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  • March 1, 1874
  • Page 20
  • THE MASONIC CHARITIES.
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1874: Page 20

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    Article THE MASONIC CHARITIES. ← Page 4 of 6 →
Page 20

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The Masonic Charities.

Having thusarrrived at the maximum cost per head , I noAV , in order to enable a comparison to be made with the amount any one of us would have to pay at a private or a public school for a bo 3 from ten until he was sixteen

years of age , deduct the folloAA'ing , namely : — £ s . d . £ s . il . 62 15 0 For extraordinary expenses 3 9 10 Office expenses 7 0 10 Clothing 8 7 4

Stationery and Books ... 0 12 3 Drawing Materials 0 2 G Hair Cutting , Brushes , & c . 0 3 3 Medical 0 11 5 Chaplain ' s Salary 0 18 7 21 1 0 ¦ which leaves £ 41 14 2

for a sound commercial education , with the addition of French , diUAving , music , and drill ; ancl in the upper division classics and advanced mathematics .

Even this sum of £ 41 14 s . 2 d . may be further reduced when Ave take into consideration that it is customary in schools to have about twelve weeks ' holiday per annum , whilst in these Charities the children have the option

of staying the Avhole year at the school , which will necessarily in crease the item of maintenance by , say one-fifth , ancl , for comparison , this one-fifth should be deducted from the above amount . ' The calculation of interest as rent of

schools , & c , averages £ 14 per head . This is a large item , and , I would ask , can we find a private or public school where the rent approaches anything like that sum , so , for comparison , this should be reduced . With reference

, hoAvever , to this amount , I Avould state that it includes infirmary , gymnasium , farm and out-buildings , drainage , layingout and formation of grounds , roads , & c , in fact , the re-construction of the estate .

The annual expenditure per head of the Boys' School is , necessarily , greater than that of the Girls' School , because a much more expensive educational staff-is ^ required , and the boys , unlike

the girls , do not reduce the clothing and household expenditure by their individual assistance . The Boys' School stands alone in the Charities in not having any funded amount to fall back upon ; such a fund

is essentially requisite , for . should , at any future time , the receipts be less than the expenditure , there will be no reserve to meet the deficiency . The third , established

was—THE EOYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOU AGED FREEMASONS AND WlDOAVS OF FltEEMASONS . It was founded at a Grand Lodge , held on the 2 nd March , 1842 , ancl was

established for "ranting annuities to males only . The annuities then granted

were—From GO to 70 years of ago ... £ 10 to £ 20 . „ 70 to 75 „ ... £ 15 to £ 20 . „ 75 and upwards ... £ 20 to £ 30 . In 1867 this scale was abolished ; a uniform payment Avas made to the men of £ 26 , which has been increased this

year to £ 36 . In 1849 the Widows' Fund was established , and annuities similar to the above scale were granted , but in 1867 this Avas altered to one of £ 25 per annum , and increased this year to £ 28 .

At the first festival , in 1847 , the amount realized Avas £ 819 16 s . Ocl , with 40 stewards , while in 1873 , wibli 185 stewards , the large sum of £ 6866

16 s . 0 d ., was received , being £ 3 , 000 more than was received at any preceding festival . In 1842 there AY ere 15 male nnuitants , there are IIOAV 115 ; each year shoAving a gradual increase .

The number of female annuitants elected in 1849 , was only five ; there are now 82 widows on the fund , and 11 receiving half their late husband ' s annuity . The Asylum at Croydon contains

apartments for 33 annuitants , who enjoy the privileges of the house in addition to the annuity , and , through the liberality of the Grand Lodge , they are also

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-03-01, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031874/page/20/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE MARRIAGE OF THE DUKE OF EDINBURGH. Article 2
BISHOP HOPKINS AS A MASON. Article 3
THE LOVED AND LOST. Article 5
FUNERAL LODGES IN SCOTLAND HALF-A-CENTURY AGO. Article 6
ROOKSTONE PRIORY. Article 7
THE PILLAR OF BEAUTY. Article 10
THE DISAPPOINTMENTS OF LIFE. Article 10
A CURIOUS PAMPHLET. Article 12
TRUE COURAGE. Article 15
ODE ON THE DUKE OF LEINSTER. Article 16
THE MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 17
MS. MASONIC CONSTITUTIONS (OR CHARGES) No. 5. Article 23
THE FADED SHAWL . Article 24
Reviews. Article 25
THE HEART-CURE. Article 27
THE SEVEN MASONIC LOCALITIES OF THE HOLY LAND. Article 30
KING PRIAM'S TREASURE. Article 31
WATCHWORDS OF LIFE . Article 31
Questions and Answers. Article 32
Monthly Odds and Ends. Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Masonic Charities.

Having thusarrrived at the maximum cost per head , I noAV , in order to enable a comparison to be made with the amount any one of us would have to pay at a private or a public school for a bo 3 from ten until he was sixteen

years of age , deduct the folloAA'ing , namely : — £ s . d . £ s . il . 62 15 0 For extraordinary expenses 3 9 10 Office expenses 7 0 10 Clothing 8 7 4

Stationery and Books ... 0 12 3 Drawing Materials 0 2 G Hair Cutting , Brushes , & c . 0 3 3 Medical 0 11 5 Chaplain ' s Salary 0 18 7 21 1 0 ¦ which leaves £ 41 14 2

for a sound commercial education , with the addition of French , diUAving , music , and drill ; ancl in the upper division classics and advanced mathematics .

Even this sum of £ 41 14 s . 2 d . may be further reduced when Ave take into consideration that it is customary in schools to have about twelve weeks ' holiday per annum , whilst in these Charities the children have the option

of staying the Avhole year at the school , which will necessarily in crease the item of maintenance by , say one-fifth , ancl , for comparison , this one-fifth should be deducted from the above amount . ' The calculation of interest as rent of

schools , & c , averages £ 14 per head . This is a large item , and , I would ask , can we find a private or public school where the rent approaches anything like that sum , so , for comparison , this should be reduced . With reference

, hoAvever , to this amount , I Avould state that it includes infirmary , gymnasium , farm and out-buildings , drainage , layingout and formation of grounds , roads , & c , in fact , the re-construction of the estate .

The annual expenditure per head of the Boys' School is , necessarily , greater than that of the Girls' School , because a much more expensive educational staff-is ^ required , and the boys , unlike

the girls , do not reduce the clothing and household expenditure by their individual assistance . The Boys' School stands alone in the Charities in not having any funded amount to fall back upon ; such a fund

is essentially requisite , for . should , at any future time , the receipts be less than the expenditure , there will be no reserve to meet the deficiency . The third , established

was—THE EOYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOU AGED FREEMASONS AND WlDOAVS OF FltEEMASONS . It was founded at a Grand Lodge , held on the 2 nd March , 1842 , ancl was

established for "ranting annuities to males only . The annuities then granted

were—From GO to 70 years of ago ... £ 10 to £ 20 . „ 70 to 75 „ ... £ 15 to £ 20 . „ 75 and upwards ... £ 20 to £ 30 . In 1867 this scale was abolished ; a uniform payment Avas made to the men of £ 26 , which has been increased this

year to £ 36 . In 1849 the Widows' Fund was established , and annuities similar to the above scale were granted , but in 1867 this Avas altered to one of £ 25 per annum , and increased this year to £ 28 .

At the first festival , in 1847 , the amount realized Avas £ 819 16 s . Ocl , with 40 stewards , while in 1873 , wibli 185 stewards , the large sum of £ 6866

16 s . 0 d ., was received , being £ 3 , 000 more than was received at any preceding festival . In 1842 there AY ere 15 male nnuitants , there are IIOAV 115 ; each year shoAving a gradual increase .

The number of female annuitants elected in 1849 , was only five ; there are now 82 widows on the fund , and 11 receiving half their late husband ' s annuity . The Asylum at Croydon contains

apartments for 33 annuitants , who enjoy the privileges of the house in addition to the annuity , and , through the liberality of the Grand Lodge , they are also

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