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  • Dec. 31, 1850
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Dec. 31, 1850: Page 65

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Page 65

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

Collectanea.

COLLECTANEA .

AVAS GEN . TAYLOR A MASON ?—We have been frequently asked if the late President was a member of the Masonic Fraternity . AVe have seen it stated that he was the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Louisiana , at the time of his death ! and some of our Brethren have been led into unpleasant dilemmas by assuming that he was a Mason . To prevent a recurrence of similar mistakes , and that the Institution may notthrough inadvertenceor for the want of the proper

informa-, , tion , be exposed to tlie charge of assuming what does not rightfully belong to it , we feel called on to say , that Gen . Taylor was not a Mason . When the direct question was put to him by a friend at AVashington , his answer was , that he had always entertained a favourable opinion of the Institution , that many of his personal friends , and officers of the army with whom he had been associated , were Masons , and that he should probably have been one himself , had not so much

of his time been occupied in camp duties , or had he been more favourably circumstanced to avail himself of the opportunity of joining a Lodge ; and added , " I would do so now , but have got to be too old . " We may not have given the precise words used by the late President in the conversation referred to , but we are sure they are in substance as they were communicated to us by the Brother who was a party to the interview , which took place soon after the inauguration in 1849 . — Freemasons' Monthly Magazine .

SUBORDINATION . —Subordination to the legally constituted authority is a cardinal virtue which should govern every good Mason who has the best interest of the Institution constantly in view . And so should every subordinate Lodge be governed in like manner , byjbe same spirit of subordination ; for it would be a matter of impossibility for our glorious and time-honoured Order to exist for any considerable length of time without complete subordination in all things to the Supreme head of the

Fraternity . If the officers and representatives of that Supreme head ( who all go out from the subordinates ) commit errors in the management of its affairs , or infringe upon the constitutional rights of any , the evil can easily be remedied by those who are subordinate to it , by electing and sending such representatives to said body , as are known to have correct views upon the question in dispute . It will not justify , by anv means , any one in committing " violent and riotous acts , " which are calculated to bring the Masonic Institution into disrepute , because the officers and members of Grand Lodge adopt laws and regulations which conflict with our views upon the subject . —Ibid .

INTERESTING ANECDOTE . —Professor Lawson , in a recent lecture before McMillan Lodge , at Cincinnati , related the following circumstance which occurred at the battle of Buena Vista : — " In the ever memorable and almost unequalled battle of Buena Vista , a scene occurred which , although unknown at the War Office , and untold by the public prints , yet there was no event connected with that wild and fearful struggle more worthy of record . During the fiercest of the fight , while

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1850-12-31, Page 65” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31121850/page/65/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE AND REVIEW. Article 1
THE REVELATIONS OF A SQUARE. Article 7
A DIPLOMATIST'S MEMORY. Article 19
NOTES UPON FUNERAL SOLEMNITIES. Article 25
SONNET TO MASONRY. Article 28
SYMBOL OF GLORY* Article 29
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 40
TO THE EDITOR. Article 41
TO THE EDITOR. Article 42
TO THE EDITOR. Article 43
TO THE EDITOR. Article 44
TO THE EDITOR. Article 45
TO THE EDITOR. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 49
Obituary. Article 53
COLLECTANEA. Article 65
ON THE INAUGURATION OF THE CORONATION STONE, KINGSTON-ON-THAMES, SEPTEMBER 19, 1850. Article 67
THE KINGSTON CORONATION STONE. Article 69
MASONIC CHARITY. Article 69
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 70
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 70
THE 33RD DEGREE FOR ENGLAND AND WALES , AND THE DEPENDENCIES OF THE BRITISH CROWN. Article 75
METROPOLITAN. Article 76
PROVINCIAL. Article 78
IRELAND. Article 99
COLONIAL. Article 101
AMERICA. Article 102
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 104
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. P. %., IPSWIC... Article 108
INDEX. Article 109
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Page 65

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

Collectanea.

COLLECTANEA .

AVAS GEN . TAYLOR A MASON ?—We have been frequently asked if the late President was a member of the Masonic Fraternity . AVe have seen it stated that he was the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Louisiana , at the time of his death ! and some of our Brethren have been led into unpleasant dilemmas by assuming that he was a Mason . To prevent a recurrence of similar mistakes , and that the Institution may notthrough inadvertenceor for the want of the proper

informa-, , tion , be exposed to tlie charge of assuming what does not rightfully belong to it , we feel called on to say , that Gen . Taylor was not a Mason . When the direct question was put to him by a friend at AVashington , his answer was , that he had always entertained a favourable opinion of the Institution , that many of his personal friends , and officers of the army with whom he had been associated , were Masons , and that he should probably have been one himself , had not so much

of his time been occupied in camp duties , or had he been more favourably circumstanced to avail himself of the opportunity of joining a Lodge ; and added , " I would do so now , but have got to be too old . " We may not have given the precise words used by the late President in the conversation referred to , but we are sure they are in substance as they were communicated to us by the Brother who was a party to the interview , which took place soon after the inauguration in 1849 . — Freemasons' Monthly Magazine .

SUBORDINATION . —Subordination to the legally constituted authority is a cardinal virtue which should govern every good Mason who has the best interest of the Institution constantly in view . And so should every subordinate Lodge be governed in like manner , byjbe same spirit of subordination ; for it would be a matter of impossibility for our glorious and time-honoured Order to exist for any considerable length of time without complete subordination in all things to the Supreme head of the

Fraternity . If the officers and representatives of that Supreme head ( who all go out from the subordinates ) commit errors in the management of its affairs , or infringe upon the constitutional rights of any , the evil can easily be remedied by those who are subordinate to it , by electing and sending such representatives to said body , as are known to have correct views upon the question in dispute . It will not justify , by anv means , any one in committing " violent and riotous acts , " which are calculated to bring the Masonic Institution into disrepute , because the officers and members of Grand Lodge adopt laws and regulations which conflict with our views upon the subject . —Ibid .

INTERESTING ANECDOTE . —Professor Lawson , in a recent lecture before McMillan Lodge , at Cincinnati , related the following circumstance which occurred at the battle of Buena Vista : — " In the ever memorable and almost unequalled battle of Buena Vista , a scene occurred which , although unknown at the War Office , and untold by the public prints , yet there was no event connected with that wild and fearful struggle more worthy of record . During the fiercest of the fight , while

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