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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Aug. 1, 1905
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  • Some Notes on Freemasonry in Austraiasia .– –(Continued).
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The Masonic Illustrated, Aug. 1, 1905: Page 2

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    Article Some Notes on Freemasonry in Austraiasia .– –(Continued). Page 1 of 4 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Some Notes On Freemasonry In Austraiasia .– –(Continued).

Some Notes on Freemasonry in Austraiasia . – –( Continued ) .

By Bro . W . F . LAMOXBV , P . D . G . M . of Victoria , and P . A . G . D . C . of England .

IN contradistinction to the foregoing , we conveniently turn for a moment or two to the latter clay provisions of the English Book of Constitutions . As for instance , as regards Grand Officers , it is laid clown that the Grand Registrar only must be an Installed Master , while in Provinces and Districts the requirement is merely applied to the Deputy and to the

Wardens . Inconsistency is consequently most apparent here , while in late years there have been occasions when Provincial Grand Masters and Grand Wardens have not been Installed Masters at the time of their appointment and induction into office . A very creditable contrast , though , to this anomaly is

shown in the Constitutions of the Grand Lodge of Victoria , a body with less than two hundred lodges from which to make selections , and yet they enact that every Grand Officer ( Heralds and Organist excepted ) must be an actual Master or Past Master of a lodge .

THE CLARKE MEDAL . Willi this slight digression let us close the progress of English Masonry in Victoria with a curious item culled from the minutes of the Provincial Grand Loclge , dated June 29 th , 18 57 , on which occasion provisional warrants were granted for six new lodges . In regard to one of them it is noted : —

" Bro . P . M . Levick inquired whether ( he Ballarat Lodge had formerly been a society meeting under the title Rameaii d'Ord . Eleusis ¦ ! if so , he considered it objectionable to have granted the dispensation . A full explanation of the former proceedings of this society was given , and it was stated that the Victoria

Lodge ( at Ballarat ) had recommended a dispensation being granted , with the understanding that certain conditions proposed by them should be agreed to . It was reported that the conditions had been assented to , and the matter then chopped . "

We now turn to the introduction of Scottish Freemasonry into Victoria . In the year 18 43 the Grand Master Mason of Scotland warranted the Australasian Kilwinning Lodge , ^' ° - 337 > m Melbourne ; but , compared with New South Wales , and later , Queensland and Western Australia , the Scottish Craft never attained any great hold in Victoria . The following were the Provincial and District Grand Masters •—

James Hunter Ross ... ... ... jg 17 Hon . William Clarke Haines , M . L . C . 18 ^ 8 Thomas Reid ... j 866 Alexander Kennedy Smith 18 74 Hon . Sir William John Clarke , Bart ., M-L . C Z 88

Between the two first Provincial Grand Masters there was a long hiatus , in point of fact , Bro . Ross never held a meeting during the whole of the eleven years he was nominally head of the Scottish Craft .

Irish Masonry , also , like the Scottish , made slow progress from the year 18 43 , when the first loclge was opened , under dispensation , and styled the Australian Felix Loclge of Hiram . It was not warranted , however , by the Duke of Leinster nntil four years later , with the number 349 . The Provincial

Grand Masters of Victoria under the Irish Constitution were only two in number , but the first reigned from 1854 till the clay of his death in 1 S 79 . Bro . John Thomas Smith , a member of the Legislative Assembly , and several times Mayor of Melbourne , was an energetic Mason and an inflexible

administrator of the laws of the Craft , lie had the distinction of installing Capt . Clarke , the first Provincial Grand Master of the English Masons in the colony , and he was the charter Master of the first Irish loclge , the Australian Felix Loclge of Hiram , besides being one of the first initiates in the mother

lodge of Victoria in 1840 . For many years , up to the inauguration of the Grand Lodge in 1889 , there was an Irish loclge in Melbourne known as the Provincial Grand Master's Lodge , without a number , the membership of which was confined to Installed Masters . One of the ordinary lodges ,

( he Washington , No . 3 68 , had also attached to it a chapter and a Mark lodge . One of the most notable personages under the Irish Constitution , for many years prior lo the fomidnfion of the present Grand Lodge , was the late Bro . George Baker . As

Deputy Provincial Grand Master his indomitable courage and firmness kept ( lie Province intact during very critical ; ind troublous times , and his honours of Past Grand Master md first Deputy Grand Master under the present regime

RIGHT HON . BARON BHASSICY , G . C . M . G ., SKL'OND Gil . VNI ) MASTSR OF VICTORIA . were thoroughly deserved . He was , during the period indicated , very materially and ably supported by Bro . Angell Ellis as Provincial Grand Secretary , subsequently Past Deputy Grand Master and firjt Grand Treasurer of Victoria .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1905-08-01, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01081905/page/2/.
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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.

Some Notes On Freemasonry In Austraiasia .– –(Continued).

Some Notes on Freemasonry in Austraiasia . – –( Continued ) .

By Bro . W . F . LAMOXBV , P . D . G . M . of Victoria , and P . A . G . D . C . of England .

IN contradistinction to the foregoing , we conveniently turn for a moment or two to the latter clay provisions of the English Book of Constitutions . As for instance , as regards Grand Officers , it is laid clown that the Grand Registrar only must be an Installed Master , while in Provinces and Districts the requirement is merely applied to the Deputy and to the

Wardens . Inconsistency is consequently most apparent here , while in late years there have been occasions when Provincial Grand Masters and Grand Wardens have not been Installed Masters at the time of their appointment and induction into office . A very creditable contrast , though , to this anomaly is

shown in the Constitutions of the Grand Lodge of Victoria , a body with less than two hundred lodges from which to make selections , and yet they enact that every Grand Officer ( Heralds and Organist excepted ) must be an actual Master or Past Master of a lodge .

THE CLARKE MEDAL . Willi this slight digression let us close the progress of English Masonry in Victoria with a curious item culled from the minutes of the Provincial Grand Loclge , dated June 29 th , 18 57 , on which occasion provisional warrants were granted for six new lodges . In regard to one of them it is noted : —

" Bro . P . M . Levick inquired whether ( he Ballarat Lodge had formerly been a society meeting under the title Rameaii d'Ord . Eleusis ¦ ! if so , he considered it objectionable to have granted the dispensation . A full explanation of the former proceedings of this society was given , and it was stated that the Victoria

Lodge ( at Ballarat ) had recommended a dispensation being granted , with the understanding that certain conditions proposed by them should be agreed to . It was reported that the conditions had been assented to , and the matter then chopped . "

We now turn to the introduction of Scottish Freemasonry into Victoria . In the year 18 43 the Grand Master Mason of Scotland warranted the Australasian Kilwinning Lodge , ^' ° - 337 > m Melbourne ; but , compared with New South Wales , and later , Queensland and Western Australia , the Scottish Craft never attained any great hold in Victoria . The following were the Provincial and District Grand Masters •—

James Hunter Ross ... ... ... jg 17 Hon . William Clarke Haines , M . L . C . 18 ^ 8 Thomas Reid ... j 866 Alexander Kennedy Smith 18 74 Hon . Sir William John Clarke , Bart ., M-L . C Z 88

Between the two first Provincial Grand Masters there was a long hiatus , in point of fact , Bro . Ross never held a meeting during the whole of the eleven years he was nominally head of the Scottish Craft .

Irish Masonry , also , like the Scottish , made slow progress from the year 18 43 , when the first loclge was opened , under dispensation , and styled the Australian Felix Loclge of Hiram . It was not warranted , however , by the Duke of Leinster nntil four years later , with the number 349 . The Provincial

Grand Masters of Victoria under the Irish Constitution were only two in number , but the first reigned from 1854 till the clay of his death in 1 S 79 . Bro . John Thomas Smith , a member of the Legislative Assembly , and several times Mayor of Melbourne , was an energetic Mason and an inflexible

administrator of the laws of the Craft , lie had the distinction of installing Capt . Clarke , the first Provincial Grand Master of the English Masons in the colony , and he was the charter Master of the first Irish loclge , the Australian Felix Loclge of Hiram , besides being one of the first initiates in the mother

lodge of Victoria in 1840 . For many years , up to the inauguration of the Grand Lodge in 1889 , there was an Irish loclge in Melbourne known as the Provincial Grand Master's Lodge , without a number , the membership of which was confined to Installed Masters . One of the ordinary lodges ,

( he Washington , No . 3 68 , had also attached to it a chapter and a Mark lodge . One of the most notable personages under the Irish Constitution , for many years prior lo the fomidnfion of the present Grand Lodge , was the late Bro . George Baker . As

Deputy Provincial Grand Master his indomitable courage and firmness kept ( lie Province intact during very critical ; ind troublous times , and his honours of Past Grand Master md first Deputy Grand Master under the present regime

RIGHT HON . BARON BHASSICY , G . C . M . G ., SKL'OND Gil . VNI ) MASTSR OF VICTORIA . were thoroughly deserved . He was , during the period indicated , very materially and ably supported by Bro . Angell Ellis as Provincial Grand Secretary , subsequently Past Deputy Grand Master and firjt Grand Treasurer of Victoria .

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