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  • May 1, 1904
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  • Installation Meeting of the Galen Lodge, No.2394.
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The Masonic Illustrated, May 1, 1904: Page 9

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Installation Meeting Of The Galen Lodge, No.2394.

Installation Meeting of the Galen Lodge, No .2394 .

^ TOTVVITHSTANDIi ^ T G occurrence of consecra-J tion of the Orchestral Lodge on the same evening , which prevented the attendance of many well known brethren , the annual installation meeting of the above lodge was very successfully held on Monday , the nth instant , at

Freemasons' Hall . A successful year of office had been concluded under the guidance of Bro . T . H . W . Iclris , and a new era was ushered in under the auspices of Bro . C . J . Strother , who was installed by Bro . Fred Bascombe , P . M . of the lodge and

of 1287 . Amongst members and visitors present were noticed : —Bros . E . C . Mulvey , P . G . P . ; C . J . Strother , W . M . ; T . H . W . Iclris , I . P . M . ; J . B . S . Lancaster , P . P . G . St . B . Surrey , Sec . ; W . J . Rogerson , P . P . G . D . C . Notts , D . C . ; Fred Bascombe , P . M ., Steward ; J . J . Arrow , S . W . ; W . J up p .

P . M ., J . W . ; A . W . Gerrard , P . M . ; J . H . Bidwell , P . M . 2120 , P . P . G . D . C . Surrey ; W . Croucher , P . M . 534 ; M . Whelan , 343 , Canada ; H . Stokes , P . M . 8 34 ; J . Gerson , P . M . 18 5 ; C . James , P . M . 15 ; A . Dyson , W . M . 194 ; J . H . Arrow , S . D . ; G . Peters , J . D . ; T . Cleave , 2662 ; R . Lang Sims ; G . R . H . Clark , Mus . Baa , P . M ., Orgt . ; J . H . Gradidge , Asst . Steward , and many others .

THE WORSHIPFUL MASTER , The proposition of a joining member terminated the lodge proceedings . The subsequent banquet was held at Freemasons'Tavern

, and was participated in by between forty and fifty brethren representing pharmacy and its kindred branches in many parts of London . The toast of " The Grand Officers , " in the absence of Bro . R . Clay Sudlow , who had attended the lodge for a

short time only , was responded to by Bro . E . C . Mulvey , P . G . P . " The Health cf the Worshipful Master , Bro . Strother , " was the occasion of complimentary remarks by Bro . Iclris , the I . P . M ., on his successor . The sight of Bro . Strother

always reminded him of the Galen motto , " Lift up your hearts , " for one could always do so in Bro . Strother ' s company .

In reply , the Worshipful Master felt , he said , much diffidence in responding to the toast of his health , which was induced not less by the Mattering remarks made by the preceding speaker , than for the reason that he was extremelv sensible of his comparative inexperience in Masonry ,

surrounded as he was by soman } - Past Masters of experience . He did not yet feel sufficiently an autocrat , he said , to rule his lodge without the full assistance of his junior officers . He hoped they would all , like a team , fall into their places , and that it would not be long before the lodge work would

have attained such excellence as to be an example for other lodges . In proposing the toast of " The Immediate Past and Installing Masters , " the W . M . said they had on the one hand a brother—Bro . Bascombe—so well versed in his work that

he felt some temerity in presuming to speak of it , while on the other they had in the I . P . M . a brother well known both in and out of the lodge , tha . t he had often been asked if Bro . Iclris was so elastic as to be able to Jill with credit so many positions at the same time . The brethren knew that

Bro . Iclris had not once been absent from his place in the lodge during the time he had filled the chair . It was with the assistance of such capable brethren that he looked forward with hope to the coming year . In reply , Bro . T . H . W . Iclris , I . P . M ., said that to be of service in Masonry , no less than in pharmacy , composed the highest aspirations of his life .

Bro . Fred Bascombe , P . M ., the Installing Master , in his reply , expressed his pleasure at having been able to instal a fourth Master into the chair of that lodge . His assistance was always , he need hardly say , at the disposal of the Galen Lodge . In alluding to the excellent performance of the lodge in its assistance to him as a Steward for the last

Benevolent Festival , he congratulated it on giving him more support than he received from his mother lodge , although the proportion of London members in that lodge was two to their one . The toast of " The Visitors " was replied to by Bros .

Dyson , Croucher , Cleave and others , while Bro . J . B . S . Lancaster , P . M ., P . P . G . St . B . Surrey , answered to the toast which stood in his and the Treasurer's name . He regretted that the last-named brother was not present by reason of illness , and in well chosen words assured the brethren of his

willingness to continue at his post . " The Healths of the Officers of the Lodge " was next drunk and fittingly responded to by the Senior and Junior Wardens , bringing to a close an evening in all respects befitting the excellent character of the lodge .

Bro . Charles John Strother , the newly-installed Master , has had a somewhat exciting and interesting life . Left an orphan within his first decade , having lost his father at the age of four and his mother at nine , at the instance of his guardian , the late Samuel H . Lindley , Editor of the Naval and Military Gazelle , he went abroad both to finish his education and earn his living .

At twenty-three he was assistant to M . Depaix , the King ' s chemist in Brussels , at the time when every effort was being made to keep alive the young Prince Royal , only son of the King of the Belgians . Afterwards employed in Germany and Parishe lived with three French pharmacists until the

, commencement of the Franco-German war , when he volunteered for the ambulance . He was in the Siege of Paris , and received the bronze cross for services on the field and in the ambulance of the French Red Cross Society . In 1872 he returned to London , becoming the manager of

E . R . Hartnell , the first " all-night " pharmacy in London . As correspondent for his guardian he was at Camden House , Chiselhurst , on the coming of age of the Prince Imperial , and was one of those who received a bunch of violets in the death chamber of Napoleon III .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1904-05-01, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01051904/page/9/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
United Grand Lodge of England. Article 2
The New Grand Officers. Article 2
Installation Meeting of the Galen Lodge, No.2394. Article 9
Installation Meeting of the St. Martin's Lodge, No. 2455. Article 10
Installation Meeting of the Borough of Bethnal Green Lodge, No. 2896. Article 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
The Masonic Veteran. Article 12
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 13
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Installation Meeting of the Willing Lodge, No. 2893. Article 16
Untitled Article 16
An American Host. Article 17
Untitled Ad 17
Untitled Ad 17
Consecration of the Vincent Lodge, No. 3031. Article 18
Untitled Ad 18
Grand Lodge of Scotland. Article 18
Untitled Article 18
Untitled Ad 18
Some Memorials of the Globe Lodge, No. 23, and of the "Red Apron.'' Article 19
A Concise History of Freemasonry. Article 22
Untitled Ad 22
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 24
Masonic Benevolence in West Yorkshire. 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.

Installation Meeting Of The Galen Lodge, No.2394.

Installation Meeting of the Galen Lodge, No .2394 .

^ TOTVVITHSTANDIi ^ T G occurrence of consecra-J tion of the Orchestral Lodge on the same evening , which prevented the attendance of many well known brethren , the annual installation meeting of the above lodge was very successfully held on Monday , the nth instant , at

Freemasons' Hall . A successful year of office had been concluded under the guidance of Bro . T . H . W . Iclris , and a new era was ushered in under the auspices of Bro . C . J . Strother , who was installed by Bro . Fred Bascombe , P . M . of the lodge and

of 1287 . Amongst members and visitors present were noticed : —Bros . E . C . Mulvey , P . G . P . ; C . J . Strother , W . M . ; T . H . W . Iclris , I . P . M . ; J . B . S . Lancaster , P . P . G . St . B . Surrey , Sec . ; W . J . Rogerson , P . P . G . D . C . Notts , D . C . ; Fred Bascombe , P . M ., Steward ; J . J . Arrow , S . W . ; W . J up p .

P . M ., J . W . ; A . W . Gerrard , P . M . ; J . H . Bidwell , P . M . 2120 , P . P . G . D . C . Surrey ; W . Croucher , P . M . 534 ; M . Whelan , 343 , Canada ; H . Stokes , P . M . 8 34 ; J . Gerson , P . M . 18 5 ; C . James , P . M . 15 ; A . Dyson , W . M . 194 ; J . H . Arrow , S . D . ; G . Peters , J . D . ; T . Cleave , 2662 ; R . Lang Sims ; G . R . H . Clark , Mus . Baa , P . M ., Orgt . ; J . H . Gradidge , Asst . Steward , and many others .

THE WORSHIPFUL MASTER , The proposition of a joining member terminated the lodge proceedings . The subsequent banquet was held at Freemasons'Tavern

, and was participated in by between forty and fifty brethren representing pharmacy and its kindred branches in many parts of London . The toast of " The Grand Officers , " in the absence of Bro . R . Clay Sudlow , who had attended the lodge for a

short time only , was responded to by Bro . E . C . Mulvey , P . G . P . " The Health cf the Worshipful Master , Bro . Strother , " was the occasion of complimentary remarks by Bro . Iclris , the I . P . M ., on his successor . The sight of Bro . Strother

always reminded him of the Galen motto , " Lift up your hearts , " for one could always do so in Bro . Strother ' s company .

In reply , the Worshipful Master felt , he said , much diffidence in responding to the toast of his health , which was induced not less by the Mattering remarks made by the preceding speaker , than for the reason that he was extremelv sensible of his comparative inexperience in Masonry ,

surrounded as he was by soman } - Past Masters of experience . He did not yet feel sufficiently an autocrat , he said , to rule his lodge without the full assistance of his junior officers . He hoped they would all , like a team , fall into their places , and that it would not be long before the lodge work would

have attained such excellence as to be an example for other lodges . In proposing the toast of " The Immediate Past and Installing Masters , " the W . M . said they had on the one hand a brother—Bro . Bascombe—so well versed in his work that

he felt some temerity in presuming to speak of it , while on the other they had in the I . P . M . a brother well known both in and out of the lodge , tha . t he had often been asked if Bro . Iclris was so elastic as to be able to Jill with credit so many positions at the same time . The brethren knew that

Bro . Iclris had not once been absent from his place in the lodge during the time he had filled the chair . It was with the assistance of such capable brethren that he looked forward with hope to the coming year . In reply , Bro . T . H . W . Iclris , I . P . M ., said that to be of service in Masonry , no less than in pharmacy , composed the highest aspirations of his life .

Bro . Fred Bascombe , P . M ., the Installing Master , in his reply , expressed his pleasure at having been able to instal a fourth Master into the chair of that lodge . His assistance was always , he need hardly say , at the disposal of the Galen Lodge . In alluding to the excellent performance of the lodge in its assistance to him as a Steward for the last

Benevolent Festival , he congratulated it on giving him more support than he received from his mother lodge , although the proportion of London members in that lodge was two to their one . The toast of " The Visitors " was replied to by Bros .

Dyson , Croucher , Cleave and others , while Bro . J . B . S . Lancaster , P . M ., P . P . G . St . B . Surrey , answered to the toast which stood in his and the Treasurer's name . He regretted that the last-named brother was not present by reason of illness , and in well chosen words assured the brethren of his

willingness to continue at his post . " The Healths of the Officers of the Lodge " was next drunk and fittingly responded to by the Senior and Junior Wardens , bringing to a close an evening in all respects befitting the excellent character of the lodge .

Bro . Charles John Strother , the newly-installed Master , has had a somewhat exciting and interesting life . Left an orphan within his first decade , having lost his father at the age of four and his mother at nine , at the instance of his guardian , the late Samuel H . Lindley , Editor of the Naval and Military Gazelle , he went abroad both to finish his education and earn his living .

At twenty-three he was assistant to M . Depaix , the King ' s chemist in Brussels , at the time when every effort was being made to keep alive the young Prince Royal , only son of the King of the Belgians . Afterwards employed in Germany and Parishe lived with three French pharmacists until the

, commencement of the Franco-German war , when he volunteered for the ambulance . He was in the Siege of Paris , and received the bronze cross for services on the field and in the ambulance of the French Red Cross Society . In 1872 he returned to London , becoming the manager of

E . R . Hartnell , the first " all-night " pharmacy in London . As correspondent for his guardian he was at Camden House , Chiselhurst , on the coming of age of the Prince Imperial , and was one of those who received a bunch of violets in the death chamber of Napoleon III .

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