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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • Sept. 30, 1852
  • Page 95
  • ROYAL FREEMASONS' GIRLS' SCHOOL.
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1852: Page 95

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    Article ROYAL FREEMASONS' GIRLS' SCHOOL. ← Page 7 of 13 →
Page 95

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

Royal Freemasons' Girls' School.

therly love , relief , aud truth ; " " Hail , Masonry ! " " Faith , Hope , and Charity ; " " Lord , we beseech thee send us prosperity , " & c . & c , all executed in white on a blue ground . At the upper end ivas the Grand Master ' s chair , flanked by pedestals for tho reception of tlio cornucopia and tbe vessels of wine and oil , the raised platforms of which we have spoken , and at the lower part of the room was another raised platformfor the accommodation of the ladieswho were to

, , present purses of 51 . 5 s . —• no other persons , with the exception of those having to take part in the ceremony , and the representatives of the press , being admitted . , The children having been duly seated , the remainder of the procession proceeded towards the door of the dedication chamber , where it halted , the Brethren dividing to the ri ght and the left , facing inwards , so as to form an avenue through which the M . W . Grand

Master passed into the chamber , preceded by the Grand Sword Bearer , and the Brethren bearing the ewers of wine ancl oil , aud the cornucopia containing the corn , and followed by the Deputy Grand Master , ancl the other Grand Officers . The Grand Master having taken his seat , the vessels deposited on the pedestals prepared for their reception , and the Brethren ranged on either side of the room ,

Bro . HARDIVIOKE , the Grand Superintendent of Works , stepped forward in front ofthe throne , and , as nearly as we could understand him . in the unfavourable position in which we were placed , said , —Most Worshipful Grand Master , as the Grand Superintendent of Works , I have , on this occasion , to submit to you tho plan of the building in which wo are now assembled . Had we now been brought together to perform the ceremony of laying tho foundation stone instead of dedicating the building , I should have been prepared to submit tho plans to your approval , ancl receive from you , Most Woi-shipfi . il Grand Master , any suggestions for their improvement . It is now , however , too late for that , but believe state that the Committee

I I may , to whom the plans wore submitted prior to the commencement of the building-, fully considered and approved them , and I trust that the works havo been so carried out , as to meet ivith your and the Committee ' s fullest approval , ancl to give general satisfaction to the Brethren . This Charity has now existed more than half a century . Indeed , it is upwards of sixty years since the school was first established in tho building it has up to this time occupied iu the Westminster Bridge Road . I have no doubt that at the period when tho school was established , that appeared to bo a very proper sito in the suburbs of London ; but in the lapse of time that has since intervened

, great alterations have taken place in the nei ghbourhood , ancl the school-house is now surrounded with much that is objectionable . As Grancl Superintendent of Works , I well know that the site of the old school-house is low , swampy , and ill-drained , —and , further , that it does not afford the means of giving that accommodation to the inmates , which is desirable in an establishment of this description . Those and other circumstances connected ivith the expiration ofthe lease , induced the Committee of Management to determine on tho removal of the school to a more fitting site . After great consideration , the sito upon which tho building , in which we are now assembled , stands , was soleeted on account of the salubritof its hereits soil

y atmosp , dry , ancl commanding- position , and 1 haye now , Most Worshipful Grand Master , to present you ivith tho plan of tho building , which Iboliovo will be found to possess admirable drainage , to be roploto with accommodation , ancl to combine all the advantages which modern science can devise for sanitary purposes . We have transplanted om- tree to this most favoured soil , where I trust it will extend its branches both far and wide , ancl strike its roots downwards , so as to place it iu that firm position , which will enable tho managers of our school to tako under their protection a greater number of the children of our poorer Brethren , than oven the most sanguine hopes ot the benevolent founder ofthe institution could over have anticipated , ancl afford them the benefits of that moral and religious education , which will not onlv make thom good and useful members of society in this world , but lead them to

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1852-09-30, Page 95” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091852/page/95/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE AND REVIEW. Article 1
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 9
Obituary Article 12
THE REVELATIONS OF A SQUARE. Article 13
ALVISE SANUTO. A TALE OF THE VENETIAN REPUBLIC. Article 32
THE BRASS THUMB. Article 35
ANCIENT MASONS' MARKS. Article 44
THE SAILOR FREEMASON. Article 53
BROTHER OR NO BROTHER; OR, WHICH WAS THE WISER ? Article 58
SHAKSPERE'S OTHELLO. Article 63
THE POET'S PLEA FOR LOVE. Article 70
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 71
MASONRY IN SCOTLAND. Article 79
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 86
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 88
ROYAL FREEMASONS' GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 89
METROPOLITAN. Article 101
PROVINCIAL. Article 102
SCOTLAND. Article 114
IRELAND. Article 124
COLONIAL. Article 127
MADRAS. Article 130
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 133
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 135
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Page 95

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

Royal Freemasons' Girls' School.

therly love , relief , aud truth ; " " Hail , Masonry ! " " Faith , Hope , and Charity ; " " Lord , we beseech thee send us prosperity , " & c . & c , all executed in white on a blue ground . At the upper end ivas the Grand Master ' s chair , flanked by pedestals for tho reception of tlio cornucopia and tbe vessels of wine and oil , the raised platforms of which we have spoken , and at the lower part of the room was another raised platformfor the accommodation of the ladieswho were to

, , present purses of 51 . 5 s . —• no other persons , with the exception of those having to take part in the ceremony , and the representatives of the press , being admitted . , The children having been duly seated , the remainder of the procession proceeded towards the door of the dedication chamber , where it halted , the Brethren dividing to the ri ght and the left , facing inwards , so as to form an avenue through which the M . W . Grand

Master passed into the chamber , preceded by the Grand Sword Bearer , and the Brethren bearing the ewers of wine ancl oil , aud the cornucopia containing the corn , and followed by the Deputy Grand Master , ancl the other Grand Officers . The Grand Master having taken his seat , the vessels deposited on the pedestals prepared for their reception , and the Brethren ranged on either side of the room ,

Bro . HARDIVIOKE , the Grand Superintendent of Works , stepped forward in front ofthe throne , and , as nearly as we could understand him . in the unfavourable position in which we were placed , said , —Most Worshipful Grand Master , as the Grand Superintendent of Works , I have , on this occasion , to submit to you tho plan of the building in which wo are now assembled . Had we now been brought together to perform the ceremony of laying tho foundation stone instead of dedicating the building , I should have been prepared to submit tho plans to your approval , ancl receive from you , Most Woi-shipfi . il Grand Master , any suggestions for their improvement . It is now , however , too late for that , but believe state that the Committee

I I may , to whom the plans wore submitted prior to the commencement of the building-, fully considered and approved them , and I trust that the works havo been so carried out , as to meet ivith your and the Committee ' s fullest approval , ancl to give general satisfaction to the Brethren . This Charity has now existed more than half a century . Indeed , it is upwards of sixty years since the school was first established in tho building it has up to this time occupied iu the Westminster Bridge Road . I have no doubt that at the period when tho school was established , that appeared to bo a very proper sito in the suburbs of London ; but in the lapse of time that has since intervened

, great alterations have taken place in the nei ghbourhood , ancl the school-house is now surrounded with much that is objectionable . As Grancl Superintendent of Works , I well know that the site of the old school-house is low , swampy , and ill-drained , —and , further , that it does not afford the means of giving that accommodation to the inmates , which is desirable in an establishment of this description . Those and other circumstances connected ivith the expiration ofthe lease , induced the Committee of Management to determine on tho removal of the school to a more fitting site . After great consideration , the sito upon which tho building , in which we are now assembled , stands , was soleeted on account of the salubritof its hereits soil

y atmosp , dry , ancl commanding- position , and 1 haye now , Most Worshipful Grand Master , to present you ivith tho plan of tho building , which Iboliovo will be found to possess admirable drainage , to be roploto with accommodation , ancl to combine all the advantages which modern science can devise for sanitary purposes . We have transplanted om- tree to this most favoured soil , where I trust it will extend its branches both far and wide , ancl strike its roots downwards , so as to place it iu that firm position , which will enable tho managers of our school to tako under their protection a greater number of the children of our poorer Brethren , than oven the most sanguine hopes ot the benevolent founder ofthe institution could over have anticipated , ancl afford them the benefits of that moral and religious education , which will not onlv make thom good and useful members of society in this world , but lead them to

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