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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Dec. 1, 1904
  • Page 4
  • Some Continental Lodge Jewels .
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The Masonic Illustrated, Dec. 1, 1904: Page 4

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    Article The Province of Cheshire. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article Some Continental Lodge Jewels . Page 1 of 4 →
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The Province Of Cheshire.

and was supported by several Provincial Grand Masters on that memorable occasion . Lord Egerton was initiated in the " Unity " Lodge , No . 321 , in 1862 , becoming the Worshipful Master in 1866 , and was Deputy Provincial Grand Master from 18 77 for some

years of the province to which he has been so much attached and was such a genial ruler . His lordship resigned as Provincial Grand Master in 1900 to the great regret of all the brethren , but was followed by his brother , who has made a very worthy successor , and filled an extremely difficult position with great acceptance generally .

The Hon . Alan de Tatton Egerton , M . P . ( P . S . G . W . of England ) , was duly installed as Provincial Grand Master on 17 th December , 1 9 , by the esteemed Grand Secretary ( Sir Edward Letchworth , P . G . D . ) , in the unavoidable absence of the Past Provincial Grand Master , and to the great satisfaction of the members . Sir Horatio Lloyd , P . G . D .,

was again appointed Deputy Provincial Grand Master , the veteran Craftsman , Bro . Richard Newhouse , P . D . G . S . B . of England , becoming once more the indefatigable Provincial Grand Secretary .

Our dear brother , the Provincial Grand Secretary , was initiated in No . 439 , Stoneclough ( now No . 350 , Farnworth , E . Lane ) , in 18 33 , becoming its Worshipful Master seven years later . In 186 4 he became connected with the Province of Chester , by being a founder of the " Stamford , " No . 1045 , and has been its capable Secretary from the year 186 5 to the

present time . Thirty years ago our brother was invested as Provincial Grand Assistant Director of Ceremonies of Cheshire b y Lord de Tabley ; in 188 7 was selected for the onerous but honourable position of Provincial Grand Secretary by the Earl of Egerton , and again was invested with that collar by

the Hon . Alan de Tatton Egerton , M . P ., in 1900 . In evidence of the spread of the Craft locally during the 50 years and more of Bro . Newhouse ' s membership of the Fraternity , it may be noted that lodges in Cheshire have quite trebled in number since he first saw the "light . "

The " Provincial Charity Guide " for 1904 contains such evidence of the beneficent operations of the province , that it will take a special article to do them even bare justice , so the pleasure of referring to those excellent institutions must be deferred for a time . I have said nothing of a Provincial Grand Lodge that was formed by the " Ancient" Grand Lodge for the Counties

Hiio . XEWIIOCSE . of York , Chester , and Lancaster , in 17 81 , as so far as evidence goes it existed but on paper . It was the only one of its kind in this country . W . J . HUGH , \ x . ( 7 ' o Ac continual . )

Some Continental Lodge Jewels .

Some Continental Lodge Jewels .

BY F . J . W . CROWE , P . P . G . REG . DEVON , G . ORG . ENG .

IN England wc are accustomed to seeing a very large number of jewels won 1 , and the first impression would he that ourown branch of the Fraternity was extremely rich in specimens of the Masonic- adornments . On closer observation , however , we find that the chief difference is in design , and that the bulk of them are Past Masters' and founders' jewels , the remainder

( I speak only of Craft Masonry ) , those of Grand or Provincial Grand Lodge Officers , past and present ; Royal Arch jewels ( which may be worn in lodge ) , Charily jewels , centenary jewels , and in a very few eases a special lodge jewel . On tlie continent , however , under nearly all the jurisdictions ,

each lodge has its own special jewel , which is worn by all the members , and the result is of much greater interest and variety than with us . If each of our : J 0 O 0 odd English lodges bad a distinctive jewel , one trembles to think what the result would be under

our system of unlimited lodge membership . " Walking jewellers shops , " as many of our brethren are irreverently called , are all too common , and with this addition made possible they would probably be bespangled from bead to foot .

Happily , however , we are spared this infliction , and abroad there is no danger , as brethren rarely belong to more than one lodge . Amongst the most artistic , and to collectors the rarest , arc those of the Grand Lodge and extinct Grand Orient of Hungary , of which I am the fortunate possessor of an unusual number .

A few examples I will describe : — No . 1 is the jewel of Lodge Egyessig a llazahon , or " Unity in the Fatherland . " The obverse shows two clasped bands issuing from clouds , with the sun above , and surrounded by the name ol' the lodge in Hungarian . The reverse has a similar inscription in German , around a laurel wreath , and the

date 18 ( 58 . The jewel is worn suspended from a ribbon of the national colours , green , white , and red . This lodge was established in Pest in LSfiK , by brethren who had been initiated in Gel-many , and afterwards became the mother lodge of the St . John ' s Grand Lodge of Hungary , founded in 1870 . The lodge is now extinct . 1 have specimens in gill metal and in

bronze . No . ' 2 is the jewel of Lodge Laszlo Kiralv , founded at . Xagyvarad , in Eastern Hungary , in 1 N 70 , and has on the

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1904-12-01, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01121904/page/4/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Cheshire. Article 2
Some Continental Lodge Jewels . Article 4
The Library and Museum of the Grand Lodge of England. Article 7
Some Notes on Freemasonry in Australasia.-(Continued). Article 12
RULERS IN THE CRAFT Article 14
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Music in the Lodge Room. Article 16
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 17
Untitled Article 19
Untitled Ad 19
Music for Christmas. Article 20
Untitled Ad 21
Untitled Ad 21
Untitled Ad 21
Consecration of the Gordon Langton Lodge, No. 3069. Article 22
Untitled Ad 22
Whittington Lodge, No. 862. Article 23
Untitled Ad 23
Kirby Lodge of Instruction, No. 263. Article 24
The Power of the Grip. Article 24
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 25
Untitled Ad 26
Order of the Temple. Article 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
"CHARITY NEVER FAILETH." Article 27
Untitled Article 27
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 29
Untitled Ad 29
Untitled Ad 29
Untitled Ad 29
Untitled Ad 30
Untitled Ad 30
Untitled Ad 30
Untitled Ad 30
Untitled Ad 30
Untitled Ad 31
Untitled Ad 32
Untitled Ad 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Province Of Cheshire.

and was supported by several Provincial Grand Masters on that memorable occasion . Lord Egerton was initiated in the " Unity " Lodge , No . 321 , in 1862 , becoming the Worshipful Master in 1866 , and was Deputy Provincial Grand Master from 18 77 for some

years of the province to which he has been so much attached and was such a genial ruler . His lordship resigned as Provincial Grand Master in 1900 to the great regret of all the brethren , but was followed by his brother , who has made a very worthy successor , and filled an extremely difficult position with great acceptance generally .

The Hon . Alan de Tatton Egerton , M . P . ( P . S . G . W . of England ) , was duly installed as Provincial Grand Master on 17 th December , 1 9 , by the esteemed Grand Secretary ( Sir Edward Letchworth , P . G . D . ) , in the unavoidable absence of the Past Provincial Grand Master , and to the great satisfaction of the members . Sir Horatio Lloyd , P . G . D .,

was again appointed Deputy Provincial Grand Master , the veteran Craftsman , Bro . Richard Newhouse , P . D . G . S . B . of England , becoming once more the indefatigable Provincial Grand Secretary .

Our dear brother , the Provincial Grand Secretary , was initiated in No . 439 , Stoneclough ( now No . 350 , Farnworth , E . Lane ) , in 18 33 , becoming its Worshipful Master seven years later . In 186 4 he became connected with the Province of Chester , by being a founder of the " Stamford , " No . 1045 , and has been its capable Secretary from the year 186 5 to the

present time . Thirty years ago our brother was invested as Provincial Grand Assistant Director of Ceremonies of Cheshire b y Lord de Tabley ; in 188 7 was selected for the onerous but honourable position of Provincial Grand Secretary by the Earl of Egerton , and again was invested with that collar by

the Hon . Alan de Tatton Egerton , M . P ., in 1900 . In evidence of the spread of the Craft locally during the 50 years and more of Bro . Newhouse ' s membership of the Fraternity , it may be noted that lodges in Cheshire have quite trebled in number since he first saw the "light . "

The " Provincial Charity Guide " for 1904 contains such evidence of the beneficent operations of the province , that it will take a special article to do them even bare justice , so the pleasure of referring to those excellent institutions must be deferred for a time . I have said nothing of a Provincial Grand Lodge that was formed by the " Ancient" Grand Lodge for the Counties

Hiio . XEWIIOCSE . of York , Chester , and Lancaster , in 17 81 , as so far as evidence goes it existed but on paper . It was the only one of its kind in this country . W . J . HUGH , \ x . ( 7 ' o Ac continual . )

Some Continental Lodge Jewels .

Some Continental Lodge Jewels .

BY F . J . W . CROWE , P . P . G . REG . DEVON , G . ORG . ENG .

IN England wc are accustomed to seeing a very large number of jewels won 1 , and the first impression would he that ourown branch of the Fraternity was extremely rich in specimens of the Masonic- adornments . On closer observation , however , we find that the chief difference is in design , and that the bulk of them are Past Masters' and founders' jewels , the remainder

( I speak only of Craft Masonry ) , those of Grand or Provincial Grand Lodge Officers , past and present ; Royal Arch jewels ( which may be worn in lodge ) , Charily jewels , centenary jewels , and in a very few eases a special lodge jewel . On tlie continent , however , under nearly all the jurisdictions ,

each lodge has its own special jewel , which is worn by all the members , and the result is of much greater interest and variety than with us . If each of our : J 0 O 0 odd English lodges bad a distinctive jewel , one trembles to think what the result would be under

our system of unlimited lodge membership . " Walking jewellers shops , " as many of our brethren are irreverently called , are all too common , and with this addition made possible they would probably be bespangled from bead to foot .

Happily , however , we are spared this infliction , and abroad there is no danger , as brethren rarely belong to more than one lodge . Amongst the most artistic , and to collectors the rarest , arc those of the Grand Lodge and extinct Grand Orient of Hungary , of which I am the fortunate possessor of an unusual number .

A few examples I will describe : — No . 1 is the jewel of Lodge Egyessig a llazahon , or " Unity in the Fatherland . " The obverse shows two clasped bands issuing from clouds , with the sun above , and surrounded by the name ol' the lodge in Hungarian . The reverse has a similar inscription in German , around a laurel wreath , and the

date 18 ( 58 . The jewel is worn suspended from a ribbon of the national colours , green , white , and red . This lodge was established in Pest in LSfiK , by brethren who had been initiated in Gel-many , and afterwards became the mother lodge of the St . John ' s Grand Lodge of Hungary , founded in 1870 . The lodge is now extinct . 1 have specimens in gill metal and in

bronze . No . ' 2 is the jewel of Lodge Laszlo Kiralv , founded at . Xagyvarad , in Eastern Hungary , in 1 N 70 , and has on the

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