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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • Dec. 31, 1851
  • Page 134
  • AMERlCA.
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Dec. 31, 1851: Page 134

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Page 134

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

Amerlca.

AMERlCA .

AA ^ e have great pleasure in calling attention to the following circular address , and will gladly receive any amount of subscription which may be forwarded to us , for the purpose of advancing the cause , for which assistance is urged . —ED . F . Q . M . and R . " To the M . AV . G . Masters , AVardens , and Brothers of the Grand Lodges of the United States and of Europe , and to the AV . Masters , Officers and Brethren of the Subordinate Lodges under their respective

jurisdictions . "At the Annual Communication of the M . AV . G . L . of the State of California , the following resolution was unanimously adopted : — " AVhereas , Several of the Lodges under this jurisdiction , and the members thereof , by their great liberality to strange Brothers , have become indebted for greater amounts than they are able to pay , therefore ,

" Resolved , that a Committee of seven be appointed to address a circular to other Grand and Subordinate Lodges , setting forth the amount and nature of the embarrassments aforesaid , and for what cause incurred , which circular shall be published with the proceedings of this Grand Lodge . " The undersigned wereappointed that Committee , and in the discharge of their duties , beg your indulgence to state : That at an early period in the history of the immense emigration into this new country from every State in the Union , and from every part of Europe , it was found that

vast numbers came without any adequate knowledge of the nature or extent of the wants to which they would become exposed , in the prosecution of the mining enterprises which they came to pursue , as well as without any idea of the causes which have been found to operate in breaking down their health and constitutions . They , therefore , came most lamentably unsupplied with any other means of providing for their necessities than their capacities for labour . It therefore happened in the autumn of 1849 and the succeeding winterthat large numbers

, , were compelled to leave the mining districts , and repaired to Sacramento City for medical advice , and for attendance in sickness . As a considerable number of such sick and destitute persons were members of the Masonic Fraternity , they naturally and of right made their condition known to their Brethren , then established at that place . " Under a most generous impulse , and a lively sense of their obligations , the Brethren undertook to institute a sanitary establishment , that should

supply the place of a hospital . At that time municipal government had not been organised , and public affairs were conducted chiefly on the voluntary principle . So it was in the case of the health establishment set up by the Masons . They found , however , that the demands upon them were , in the course of a few months , increased to an extent greater than they had anticipated , and greater than their own means , and the contributions which they could collect , would enable them to meet . They could not , however , go back , nor could they abandon the sufferers xvhom they had been obliged to receive , and whose numbers were greatly

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1851-12-31, Page 134” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31121851/page/134/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE AND REVIEW. Article 1
THE REVELATIONS OF A SQUARE. Article 9
THE DWARFS' TAILOR, BY APPOINTMENT. Article 23
ADVANTAGES RESULTING FROM THE STUDY OF HERALDRY. Article 37
ANCIENT MASONS' MARKS. Article 44
PRETENDED MASONIC REVELATIONS. Article 53
AN ARCTIC SERENADE. Article 61
BIOGRAPHICAL TABLEAU. Article 62
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 69
TO THE EDITOR. Article 72
Obituary. Article 73
UNITED GRAND LODGE . Article 76
THE ' 33RD DEGREE FOE ENGLAND AND WALES , AND THE DEPENDENCIES OF THE BRITISH CROWN. Article 81
THE CHARITIES. Article 84
METROPOLITAN. Article 85
PROVINCIAL. Article 93
SCOTLAND. Article 127
IRELAND. Article 130
FOREIGN AND COLONIAL. Article 132
AMERlCA. Article 134
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 136
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 139
INDEX. Article 141
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Page 134

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

Amerlca.

AMERlCA .

AA ^ e have great pleasure in calling attention to the following circular address , and will gladly receive any amount of subscription which may be forwarded to us , for the purpose of advancing the cause , for which assistance is urged . —ED . F . Q . M . and R . " To the M . AV . G . Masters , AVardens , and Brothers of the Grand Lodges of the United States and of Europe , and to the AV . Masters , Officers and Brethren of the Subordinate Lodges under their respective

jurisdictions . "At the Annual Communication of the M . AV . G . L . of the State of California , the following resolution was unanimously adopted : — " AVhereas , Several of the Lodges under this jurisdiction , and the members thereof , by their great liberality to strange Brothers , have become indebted for greater amounts than they are able to pay , therefore ,

" Resolved , that a Committee of seven be appointed to address a circular to other Grand and Subordinate Lodges , setting forth the amount and nature of the embarrassments aforesaid , and for what cause incurred , which circular shall be published with the proceedings of this Grand Lodge . " The undersigned wereappointed that Committee , and in the discharge of their duties , beg your indulgence to state : That at an early period in the history of the immense emigration into this new country from every State in the Union , and from every part of Europe , it was found that

vast numbers came without any adequate knowledge of the nature or extent of the wants to which they would become exposed , in the prosecution of the mining enterprises which they came to pursue , as well as without any idea of the causes which have been found to operate in breaking down their health and constitutions . They , therefore , came most lamentably unsupplied with any other means of providing for their necessities than their capacities for labour . It therefore happened in the autumn of 1849 and the succeeding winterthat large numbers

, , were compelled to leave the mining districts , and repaired to Sacramento City for medical advice , and for attendance in sickness . As a considerable number of such sick and destitute persons were members of the Masonic Fraternity , they naturally and of right made their condition known to their Brethren , then established at that place . " Under a most generous impulse , and a lively sense of their obligations , the Brethren undertook to institute a sanitary establishment , that should

supply the place of a hospital . At that time municipal government had not been organised , and public affairs were conducted chiefly on the voluntary principle . So it was in the case of the health establishment set up by the Masons . They found , however , that the demands upon them were , in the course of a few months , increased to an extent greater than they had anticipated , and greater than their own means , and the contributions which they could collect , would enable them to meet . They could not , however , go back , nor could they abandon the sufferers xvhom they had been obliged to receive , and whose numbers were greatly

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