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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Sept. 1, 1902
  • Page 3
  • The Province of Hertfordshire.
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The Masonic Illustrated, Sept. 1, 1902: Page 3

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    Article The Province of Hertfordshire. ← Page 2 of 5 →
Page 3

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

The Province Of Hertfordshire.

A ruler without a single lodge to rule over , and no members to appoint as his officers . Bro . Forsteen seems to have been a distinguished member of the Shakespear Lodge , and was indefatigable in the cause of charity . He was particularly identified with the Royal Masonic Institution for Girls , which

he served in various capacities for nineteen years , eventually becoming Treasurer of the Institution . But apparently no effort was made to make his provincial office anything but a barren honour , and he resigned it in 1803 , when he became Junior Grand Warden . The sinecure office was , however ,

THE TOWN HALL , ST . ALBANS—HALSKY LODGE , No . 117 .

still continued , and a member of the same London lodge as the former Provincial Grand Master , Bro . George Daniel Harvey , born in 1777 , received his patent three years after his initiation as Provincial Grand Master . The solitary position occupied by the Craft ruler seems to

have touched the hearts of the authorities , for to render his position more endurable a Provincial Grand Superintendent of Hertfordshire was appointed in 1811 ( Colonel Andrew Dennis O'Kelly ) , though Royal Arch Chapters must have been as non-existent as lodges . We wonder if the two ever met

and mutually consoled each other in their Crusoesque condition .

ST . AL 11 AXS LODGE ROOM .

How long Colonel O'Kelly remained in this position we do not know , but there was no further appointment made until 18 35 . A real Masonic beginning , however , was now about to be made . The establishment of lodges very much resembles the foundation of the Greek Colonies . The settlers are mostly citizens from some overgrown city , who , as

strangers , take up an unoccupied spot , and there proceed to reproduce the buildings , organization , and life of the parent city , and after a time to incorporate among themselves the most eligible of the inhabitants of the district .

In the year 1829 another effort was made to Alasom ' cally colonise Hertfordshire , and this time with success . We may notice , however , in what a chaotic state the rights and duties of Provincial Grand Masters still were , although the appointment to this office had been made a century before , for no reference whatever seems to have been made by the

founders of the first Hertfordshire lodge under the new regime to the R . W . Bro . Harvey . It is of course possible that the settlers were unaware of the existence of a Provincial Grand Master , or it may be that a settlement from London , and from so distinguished a body as the Grand Masters ' Lodge , to which nearly all the founders belonged , looked

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1902-09-01, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01091902/page/3/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Hertfordshire. Article 2
Consecration of the Somersetshire Lodge, No. 2925. Article 7
Consecration of the Tamesis Lod ge, No. 29 26. Article 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Th e Irregular Officers. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Installation of the Provincial Grand Master of Essex. Article 14
The Scottish Masonic Club, Edinburgh. Article 14
Dedication of a New Masonic Hall at Oswestry. Article 16
Provincial Grand Lodge of Bucks. Article 17
Presentation to Bro. Brazier. Article 17
Rising Star Lodge, Bloemfontein. Article 17
History of the Emulation Lodge of Improvement, No. 256.——(Continued). Article 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Province Of Hertfordshire.

A ruler without a single lodge to rule over , and no members to appoint as his officers . Bro . Forsteen seems to have been a distinguished member of the Shakespear Lodge , and was indefatigable in the cause of charity . He was particularly identified with the Royal Masonic Institution for Girls , which

he served in various capacities for nineteen years , eventually becoming Treasurer of the Institution . But apparently no effort was made to make his provincial office anything but a barren honour , and he resigned it in 1803 , when he became Junior Grand Warden . The sinecure office was , however ,

THE TOWN HALL , ST . ALBANS—HALSKY LODGE , No . 117 .

still continued , and a member of the same London lodge as the former Provincial Grand Master , Bro . George Daniel Harvey , born in 1777 , received his patent three years after his initiation as Provincial Grand Master . The solitary position occupied by the Craft ruler seems to

have touched the hearts of the authorities , for to render his position more endurable a Provincial Grand Superintendent of Hertfordshire was appointed in 1811 ( Colonel Andrew Dennis O'Kelly ) , though Royal Arch Chapters must have been as non-existent as lodges . We wonder if the two ever met

and mutually consoled each other in their Crusoesque condition .

ST . AL 11 AXS LODGE ROOM .

How long Colonel O'Kelly remained in this position we do not know , but there was no further appointment made until 18 35 . A real Masonic beginning , however , was now about to be made . The establishment of lodges very much resembles the foundation of the Greek Colonies . The settlers are mostly citizens from some overgrown city , who , as

strangers , take up an unoccupied spot , and there proceed to reproduce the buildings , organization , and life of the parent city , and after a time to incorporate among themselves the most eligible of the inhabitants of the district .

In the year 1829 another effort was made to Alasom ' cally colonise Hertfordshire , and this time with success . We may notice , however , in what a chaotic state the rights and duties of Provincial Grand Masters still were , although the appointment to this office had been made a century before , for no reference whatever seems to have been made by the

founders of the first Hertfordshire lodge under the new regime to the R . W . Bro . Harvey . It is of course possible that the settlers were unaware of the existence of a Provincial Grand Master , or it may be that a settlement from London , and from so distinguished a body as the Grand Masters ' Lodge , to which nearly all the founders belonged , looked

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