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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Dec. 1, 1905
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The Masonic Illustrated, Dec. 1, 1905: Page 24

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    Article History of the Lodge of Em ulation, No . 21. ← Page 4 of 4
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Page 24

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

April 27 th . —On this night the lodge was visited by the Master , Wardens , and Officers of the Tuscan Lodge . The interchange of " visits in form " seems to have been a general custom amongst the old lodges at this period , and for many years afterwards , for at the next meeting it is recorded that " The Castle Lodge of Harmony , agreeable to their notice ,

paid a public visit in due form , and were received with the utmost friendship and cordiality . " This practice was enjoined by the old Constitutions ( 1723 ) in the following words : — " All particular Lodges are to observe the same Usages as much as possible ; in order to which , and

for cultivating a good Understanding among Freemasons , some members out of every Lodge shall be deputed to visit the oilier Lodges as often as shall be thought convenient . " Although Rule 149 of the present Constitutions is to the same purpose as the above , I think it is now very seldom observed .

The records of many old lodges indicate periods of prosperity and of decline , and this is particularly noticeable in the career of the Mourning Bush Lodge , as clown to the year 1778 , the lodge appears to have been remarkably successful , both in regard to membership as well as in its financial affairs ; but during the year last mentioned the

minutes show a decided falling off in the attendance of members . At the July meeting there were not sufficient members to open the lodge , and during the remainder of the year the attendances were small , and the minutes of proceedings unusually brief and indifferently recorded . On

January 25 th , 1779 , Bro . Wilson made a Motion , and was seconded by Bro . Frith , that One Guinea should be in future carried to the Committee of Charity instead of the former usual donation of Two Guineas , ; No meetings appear to have been held the months of February and March , and

on April 12 th it was resolved that the lodge should meet monthly instead of fortnightly as heretofore . No minutes of the June meeting are recorded in the book , the page on which they should have been entered being left blank . This is the more strange as it was election night , and it is

clear that a meeting was held , for at the July meeting the new officers are mentioned . No , further omissions appear in the minutes , but the business done was very little , and the attendance of members small in comparison with what it had been in previous years .

On the 13 th March , 1780 , the lodge was visited by Bros . White and Cousins , of the Stewards Lodge , and this visit in all probability was the first step towards the amalgamation of the two lodges—Mourning Bush and Emulation—which took place a few months later , Bro . William White being then a prominent member of the lodge last named , and also of the

Stewards Lodge . At a meeting of the lodge on August 14 th , 1780 , six members and one visitor being present , the subject of uniting with the Lodge of Emulation , No . 255 , was brought forward by the Master , and it was resolved to appoint a

committee of six to meet the same number of members of the Lodge of Emulation , and to report the conditions on which that lodge would agree to unite with the Mourning

Bush Lodge . Accordingly , on September 4 th following , the two Committees , consisting of four members of the Mourning Bush Lodge and seven of the Lodge of Emulation , held a meeting , and having taken the matter into consideration , it was " Resolved unanimously , That it be recommended by the Committee of each Lodge to their respective lodges at their

next meeting , that the two Lodges unite at the Paul ' s Head Tavern . . . . Also that it be recommended to the Officers of each Lodge to resign their respective offices , and , in order to avoid any distinction or preference in the election of Officers of the Lodge , when united , that the Deputy Grand

Master to take the Chair for the purpose of presiding at the Election of Officers for the remainder of the present year , or in his absence one of the other present Grand Officers . " The report of the Committee was read and approved at the next meeting of the lodge , and "A motion was then

made by our R . W . M ., Seconded by B Smerdon , that our Lodge of the Mourning Bush , and the Lodge of Emulation , do unite with and take place next Lodge Night , the second Monday in October , which was agreed to Nem . Con . and that our R . W . M . and others of the Committee do now go to the Lodge of Emulation held at the London Tavern and acquaint them with the same .

On the 9 th of October , 1780 , after two brethren had been raised and one initiated , " B White took the Chair as R . W . M . of the Stewards Lodge , no other Grand Officer present . The Brethren of the Lodge of Emulation was introduced and Union took place , the Secretarys of both Lodges read their minutes . " A ballot was then taken for the

Mastership of the united lodges , when B ' Frith was elected by a large majority , and subsequently appointed B White Senior Warden for the remainder of the quarter . At this meeting there appears from the minute book to have been nine members of the " Mourning Bush " present ,

and fifteen members of the " Emulation . " Having finished my examination of the existing records of the older lodge , I will now proceed to an investigation of those appertaining to its junior partner . —( To be continued . )

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The Surgical Aid T ELEPHONE Society N O . 12282 C ENTRAL , CHIEF OFFICES : Salisbury Square , Fleet Street , London , E . C . Patron : HIS MAJESTY THE KINO . President : THE RIGHT HON . THE EARL OF ABERDEEN , G . C . M . G . mHIS Society was established in lSfis to supply SPINAL SUPPORTS , LEG INSTRUMENTS , TRUSSES , ELASTIC STOCKINGS , ARTIFICIAL LlMBS , ETC ., and every other description of mechanical support , to the poor , without limit as to locality or disease . Since the commencement of the Society it has supplied 498 , 759 APPLIANCES TO THE POOR . Annual Subscription of 10 s . 6 o ., or Life Subscription of £ 5 5 s ., entitles to Two Recommendations per annum , the number of letters increasing in proportion to the amount of Contributions . Subscriptions and Donations are earnestly solicited . and will be thankfully received by the Bankers , Messrs . BARCLAY & Co ., Ltd ., Lombard Street , or at the Chief Office of the Society by RICHARD C . TRESSIDER , Secretary .

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The Cancer Hospital ( Free

)FOUNDED 1851

BROMPTON , LOND ON , S . IN

A special refuge for poor persons afflicted with this terrible disease who are admitted free without the trouble of procuring a Subscriber's Letter A number of beds are provided for Patients who may remain for Life . All Applicants are seen each week-day at Two o ' clock . The Diet provided has to be most generous , and the Treatment of the most expensive kind .

New Annual Subscriptions and Donations are Urgently Solicited for General Purposes and for the Research Department

.Secretary—FRED . W . HOWELL . FORM OF BEQUEST OF A LEGACY . —To those benevolent persons who kindly desire to become benefactors by Will to this Institution , the following Form of Legacy is respectfully recommended : — " / give nml bequeath unto the Treasurer for the time being of THE CANCER HOSPITAL ( FREE ) , situate in the Fiilliain Road , Brontptoii , London , Middlesex , the sum of ( free of Legacy Duty ) , to be applied towards carrying on the charitable designs of the xaid Institution . "

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“The Masonic Illustrated: 1905-12-01, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01121905/page/24/.
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Title Category Page
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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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

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

April 27 th . —On this night the lodge was visited by the Master , Wardens , and Officers of the Tuscan Lodge . The interchange of " visits in form " seems to have been a general custom amongst the old lodges at this period , and for many years afterwards , for at the next meeting it is recorded that " The Castle Lodge of Harmony , agreeable to their notice ,

paid a public visit in due form , and were received with the utmost friendship and cordiality . " This practice was enjoined by the old Constitutions ( 1723 ) in the following words : — " All particular Lodges are to observe the same Usages as much as possible ; in order to which , and

for cultivating a good Understanding among Freemasons , some members out of every Lodge shall be deputed to visit the oilier Lodges as often as shall be thought convenient . " Although Rule 149 of the present Constitutions is to the same purpose as the above , I think it is now very seldom observed .

The records of many old lodges indicate periods of prosperity and of decline , and this is particularly noticeable in the career of the Mourning Bush Lodge , as clown to the year 1778 , the lodge appears to have been remarkably successful , both in regard to membership as well as in its financial affairs ; but during the year last mentioned the

minutes show a decided falling off in the attendance of members . At the July meeting there were not sufficient members to open the lodge , and during the remainder of the year the attendances were small , and the minutes of proceedings unusually brief and indifferently recorded . On

January 25 th , 1779 , Bro . Wilson made a Motion , and was seconded by Bro . Frith , that One Guinea should be in future carried to the Committee of Charity instead of the former usual donation of Two Guineas , ; No meetings appear to have been held the months of February and March , and

on April 12 th it was resolved that the lodge should meet monthly instead of fortnightly as heretofore . No minutes of the June meeting are recorded in the book , the page on which they should have been entered being left blank . This is the more strange as it was election night , and it is

clear that a meeting was held , for at the July meeting the new officers are mentioned . No , further omissions appear in the minutes , but the business done was very little , and the attendance of members small in comparison with what it had been in previous years .

On the 13 th March , 1780 , the lodge was visited by Bros . White and Cousins , of the Stewards Lodge , and this visit in all probability was the first step towards the amalgamation of the two lodges—Mourning Bush and Emulation—which took place a few months later , Bro . William White being then a prominent member of the lodge last named , and also of the

Stewards Lodge . At a meeting of the lodge on August 14 th , 1780 , six members and one visitor being present , the subject of uniting with the Lodge of Emulation , No . 255 , was brought forward by the Master , and it was resolved to appoint a

committee of six to meet the same number of members of the Lodge of Emulation , and to report the conditions on which that lodge would agree to unite with the Mourning

Bush Lodge . Accordingly , on September 4 th following , the two Committees , consisting of four members of the Mourning Bush Lodge and seven of the Lodge of Emulation , held a meeting , and having taken the matter into consideration , it was " Resolved unanimously , That it be recommended by the Committee of each Lodge to their respective lodges at their

next meeting , that the two Lodges unite at the Paul ' s Head Tavern . . . . Also that it be recommended to the Officers of each Lodge to resign their respective offices , and , in order to avoid any distinction or preference in the election of Officers of the Lodge , when united , that the Deputy Grand

Master to take the Chair for the purpose of presiding at the Election of Officers for the remainder of the present year , or in his absence one of the other present Grand Officers . " The report of the Committee was read and approved at the next meeting of the lodge , and "A motion was then

made by our R . W . M ., Seconded by B Smerdon , that our Lodge of the Mourning Bush , and the Lodge of Emulation , do unite with and take place next Lodge Night , the second Monday in October , which was agreed to Nem . Con . and that our R . W . M . and others of the Committee do now go to the Lodge of Emulation held at the London Tavern and acquaint them with the same .

On the 9 th of October , 1780 , after two brethren had been raised and one initiated , " B White took the Chair as R . W . M . of the Stewards Lodge , no other Grand Officer present . The Brethren of the Lodge of Emulation was introduced and Union took place , the Secretarys of both Lodges read their minutes . " A ballot was then taken for the

Mastership of the united lodges , when B ' Frith was elected by a large majority , and subsequently appointed B White Senior Warden for the remainder of the quarter . At this meeting there appears from the minute book to have been nine members of the " Mourning Bush " present ,

and fifteen members of the " Emulation . " Having finished my examination of the existing records of the older lodge , I will now proceed to an investigation of those appertaining to its junior partner . —( To be continued . )

Ad02402

The Surgical Aid T ELEPHONE Society N O . 12282 C ENTRAL , CHIEF OFFICES : Salisbury Square , Fleet Street , London , E . C . Patron : HIS MAJESTY THE KINO . President : THE RIGHT HON . THE EARL OF ABERDEEN , G . C . M . G . mHIS Society was established in lSfis to supply SPINAL SUPPORTS , LEG INSTRUMENTS , TRUSSES , ELASTIC STOCKINGS , ARTIFICIAL LlMBS , ETC ., and every other description of mechanical support , to the poor , without limit as to locality or disease . Since the commencement of the Society it has supplied 498 , 759 APPLIANCES TO THE POOR . Annual Subscription of 10 s . 6 o ., or Life Subscription of £ 5 5 s ., entitles to Two Recommendations per annum , the number of letters increasing in proportion to the amount of Contributions . Subscriptions and Donations are earnestly solicited . and will be thankfully received by the Bankers , Messrs . BARCLAY & Co ., Ltd ., Lombard Street , or at the Chief Office of the Society by RICHARD C . TRESSIDER , Secretary .

Ad02401

The Cancer Hospital ( Free

)FOUNDED 1851

BROMPTON , LOND ON , S . IN

A special refuge for poor persons afflicted with this terrible disease who are admitted free without the trouble of procuring a Subscriber's Letter A number of beds are provided for Patients who may remain for Life . All Applicants are seen each week-day at Two o ' clock . The Diet provided has to be most generous , and the Treatment of the most expensive kind .

New Annual Subscriptions and Donations are Urgently Solicited for General Purposes and for the Research Department

.Secretary—FRED . W . HOWELL . FORM OF BEQUEST OF A LEGACY . —To those benevolent persons who kindly desire to become benefactors by Will to this Institution , the following Form of Legacy is respectfully recommended : — " / give nml bequeath unto the Treasurer for the time being of THE CANCER HOSPITAL ( FREE ) , situate in the Fiilliain Road , Brontptoii , London , Middlesex , the sum of ( free of Legacy Duty ) , to be applied towards carrying on the charitable designs of the xaid Institution . "

. . ¦ ^^^^^^¦^¦^^¦^^^¦^¦¦^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^¦¦¦^^^^^^^¦¦¦¦¦¦^^^^^^^^^¦^^^¦¦^^^^^^¦^^^^^^¦^^^^^¦¦¦ MH MB ^^^^^^ H ^^^ HMM ^^^^^^^^ MHi ^^^^ HHi ^^^^^ H ^^^^ HiM ^^^^^^ H

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