , for two hundred and fifty members , it could scarcely be less than £ 2500 , being a large instalment of the purchase money for the proposed site . The chairman admitted the omission , and stated that the committee

had considered the question and had left the same as an offset against furniture aud other contingent expenses . After a brief eulogy on the earnest maimer in which the question had been placed before them , and a concurrence in the wish to dissociate Jlasonry from tavern associations , Bro . Rawliiison moved " That in the opinion of this meeting it is highly desirable to erect a Alasonic hall iu connection with a Alasonic club in Jlelbounie . " This was seconded by Bro . Leivcllen , and carried unanimously after marks of approval by the brethren .

After a desultory conversation as to the best means of carrying out the above resolution , Bro . Prof . Wilson intimated that to save time he had just sketched out one or two resolutions bearing on tho question , and ivith permission of the chairman would propose the same , seriatim . Bro . Professor AVilson then proposed " That the money for a Jfasonie hall in connection with a Alasonic club bo raised by £ 1 shares in a

Australia.

'Alasonic Hill Company . '" This was seconded by Bro . AValsh , ancl carried unanimously . It was then moved by Bro . Professor AVilson , and seconded by Bro . Hale "That the land be vested in trustees , and the company be managed by a Board of Directors , and that no one be eligible as a trustee or director who is :. iot a subscribing member of somo regular Masonic Lodgo iu tho Colony of Victoria . " Before this resolution ivas put the question was asked hy a brother if

it was intended to provide for the three constitutions or only the English . The chairman replied that the movement was on behalf of the whole Afasonic body , as iu a question of this kind he did not think any distinction could be drawn between the different constitutions any more than could bo made between different Lodges under the same constitution . The resolution was then put and carried unanimously . Bro . Professor AVilson then moved , and Bro . Barnes seconded , " That when the profits shall exceed ten per cent ., the surplus shall be applied to

buying up the shares for the use of the Alasonic body , in such manner as may be found most expedient . '' Carried unanimously . Bro . Professor AVilson then moved , and Bro . Purchase seconded , "That a committee be formed for obtaining subscriptions to the share list , and making all other preliminary arrangements ; the committee to report to an adjourned meeting of the present delegates ou the earliest day possible . " Carried unanimously . Bro . Professor Wilson moved , and Bro . Halo seconded , " That the

committee do consist of Prov . G . Af . I , and his two Wardens ; D . Prov . G . AI . E , and his AVardens ; and D . Prov . G . AI . S , and his AVardens ; and the Alasters of all Lodges within five miles of the Post-office of Melbourne ; live to form a quorum . " Carried . A vote of thanks to the chairman was passed , and the meeting then adjourned . The ready response by a large meeting of brethren to the call for action on this question argues well for the healthy tone of Afasonic feeling i . i Victoria , and that the objects for which the brethren are now banding themselves together may bo carried out in their integrity , must be the wish of every ardent Alason .

The Week.

THE WEEK .

THE COURT . —The Queen and her family , wc arc happy to say , continue in good health , notwithstanding the busy week of gaiety which has just passed . The King of the Belgians and his son , the Count of Flanders , have continued at Buckingham Palace as her Majesty ' s guests , and on Saturday evening the Queen and the Count of Flanders visited the Olympic theatre ; Princess Alice going to the Princess ' s theatre the same night . The Queen , the Prince Consort , and the Princess Alice dined with the Duke of Cambridge , on Alonday , at Gloucester House .

The King of the Belgians and the Count of Flanders were also present to meet the Queen , as well as the Duchess of Cambridge , the Grand Duchess of Alecklenburg Strelitz , and the Princess Alary , Prince Edward of Saxe AVciinar , the Duke of Newcastle , tho Earl of Derby , the Earl of Clarendon , Viscount Palmerston , and some of the foreign ministers . The Queen held a levee on AVednesday , in St . James ' s Palace . Last night her Alajesty gave a state ball , in Buckingham Palace ; invitations wore issued to a very numerous party of the nobility and gentry . AVe

learn , from pretty reliable authority , that her Alajesty may be expected at Balmoral Castle during the first week of August . IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT . —On Jlond . iy , in the HOUSE of LORDS , Lord Brougham asked whether the government had any information with regard to tho truth of a rumour which had prevailed both here and in Paris , and which had caused great alarm , that a large military force was about to be sent from Franco to Naples . Earl Granville was iu a position to deny that there was any foundation for such a rumour , ancl to express his belief that no intention of despatching any such force to

Naples existed on the part of the French government . On Tuesday Lord Lyveden moved the second reading of the Church Rates Abolition Bill , and after a short debate the house divided ; majority against the second reading , 97 . In the HOUSE of COMMONS on Alonday , Jlr . E . James directed attention to the enlistment now and for some time past carried on iu Ireland for the service of the Pope , notwithstanding the proclamation issued by the government to forbid it . He alluded to the exultant tone in which certain Irish newspapers referred to the

movement , pointed to the part taken in it by the priests , and urged the necessity of steps being taken by the government to show that they had power to cheek such an infringement of the Foreign Enlistment Act . Afr . Cardwell said the government were first made aware on the 26 th of Alay that persons were being engaged in Ireland under pretence of making a railway at Ancona , but with reason to suppose that they were really for the military service of the Pope . A proclamation was then issued , informing the people of the real state ofthe law on the- subject ;

and , at the same time , the police ivere directed to watch , and to report weekly , which they had done , and those reports had been regularly submitted to tho law officers of the crown , who had not , however , been able to find a single case in ivhich the evidence at their command ivould justify a prosecution . Air . A " . Scully said it was very unfortunate , if the newspaper statements were true , that so many men should be leaving home , where they were very much wanted . The house soon after went into committee of supply , and agreed to a number of votes iu the army estimates . On one of the votes— -connected with small arms—a

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-06-23, Page 18” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23061860/page/18/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XXIII. Article 1
THE IDEALS OF FREEMASONRY. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
Literature. Article 7
NEW MUSIC. Article 9
Selections from Recent Poetry. Article 9
DE CORONA. Article 10
THE AGE OF CONCEIT. Article 10
PARIS UNDER NAPOLEON III. Article 10
INAUGURATION OF THE EOS LODGE AT CREFELD.* Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
METRO POLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
AMERICA. Article 17
AUSTRALIA. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Australia.

Bro . 11 . AV . Lowry fill the chair , a proposition which was seconded by Bro . Read , and carried unanimously . Bro . AVhite then proposed that Bro . Read be Secretary pro lem . Seconded by Bro . Lcwellen , and carried . The chairman opened the business of the evening by calling upon the Secretary to read the circular convening the present meetiug ; after which he made a brief statement setting forth the general views of tho promoters of the present scheme in reference to tho paramount

importance of a building devoted wholly to Alasonic usages and rites . He dwelt in a brief but forcible manner on the evils attendant on the present necessity for holding Mason ' s Lodges in rooms connected with "public houses , " and the consequent stigma attaching to the Masonic name amongst the uninitiated . Ho said that feeling strongly the evils consequent upon the want of Jlasouic halls devoted to Alasonic uses only , ( ni'iro especially in a metropolitan centre such as Melbourne ) , ho had , iu conjunction with a few other brethren , taken the initiative by forming

a provisional committee to consider the best means of providing a remedy for the existing state of things , and ho would now lay before them the result of their deliberations . Aftor a careful consideration the committee were , of opinion that a Masonic hall , in connection with a Alasonic club and proper dormitories , will not only bo tho greatest desideratum , but will also command the best prospects of success ; for not only is the want of a hall felt , but country brethren , on their arrival in town , require some establishment of the kind where pecuniary consideration ,-,- would not be the only

qualification ; and the committee were assured that such a project would meet with the warmest support from country Lodges , ivho without such consideration could scarcely be expected to feel so extensive au interest iu a metropolitan hall , only the influence of which , for good on the Craft generally , is of a more iutangoable character . After careful inquiry the committee found their choice of eligible sites but a limited one , but they have been fortunate enough to receive an offer of a piece of land on reasonable terms , which they consider combines the

greatest advantages in respect to situation , size , and price . The laud has a frontage G' 5 feet to Cillin ' s-street East , by a depth south of 149 J feet , aud situate nearly opposite to the New Alelbourne Club . The tonus offered are as follows : — £ 1000 for the land , the payments to be made at the rate of £ 100 per mouth . The first instalment being made upon the completion of the hall ; no interest to be charged except for non-payments of the monthly instalments as they fall due , when interest will be charged at the rate of ten per cent . The committee has

also obtained from a competent authority au estimate of cost for the erection of a suitable building , the amount of which if £ 10 , 000 , this being exclusive of the laud . The revenue has been estimated as follows , namely : — Rental for the use of the Hall by the several Alasonic bodies in Melbourne £ 4 f . O 0 0 Subscriptions of Club Members estimated at £ -200 , at £ 2 2 s . per annum 525 0 0 The Rental from the Club 1000 0 0

Gross Total £ 13 S 5 0 0 From this amount a deduction of ten per cent , is made for rates , taxes , and repairs , leaving a balance of £ 1 , 700 , ivhich amount , after paying ten per cent , interest on the capital of £ 10 , 000 , would leave a balance of £ 700 per annum towards the land . From this estimate the brethren will perceive that if viewed as a commercial speculation only , the outlay is a prudent one , independent of its

merits in a moral point of view . The committee believe the estimates as submitted are exceedingly moderate and trustworthy . AVith these few prefatory remarks he would leave the question for the serious consideration of brethren , but he would strongly impress npon them that nothing had been done conclusively , and that the whole question was an open one in every point , the committee having abstained even from the usual course of preparing resolutions beforehand to enable the brethren to speak without prejudice to the several questions before

them , and wishing that any movement emanating from this meeting should bo a spontaneous one . Bro . Rawliiison called attention to the circumstance that no allusion had been made to entrance fees for admission to the club , which he thought an important item , as , for two hundred and fifty members , it could scarcely be less than £ 2500 , being a large instalment of the purchase money for the proposed site . The chairman admitted the omission , and stated that the committee

had considered the question and had left the same as an offset against furniture aud other contingent expenses . After a brief eulogy on the earnest maimer in which the question had been placed before them , and a concurrence in the wish to dissociate Jlasonry from tavern associations , Bro . Rawliiison moved " That in the opinion of this meeting it is highly desirable to erect a Alasonic hall iu connection with a Alasonic club in Jlelbounie . " This was seconded by Bro . Leivcllen , and carried unanimously after marks of approval by the brethren .

After a desultory conversation as to the best means of carrying out the above resolution , Bro . Prof . Wilson intimated that to save time he had just sketched out one or two resolutions bearing on tho question , and ivith permission of the chairman would propose the same , seriatim . Bro . Professor AVilson then proposed " That the money for a Jfasonie hall in connection with a Alasonic club bo raised by £ 1 shares in a

Australia.

'Alasonic Hill Company . '" This was seconded by Bro . AValsh , ancl carried unanimously . It was then moved by Bro . Professor AVilson , and seconded by Bro . Hale "That the land be vested in trustees , and the company be managed by a Board of Directors , and that no one be eligible as a trustee or director who is :. iot a subscribing member of somo regular Masonic Lodgo iu tho Colony of Victoria . " Before this resolution ivas put the question was asked hy a brother if

it was intended to provide for the three constitutions or only the English . The chairman replied that the movement was on behalf of the whole Afasonic body , as iu a question of this kind he did not think any distinction could be drawn between the different constitutions any more than could bo made between different Lodges under the same constitution . The resolution was then put and carried unanimously . Bro . Professor AVilson then moved , and Bro . Barnes seconded , " That when the profits shall exceed ten per cent ., the surplus shall be applied to

buying up the shares for the use of the Alasonic body , in such manner as may be found most expedient . '' Carried unanimously . Bro . Professor AVilson then moved , and Bro . Purchase seconded , "That a committee be formed for obtaining subscriptions to the share list , and making all other preliminary arrangements ; the committee to report to an adjourned meeting of the present delegates ou the earliest day possible . " Carried unanimously . Bro . Professor Wilson moved , and Bro . Halo seconded , " That the

committee do consist of Prov . G . Af . I , and his two Wardens ; D . Prov . G . AI . E , and his AVardens ; and D . Prov . G . AI . S , and his AVardens ; and the Alasters of all Lodges within five miles of the Post-office of Melbourne ; live to form a quorum . " Carried . A vote of thanks to the chairman was passed , and the meeting then adjourned . The ready response by a large meeting of brethren to the call for action on this question argues well for the healthy tone of Afasonic feeling i . i Victoria , and that the objects for which the brethren are now banding themselves together may bo carried out in their integrity , must be the wish of every ardent Alason .

The Week.

THE WEEK .

THE COURT . —The Queen and her family , wc arc happy to say , continue in good health , notwithstanding the busy week of gaiety which has just passed . The King of the Belgians and his son , the Count of Flanders , have continued at Buckingham Palace as her Majesty ' s guests , and on Saturday evening the Queen and the Count of Flanders visited the Olympic theatre ; Princess Alice going to the Princess ' s theatre the same night . The Queen , the Prince Consort , and the Princess Alice dined with the Duke of Cambridge , on Alonday , at Gloucester House .

The King of the Belgians and the Count of Flanders were also present to meet the Queen , as well as the Duchess of Cambridge , the Grand Duchess of Alecklenburg Strelitz , and the Princess Alary , Prince Edward of Saxe AVciinar , the Duke of Newcastle , tho Earl of Derby , the Earl of Clarendon , Viscount Palmerston , and some of the foreign ministers . The Queen held a levee on AVednesday , in St . James ' s Palace . Last night her Alajesty gave a state ball , in Buckingham Palace ; invitations wore issued to a very numerous party of the nobility and gentry . AVe

learn , from pretty reliable authority , that her Alajesty may be expected at Balmoral Castle during the first week of August . IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT . —On Jlond . iy , in the HOUSE of LORDS , Lord Brougham asked whether the government had any information with regard to tho truth of a rumour which had prevailed both here and in Paris , and which had caused great alarm , that a large military force was about to be sent from Franco to Naples . Earl Granville was iu a position to deny that there was any foundation for such a rumour , ancl to express his belief that no intention of despatching any such force to

Naples existed on the part of the French government . On Tuesday Lord Lyveden moved the second reading of the Church Rates Abolition Bill , and after a short debate the house divided ; majority against the second reading , 97 . In the HOUSE of COMMONS on Alonday , Jlr . E . James directed attention to the enlistment now and for some time past carried on iu Ireland for the service of the Pope , notwithstanding the proclamation issued by the government to forbid it . He alluded to the exultant tone in which certain Irish newspapers referred to the

movement , pointed to the part taken in it by the priests , and urged the necessity of steps being taken by the government to show that they had power to cheek such an infringement of the Foreign Enlistment Act . Afr . Cardwell said the government were first made aware on the 26 th of Alay that persons were being engaged in Ireland under pretence of making a railway at Ancona , but with reason to suppose that they were really for the military service of the Pope . A proclamation was then issued , informing the people of the real state ofthe law on the- subject ;

and , at the same time , the police ivere directed to watch , and to report weekly , which they had done , and those reports had been regularly submitted to tho law officers of the crown , who had not , however , been able to find a single case in ivhich the evidence at their command ivould justify a prosecution . Air . A " . Scully said it was very unfortunate , if the newspaper statements were true , that so many men should be leaving home , where they were very much wanted . The house soon after went into committee of supply , and agreed to a number of votes iu the army estimates . On one of the votes— -connected with small arms—a

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