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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1877
  • Page 13
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The Masonic Magazine, Feb. 1, 1877: Page 13

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    Article OLD LONDON. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article OLD LONDON. Page 2 of 2
    Article ON READING. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 13

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

Old London.

and beautifully carved , and many of the rooms are most handsomely panelled and have fine staircases . Hard by , at 25 , Bishopsgate Street , Crosby Hall Chambers , is a very noble chimney-piece . Mr . Birch attributed this bouse again to Inigo Jones ,

owing to the peculiar rustication of the ground floor . Passing on to Lime Street , the author of the paper described con amore a house of which he took drawings in 1872 , before it Avas unhappily destroyed , and on Avhich he has published a

monograp h . The quarter was the Belgravia of Old London , when the Court Avas habitually kept at the ToAver . The gate Avas inscribed with the year 1631 , but successive modernizations had robbed the outside of all interest , save , perhaps , to the

antiquary . It was impossible fully to trace the history of this relic of London before the Great Fire . But there were names stirring enough identified Avith it . Before the 15 th century ended the site was occupied by the town house of the powerful

Scropes of Bolton . For Lime Street was then inhabited Avholly by the Avealthiest and greatest nobles—the Nevdles , Bohuns , Fitzalans , Whittingtons , De Burleys , De Veres . The identification of the house in question with the Scropes vras established

by the will of one Richart Kuyht Hustings , dated in the 20 th of Henry VII . ( 1505 ) . The names of the next lessees were lost by the destruction of the archives of the

Fishmongers' Company , to Avhich it had been bequeathed , in the Great Fire . But eventually the house was leased to Sir Thomas Abney , Lord Mayor of London in 1701 , and the patron of Dr . Isaac Watts . In his tune it underwent changes ,

which Mr . Birch described in detail , and the oAvner kept his mayoralty there . The name and estates of the Abneys passed by marriage into the Hastings family , and became extinct in the direct male line on the death of the late Raivdon Phntagenet

Abney Hastings , Marquis of Hastings . The Bordieus , very eminent merchants , were the next possessors , Avho lie buried in the neighbouring church of St . Mary Tlndershaft . Mr . Birch ' s drawings of this nue old mansion Avere shownand the

de-, tails fondly dAvelt on . It Avas mentioned that the Fishmongers' Company generously presented some of the noble fireplaces to the South Kensington Museum , and one to

Old London.

the Guildhall . Some of the oldest London Inns Avere much passed in review , the Tabard , the Swan Avith Four Necks , or "Nicks" rather , as Mr . Birch said it Avould be , and the Oxford Arms , in Warwick Lane . The vieAvs of the last taken

by the society for photographing Old London Avere exhibited , and their beauty of chiaroscuro Avas lovingly dwelt upon . The Oxford Arms was rebuilt immediately after the Great Fire , as a contemporary advertisement of Edward Bartlett , an

Oxford carrier , whose head quarters the Inn Avas , demonstrably proved . These old Inns were built on a sort of traditional plan , so that the present Oxford Arms resembled the old model . Old river-side houses , ancient tenements in Hoxton High Street , Wapping , Blackwall , Aldgate , Mile End Road , and Gray ' s Inn-lane were next spoken of , ancl then folloAved more detailed

accounts of Lambeth Palace , Middle Temple Hall , Lincoln ' s Inn , Gray ' s Inn , with a slig ht mention of the minor Inns of Court . The history and architecture of the Charterhouse Avere sketched more fully . Before concluding the lecturer spoke of " one little gem of a room" in the Ward

Schools of St . Botolph , Billingsgate , all panelled in oak , and in each of the panels an excellent fainting in chiaroscuro in a very perfect state of preservation . Attention Avas also called to a house in Mark Lane—not the Avell-known old house on

the right going from Fenchurch Street , but on the left , close to the Corn Exchange , in which there Avas a very perfect room , Avith a high chimney-piece , elaborate architrave and pediments to the door , with a very richly-decorated plaster ceiling . Unhappily , it was about to be pulled cloAvn . The paper Avas repeatedly cheered , and a discussion folloAved .

On Reading.

ON READING .

SOME short time back the annual meeting of the City ancl Sp italfields School of Artunique of its kind in the City of London , and Avell Avorthy of imitation in otherparts of the metropolis and in large provincial towns , for the good it is doing

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-02-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01021877/page/13/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
SONNET. Article 3
LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE UF OHIO. Article 4
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES AND MODERN FREEMASONRY; THEIR ANALOGIES CONSIDERED. Article 7
LINES TO THE CRAFT. Article 11
OLD LONDON. Article 12
ON READING. Article 13
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 15
ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL. Article 17
CHURCH GARDENS. Article 19
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 21
THE BYZANTINE AND TURKISH EMPIRES. Article 24
GERARD MONTAGU: Article 26
BURMAH.* Article 28
THE MASONIC ANGEL. Article 30
A LEGEND. Article 32
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 33
" BLIND." Article 35
THE BRAKEMAN'S STORY. Article 35
A LAY OF MODERN DURHAM. Article 37
MEMBERSHIP OF LODGES IN ENGLAND AND IRELAND. Article 38
A CIGAR SCIENTIFICALLY DISSECTED. Article 40
NOTES BY FATHER FOY ON HIS SECOND LECTURE. Article 42
LINDISFARNE ABBEY. Article 46
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE WIDOWED SISTERS. Article 50
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Page 13

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

Old London.

and beautifully carved , and many of the rooms are most handsomely panelled and have fine staircases . Hard by , at 25 , Bishopsgate Street , Crosby Hall Chambers , is a very noble chimney-piece . Mr . Birch attributed this bouse again to Inigo Jones ,

owing to the peculiar rustication of the ground floor . Passing on to Lime Street , the author of the paper described con amore a house of which he took drawings in 1872 , before it Avas unhappily destroyed , and on Avhich he has published a

monograp h . The quarter was the Belgravia of Old London , when the Court Avas habitually kept at the ToAver . The gate Avas inscribed with the year 1631 , but successive modernizations had robbed the outside of all interest , save , perhaps , to the

antiquary . It was impossible fully to trace the history of this relic of London before the Great Fire . But there were names stirring enough identified Avith it . Before the 15 th century ended the site was occupied by the town house of the powerful

Scropes of Bolton . For Lime Street was then inhabited Avholly by the Avealthiest and greatest nobles—the Nevdles , Bohuns , Fitzalans , Whittingtons , De Burleys , De Veres . The identification of the house in question with the Scropes vras established

by the will of one Richart Kuyht Hustings , dated in the 20 th of Henry VII . ( 1505 ) . The names of the next lessees were lost by the destruction of the archives of the

Fishmongers' Company , to Avhich it had been bequeathed , in the Great Fire . But eventually the house was leased to Sir Thomas Abney , Lord Mayor of London in 1701 , and the patron of Dr . Isaac Watts . In his tune it underwent changes ,

which Mr . Birch described in detail , and the oAvner kept his mayoralty there . The name and estates of the Abneys passed by marriage into the Hastings family , and became extinct in the direct male line on the death of the late Raivdon Phntagenet

Abney Hastings , Marquis of Hastings . The Bordieus , very eminent merchants , were the next possessors , Avho lie buried in the neighbouring church of St . Mary Tlndershaft . Mr . Birch ' s drawings of this nue old mansion Avere shownand the

de-, tails fondly dAvelt on . It Avas mentioned that the Fishmongers' Company generously presented some of the noble fireplaces to the South Kensington Museum , and one to

Old London.

the Guildhall . Some of the oldest London Inns Avere much passed in review , the Tabard , the Swan Avith Four Necks , or "Nicks" rather , as Mr . Birch said it Avould be , and the Oxford Arms , in Warwick Lane . The vieAvs of the last taken

by the society for photographing Old London Avere exhibited , and their beauty of chiaroscuro Avas lovingly dwelt upon . The Oxford Arms was rebuilt immediately after the Great Fire , as a contemporary advertisement of Edward Bartlett , an

Oxford carrier , whose head quarters the Inn Avas , demonstrably proved . These old Inns were built on a sort of traditional plan , so that the present Oxford Arms resembled the old model . Old river-side houses , ancient tenements in Hoxton High Street , Wapping , Blackwall , Aldgate , Mile End Road , and Gray ' s Inn-lane were next spoken of , ancl then folloAved more detailed

accounts of Lambeth Palace , Middle Temple Hall , Lincoln ' s Inn , Gray ' s Inn , with a slig ht mention of the minor Inns of Court . The history and architecture of the Charterhouse Avere sketched more fully . Before concluding the lecturer spoke of " one little gem of a room" in the Ward

Schools of St . Botolph , Billingsgate , all panelled in oak , and in each of the panels an excellent fainting in chiaroscuro in a very perfect state of preservation . Attention Avas also called to a house in Mark Lane—not the Avell-known old house on

the right going from Fenchurch Street , but on the left , close to the Corn Exchange , in which there Avas a very perfect room , Avith a high chimney-piece , elaborate architrave and pediments to the door , with a very richly-decorated plaster ceiling . Unhappily , it was about to be pulled cloAvn . The paper Avas repeatedly cheered , and a discussion folloAved .

On Reading.

ON READING .

SOME short time back the annual meeting of the City ancl Sp italfields School of Artunique of its kind in the City of London , and Avell Avorthy of imitation in otherparts of the metropolis and in large provincial towns , for the good it is doing

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