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  • June 1, 1794
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The Freemasons' Magazine, June 1, 1794: Page 70

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    Article MONTHLY CHRONICLE. ← Page 2 of 6 →
Page 70

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

Monthly Chronicle.

him any injury . The Convention have since passed a savage decree , viz . to make no pr i ~> soners of Hanoverians or English ; that is , in other words , to give no quarter , but to put all to the sword that fall into the hands of their troops . This diabolical resolution was taken , in consequence of a suggestion , that Mr . Pitt was at the bottom of tlle plot for assassinating Roberspierre and Collot d'Herbois . All popular societies in -France are to be abolished . The society of the friends of liberty and equality , have set the example , and have been followed by several others . The Jacobins bavc even thought of giving up and absorbing their power in the Convention .

DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE .

A private letter received from Paris mentions , that citizen Stone , brother to Mr . Stone , now in Newgate , has been guillotined . A letter from l ^ ondon , to Mr . Stone in Paris , giving an account of the time when some ships would sail from England , and where they might be taken , having been intercepted , and laid before our Ministry , ic -mas agreed to send the letter as directed , and to order a superior force to meet the frigates which the French should send out , which was accordingly done , and the French frigates taken .. As soon as tin ' s was known at Paris , Stone was apprehended , on suspicion of being privy to the manoeuvres , and the Revolutionary Tribunal

sentenced him to the guillotine . By the Harpy , just arrived from Sierra-Leone , we learn , that the settlement was very healthful when this vessel came away , and that only two or three people had died within a twelvemonth , and every thing there seems to be in a prosperous way .

24 . Some persons convicted of a conspiracy , and for riotously assembling at a chapel 111 Kent , belonging to the late John Westley ' s connection , and assaulting the preacher , were brought up from Newgate id the Court of King ' s Bench , to enter into recognizances for their future good behavibui ' : On which occasion , Lord Kenyon gave them a pretty severe lecture ; and concluded by desiring , that the defendants and their suretics would remember , that the same law secured to the Methodists and Dissenters an unmolested right of religious worship , as to the members of the Established Church , and that it was as great an offence to interrupt the former as the latter .

25 . Messrs . Ross and Higgins , two of bis Majesty's messengers in ordinary , arrived in town from Sheffield , having under their charge three persons , of the name of Broomhead , Carnage , and Moody , charged with treasonable and seditious practices . The former acted as secretary to the Jacobin Society held there , and has corresponded with one held in town . Carnage has acted as chairman ; and Moody is charged with having made a number of pikes , near 7 feet long , by direction of Carnage . It was with great difficulty these fellows were secured , the town being in such a state of confusion , that they were obliged to call in a troop of the 16 th Light Dragoons , to escort them out of the town .

2 . 7 , At a Court of Common Council of the City of London , it was . unanimously resolved , That the thanks of that court should be given to Sir Charles Grey , K . B . to Sir John Jervis , K . B . and to the officers , soldiers , and seamen , under their command , for the signal services they have rendered to their country , by their able , gallant , and meritorious conduct in the West Indies : And it was also unanimously resolved , that the freedom of the city should be presented to Sir Charles Grey , and Sir John Jervis , in gold boxes , of the value of ico guineas each . 28 . An Extraordinary Gazette announced a signal victory by General Count

Kaunitz over the French near Rouvcroy , in which the latter lost 5090 men , and 50 pieces of cannon . ' June 3 . Intelligence reached our government , that Marshall Mollendorff had surrounded the French camp at' Keyserslautern , killed 1000 , and taken 2000 prisoners , and iS pieces of cannon . 5 . The Annual Concert of the Royal Society of Musicians was this day given , for the third time , in St . Margaret ' s Church , Westminster ; when the Messiah was performed by command . This oratorio , under the direction of Dr . Arnold , was never mere correctly performed , -and afforded a delicious treat to the admirer ' s of Handel ' s

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-06-01, Page 70” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01061794/page/70/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 3
PRESENT STATE OF FREE MASONRY. Article 4
A SPEECH Article 9
LITERATURE. Article 14
LETTER THE FIRST. Article 14
ANECDOTES OF THE LAST CENTURY. Article 16
ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY, &c. Article 17
THE LIFE OF MRS. ANNE AYSCOUGH, OR ASKEW. Article 21
ACCOUNT OF DRUIDISM. Article 28
MASONIC ANECDOTE Article 33
REFUTATION Article 35
A SERMON Article 36
JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, Article 40
A DESCRIPTION OF ST. GEORGE'S CAVE AT GIBRALTAR. Article 45
SHORT ABSTRACT OF THE HISTORY OF GUADALOUPE. Article 46
NATURAL HISTORY OF THE JACKALL. Article 49
SPEECH OF A CREEK INDIAN, Article 50
THE USE AND ABUSE OF SPEECH. Article 52
ON SUICIDE . Article 55
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 57
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 61
POETRY. Article 63
VERSES Article 64
BY MR. TASKER. Article 66
ODE TO A MILITIA OFFICER. Article 66
TRUE GREATNESS. Article 67
A MASONIC SONG. Article 68
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 69
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 69
PREFERMENTS. Article 74
Untitled Article 75
Untitled Article 76
BANKRUPTS. Article 77
INDEX TO THE SECOND VOLUME. Article 78
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Monthly Chronicle.

him any injury . The Convention have since passed a savage decree , viz . to make no pr i ~> soners of Hanoverians or English ; that is , in other words , to give no quarter , but to put all to the sword that fall into the hands of their troops . This diabolical resolution was taken , in consequence of a suggestion , that Mr . Pitt was at the bottom of tlle plot for assassinating Roberspierre and Collot d'Herbois . All popular societies in -France are to be abolished . The society of the friends of liberty and equality , have set the example , and have been followed by several others . The Jacobins bavc even thought of giving up and absorbing their power in the Convention .

DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE .

A private letter received from Paris mentions , that citizen Stone , brother to Mr . Stone , now in Newgate , has been guillotined . A letter from l ^ ondon , to Mr . Stone in Paris , giving an account of the time when some ships would sail from England , and where they might be taken , having been intercepted , and laid before our Ministry , ic -mas agreed to send the letter as directed , and to order a superior force to meet the frigates which the French should send out , which was accordingly done , and the French frigates taken .. As soon as tin ' s was known at Paris , Stone was apprehended , on suspicion of being privy to the manoeuvres , and the Revolutionary Tribunal

sentenced him to the guillotine . By the Harpy , just arrived from Sierra-Leone , we learn , that the settlement was very healthful when this vessel came away , and that only two or three people had died within a twelvemonth , and every thing there seems to be in a prosperous way .

24 . Some persons convicted of a conspiracy , and for riotously assembling at a chapel 111 Kent , belonging to the late John Westley ' s connection , and assaulting the preacher , were brought up from Newgate id the Court of King ' s Bench , to enter into recognizances for their future good behavibui ' : On which occasion , Lord Kenyon gave them a pretty severe lecture ; and concluded by desiring , that the defendants and their suretics would remember , that the same law secured to the Methodists and Dissenters an unmolested right of religious worship , as to the members of the Established Church , and that it was as great an offence to interrupt the former as the latter .

25 . Messrs . Ross and Higgins , two of bis Majesty's messengers in ordinary , arrived in town from Sheffield , having under their charge three persons , of the name of Broomhead , Carnage , and Moody , charged with treasonable and seditious practices . The former acted as secretary to the Jacobin Society held there , and has corresponded with one held in town . Carnage has acted as chairman ; and Moody is charged with having made a number of pikes , near 7 feet long , by direction of Carnage . It was with great difficulty these fellows were secured , the town being in such a state of confusion , that they were obliged to call in a troop of the 16 th Light Dragoons , to escort them out of the town .

2 . 7 , At a Court of Common Council of the City of London , it was . unanimously resolved , That the thanks of that court should be given to Sir Charles Grey , K . B . to Sir John Jervis , K . B . and to the officers , soldiers , and seamen , under their command , for the signal services they have rendered to their country , by their able , gallant , and meritorious conduct in the West Indies : And it was also unanimously resolved , that the freedom of the city should be presented to Sir Charles Grey , and Sir John Jervis , in gold boxes , of the value of ico guineas each . 28 . An Extraordinary Gazette announced a signal victory by General Count

Kaunitz over the French near Rouvcroy , in which the latter lost 5090 men , and 50 pieces of cannon . ' June 3 . Intelligence reached our government , that Marshall Mollendorff had surrounded the French camp at' Keyserslautern , killed 1000 , and taken 2000 prisoners , and iS pieces of cannon . 5 . The Annual Concert of the Royal Society of Musicians was this day given , for the third time , in St . Margaret ' s Church , Westminster ; when the Messiah was performed by command . This oratorio , under the direction of Dr . Arnold , was never mere correctly performed , -and afforded a delicious treat to the admirer ' s of Handel ' s

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