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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Dec. 1, 1905
  • Page 21
  • History of the Lodge of Em ulation, No . 21.
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The Masonic Illustrated, Dec. 1, 1905: Page 21

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History Of The Lodge Of Em Ulation, No . 21.

History of the Lodge of Emulation , No . 21 .

( By HKXKY S , M ) I-I-: K , Sub-Librarian to the Grand Lodge of England )

PRIOR to the year 1768 , there was no compulsory registration of the members of lodges at the regular , or what is known as the " Modern Grand Lodge , " and there was but one source of income , ( he Fund of Charity , and so long as a lodge sent an occasional contribution to this Fund the authorities troubled themselves very little about it ; but

should it cease to contribute or to correspond with the Grand Secretary for several years , and could give no satisfactory reason for its neglect , it was erased from the list forthwith . At a meeting of the Grand Lodge on ( he 2 SU 1 of October , 1768 , "The Honble : and Right Worshipful Charles Dillon ,

D . G . Master , ( as Grand Master ) having acquainted the Brethren at the last Committee of Charity with His Grace the Duke of Beaufort ' s intentions to have the Society

. sr IIOAIII OF i'iii-: i . nncv , OK K . MI ' I . ATIOX . incorporated ( and also represented to them the advantages that would result from the accomplishment of so great a Design ) , proposed , previously thereto , that the Committee should take into serious Consideration the most effectual

Means for raising a Fund to build a Hall and purchase Jewels Furniture , etc ., for the Grand Lodge , independent of the General Fund of Charity , and at the same time recommended a Plan to their perusal , to which several Amendments were made and the following Resolutions agreed to , were referred

to this Communication and unanimously Confirmed . " The New Regulations , comprising Ten Articles , included the annual payment of a fee b y the Grand Officers , a fee for I'cgistering newly made and joining members ; also that very convenient source of income , the granting of Dispensations

( an payment of specified fees ) by flic Grand Master , and sundry other methods of " raising the wind , " duly set forth J | i the Constitutions of the period .

On tlie 28 th of April , 1769 , "The D . G . Master informed the Brethren [ in Grand Lodge ] that in consequence of the Orders he had received from the Grand Master , he had sent a Plan of the intended Charter of Incorporation to the several Lodges for their approbation , and that the following return had been made : —

" For the Incorporation 168 Lodges "Against it 43 „ u A Motion was then made and the Question put , whether the Society should be Incorporated or not , when it was carried in the Affirmative by a great majority . "

Notwithstanding this decisive vote in favour of the Grand Master's design , it was stoutly opposed by several influential members of the Craft , with the result that when , in 1771 , a Bill was brought into Parliament by the Hon . Charles Dillon , with the desired object , it was thrown out on " the second

reading , having been opposed by Mr . Onslow , at the request of certain brethren who had petitioned the House against it . The minutes of the Mourning Bush Lodge of December 12 th , 1768 , contain flic following : — " A Letter to the Master of this Lodge being received

from the D . G . M . requiring the Lodge to receive Bro . Henry John Maskell as Provincial Grand Master , the said Letter was read , and the consideration thereof was postponed till after the . next Quarterly Communication . "

1769 , Feb . 13 th . —The minutes on this occasion contain the following with reference to a letter received from the Grand Secretary , notifying the lodge of a Quarterly Communication and a meeting of the Committee of Charity . " The said Letter also contained a Request of the Grand Secretary , that the Date of the Constitution of this Lodge

might be transmitted to him , but the orig inal Books and other Papers belonging to this Lodge being unhappily destroyed by a lire , which happened at the Mourning Bush Tairrii , Aldersgate Street , where this Lodge was then held , on 7 th April , 1 742 , it was found absolutely impossible that

the said Request could be complied with . It was therefore agreed , ' That an account of this fatal accident should be communicated to the Grand Secretary , and that he be requested to examine the Grand Lodge Books for the Date of the said Constitution . ' "

The total loss of the earl y records of the lodge was a deplorable calamity , if not a "fatal accident , " for had they been still in existence they would have been simpl y invaluable from an historical point of view . This , however , does not explain the absence of the minutes from 1742 to

175 6 , which were evidently available during the year last named , or they could not have been read and confirmed on the 24 th December in that year . The later records may possibly throw some light on their disappearance ; but , failing that , I shall assume that ( heir loss may probably be '

ascribed to some brother having borrowed the book , and omitted to return it , a similar calamity having befallen many other old lodges from this cause .

March 13 th . — "A Pamphlet addressed to the Master of this Lodge was , at the request of the Members , read ; and a motion was thereupon made by Bro'' Adams , Past Master : That as the said Pamphlet made public the Proceedings of a Grand Lodge , contrary to the Laws of Masonry , and as it was an anonimous performance , it should be burnt by the

Tyler of the Lodge , which motion was carried in the Negative , with this proviso , That the Pamphlet might first be reconsidered the next Lodge night . " March 27 th . — "The Reconsideration of the Anonimous Pamphlet , mentioned in the Minutes of the last Lodge Night

was this Night deferred sine die , by the unanimous consent of the Brethren present . " We are left in the dark as to the subject matter of this pamphlet , but I imagine it had some relation to the proposed Incorporation of the Society , some of the London lodges being strongly opposed to this proceeding .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1905-12-01, Page 21” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01121905/page/21/.
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Untitled Article 1
Rare Certificates. Article 2
United Grand Lodge. Article 5
Grand Lodge of Scotland. Article 6
Consecration of the Guildhall Lodge, No. 3116. Article 7
Regent Lodge, No. 3121. Article 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Qualifications of Candidates. Article 12
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 13
Untitled Ad 15
Our Lady of Light. Article 16
York Lodge, No. 236. Article 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Liverpool Cathedral. Article 17
Untitled Ad 17
Provincial Brand Lodge of Cambridgeshire. Article 18
The Marquess of Hertford. Article 18
Provincial Grand Lodge of Sussex. Article 18
Untitled Ad 18
Province of Northumberland. Article 19
The Royal Arthur Lodge, No. 1360. Article 19
Consecration of the Lakeland Lodge, No. 3134. Article 20
Untitled Ad 20
History of the Lodge of Em ulation, No . 21. Article 21
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 24
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Page 21

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

History Of The Lodge Of Em Ulation, No . 21.

History of the Lodge of Emulation , No . 21 .

( By HKXKY S , M ) I-I-: K , Sub-Librarian to the Grand Lodge of England )

PRIOR to the year 1768 , there was no compulsory registration of the members of lodges at the regular , or what is known as the " Modern Grand Lodge , " and there was but one source of income , ( he Fund of Charity , and so long as a lodge sent an occasional contribution to this Fund the authorities troubled themselves very little about it ; but

should it cease to contribute or to correspond with the Grand Secretary for several years , and could give no satisfactory reason for its neglect , it was erased from the list forthwith . At a meeting of the Grand Lodge on ( he 2 SU 1 of October , 1768 , "The Honble : and Right Worshipful Charles Dillon ,

D . G . Master , ( as Grand Master ) having acquainted the Brethren at the last Committee of Charity with His Grace the Duke of Beaufort ' s intentions to have the Society

. sr IIOAIII OF i'iii-: i . nncv , OK K . MI ' I . ATIOX . incorporated ( and also represented to them the advantages that would result from the accomplishment of so great a Design ) , proposed , previously thereto , that the Committee should take into serious Consideration the most effectual

Means for raising a Fund to build a Hall and purchase Jewels Furniture , etc ., for the Grand Lodge , independent of the General Fund of Charity , and at the same time recommended a Plan to their perusal , to which several Amendments were made and the following Resolutions agreed to , were referred

to this Communication and unanimously Confirmed . " The New Regulations , comprising Ten Articles , included the annual payment of a fee b y the Grand Officers , a fee for I'cgistering newly made and joining members ; also that very convenient source of income , the granting of Dispensations

( an payment of specified fees ) by flic Grand Master , and sundry other methods of " raising the wind , " duly set forth J | i the Constitutions of the period .

On tlie 28 th of April , 1769 , "The D . G . Master informed the Brethren [ in Grand Lodge ] that in consequence of the Orders he had received from the Grand Master , he had sent a Plan of the intended Charter of Incorporation to the several Lodges for their approbation , and that the following return had been made : —

" For the Incorporation 168 Lodges "Against it 43 „ u A Motion was then made and the Question put , whether the Society should be Incorporated or not , when it was carried in the Affirmative by a great majority . "

Notwithstanding this decisive vote in favour of the Grand Master's design , it was stoutly opposed by several influential members of the Craft , with the result that when , in 1771 , a Bill was brought into Parliament by the Hon . Charles Dillon , with the desired object , it was thrown out on " the second

reading , having been opposed by Mr . Onslow , at the request of certain brethren who had petitioned the House against it . The minutes of the Mourning Bush Lodge of December 12 th , 1768 , contain flic following : — " A Letter to the Master of this Lodge being received

from the D . G . M . requiring the Lodge to receive Bro . Henry John Maskell as Provincial Grand Master , the said Letter was read , and the consideration thereof was postponed till after the . next Quarterly Communication . "

1769 , Feb . 13 th . —The minutes on this occasion contain the following with reference to a letter received from the Grand Secretary , notifying the lodge of a Quarterly Communication and a meeting of the Committee of Charity . " The said Letter also contained a Request of the Grand Secretary , that the Date of the Constitution of this Lodge

might be transmitted to him , but the orig inal Books and other Papers belonging to this Lodge being unhappily destroyed by a lire , which happened at the Mourning Bush Tairrii , Aldersgate Street , where this Lodge was then held , on 7 th April , 1 742 , it was found absolutely impossible that

the said Request could be complied with . It was therefore agreed , ' That an account of this fatal accident should be communicated to the Grand Secretary , and that he be requested to examine the Grand Lodge Books for the Date of the said Constitution . ' "

The total loss of the earl y records of the lodge was a deplorable calamity , if not a "fatal accident , " for had they been still in existence they would have been simpl y invaluable from an historical point of view . This , however , does not explain the absence of the minutes from 1742 to

175 6 , which were evidently available during the year last named , or they could not have been read and confirmed on the 24 th December in that year . The later records may possibly throw some light on their disappearance ; but , failing that , I shall assume that ( heir loss may probably be '

ascribed to some brother having borrowed the book , and omitted to return it , a similar calamity having befallen many other old lodges from this cause .

March 13 th . — "A Pamphlet addressed to the Master of this Lodge was , at the request of the Members , read ; and a motion was thereupon made by Bro'' Adams , Past Master : That as the said Pamphlet made public the Proceedings of a Grand Lodge , contrary to the Laws of Masonry , and as it was an anonimous performance , it should be burnt by the

Tyler of the Lodge , which motion was carried in the Negative , with this proviso , That the Pamphlet might first be reconsidered the next Lodge night . " March 27 th . — "The Reconsideration of the Anonimous Pamphlet , mentioned in the Minutes of the last Lodge Night

was this Night deferred sine die , by the unanimous consent of the Brethren present . " We are left in the dark as to the subject matter of this pamphlet , but I imagine it had some relation to the proposed Incorporation of the Society , some of the London lodges being strongly opposed to this proceeding .

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