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  • Feb. 1, 1901
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  • Thomas Dunckerley.
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The Masonic Illustrated, Feb. 1, 1901: Page 16

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

Thomas Dunckerley.

Thomas Dunckerley .

AMONGST the many ardent and earnest supporters of 18 th century Masonry , Thomas Dunckerley stands preeminent ; indeed , so conspicuous was the position which he filled in the ranks of his contemporaries that neither before his time , nor since , has any other person held a similar

one . The romantic story of his parentage having been recently published , it is unnecessary to more than briefly allude to it in this sketch . '' Suffice it to say that he was bom in 1724 , probably at Old Somerset House , in which his mother had apartmentsthis old palace being then a Royal Alms-house

, , or home for distinguished pensioners of the Crown , answering precisely the same purpose as Hampton Court Palace has clone since the rebuilding of Somerset House in 177 6-80 , when the former residents , including Dunckerley-, were removed to Hampton Court .

At a very- early period in life he entered the Royal Navy . According to one account he ran away from school at the age of ten and got on board the ship of Sir John Norris , then going abroad , and from the fact of his mentioning in after life the name of Sir John Norris , or " foul weather Jack , " as he was called by the sailors , as one of the commanders under

whose flag he had sailed , there is probably some truth in the popular account of his first entry into the sea-service of his country . However , it is more with his Masonic career than his naval life that we have now to deal . Of the latter very little is known , except that he served with distinction in many ships , chiefly of the larger class , and that he appears to have

enjoyed the friendship and even intimacy of several of his superior officers , although he himself never attained a higher rank in the service than that of gunner , to which important post he was appointed by warrant at the early age of twentytwo , subsequently serving in the dual capacity of gunner and schoolmaster . He took part in the capture of Louisburg , Cape Breton , in 1758 , and of Quebec in the following year . It was on his return , early in 1760 , from the last-named

important action , which resulted in the permanent overthrow of the French domination in North America , that an event occurred which materially affected his subsequent fortunes . At Portsmouth he received news of the death of his mother only a few clays before his arrival there , and , hastening to London , he was in time to attend her funeral . On the return

of the party to Somerset House , Dunckerley was made the recipient of the death-bed confession of his mother , that the then King of England , George II ., was his father . To use Dunckerley's own words , " this information gave me great surprise and much uneasiness , and as I was obliged to return immediately to my duty on board the Vanguard I

made it known to no person at that time but Captain Swanton . He said that those who did not know me would look on it to be nothing more than a gossip's story . " We were then bound a second time to Quebec , and Captain Swanton did promise me that on our return to England he would endeavour to get me introduced to the King , and that he would give me a character , but when we came back to England the King was dead . "

Dunckerley continued to serve his country until 1764 , when , the war being ended , he was , at the interest of Lord Digby , superannuated . At this time , owing to arrears of pay and domestic afflictions , he was in financial difficulties , and in order to avoid arrest for debt he took a trip as a passenger to the Mediterranean with his friend , the Hon . Captain John Ruthven

, in the Guadaloupe frigate . Meanwhile , Dunckerley appears to have had more than one influential friend at court , amongst others , the celebrated Lord Chesterfield , with whom he appears to have been sufficiently intimate long before the question of his parentage came to the front to warrant his ' writing interesting letters

descriptive of various places which he had , in the course of his voyages , visited . In view of his comparatively humble social position it is not easy to account for this condition of things , except upon the hypothesis that although himself in

ignorance of the peculiar circumstances of his parentage and birth , others in higher places were better informed . At all events , owing to the friendly offices of certain gentlemen about the person of the young King , George III ., his mother ' s confession wasin May-1767 laid before that warm-hearted

, , , monarch , who at once ordered . £ 100 a year to be paid to Dunckerley out of his privy purse , which , after investigation , was materially increased , and , according to his biographer , by the munificence of his Sovereign , the Prince of Wales , and the Duke of York , he was placed in a very comfortable situation .

Amongst the early- Masonic writers and historians it was an open question as to the lodge which had the honour of conferring the light of Masonry on the subject of this sketch . Indeed , it was not until a few years ago that this point was definitely settled by the discovery in the archives of the Grand Lodgeby the compiler of the book before referred

, to , of a letter of Dunckerley ' s , dated December 19 th , 1773 , in which he refers to the Lodge of Antiquity , Portsmouth , as his " Mother Lodge . " From another source we learn that he was initiated in 1754 at the age of thirty .

Notwithstanding the exigencies of the service , Dunckerley entered upon his Masonic life with characteristic energy and enthusiasm . His admission into the Craft was followed in the same year by exaltation in the Royal Arch , and less than three years later ( April , 1757 , ) he delivered a charge at the opening of a new Masonic room at Plymouth . He was the

first to hold a regular lodge under the Union Jack in the broad dominions of Father Neptune , a warrant bearing date 16 th January , 1760 , having been granted to him for a lodge to be held on board the Vanguard . On his appointment to the Prince in the following year he lost no time in applying for a warrant for that ship , which was granted in clue course ,

bearing date , 22 nd May , 1762 . This warrant he took with him on board the Guadaloupe in 1764 , and subsequently worked under it in his private apartments at Somerset House , the lodge hence taking the name of the Somerset House Lodge , under which denomination it united with the Old Horn LodgeNo . 2 in 1774 the united lodges being now on

, , , the register of Grand Lodge as the Royal Somerset House and Inverness Lodge , X o . 4 . Of the Vanguard Lodge , as a sea lodge , nothing is known from the time of Dunckerley ' s leaving that ship in the latter part of 1761 until it reappears in 1768 as a full blown lodge in London , meeting at the Queen of Bohemia ' s HeadWych StreetSt . Clementsunder

, , , Dunckerley ' s guidance and protection , he being the first R . W . M . after its resuscitation . In 1772 it was removed to the London Coffee House , Ludgate Hill , then kept by one of his most intimate friends , where it remained for about forty years , taking the name which it still bears , the London Lodge , Xo . 1 . 08 , on the Grand Lodge register .

With the exception of the time devoted to legal studies , between 1770 and 1774—he was called to the bar in the year last named—Dunckerley gave his whole time to the best interests of Freemasonry . In addition to the two lodges before mentioned , he joined or became a founder of several others , both in town and Country ; it is , however , as a Provincial

Grand Master and a Superintendent of the Royal Arch that his name is best known in the annals of Masonry . Commencing in Februarys , 1767 , as Prov . Grand Master for Hampshire , he filled the same office with conspicuous ability for the Provinces of Bristol , Dorset , Essex , Gloucester , the Isle of Wight , Hereford , Somerset , Southampton , and

Wiltshire . In addition to being Superintendent of Royal Arch Masonry in the above-named provinces , he filled that office in Cornwall , Devon , Durham , Kent , Xottinghamshire , Suffolk , Surrey , and Sussex , besides being the first Grand Master of the Masonic Knights Templars in England , as well

as the acknowledged head and organizer of that body during his lifetime . Most of these offices he held at the same time , and , indeed , did little but travel about the country impressing on his constituents the necessity of properly conducting their lodges and chapters , subscribing liberally to the Charity Fund of Grand Lodge , the Hall Fund , and the Fund for the support of the Royal Cumberland School , now known as the Royal Masonic Institution lor Girls .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1901-02-01, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01021901/page/16/.
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Untitled Article 1
The Grand Lodge Life-boats. Article 2
Freemasonry in the West Indies. Article 6
Lodge of Edinburgh (Mary's Chapel), No. 1. Article 6
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 8
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Provincial Grand Chapter of Gloucestershire. Article 11
Bro. Sir Robert Harvey. Article 11
B ro. Joseph Albert Arnold. Article 11
Untitled Ad 12
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Untitled Ad 12
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The Queen and the Craft. Article 12
Untitled Article 13
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 14
Thomas Dunckerley. Article 16
The late Bro. the Rev. C. J. Martyn. Article 18
Untitled Ad 18
Untitled Ad 18
Untitled Ad 18
Masonic Extracts from 18th Century Newspapers. Article 19
A Last Century Silver Wedding. Article 20
Derby Allcroft Lodge, No. 2168. Article 22
Savage Club Lodge, No. 2190. Article 22
Royal Masonic Institution for Boys. Article 24
Untitled Ad 24
Reviews. Article 24
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 24
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Thomas Dunckerley.

Thomas Dunckerley .

AMONGST the many ardent and earnest supporters of 18 th century Masonry , Thomas Dunckerley stands preeminent ; indeed , so conspicuous was the position which he filled in the ranks of his contemporaries that neither before his time , nor since , has any other person held a similar

one . The romantic story of his parentage having been recently published , it is unnecessary to more than briefly allude to it in this sketch . '' Suffice it to say that he was bom in 1724 , probably at Old Somerset House , in which his mother had apartmentsthis old palace being then a Royal Alms-house

, , or home for distinguished pensioners of the Crown , answering precisely the same purpose as Hampton Court Palace has clone since the rebuilding of Somerset House in 177 6-80 , when the former residents , including Dunckerley-, were removed to Hampton Court .

At a very- early period in life he entered the Royal Navy . According to one account he ran away from school at the age of ten and got on board the ship of Sir John Norris , then going abroad , and from the fact of his mentioning in after life the name of Sir John Norris , or " foul weather Jack , " as he was called by the sailors , as one of the commanders under

whose flag he had sailed , there is probably some truth in the popular account of his first entry into the sea-service of his country . However , it is more with his Masonic career than his naval life that we have now to deal . Of the latter very little is known , except that he served with distinction in many ships , chiefly of the larger class , and that he appears to have

enjoyed the friendship and even intimacy of several of his superior officers , although he himself never attained a higher rank in the service than that of gunner , to which important post he was appointed by warrant at the early age of twentytwo , subsequently serving in the dual capacity of gunner and schoolmaster . He took part in the capture of Louisburg , Cape Breton , in 1758 , and of Quebec in the following year . It was on his return , early in 1760 , from the last-named

important action , which resulted in the permanent overthrow of the French domination in North America , that an event occurred which materially affected his subsequent fortunes . At Portsmouth he received news of the death of his mother only a few clays before his arrival there , and , hastening to London , he was in time to attend her funeral . On the return

of the party to Somerset House , Dunckerley was made the recipient of the death-bed confession of his mother , that the then King of England , George II ., was his father . To use Dunckerley's own words , " this information gave me great surprise and much uneasiness , and as I was obliged to return immediately to my duty on board the Vanguard I

made it known to no person at that time but Captain Swanton . He said that those who did not know me would look on it to be nothing more than a gossip's story . " We were then bound a second time to Quebec , and Captain Swanton did promise me that on our return to England he would endeavour to get me introduced to the King , and that he would give me a character , but when we came back to England the King was dead . "

Dunckerley continued to serve his country until 1764 , when , the war being ended , he was , at the interest of Lord Digby , superannuated . At this time , owing to arrears of pay and domestic afflictions , he was in financial difficulties , and in order to avoid arrest for debt he took a trip as a passenger to the Mediterranean with his friend , the Hon . Captain John Ruthven

, in the Guadaloupe frigate . Meanwhile , Dunckerley appears to have had more than one influential friend at court , amongst others , the celebrated Lord Chesterfield , with whom he appears to have been sufficiently intimate long before the question of his parentage came to the front to warrant his ' writing interesting letters

descriptive of various places which he had , in the course of his voyages , visited . In view of his comparatively humble social position it is not easy to account for this condition of things , except upon the hypothesis that although himself in

ignorance of the peculiar circumstances of his parentage and birth , others in higher places were better informed . At all events , owing to the friendly offices of certain gentlemen about the person of the young King , George III ., his mother ' s confession wasin May-1767 laid before that warm-hearted

, , , monarch , who at once ordered . £ 100 a year to be paid to Dunckerley out of his privy purse , which , after investigation , was materially increased , and , according to his biographer , by the munificence of his Sovereign , the Prince of Wales , and the Duke of York , he was placed in a very comfortable situation .

Amongst the early- Masonic writers and historians it was an open question as to the lodge which had the honour of conferring the light of Masonry on the subject of this sketch . Indeed , it was not until a few years ago that this point was definitely settled by the discovery in the archives of the Grand Lodgeby the compiler of the book before referred

, to , of a letter of Dunckerley ' s , dated December 19 th , 1773 , in which he refers to the Lodge of Antiquity , Portsmouth , as his " Mother Lodge . " From another source we learn that he was initiated in 1754 at the age of thirty .

Notwithstanding the exigencies of the service , Dunckerley entered upon his Masonic life with characteristic energy and enthusiasm . His admission into the Craft was followed in the same year by exaltation in the Royal Arch , and less than three years later ( April , 1757 , ) he delivered a charge at the opening of a new Masonic room at Plymouth . He was the

first to hold a regular lodge under the Union Jack in the broad dominions of Father Neptune , a warrant bearing date 16 th January , 1760 , having been granted to him for a lodge to be held on board the Vanguard . On his appointment to the Prince in the following year he lost no time in applying for a warrant for that ship , which was granted in clue course ,

bearing date , 22 nd May , 1762 . This warrant he took with him on board the Guadaloupe in 1764 , and subsequently worked under it in his private apartments at Somerset House , the lodge hence taking the name of the Somerset House Lodge , under which denomination it united with the Old Horn LodgeNo . 2 in 1774 the united lodges being now on

, , , the register of Grand Lodge as the Royal Somerset House and Inverness Lodge , X o . 4 . Of the Vanguard Lodge , as a sea lodge , nothing is known from the time of Dunckerley ' s leaving that ship in the latter part of 1761 until it reappears in 1768 as a full blown lodge in London , meeting at the Queen of Bohemia ' s HeadWych StreetSt . Clementsunder

, , , Dunckerley ' s guidance and protection , he being the first R . W . M . after its resuscitation . In 1772 it was removed to the London Coffee House , Ludgate Hill , then kept by one of his most intimate friends , where it remained for about forty years , taking the name which it still bears , the London Lodge , Xo . 1 . 08 , on the Grand Lodge register .

With the exception of the time devoted to legal studies , between 1770 and 1774—he was called to the bar in the year last named—Dunckerley gave his whole time to the best interests of Freemasonry . In addition to the two lodges before mentioned , he joined or became a founder of several others , both in town and Country ; it is , however , as a Provincial

Grand Master and a Superintendent of the Royal Arch that his name is best known in the annals of Masonry . Commencing in Februarys , 1767 , as Prov . Grand Master for Hampshire , he filled the same office with conspicuous ability for the Provinces of Bristol , Dorset , Essex , Gloucester , the Isle of Wight , Hereford , Somerset , Southampton , and

Wiltshire . In addition to being Superintendent of Royal Arch Masonry in the above-named provinces , he filled that office in Cornwall , Devon , Durham , Kent , Xottinghamshire , Suffolk , Surrey , and Sussex , besides being the first Grand Master of the Masonic Knights Templars in England , as well

as the acknowledged head and organizer of that body during his lifetime . Most of these offices he held at the same time , and , indeed , did little but travel about the country impressing on his constituents the necessity of properly conducting their lodges and chapters , subscribing liberally to the Charity Fund of Grand Lodge , the Hall Fund , and the Fund for the support of the Royal Cumberland School , now known as the Royal Masonic Institution lor Girls .

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