Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Jan. 21, 1860
  • Page 5
  • MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES.
Current:

The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 21, 1860: Page 5

  • Back to The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 21, 1860
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 5

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

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

lino , u . n . u . TILE ( MUST ) DUKE or GLOUCESTER . IN my " is ote" ou the Manchester Masonic Eifle Corps , given in the Maijaziue . of December . 2-ith , iu naming the Duke of Gloucester , who reviewed the corps in ISOi , I accidentally omitted the word '' brother , " so that a young Mason , who has not yet studied the history of the Craft , might be misled into thinking that the duke had not seen the light in a Lodge . This , however , as the

well informed Mason is aware , was not the case ; Bro . His Royal Highness Prince William Henry , first Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh , K . G ., third sou of ' Frederick Prince of Wales , and brother of King George the Third , was born in 17-13 ; and on the 1 . 6 ' tli day of February , 17 GG , had the honour to be initiated into the mysteries of Freemasonry at an occasional Lodge assembled at the Horn Tavern , Westminster , at which Lord Blaney , then Grand Master

, presided in person . In the same year he married Maria , Countess Dowager of Waldegrave , second daughter of the Hon . Sir Edward Walpole , K . B ., and widow of James , second Earl Waldegrave , by whom he had issue two daughters and a son , the latter being Bro . II . R . II . Prince William Frederick , who succeeded to the title of Duke of Gloucester ancl Edinburgh , on the death of his father , August 22 nd , 1805 . — GEOIHJB ALVKKHAM TWEDDEEL .

ricTUKE OE rmr . AUELniiA . REAM Sin AND BKOTHEH , —I purpose , with your permission , contributing something now and then to the Masonic Notes ancl ( Queries , commenced in your last number . Such gossiping papers form a pleasant relief to the graver articles of a Magazine ; whilst they rescue from oblivion many a stray fact , which might otherwise he irrecoverably loat .

Tho subjoined passages arc extracted from a Avork entitled The Picture of Philadelphia , by James Mease , M . D ., Philadelphia , 1811 . The book is rare , even in America , and in this country there is not perhaps a second copy , so that these extracts may be deemed not unworthy of preservation in the Alagaxine . The prejudice against Masonry , occasioned by the " melancholy event " here recordedwhich " the brethren such uneasiness "

, gave , ¦ appears to be a sort of credulous epidemic , if I may so express it , recurring periodically in America ; as shown , for instance , in the jnorc recent case of William Morgan who , after having been diabolically murdered by the Freemasons at Niagara , in 182 G ,

was found comfortably settled at Smyrna in 1831 . *—SCIUHA , SOY . — -Birmingham . " SOCIETY OE MASONS . " Tho early records of Masonry in Philadelphia have been lost ; but it is known that a s . oeiety of the ' Moderns' was formed at au early date , and that it was composed of several of tho most respectable and prominent characters of the day . The gazettes , the only authority existing ou the subjectinform us of a Grand Lod having been hold so earl

, ge y as the year 1732 , at the 'Tuu Tavern , ' the fashionable hotel of the lime , when William Allen , tho recorder of the city ( afterwards chief justice ) was chosen Grand Master ; it appears that regular meetings were annually held for several years afterwards . "In the year 1737 , a melancholy event occurred , which gave the brethren much uneasiness . A party of idle men , not belonging to the Craftwith a view of enjoying the friht which they supposed they

, g would excite , cither volunteered their services , or acceded to the wishes of a . young man , to initiate him into the mysteries of Masonry , and ¦ accordingly instituted a variety of ridiculous operations ; at night , in a cellar , to all which he submitted with fortitude , although they wore [ willful and extremely trying to a young mind . Finding that their object was likely to be defeated , a bowl of burning spirit , bito which ho had been directed to look for some time , was thrown over him , and his

'clothes taking fire , he was so much burnt that he died in a few days afterwards . This melancholy event justly excited the public indignation , and . the chief promoter of the mischief , after a legal investigation , was iguomhuously punished by being burnt in the baud ; but unfortunately the scene having been conducted under the impression of a connection with Masonry , a considerable prejudice , among those who were unacquainted with the principles o'i the Craft , was excited , aud to such a degree did it extend that the brethren deemed it necessary to come

forward , and after stating the occurrence iu the newspapers , to 'declare the abhorrence of all true brethren to this horrid practice ; and that the persons concerned were not of their society , nor of any society of Free and Accented Masons .

" On the : 23 rd September , 3 7-13 , the Eight Honourable Lord John Ward , Grand Master of England , nominated Thomas Oxnard , Esq ., Provincial Grand Master of all Jforth America , On the 10 th July , 174 !) , Thomas Oxuard , Esq ., appointed Benjamin Franklin , Esq ., Provincial Grand Master of Pennsylvania , with authority to appoint the other Grand Officers , hold aGrand Lodge , issue warrants , & c . "On the 5 th September , 17-10 , the first Grand Lodge was held at "The Koyal Standard , " iu Market-street , under this warrant ; Grand * Vide Freemasons' Magazine March , 1855 , p . 153 .

Master Frauklin having appointed Dr . Thomas Bond , Deputy Grand Master ; Josonh Shipper ) , Senior Grand Warden ; Philip Syng , Junior Grand Warden ; William Plumsted , Grand Treasurer ; Daniel Byles , Grand Secretary . " At the same meeting a warrant was granted to James Bogreeu , aud others , to hold a Lodge in Philadelphia , The meetings were regularly held until 13 th March , 1750 , when William Allen , Esq ., the recorder of the city of Philadelphia , presented to the Grand Lodge a commission

from the Grand Lodge of England , appointing him Provincial Grand Master , which was recognized , and he appointed Benjamin Frauklin , Deputy Grand . Master ; and the other officers above mentioned , according to rank .

"Prom this time they proceeded iu their business , granting new warrants in the city , in various parts of the state and other places , until superceded by the introduction of various Lodges of 'Ancient York Masons , ' and the ultimate ostablishment . of a Grand Lodge of that Order . "As far as tho minutes of the Modern Grand Lodge go , Dr . Franklin was never absent from a meeting . " A Grand Lodge was erected some years afterwards , in the alley leading from Second-street to Dock-streetby the bank of Pennsylvania

, , which remained until the yearl 785 , when the ' Moderns , ' having greatly diminished , the two surviving trustees of the building were authorized , by au act of . the legislature , to sell it , and to apply part of the proceeds thereof to a charitable purpose . They were given to tho city for tho use of the poor . "At what time tho members of "Ancient York Masons" first held subordinate Lodges does not now appear , but in the year 1761 the late of that

William Ball , of Philadelphia ,, obtained from the Grand Lodge society in London , the charter or warrant for the Grand Lodge iu Pennsylvania , It is Wo . 1 in Pennsylvania , and No . S !) in England , and registered in the Grand Lodge , London , vol . 3 rd , letter C , and bears date July U , 1761 . " The fraternity of the ancients have since regularly held their grand communications , except while the British were in possession of Philadelphiaand to the end of last year have constituted one hundred and

, thirty-one subordinate Lodges in several of the states , in the West Indies , in Florida , and twenty-one in Philadelphia . "For several yeans . past they have been anxious to erect a building suitable to the dignity of the Craft and to their thriving situation , but were not able until the year ISO !) to accomplish their wishes . With the funds then in hand , and the help of additional subscriptions , tkey commenced the undertaking ; but their views enlarging as the work proceededit became to increase their fundsthey therefore

, necessary ; proposed a loan of forty thousand dollars at six per cent , redeemable on the first day of January , 1 S 25 , on the security of the house aud lot . This loan was filled in jess than two hours , by eighty subscribers . A . second loan , for twenty thousand dollars , has also been filled . "The Masonic Hall is in Uhesnut , between Seventh and Eighth streets from Delaware , and was consecrated in due form and with all possible splendour and solemnity on last St . John ' s day . Upwards of eight statesattended the

hundred brethren , many of them from other , procession ou the . occasion . Au impressive and eloquent oration was delivered on the same day , before the society , by the Grand Master , James Milnor , Esq ., in St . John ' s church , Sassafras-street . Officers : — James Milnor , R . W . Grand Master ; P . L . B . DuPlessi « , R . W . Deputy Grand Master ; Biehard Tybout , 11 . W . Senior Grand Warden ; Joseph Burden , K . W . Junior Grand Warden ; Georgo A . Baker , K , W . Grand Secretary ; Samuel F . Bradford , 11 . W . Grand Treasurer . "

" MASONIC UALL . " This spacious and elegant building is situate in Chesnut , between Seventh and Eighth streets . The lot is one hundred and one feet seven , inches in front , on Chosnut-sfcreet , extending in depth oiic hundred and seventy-sis feet , to a new twenty feet street , which has been opened in the rear of the lot . "The building is placed about the centre of the lot , so as to afford a handsome in frontlaid out in walksskirted with grass and

area , , shrubbery , enclosed by a dwarf wall surmounted by an iron palisade , and having two Gothic gates of . the same material attached to white marble pillars , capped with Gothic pinnacles ( corresponding with those hereafter mentioned ) on the summit of the wall . "The front of the building is eighty-two feet , aud its depth sixty-mno feet ; its height to the top of the roof seventy feet , and from thence to the top of the ireincluding the vaneeihtfeet . It is of brick

sp , , gy , _ designed iu the Gothic style , laving in front four marble buttresses of four feet iu breadth , extending from a basement , four feet high , to the roof , and capped with pinnacles . In these buttresses arc two niches eight feet in height , and two and a hall : foot wide , finished with tracery . There are eight windows fourteen by six feet , with an elegant central window , over the entrance , eleven by eighteen feet . " The ascent to the principal story is by a flight of marble steps between two check blocks four feet iu

. seventeen feet long , supported height and live feet in breadth ; the ornaments on which arc the admired quarter foil panel , surmounted by iron lamp pieds , of a construction agreeing with the stylo of the building . The doorway and vestibule are enriched with appropriate ornaments ; over the door , the large window is conspicuously and beautifully disposed , beneath a regular oxeye arch The internal arrangement of the hall exhibits an admirable union of beauty and convenience . The vestibule , twenty-nine by twelve feet , _ is iinitihed in superior style , and conducts to the great room on tho priii-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-01-21, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 20 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_21011860/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—VI. Article 1
FREEMASONRY AND ITS INSTITUTES Article 2
THE WORKING HOURS OF MASONS.* Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
Literature. REVIEWS. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 15
IRELAND. Article 15
SCOTLAND. Article 16
COLONIAL. Article 17
AUSTRALIA. Article 17
AMERICA. Article 18
GERMANY. Article 18
INDIA. Article 18
TURKEY. Article 19
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 19
Obituary. Article 19
THE WEEK Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

2 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

2 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

1 Article
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

1 Article
Page 9

Page 9

1 Article
Page 10

Page 10

2 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

1 Article
Page 12

Page 12

1 Article
Page 13

Page 13

1 Article
Page 14

Page 14

1 Article
Page 15

Page 15

3 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

3 Articles
Page 17

Page 17

3 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

5 Articles
Page 19

Page 19

5 Articles
Page 20

Page 20

2 Articles
Page 5

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

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

lino , u . n . u . TILE ( MUST ) DUKE or GLOUCESTER . IN my " is ote" ou the Manchester Masonic Eifle Corps , given in the Maijaziue . of December . 2-ith , iu naming the Duke of Gloucester , who reviewed the corps in ISOi , I accidentally omitted the word '' brother , " so that a young Mason , who has not yet studied the history of the Craft , might be misled into thinking that the duke had not seen the light in a Lodge . This , however , as the

well informed Mason is aware , was not the case ; Bro . His Royal Highness Prince William Henry , first Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh , K . G ., third sou of ' Frederick Prince of Wales , and brother of King George the Third , was born in 17-13 ; and on the 1 . 6 ' tli day of February , 17 GG , had the honour to be initiated into the mysteries of Freemasonry at an occasional Lodge assembled at the Horn Tavern , Westminster , at which Lord Blaney , then Grand Master

, presided in person . In the same year he married Maria , Countess Dowager of Waldegrave , second daughter of the Hon . Sir Edward Walpole , K . B ., and widow of James , second Earl Waldegrave , by whom he had issue two daughters and a son , the latter being Bro . II . R . II . Prince William Frederick , who succeeded to the title of Duke of Gloucester ancl Edinburgh , on the death of his father , August 22 nd , 1805 . — GEOIHJB ALVKKHAM TWEDDEEL .

ricTUKE OE rmr . AUELniiA . REAM Sin AND BKOTHEH , —I purpose , with your permission , contributing something now and then to the Masonic Notes ancl ( Queries , commenced in your last number . Such gossiping papers form a pleasant relief to the graver articles of a Magazine ; whilst they rescue from oblivion many a stray fact , which might otherwise he irrecoverably loat .

Tho subjoined passages arc extracted from a Avork entitled The Picture of Philadelphia , by James Mease , M . D ., Philadelphia , 1811 . The book is rare , even in America , and in this country there is not perhaps a second copy , so that these extracts may be deemed not unworthy of preservation in the Alagaxine . The prejudice against Masonry , occasioned by the " melancholy event " here recordedwhich " the brethren such uneasiness "

, gave , ¦ appears to be a sort of credulous epidemic , if I may so express it , recurring periodically in America ; as shown , for instance , in the jnorc recent case of William Morgan who , after having been diabolically murdered by the Freemasons at Niagara , in 182 G ,

was found comfortably settled at Smyrna in 1831 . *—SCIUHA , SOY . — -Birmingham . " SOCIETY OE MASONS . " Tho early records of Masonry in Philadelphia have been lost ; but it is known that a s . oeiety of the ' Moderns' was formed at au early date , and that it was composed of several of tho most respectable and prominent characters of the day . The gazettes , the only authority existing ou the subjectinform us of a Grand Lod having been hold so earl

, ge y as the year 1732 , at the 'Tuu Tavern , ' the fashionable hotel of the lime , when William Allen , tho recorder of the city ( afterwards chief justice ) was chosen Grand Master ; it appears that regular meetings were annually held for several years afterwards . "In the year 1737 , a melancholy event occurred , which gave the brethren much uneasiness . A party of idle men , not belonging to the Craftwith a view of enjoying the friht which they supposed they

, g would excite , cither volunteered their services , or acceded to the wishes of a . young man , to initiate him into the mysteries of Masonry , and ¦ accordingly instituted a variety of ridiculous operations ; at night , in a cellar , to all which he submitted with fortitude , although they wore [ willful and extremely trying to a young mind . Finding that their object was likely to be defeated , a bowl of burning spirit , bito which ho had been directed to look for some time , was thrown over him , and his

'clothes taking fire , he was so much burnt that he died in a few days afterwards . This melancholy event justly excited the public indignation , and . the chief promoter of the mischief , after a legal investigation , was iguomhuously punished by being burnt in the baud ; but unfortunately the scene having been conducted under the impression of a connection with Masonry , a considerable prejudice , among those who were unacquainted with the principles o'i the Craft , was excited , aud to such a degree did it extend that the brethren deemed it necessary to come

forward , and after stating the occurrence iu the newspapers , to 'declare the abhorrence of all true brethren to this horrid practice ; and that the persons concerned were not of their society , nor of any society of Free and Accented Masons .

" On the : 23 rd September , 3 7-13 , the Eight Honourable Lord John Ward , Grand Master of England , nominated Thomas Oxnard , Esq ., Provincial Grand Master of all Jforth America , On the 10 th July , 174 !) , Thomas Oxuard , Esq ., appointed Benjamin Franklin , Esq ., Provincial Grand Master of Pennsylvania , with authority to appoint the other Grand Officers , hold aGrand Lodge , issue warrants , & c . "On the 5 th September , 17-10 , the first Grand Lodge was held at "The Koyal Standard , " iu Market-street , under this warrant ; Grand * Vide Freemasons' Magazine March , 1855 , p . 153 .

Master Frauklin having appointed Dr . Thomas Bond , Deputy Grand Master ; Josonh Shipper ) , Senior Grand Warden ; Philip Syng , Junior Grand Warden ; William Plumsted , Grand Treasurer ; Daniel Byles , Grand Secretary . " At the same meeting a warrant was granted to James Bogreeu , aud others , to hold a Lodge in Philadelphia , The meetings were regularly held until 13 th March , 1750 , when William Allen , Esq ., the recorder of the city of Philadelphia , presented to the Grand Lodge a commission

from the Grand Lodge of England , appointing him Provincial Grand Master , which was recognized , and he appointed Benjamin Frauklin , Deputy Grand . Master ; and the other officers above mentioned , according to rank .

"Prom this time they proceeded iu their business , granting new warrants in the city , in various parts of the state and other places , until superceded by the introduction of various Lodges of 'Ancient York Masons , ' and the ultimate ostablishment . of a Grand Lodge of that Order . "As far as tho minutes of the Modern Grand Lodge go , Dr . Franklin was never absent from a meeting . " A Grand Lodge was erected some years afterwards , in the alley leading from Second-street to Dock-streetby the bank of Pennsylvania

, , which remained until the yearl 785 , when the ' Moderns , ' having greatly diminished , the two surviving trustees of the building were authorized , by au act of . the legislature , to sell it , and to apply part of the proceeds thereof to a charitable purpose . They were given to tho city for tho use of the poor . "At what time tho members of "Ancient York Masons" first held subordinate Lodges does not now appear , but in the year 1761 the late of that

William Ball , of Philadelphia ,, obtained from the Grand Lodge society in London , the charter or warrant for the Grand Lodge iu Pennsylvania , It is Wo . 1 in Pennsylvania , and No . S !) in England , and registered in the Grand Lodge , London , vol . 3 rd , letter C , and bears date July U , 1761 . " The fraternity of the ancients have since regularly held their grand communications , except while the British were in possession of Philadelphiaand to the end of last year have constituted one hundred and

, thirty-one subordinate Lodges in several of the states , in the West Indies , in Florida , and twenty-one in Philadelphia . "For several yeans . past they have been anxious to erect a building suitable to the dignity of the Craft and to their thriving situation , but were not able until the year ISO !) to accomplish their wishes . With the funds then in hand , and the help of additional subscriptions , tkey commenced the undertaking ; but their views enlarging as the work proceededit became to increase their fundsthey therefore

, necessary ; proposed a loan of forty thousand dollars at six per cent , redeemable on the first day of January , 1 S 25 , on the security of the house aud lot . This loan was filled in jess than two hours , by eighty subscribers . A . second loan , for twenty thousand dollars , has also been filled . "The Masonic Hall is in Uhesnut , between Seventh and Eighth streets from Delaware , and was consecrated in due form and with all possible splendour and solemnity on last St . John ' s day . Upwards of eight statesattended the

hundred brethren , many of them from other , procession ou the . occasion . Au impressive and eloquent oration was delivered on the same day , before the society , by the Grand Master , James Milnor , Esq ., in St . John ' s church , Sassafras-street . Officers : — James Milnor , R . W . Grand Master ; P . L . B . DuPlessi « , R . W . Deputy Grand Master ; Biehard Tybout , 11 . W . Senior Grand Warden ; Joseph Burden , K . W . Junior Grand Warden ; Georgo A . Baker , K , W . Grand Secretary ; Samuel F . Bradford , 11 . W . Grand Treasurer . "

" MASONIC UALL . " This spacious and elegant building is situate in Chesnut , between Seventh and Eighth streets . The lot is one hundred and one feet seven , inches in front , on Chosnut-sfcreet , extending in depth oiic hundred and seventy-sis feet , to a new twenty feet street , which has been opened in the rear of the lot . "The building is placed about the centre of the lot , so as to afford a handsome in frontlaid out in walksskirted with grass and

area , , shrubbery , enclosed by a dwarf wall surmounted by an iron palisade , and having two Gothic gates of . the same material attached to white marble pillars , capped with Gothic pinnacles ( corresponding with those hereafter mentioned ) on the summit of the wall . "The front of the building is eighty-two feet , aud its depth sixty-mno feet ; its height to the top of the roof seventy feet , and from thence to the top of the ireincluding the vaneeihtfeet . It is of brick

sp , , gy , _ designed iu the Gothic style , laving in front four marble buttresses of four feet iu breadth , extending from a basement , four feet high , to the roof , and capped with pinnacles . In these buttresses arc two niches eight feet in height , and two and a hall : foot wide , finished with tracery . There are eight windows fourteen by six feet , with an elegant central window , over the entrance , eleven by eighteen feet . " The ascent to the principal story is by a flight of marble steps between two check blocks four feet iu

. seventeen feet long , supported height and live feet in breadth ; the ornaments on which arc the admired quarter foil panel , surmounted by iron lamp pieds , of a construction agreeing with the stylo of the building . The doorway and vestibule are enriched with appropriate ornaments ; over the door , the large window is conspicuously and beautifully disposed , beneath a regular oxeye arch The internal arrangement of the hall exhibits an admirable union of beauty and convenience . The vestibule , twenty-nine by twelve feet , _ is iinitihed in superior style , and conducts to the great room on tho priii-

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 4
  • You're on page5
  • 6
  • 20
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2023

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy