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  • May 1, 1796
  • Page 8
  • THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. FOR MAY 1796. PRESENT STATE OF FREEMASONRY IN SCOTLAND.
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    Article THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. FOR MAY 1796. PRESENT STATE OF FREEMASONRY IN SCOTLAND. ← Page 4 of 5 →
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The Freemasons' Magazine. For May 1796. Present State Of Freemasonry In Scotland.

173 6 , yet nothing appears in their possession to show that they ever got a regular charter , notwithstanding which , they have been acknowledged by the Grand Lodge as regular , for many years after , as appears by their minutes . It appears from a minute of March 5 , 1737 , that they had a promise from Sir William Baillie , ( I suppose of Lamington ) to represent them in the Grand Lodge ; but he having failed to fulfil his

pro mise , they appointed Brother Thomas Simpson to act as proxy in his room on the 4 th of April following . On the 12 th of the said month , they gave him a full double of their charter from Linlith gow , with instructions how to regulate the Lodge business witii the Grand Lodge . —The above proxy appears to have attended-the-quarterl y communication of the Grand Lodon the 13 thfrom a of the

ge , copy proceedings found among the old papers belonging to theLodge , and in which Biggar is marked as one of the thirty Lodges who were present . Seven Lodges are marked as absent . On St . John ' s Day , in December 1737 , the members of the Lodge had a procession , in the same manner as last year . . The Lodge was at this time represented by Brother William Gray /

as appears from a petition among the papers of the Lodge . For the long period of upwards of twenty years nothing occurs , but elections , money matters , & c . The Lodge seems to have been then in a prosperous condition . ' ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ : At a meeting of the date of January 2 r , 176 ; , the members having considered . " the frequent letters they had received from Linlith

gow Lodge , of which they are a pendicle , did , nemine contradkente , resolve to send three of their Lodge according to desire , also they appoint each man his day ' s wages , and necessary charges , till his return . " Thus , they seem to have acknowledged , at this time , two

superiors . » [ Here occurs another period of twenty-three years , in which nothing material happened ' - . ] November 28 , 17 82 . —At a meeting , called to consult about matters of the Lodge , a letter was wrote to the Grand Lodge at Edinburgh , requesting information relative to the expences of a charter . . On the 27 th of December followingthe members metancl

, , " voted the offices all vacant , as none of the office-bearers attended . " The funds of the Lodge were now reduced to il . 19 s . 4 f d sterling . December 27 , 1783 . —At a meeting of the Lodge , five of tlie members bound themselves to advance the money necessary to defray the expence of getting a charter from the Grand Lodge . These wereGeorge Murrayin Tliankerton ; John BarclaySchoolmaster

, , , , in Culter ; John Lawson , Mason , in Skirling ; and John Inglis , in Wolf-Clyde . On the 27 th of December 1785 , the members , at last , " unanimously agreed to have the charter from the Grand Lodge . " A regular charter was accordingly obtained from the Grand Lodge of Scotland , in the month of October 1786 .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-05-01, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051796/page/8/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON: Article 3
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 4
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. FOR MAY 1796. PRESENT STATE OF FREEMASONRY IN SCOTLAND. Article 5
Untitled Article 10
COPY OF A LETTER. FROM THE REV. DR. STURGES, Article 13
THE FOLLY OF NOBLEMEN AND GENTLEMEN PAYING THEIR DEBTS, Article 16
SKETCHES OF THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF THE NORTH-AMERICAN INDIANS. Article 19
DISCIPLINE. Article 24
EXTRACTS FROM THE MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF EDWARD GIBBON, ESQ. Article 25
ON THE MASONIC JEWELS. Article 31
ON PRESENCE OF MIND. Article 33
THE DOG-TAX; A FRAGMENT. Article 35
CIVIC ANECDOTE. Article 36
EXCERPTA ET COLLECTANEA. Article 37
CLOWNISH SIMPLICITY. Article 38
BON MOT OF THE DEVIL. Article 38
ORIGINALITY IN DR. ROBERTSON AND MR. GIBBON. Article 39
SOME ANECDOTES OF HENRY PRINCE OF WALES, Article 40
SOME PARTICULARS NOT GENERALLY KNOWN RESPECTING MONSIEUR BAILLY. Article 41
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 43
LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 48
BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 49
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 50
THE FINE ARTS. Article 57
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 59
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 61
ANNIVERSARY OF THE GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 63
POETRY. Article 66
ELEGY, TO THE MEMORY OF STEPHEN STORACE , THE COMPOSER. Article 67
A NEW OCCASIONAL LYRIC, MASONIC EULOGIVM, Article 68
LINES TO DAPHNE, Article 68
Untitled Article 69
TO DELIA. Article 70
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 71
HOME NEWS. Article 73
PROMOTIONS. Article 77
Untitled Article 77
OBITUARY. Article 78
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 80
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Page 8

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

The Freemasons' Magazine. For May 1796. Present State Of Freemasonry In Scotland.

173 6 , yet nothing appears in their possession to show that they ever got a regular charter , notwithstanding which , they have been acknowledged by the Grand Lodge as regular , for many years after , as appears by their minutes . It appears from a minute of March 5 , 1737 , that they had a promise from Sir William Baillie , ( I suppose of Lamington ) to represent them in the Grand Lodge ; but he having failed to fulfil his

pro mise , they appointed Brother Thomas Simpson to act as proxy in his room on the 4 th of April following . On the 12 th of the said month , they gave him a full double of their charter from Linlith gow , with instructions how to regulate the Lodge business witii the Grand Lodge . —The above proxy appears to have attended-the-quarterl y communication of the Grand Lodon the 13 thfrom a of the

ge , copy proceedings found among the old papers belonging to theLodge , and in which Biggar is marked as one of the thirty Lodges who were present . Seven Lodges are marked as absent . On St . John ' s Day , in December 1737 , the members of the Lodge had a procession , in the same manner as last year . . The Lodge was at this time represented by Brother William Gray /

as appears from a petition among the papers of the Lodge . For the long period of upwards of twenty years nothing occurs , but elections , money matters , & c . The Lodge seems to have been then in a prosperous condition . ' ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ : At a meeting of the date of January 2 r , 176 ; , the members having considered . " the frequent letters they had received from Linlith

gow Lodge , of which they are a pendicle , did , nemine contradkente , resolve to send three of their Lodge according to desire , also they appoint each man his day ' s wages , and necessary charges , till his return . " Thus , they seem to have acknowledged , at this time , two

superiors . » [ Here occurs another period of twenty-three years , in which nothing material happened ' - . ] November 28 , 17 82 . —At a meeting , called to consult about matters of the Lodge , a letter was wrote to the Grand Lodge at Edinburgh , requesting information relative to the expences of a charter . . On the 27 th of December followingthe members metancl

, , " voted the offices all vacant , as none of the office-bearers attended . " The funds of the Lodge were now reduced to il . 19 s . 4 f d sterling . December 27 , 1783 . —At a meeting of the Lodge , five of tlie members bound themselves to advance the money necessary to defray the expence of getting a charter from the Grand Lodge . These wereGeorge Murrayin Tliankerton ; John BarclaySchoolmaster

, , , , in Culter ; John Lawson , Mason , in Skirling ; and John Inglis , in Wolf-Clyde . On the 27 th of December 1785 , the members , at last , " unanimously agreed to have the charter from the Grand Lodge . " A regular charter was accordingly obtained from the Grand Lodge of Scotland , in the month of October 1786 .

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