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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • March 31, 1840
  • Page 30
  • ASYLUM FOR THE AGED AND DECAYED FREEMASON.
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, March 31, 1840: Page 30

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    Article ASYLUM FOR THE AGED AND DECAYED FREEMASON. ← Page 4 of 5 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Asylum For The Aged And Decayed Freemason.

ingham Palace , ugly as it is , cost the country a million and a half . What sort of a building , therefore , can we expect under 40 , 000 / . ? The supporters of the Charity , I know , talk something about building cottages containing three rooms each , either detached or in clusters of two or four together , and have the hardihood to assert that such could be built with taste for about 100 / . a cottage . That they can buy sufficient land for their for about 600 / and build ten cottages to

purpose . begin with for 1 , 000 / . more . I should like to know , if the small portion of taste in Buckingham Palace cost a million and a half , how much , by the Rule of Three , are we likely to get for 100 / . No , if we are to have a building let it be worthy of us , and that cannot be the case under 40 , 000 / . ; add to this 5 , 000 / . for land , and probably 5 , 0001 . lor extras and furniture , and I assert the Asylum cannot be properly built for less than 50 , 000 / .

But whatever the Asylum may cost , however small the sum , still I say that it is so much money thrown away , for when once the stock is drawn from the Bank , it can never more produce interest , and the future dividends will shew the deficiency . The Society may talk of the value of the rental they will save to the old men . —They may assert that a man cannot have three rooms for less than 4 s . a week , and they may prove by fi this amounts to 10 / . 8 * annum for an outlay of 100 / which

gures . per ., in the funds would produce only 3 / . 10 s . ; but this does not alter the argument , that for every 100 / . spent , their dividends will be 3 / . 10 s . per annum less , and , therefore , all the money employed in building is so much clear loss to themselves . As a proof of this fact , I have a friend in a public office , whose salary is 300 / . a year . He had besides in the

Bank 500 / . 3 ^ per cents ., the dividends on which were 17 / . 10 s . more , making his total income 317 / . 10 s . per annum . He rented a house at 40 / . per annum , and afterwards bought the freehold for 500 / ., the proceeds of the stock , and now lives in it , so that his present income is 300 / . only , instead of 317 / . 10 s , being a clear loss of 17 / . 10 s . a year , and yet he fancies he has gained 22 / . 10 s . a year , being the difference , as he says , between his former dividends and the rental he paid for the house .

So much for the blindness of some men . But besides this , as no man ought to set up a carriage until he is able to support it , so ought no man to build a house until he has money in the funds to enable him to live accordingly ; and my friend was wrong in another respect , in buying a house , having no funded property left to sustain the character of a freeholder . To be sure he has his salary of 300 / ., but that may cease from unforeseen circumstances , and in such event how could he live in the house

an he has bought . It is true this example does not exactly apply to the Masons' Asylum , as they talk of not building until they have accumulated a fund for continuing the annuities ; but still their subscriptions may cease , and they will then have no further means of supporting the Asylum than the annuities then existing . I have called the proposed lum Workhouseand I did

Asy a , so advisedly , because the term Workhouse is known to be very unpopular , and the giving a nickname is sometimes the best argument that can be used . I grant that a Workhouse itself is a charitable provision , and saves the lives of many who woul d otherwise starve ; but still it is a forced charity , which men only pay for because they are obliged , as is proved by the fact , that the paupers are not much better fed and clothed than many ofthe rate-payers . It must also be remembered , that

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1840-03-31, Page 30” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31031840/page/30/.
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 1
TO THE REV. GEORGE OLIVER, D.D. Article 2
CONTENT 8. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 5
ON FREEMASONRY. EVIDENCES, DOCTRINES, AND TRADITIONS. Article 13
MASONIC DIDACTICS; OR, SHORT MORAL ESSAYS OF UNIVERSAL ADAPTATION. Article 25
ASYLUM FOR THE AGED AND DECAYED FREEMASON. Article 27
TO THE EDITOR. Article 31
THE ANNALIST. Article 36
THE END OF PERFECTION. Article 41
A MARRIAGE IN THE GRESSONS IN 1792. Article 43
NOTITAE TEMPLARIAE. Article 47
ON THE FIRST CHAPTER OF GENESIS. Article 52
TO THE EDITOR. Article 53
TO THE EDITOR. Article 54
HISTORIC SONNETS. Article 57
THE EARTHQUAKE AT ALEPPO. Article 57
Poetry. Article 58
Poetry. Article 59
Poetry. Article 60
I SING OF THE LAND OF AULD SCOTLAND. Article 60
Poetry. Article 61
PARODY ON "THE SUNFLOWER." Article 61
MIGHT AND RIGHT. Article 62
LINES Article 62
THE ARK LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY. Article 63
" If it was one of the ' original princi... Article 64
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE.* Article 67
SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER. Article 67
QUARTERLY CONVOCATION .-FEB. 6, 1840. Article 68
COMMITTEE OF MASTERS. Article 68
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION.—MARCH 4, 1840. Article 70
THE CHARITIES. Article 71
ASYLUM FOR THE WORTHY AGED AND DECAYED FREEMASONS. Article 76
THE REPORTER. Article 79
MASONIC CHIT CHAT. Article 83
Obituary. Article 86
PROVINCIAL. Article 90
SCOTLAND. Article 101
IRELAND. Article 104
To HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCE ALBERT , K.G. Article 106
FOREIGN. Article 114
INDIA. Article 115
REVIEW OF LITERATURE. Article 120
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 128
INDEX. Article 133
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 135
Boohs. <§¦£.., for Review should be sent... Article 136
Untitled Ad 137
Untitled Ad 138
FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY ADVERTISER, No. XX... Article 139
FREEMASONRY. HIS UOYAL HIGHNESS THE DUKE... Article 139
• FREEMASONRY. 1 ROYAL FREEMASONS' CHARI... Article 139
FREEMASONRY. THE ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTI... Article 140
ASYLUM FOR THE WORTHY AGED AND DECAYED F... Article 140
EREEMASONRY. BROTHER W. POVEY, MASONIC B... Article 140
FREEMASONRY. BROT H E R J. P. ACKLA M, M... Article 141
EREEMASONRY. BROTHERS BROADHURST and Co.... Article 141
ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. COMPANION J. HARRIS,... Article 141
FREEMASONRY. THE EMULATION LODGE OF IMPR... Article 141
FREEMASONRY. MASONIC CLOTHING, FURNITURE... Article 141
MASONIC LIBRARY, 314, HIGH HOLBORN. BRO.... Article 141
PROPOSALS FOR PUBLISHING BY SUBSCRIPTION... Article 142
MASONIC LIBRARY, 314, HIGH HOLBORN. "DRO... Article 142
HAMPTON COURT GRAMMAR SCHOOL. CONDUCTED ... Article 142
ACCOUNTANTSHIP, WITH FIDELITY, ECONOMY, ... Article 142
Preparing for the Press. TEN YEARS' EXPE... Article 143
DEDICATED TO THE CRAFT. Shortly will be ... Article 143
Just Published, Second Edition , 12mo. C... Article 143
Just Published , XSmo. Cloth , Price is.... Article 143
Just Published, Svo., with Plates , Pric... Article 143
Just Published-, Second Edition, Svo. Cl... Article 143
Just Published, Price 3s. Gd. A TREATISE... Article 143
NEW AND USEFUL BOOKS PUBLISHED BY SHERWO... Article 144
EIGHT DA\ r CLOCKS. TO STRIKE THE HOURS ... Article 145
WATCHES, PLATE, AND JEWELLERY. J P. ACKL... Article 145
THE GRAPHIC AI u will be found an invalu... Article 145
PATENT LEVER WATCHES. With Silver double... Article 145
TO PREVENT FRAUD. THORNE'S POTTED YARMOU... Article 146
Magna est Veritas et prwvalebit. GALL'S ... Article 146
THE FARMER'S G E NE R A L FIRE AND LIFE ... Article 147
REFEREES. Acting until Agents be formall... Article 150
PREPARING FOR PUBLICATION, A TRANSLATION... Article 155
SUBSCRIBERS' NAMES. Article 156
Untitled Ad 157
Untitled Ad 158
UNDER THE IMMEDIATE PATRONAGE OF HER ROY... Article 159
THE NEW MONTHLY BELLE ASSEMBLES. 072KSON... Article 160
Tlie Cheapest ami Best Sporting- Magazin... Article 161
THE SPORTSMAN. OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. " ... Article 162
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Page 30

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

Asylum For The Aged And Decayed Freemason.

ingham Palace , ugly as it is , cost the country a million and a half . What sort of a building , therefore , can we expect under 40 , 000 / . ? The supporters of the Charity , I know , talk something about building cottages containing three rooms each , either detached or in clusters of two or four together , and have the hardihood to assert that such could be built with taste for about 100 / . a cottage . That they can buy sufficient land for their for about 600 / and build ten cottages to

purpose . begin with for 1 , 000 / . more . I should like to know , if the small portion of taste in Buckingham Palace cost a million and a half , how much , by the Rule of Three , are we likely to get for 100 / . No , if we are to have a building let it be worthy of us , and that cannot be the case under 40 , 000 / . ; add to this 5 , 000 / . for land , and probably 5 , 0001 . lor extras and furniture , and I assert the Asylum cannot be properly built for less than 50 , 000 / .

But whatever the Asylum may cost , however small the sum , still I say that it is so much money thrown away , for when once the stock is drawn from the Bank , it can never more produce interest , and the future dividends will shew the deficiency . The Society may talk of the value of the rental they will save to the old men . —They may assert that a man cannot have three rooms for less than 4 s . a week , and they may prove by fi this amounts to 10 / . 8 * annum for an outlay of 100 / which

gures . per ., in the funds would produce only 3 / . 10 s . ; but this does not alter the argument , that for every 100 / . spent , their dividends will be 3 / . 10 s . per annum less , and , therefore , all the money employed in building is so much clear loss to themselves . As a proof of this fact , I have a friend in a public office , whose salary is 300 / . a year . He had besides in the

Bank 500 / . 3 ^ per cents ., the dividends on which were 17 / . 10 s . more , making his total income 317 / . 10 s . per annum . He rented a house at 40 / . per annum , and afterwards bought the freehold for 500 / ., the proceeds of the stock , and now lives in it , so that his present income is 300 / . only , instead of 317 / . 10 s , being a clear loss of 17 / . 10 s . a year , and yet he fancies he has gained 22 / . 10 s . a year , being the difference , as he says , between his former dividends and the rental he paid for the house .

So much for the blindness of some men . But besides this , as no man ought to set up a carriage until he is able to support it , so ought no man to build a house until he has money in the funds to enable him to live accordingly ; and my friend was wrong in another respect , in buying a house , having no funded property left to sustain the character of a freeholder . To be sure he has his salary of 300 / ., but that may cease from unforeseen circumstances , and in such event how could he live in the house

an he has bought . It is true this example does not exactly apply to the Masons' Asylum , as they talk of not building until they have accumulated a fund for continuing the annuities ; but still their subscriptions may cease , and they will then have no further means of supporting the Asylum than the annuities then existing . I have called the proposed lum Workhouseand I did

Asy a , so advisedly , because the term Workhouse is known to be very unpopular , and the giving a nickname is sometimes the best argument that can be used . I grant that a Workhouse itself is a charitable provision , and saves the lives of many who woul d otherwise starve ; but still it is a forced charity , which men only pay for because they are obliged , as is proved by the fact , that the paupers are not much better fed and clothed than many ofthe rate-payers . It must also be remembered , that

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