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  • The Masonic Review
  • Nov. 1, 1889
  • Page 10
  • THE ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS.
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The Masonic Review, Nov. 1, 1889: Page 10

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Eminent Masons At Home.

he leaves you to your own opinions , to condemn—if condemnation is in your heart . You confess to much sympathy with Bro . Binckes , not that you think he has used the utmost tact in his connection with various officials of the Institution , but because his twentyeight years' successful labors on behalf of the Institution should stand

him in good stead now that a change is necessary . The question of the pension , which the greater number of the subscribers are anxious to offer him during the remaining years of his life , is extraneous to the point at issue . It is his honor to the Craft and the Institution that interests him most , but he feels , with all those

who are anxious to brighten the completion of his Masonic career , that the opposition to his pension being granted is in itself an impeachment of that honor . Whether that pension will ever be his or not , cannot for one moment tarnish the memory of those brethren who have in days

gone by received material benefits from his hands . It is so easy to condemn , that these , at least , will make some effort to praise . They will find out affairs in his life which can add only lustre to the obligations of brotherhood he has fulfilled since he first entered a Masonic Lodge five-and-thirty years ago . They will forget , as all

true Masons should , many of the trivial circumstances upon which opinions may not differ , and they will find in Frederick Binckes , and his lifetime services at Freemasons' Hall , a man who has not } 'et been surpassed in his energies for the benefits of Freemasonry , and a tenure of officialdom which has not been equalled since the sacred lamp of the Order was lit , centuries ago , in the Temple of King Solomon .

The Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

THE ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS .

THE Committee of the above Institution held Hs usual monthly meeting on Saturday , the 51 I 1 ult ., under the chairmanship of Bro . Richard Eve , P . G . T ., when there was a very large attendance of subscribing brethren . The lime will come , perhaps , when tlie affairs of the school and its administrative department will emerge from ihe unfortunate position in which they now are , and nothing but a clean sweep of all the officials from the highest to the lowest will , perhaps , effect this . Whenever the affairs of a charitable

institution is left somewhat in the bands of the general body of supporters , the result is always chaos , and the antagonistic influences which seem to be floating among the subscribers of the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys have not spared this Institution from drifting into such a condition . In the course of the proceeding 1 ; Bro . John Class moved the following proposition : —

That the Provisional Committee be authorised to terminate the appointment of Dr . Morris , the head master , in accordance with the terms of agreement , dated 20 th August , 1 S 75 , and that the said Committee be further empowered to take such steps as they may deem desirable to appoint another head master m accordance with the aws of the Institution . Bro . J . S . Cumberland had pleasure in seconding him . Bro . Biitten was of the strong opinion that Dr . Morris should be retained , and moved an

amendment to that effect . Bro . Jones strongly upheld the resolution passed at the June Quarterly Court , that the whole of the administrative officers of the Institution were to resign , or tender their resignation . He thought there was not sufficient discipline in the school , and hoped the General Committee would support the Provisional Committee and its recommendations to the letter .

Bro . Alfred Durrani , on the other hand , could not allow any statement to be made in any public body reflecting on the management of the Institution by Dr . Morris . He had had many opportunities of seeing and knowing how discipline was maintained at the school , and he most unhesitatingly maintained that the school , as far as the head master was concerned , was well managed , and that its discipline was excellent . Dr . Morris occupied a very high position

in the educational world , and his character was too high to be attacked by persons who had no shred of evidence to support their charges . As one of those who adhered to the report of the Provisional Committee , Bro . Hawkins remarked he was not conscious that Dr . Morris had been insufficient as far as the discipline of the school was concerned , and that he had been weak in not coming to the House Committee to protest against the

ISinckes control . This statement had been made , and they were told that as soon as he had come to the House Committee he was not supported there . They never heard of that until he came before the Philbrick Committee . Now , either Dr . Morris did go to the House Committee and complain of interference with his administration , or he did not . If he did he was right , if he did not he was wrong . He ( Bro . Hawkins ) would like to know whether he did . The

Philbrick Committee held that the educational condition of the school was good ; he heard practically the same Commission , consisting of the same gentlemen , recommending unanimously that Dr . Morris should be dismissed . Did thoFc gentlemen accede to that report ? Was any information obtained from Bro . Philbrick , or Sir Reginald Hanson , or others ,

The Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

as to whether Dr . Morns had had the opportunity of carrying on the Institution with another staff ? It seemed to him that Dr . Morris had no real opportunity of being the Governor of the School . Was the Provisiona l Committee , after so many years of Dr . Morris's services , going to give Dr . Morris a six months' notice , or six months' salary only , when they were going to give another a gigantic pension ? He was surprised at such conduct . There was no reason in the thing . They recommended the pensioning of an

officer at £ 50 a year more than the salary which they were going to give his successor . If Dr . Morris was to go , give him some solatium : do not turn him away . If Dr . Moms was such an incompetent master , such a bad scholar , how was it he ( Bro . Hawkins ) had read for years the repoits from the Secretary and Committee extolling Dr . Morris ? There must certainly be some arguments in his favor . He did not say keep him permanently , but give

him an opportunity of receiving something if they were going to turn him away at once . Eventually the motion of Bro . Glass was carried by 45 votes against 34 , and Dr . Morris will , therefore , surrender his position at Wood Green , and the resolution will be acted upon by the Provisional Committee . After a number of party questions had been made , and explanations , amid laughter and various

cries of disapproval given , it was reported that at the Quarterly Court , to be held on October 25 , the motion of a pension of , £ 330 a year to Bro . Binckes would be put for confirmation , and the brethren dispersed without passing a vote of thanks to the Chairman for presiding . The Quarterly Court was held at the Freemasons' Tavern on Friday , the 25 th ult ., when the Grand Treasurer presided . A large number of Brethren were present , and the report of the Provisional Management Committee contained the following clause : —

The Committee , acting upon the authority given to it at the last Quarterly Court to confer with the Secretary , Bro . Binckes , " as to the terms of la ' s retirement , and to arrange them , if possible , '' has , after deliberation , arranged with him that he shall retire from the office of Secretary at tlie end of the present year 1 SS 9 , upon a retiring allowance of , £ 350 per annum for life . This arrangement received the almost unanimous approval of the General Committee on August 10 last , and this Committee now asks the General Court to sanction and confirm the same .

Upon this question the discussion which ensued was peculiarly of a party nature . After Mr . W . E . Porter had been elected by a very large majority to fulfil the duties of Medical Officer to the Institution , the motion of Bro . Richard Eve That in accordance with the recommendation of the Provisional Management Committee , adopted by the General Committee , on Saturday , 10 th August 1 S 89 an allowance of £ 350 per annum for life be made to Bro .

, , Frederick Binckes on his retirement from the office of Secretary after a service of upwards of 28 years . was carried . The proposer laid his case before the Court in a concise but impartial manner . He called the attention of the subscribers to the recommendations of the Committee appointed by themselves . He detailed the work of Bro . Binckes during the great number of years he had held office ,

and laid much stress on the yearly increase of the funds of the Institution during that period . Bro . Eve , whose remarks were continually interrupted , finished by reading a letter he had received from Bro . Pope , P . G . D ., one of the members of the Investigation Committee , who " relied on the generosity of the Craft to recognise the undoubted services of Bro . Binckes , and to provide some such means of honorable or voluntary

retirement as is contemplated in 3 our resolution . " Colonel Brisbane seconded the resolution , which—after several abortive amendments had been moved , one of which was not seconded , and others not put to the vote—the Chairman eventually , amid great confusion and excitement , took a division on the original motion , with the result that it was carried by 220 votes to 213 , after which Brother Hawkins invited the Brethren to

subscribe to a fund of , £ 500 to carry the question to the Chancery Court . A motion to expend a sum of . £ 3 , 500 t 0 provide washing and swimming baths for the use of the pupils was also carried , and sixteen candidates having been elected to the vacancies in the school , a vote of thanks to Brother Edward Terry terminated the proceedings .

At the moment of going to press , we unfortunately hear that an application will be immediately made to the Courts to overthrow the resolution carried in favor of the pension to Brother Binckes .

Freemasonry includes within its circle almost every branch of polite learning . Under the veil of its mysteries is comprehended a regular system of science . Many of its illustrations to the confined genius may appear unimportant , but the man of more enlarged faculties will perceive them to be in the highest degree useful and entercsting . To please the accomplished scholar and ingenuous artist , Freemasonry is wisely planned ; and in the investigation of its latent doctrines the philosopher and mathematician may

experience equal delight and satisfaction . To exhaust the various subjects of which it treats would transcend the powers of the bri ghtest genius ; still , however , nearer approaches 10 perfection may be made , and the man of understanding will not check the progress of his abilities , though the task he attempts may at first seem insurmountable . Perseverance and application remove each difficulty ns it occurs ; every step he advances new pleasures open to his view , and instruction of the noblest kind attends his researches . In the diligent pursuit of knowledge ihe intellectual faculties are employed in promoting the glory of God and the good of men- — Alfred D . Kins ; .

“The Masonic Review: 1889-11-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msr/issues/msr_01111889/page/10/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 1
" REPUTABLE CIRCUMSTANCES. " Article 1
Round and About. Article 2
Masonic Mems. Article 5
Untitled Article 8
Eminent Masons at Home. Article 8
THE ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 10
THE MARQUIS OF HERTFORD INSTALLED AS PRO. GRAND MASTER OF ANTRIM. Article 11
Among the Bohemians. Article 12
Provincial Grand Lodges and Chapters. Article 14
Colonial and Foreign. Article 15
BOOKS AND PERIODICALS RECEIVED. Article 16
Answers to Correspondents. Article 16
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Eminent Masons At Home.

he leaves you to your own opinions , to condemn—if condemnation is in your heart . You confess to much sympathy with Bro . Binckes , not that you think he has used the utmost tact in his connection with various officials of the Institution , but because his twentyeight years' successful labors on behalf of the Institution should stand

him in good stead now that a change is necessary . The question of the pension , which the greater number of the subscribers are anxious to offer him during the remaining years of his life , is extraneous to the point at issue . It is his honor to the Craft and the Institution that interests him most , but he feels , with all those

who are anxious to brighten the completion of his Masonic career , that the opposition to his pension being granted is in itself an impeachment of that honor . Whether that pension will ever be his or not , cannot for one moment tarnish the memory of those brethren who have in days

gone by received material benefits from his hands . It is so easy to condemn , that these , at least , will make some effort to praise . They will find out affairs in his life which can add only lustre to the obligations of brotherhood he has fulfilled since he first entered a Masonic Lodge five-and-thirty years ago . They will forget , as all

true Masons should , many of the trivial circumstances upon which opinions may not differ , and they will find in Frederick Binckes , and his lifetime services at Freemasons' Hall , a man who has not } 'et been surpassed in his energies for the benefits of Freemasonry , and a tenure of officialdom which has not been equalled since the sacred lamp of the Order was lit , centuries ago , in the Temple of King Solomon .

The Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

THE ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS .

THE Committee of the above Institution held Hs usual monthly meeting on Saturday , the 51 I 1 ult ., under the chairmanship of Bro . Richard Eve , P . G . T ., when there was a very large attendance of subscribing brethren . The lime will come , perhaps , when tlie affairs of the school and its administrative department will emerge from ihe unfortunate position in which they now are , and nothing but a clean sweep of all the officials from the highest to the lowest will , perhaps , effect this . Whenever the affairs of a charitable

institution is left somewhat in the bands of the general body of supporters , the result is always chaos , and the antagonistic influences which seem to be floating among the subscribers of the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys have not spared this Institution from drifting into such a condition . In the course of the proceeding 1 ; Bro . John Class moved the following proposition : —

That the Provisional Committee be authorised to terminate the appointment of Dr . Morris , the head master , in accordance with the terms of agreement , dated 20 th August , 1 S 75 , and that the said Committee be further empowered to take such steps as they may deem desirable to appoint another head master m accordance with the aws of the Institution . Bro . J . S . Cumberland had pleasure in seconding him . Bro . Biitten was of the strong opinion that Dr . Morris should be retained , and moved an

amendment to that effect . Bro . Jones strongly upheld the resolution passed at the June Quarterly Court , that the whole of the administrative officers of the Institution were to resign , or tender their resignation . He thought there was not sufficient discipline in the school , and hoped the General Committee would support the Provisional Committee and its recommendations to the letter .

Bro . Alfred Durrani , on the other hand , could not allow any statement to be made in any public body reflecting on the management of the Institution by Dr . Morris . He had had many opportunities of seeing and knowing how discipline was maintained at the school , and he most unhesitatingly maintained that the school , as far as the head master was concerned , was well managed , and that its discipline was excellent . Dr . Morris occupied a very high position

in the educational world , and his character was too high to be attacked by persons who had no shred of evidence to support their charges . As one of those who adhered to the report of the Provisional Committee , Bro . Hawkins remarked he was not conscious that Dr . Morris had been insufficient as far as the discipline of the school was concerned , and that he had been weak in not coming to the House Committee to protest against the

ISinckes control . This statement had been made , and they were told that as soon as he had come to the House Committee he was not supported there . They never heard of that until he came before the Philbrick Committee . Now , either Dr . Morris did go to the House Committee and complain of interference with his administration , or he did not . If he did he was right , if he did not he was wrong . He ( Bro . Hawkins ) would like to know whether he did . The

Philbrick Committee held that the educational condition of the school was good ; he heard practically the same Commission , consisting of the same gentlemen , recommending unanimously that Dr . Morris should be dismissed . Did thoFc gentlemen accede to that report ? Was any information obtained from Bro . Philbrick , or Sir Reginald Hanson , or others ,

The Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

as to whether Dr . Morns had had the opportunity of carrying on the Institution with another staff ? It seemed to him that Dr . Morris had no real opportunity of being the Governor of the School . Was the Provisiona l Committee , after so many years of Dr . Morris's services , going to give Dr . Morris a six months' notice , or six months' salary only , when they were going to give another a gigantic pension ? He was surprised at such conduct . There was no reason in the thing . They recommended the pensioning of an

officer at £ 50 a year more than the salary which they were going to give his successor . If Dr . Morris was to go , give him some solatium : do not turn him away . If Dr . Moms was such an incompetent master , such a bad scholar , how was it he ( Bro . Hawkins ) had read for years the repoits from the Secretary and Committee extolling Dr . Morris ? There must certainly be some arguments in his favor . He did not say keep him permanently , but give

him an opportunity of receiving something if they were going to turn him away at once . Eventually the motion of Bro . Glass was carried by 45 votes against 34 , and Dr . Morris will , therefore , surrender his position at Wood Green , and the resolution will be acted upon by the Provisional Committee . After a number of party questions had been made , and explanations , amid laughter and various

cries of disapproval given , it was reported that at the Quarterly Court , to be held on October 25 , the motion of a pension of , £ 330 a year to Bro . Binckes would be put for confirmation , and the brethren dispersed without passing a vote of thanks to the Chairman for presiding . The Quarterly Court was held at the Freemasons' Tavern on Friday , the 25 th ult ., when the Grand Treasurer presided . A large number of Brethren were present , and the report of the Provisional Management Committee contained the following clause : —

The Committee , acting upon the authority given to it at the last Quarterly Court to confer with the Secretary , Bro . Binckes , " as to the terms of la ' s retirement , and to arrange them , if possible , '' has , after deliberation , arranged with him that he shall retire from the office of Secretary at tlie end of the present year 1 SS 9 , upon a retiring allowance of , £ 350 per annum for life . This arrangement received the almost unanimous approval of the General Committee on August 10 last , and this Committee now asks the General Court to sanction and confirm the same .

Upon this question the discussion which ensued was peculiarly of a party nature . After Mr . W . E . Porter had been elected by a very large majority to fulfil the duties of Medical Officer to the Institution , the motion of Bro . Richard Eve That in accordance with the recommendation of the Provisional Management Committee , adopted by the General Committee , on Saturday , 10 th August 1 S 89 an allowance of £ 350 per annum for life be made to Bro .

, , Frederick Binckes on his retirement from the office of Secretary after a service of upwards of 28 years . was carried . The proposer laid his case before the Court in a concise but impartial manner . He called the attention of the subscribers to the recommendations of the Committee appointed by themselves . He detailed the work of Bro . Binckes during the great number of years he had held office ,

and laid much stress on the yearly increase of the funds of the Institution during that period . Bro . Eve , whose remarks were continually interrupted , finished by reading a letter he had received from Bro . Pope , P . G . D ., one of the members of the Investigation Committee , who " relied on the generosity of the Craft to recognise the undoubted services of Bro . Binckes , and to provide some such means of honorable or voluntary

retirement as is contemplated in 3 our resolution . " Colonel Brisbane seconded the resolution , which—after several abortive amendments had been moved , one of which was not seconded , and others not put to the vote—the Chairman eventually , amid great confusion and excitement , took a division on the original motion , with the result that it was carried by 220 votes to 213 , after which Brother Hawkins invited the Brethren to

subscribe to a fund of , £ 500 to carry the question to the Chancery Court . A motion to expend a sum of . £ 3 , 500 t 0 provide washing and swimming baths for the use of the pupils was also carried , and sixteen candidates having been elected to the vacancies in the school , a vote of thanks to Brother Edward Terry terminated the proceedings .

At the moment of going to press , we unfortunately hear that an application will be immediately made to the Courts to overthrow the resolution carried in favor of the pension to Brother Binckes .

Freemasonry includes within its circle almost every branch of polite learning . Under the veil of its mysteries is comprehended a regular system of science . Many of its illustrations to the confined genius may appear unimportant , but the man of more enlarged faculties will perceive them to be in the highest degree useful and entercsting . To please the accomplished scholar and ingenuous artist , Freemasonry is wisely planned ; and in the investigation of its latent doctrines the philosopher and mathematician may

experience equal delight and satisfaction . To exhaust the various subjects of which it treats would transcend the powers of the bri ghtest genius ; still , however , nearer approaches 10 perfection may be made , and the man of understanding will not check the progress of his abilities , though the task he attempts may at first seem insurmountable . Perseverance and application remove each difficulty ns it occurs ; every step he advances new pleasures open to his view , and instruction of the noblest kind attends his researches . In the diligent pursuit of knowledge ihe intellectual faculties are employed in promoting the glory of God and the good of men- — Alfred D . Kins ; .

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