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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Aug. 1, 1905
  • Page 18
  • A Short History of the Lodge of Emulation, No. 21.
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The Masonic Illustrated, Aug. 1, 1905: Page 18

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    Article A Short History of the Lodge of Emulation, No. 21. ← Page 2 of 4 →
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A Short History Of The Lodge Of Emulation, No. 21.

and distinction they agreed to accept of a Constitution , for which in those clays no payment was required , in order to be placed on the official list of regular lodges . At the period of the enrolment on the Grand Loclge

Register of the lodge which subsequently adopted the distinctive appellation of " The Mourning Bush , " Warrants in their present form were unknown , or , at all events , were

not used by the Grand Lodge of England until about 30 years

THK SKXlOl ! WAUDKX'S CHAII ! AXI 1 HON OF IVORY MALLETS . 1 ' ,-cteiileil hi ) C-uirlet Willi ,, l ' . M . later . The method of constituting a lodge in the metropolis was for the Grand Officers to appear in person at the intended meeting-place of the new loclge , and having

performed the usual ceremonies of Constitution and Installation , to sign a declaration to that effect On the first page of the Lodge Minute Book . For lodges in the provinces and abroad an official document known as a " Deputation " was issued by the

Grand Master to some brother of more or less eminence , generally residing in the district , authorizing him to act as his Deputy in the performance of the necessary functions . In many , I might safely say a majority of cases , the first and most serious difficulty encountered by the historian of a

private loclge is the absence of the lodge records for some period of its history , generally at the most interesting stagethe beginning—when , had they been available , probably much light might be thrown upon the doings of our early speculative ancestors generally , as well as upon the affairs of

the loclge concerned . I regret to state that " The Mourning Bush Loclge" is not an exception , for the earliest minute book now in possession of the loclge was begun on the 24 th December , 1756 , leaving us almost in the dark as to its proceedings prior to that date .

Fortunately a Treasurer ' s Book commencing in 1742 has been preserved . These books will be dealt with in due course at a later stage , but before so doing , I purpose placing

on record every scrap of information appertaining to the lodge which I have been able to glean from a careful investigation of the archives of the Grand Loclge and other available sources . There seems to have been some uncertainty as to the precise date of the constitution of the loclge whose history I

am endeavouring to trace , but had the usual practice in the formation of ;/« c > lodges been followed , there should have been no difficulty in getting the information either by a reference to the first loclge book , or to the Grand Loclge records if the latter existed . Hence I am inclined to think

that this was not an entirely new loclge when it was placed on the Grand Loclge Register and acknowledged as Regular , but that it was originally working after the time-honoured custom of the Operatives , and also of the early speculative Masons , by inherent right . We know that several such lodges existed

long after the foundation of the Grand Loclge . On the 25 th of November , 1723 , thei following motion was agreed to in Grand Lodge and recorded in the Minutes— " That no new loclge in or near London without it be regularly constituted be countenanced by the Grand Loclge , nor

the Master or Wardens admitted at the Grand Loclge . " It will be observed that no reference is made in this resolution to the mode of receiving old lodges into the official fold , I am , therefore , of opinion that in such cases there was at first no ceremony- whatever , but that they were simply placed on the list of lodges at the request of their representatives .

THK JUNIOR WARDKX'S CHAIR AND A QUAINT OLD BALLOT BOX . At that period lodges were only distinguished by the names of the taverns at which they were held , and it was not until five or six years after this loclge was enrolled that it was deemed advisable that the lodges should bear distinctive

numbers . The engraving of the lists of lodges previously mentioned , was the first mode of communicating to the fraternity at large , the number of lodges on the register and their places

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1905-08-01, Page 18” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01081905/page/18/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Some Notes on Freemasonry in Austraiasia .– –(Continued). Article 2
Provincial Grand Lodge of Essex. Article 5
Provincial Grand Lodge of Shropshire. Article 6
Provincial Grand Lodge of Surrey. Article 7
Installation Meeting of the Sanctuary Lodge, No. 3051. Article 9
Untitled Article 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Grand Lodge and the Grand Master. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 14
The Grand Lodge of France. Article 15
A Short History of the Lodge of Emulation, No. 21. Article 17
Untitled Ad 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Short History Of The Lodge Of Emulation, No. 21.

and distinction they agreed to accept of a Constitution , for which in those clays no payment was required , in order to be placed on the official list of regular lodges . At the period of the enrolment on the Grand Loclge

Register of the lodge which subsequently adopted the distinctive appellation of " The Mourning Bush , " Warrants in their present form were unknown , or , at all events , were

not used by the Grand Lodge of England until about 30 years

THK SKXlOl ! WAUDKX'S CHAII ! AXI 1 HON OF IVORY MALLETS . 1 ' ,-cteiileil hi ) C-uirlet Willi ,, l ' . M . later . The method of constituting a lodge in the metropolis was for the Grand Officers to appear in person at the intended meeting-place of the new loclge , and having

performed the usual ceremonies of Constitution and Installation , to sign a declaration to that effect On the first page of the Lodge Minute Book . For lodges in the provinces and abroad an official document known as a " Deputation " was issued by the

Grand Master to some brother of more or less eminence , generally residing in the district , authorizing him to act as his Deputy in the performance of the necessary functions . In many , I might safely say a majority of cases , the first and most serious difficulty encountered by the historian of a

private loclge is the absence of the lodge records for some period of its history , generally at the most interesting stagethe beginning—when , had they been available , probably much light might be thrown upon the doings of our early speculative ancestors generally , as well as upon the affairs of

the loclge concerned . I regret to state that " The Mourning Bush Loclge" is not an exception , for the earliest minute book now in possession of the loclge was begun on the 24 th December , 1756 , leaving us almost in the dark as to its proceedings prior to that date .

Fortunately a Treasurer ' s Book commencing in 1742 has been preserved . These books will be dealt with in due course at a later stage , but before so doing , I purpose placing

on record every scrap of information appertaining to the lodge which I have been able to glean from a careful investigation of the archives of the Grand Loclge and other available sources . There seems to have been some uncertainty as to the precise date of the constitution of the loclge whose history I

am endeavouring to trace , but had the usual practice in the formation of ;/« c > lodges been followed , there should have been no difficulty in getting the information either by a reference to the first loclge book , or to the Grand Loclge records if the latter existed . Hence I am inclined to think

that this was not an entirely new loclge when it was placed on the Grand Loclge Register and acknowledged as Regular , but that it was originally working after the time-honoured custom of the Operatives , and also of the early speculative Masons , by inherent right . We know that several such lodges existed

long after the foundation of the Grand Loclge . On the 25 th of November , 1723 , thei following motion was agreed to in Grand Lodge and recorded in the Minutes— " That no new loclge in or near London without it be regularly constituted be countenanced by the Grand Loclge , nor

the Master or Wardens admitted at the Grand Loclge . " It will be observed that no reference is made in this resolution to the mode of receiving old lodges into the official fold , I am , therefore , of opinion that in such cases there was at first no ceremony- whatever , but that they were simply placed on the list of lodges at the request of their representatives .

THK JUNIOR WARDKX'S CHAIR AND A QUAINT OLD BALLOT BOX . At that period lodges were only distinguished by the names of the taverns at which they were held , and it was not until five or six years after this loclge was enrolled that it was deemed advisable that the lodges should bear distinctive

numbers . The engraving of the lists of lodges previously mentioned , was the first mode of communicating to the fraternity at large , the number of lodges on the register and their places

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