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  • Nov. 1, 1889
  • Page 9
  • Eminent Masons at Home.
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The Masonic Review, Nov. 1, 1889: Page 9

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

Eminent Masons At Home.

golden glory of eventide , to blacken and destroy the peaccfulness of repose , and hasten by its own blackness the blackness of the gathering night . Frederick Binckes was initiated into Freemasonry in the Enoch Lodge ( n ) in December thirty-eight years ago , and passed through the chair five years later , having been exalted the previous year

( 1855 ) in the Mount Sinai Chapter . In 1856 he was elected on the Board of General Purposes , and was a member of the first Building Committee appointed to consider the re-erection of Freemasons ' Hall . In 1 S 60 he filled the chair of the Crescent Lodge ( 788 ) , and has since occupied the same position in the Peace and

Harmony , urand stewards , and Lewis Lodges . In 1862 lie passed the eighteenth degree , Rosicrucian , and that of P . M . W . S . thirtieth

degree , in 1864 . In 1866 he was installed K . T ., and three years later joined the Order of the Red Cross of

Constantino , and in due course filled the chair as Sovereign , and held office as Intendant-General unattached .

From 1862 to June , 1 SS 9 , he occupied the position of Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of Mark Master Masons , having acted as Assistant

Grand Secretary for two years previous . He has served many times as Steward at the Festivals of the Charities .

But in 1861 he was elected to the Secretaryship of the Royal Masonic Institution for

Boys , a position he will in all probability vacate at the end of the present year . Perhaps there is no man in the Craft who

has been more feted than Frederick Binckes . When Mr . Blizzard Abbot wrote his " History of the Royal

Masonic Institution for Boys , " in ' 85 , he completed the work with these remarks : —

In fine , if it was Bro . William Burwood who founded the Institution , it is Bro . Binckes who lias made the School , and our hope is that he maybe spared yet many years to confirm and even extend successes , in the achievement of which lie has played so conspicuous a part . He , more than any brother of whom we have read or heard , is entitled to bear on his achievement of arms the proudly-expressive device ' Non omnis moriar , ' and thrice fortunate will our liojs' School be , if , in what we hope and trust will be the far distant futurethe inheritor of Bro . Binckes' and responsibilities shall

, s cares prove to be the possessor of Bro . Binckes ' s energy , ability , and will . " That Frederick Binckes has possessed this " energy , ability , and will , " may perhaps be allowed b y those who are seeking to reward his efforts with a summary dismissal from the post he has for twenty-eight years so successfully filled . But the ways of the

MR . EREDE 1 UCK IilXCKKS .

aid of a bill of indictment drawn with a view to condemnation , instead of a report upon imperfections with the object

of amendment . You can yourself possess no opinions beyond those gathered from a perusal of that terrible Report ,

barren from Dan to Beersheba , without an oasis in the desert . The world of Masonry is asked to forget

twenty - eight years of successful working . It is not to remember the brilliant festivals , nor the services of the eighty-six members of

world get stranger day by day . Masons are mortals , and have all the idiosyncracies of mortal beings ; and generous men will no doubt forgive much of the vituperative outbursts of a certain section of the Craft . But it will be hard for Frederick Binckes to forgive , and it will be impossible for him to forget . Could you but place yourself for one moment in the position of the unfortunate Secretary of the

R . M . Institution for Boys , you would perhaps comment on the absence of judicial fairness in the Report of the inquiry committee . You could not but regret that , if objections were to have been made against the administrations of the institution , they should have been accomplished in an open and judicious manner , without the

the various Committees who have given their time to the welfare of the Institution . It is to have no thought of the large sums of money

which Frederick Binckes has , entirely by his own persuasive energies , weaned from the pockets of the charitable

Brethren . It is to forget the welfare of the boys who have left the Institution to become active members of the

great community outside ; and it is to ignore —if the wish of the minority were takenthe benefits which

Frederick Binckes has undoubtedly secured for the most important of the Masonic

Institutions . These are points which he will press upon you as you sit with him this October nig ht—with Frederick Binckes the man , and not the Mason . He discards for the moment any of the influences Masonry might be supposed to cast upon the situation . He will ask you to point out one instance in his connection with the Institution that can bring down upon him the

condemnation of honest men . He will tell you of the charge of forgery that his brother Masons have brought against him , a charge which he will not , he tells you also , disgrace his Brotherhood by meeting . He points out , and disposes of to your satisfaction , many of the matters which his enemies lay much stress upon , and

“The Masonic Review: 1889-11-01, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msr/issues/msr_01111889/page/9/.
  • List
  • Grid
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.

golden glory of eventide , to blacken and destroy the peaccfulness of repose , and hasten by its own blackness the blackness of the gathering night . Frederick Binckes was initiated into Freemasonry in the Enoch Lodge ( n ) in December thirty-eight years ago , and passed through the chair five years later , having been exalted the previous year

( 1855 ) in the Mount Sinai Chapter . In 1856 he was elected on the Board of General Purposes , and was a member of the first Building Committee appointed to consider the re-erection of Freemasons ' Hall . In 1 S 60 he filled the chair of the Crescent Lodge ( 788 ) , and has since occupied the same position in the Peace and

Harmony , urand stewards , and Lewis Lodges . In 1862 lie passed the eighteenth degree , Rosicrucian , and that of P . M . W . S . thirtieth

degree , in 1864 . In 1866 he was installed K . T ., and three years later joined the Order of the Red Cross of

Constantino , and in due course filled the chair as Sovereign , and held office as Intendant-General unattached .

From 1862 to June , 1 SS 9 , he occupied the position of Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of Mark Master Masons , having acted as Assistant

Grand Secretary for two years previous . He has served many times as Steward at the Festivals of the Charities .

But in 1861 he was elected to the Secretaryship of the Royal Masonic Institution for

Boys , a position he will in all probability vacate at the end of the present year . Perhaps there is no man in the Craft who

has been more feted than Frederick Binckes . When Mr . Blizzard Abbot wrote his " History of the Royal

Masonic Institution for Boys , " in ' 85 , he completed the work with these remarks : —

In fine , if it was Bro . William Burwood who founded the Institution , it is Bro . Binckes who lias made the School , and our hope is that he maybe spared yet many years to confirm and even extend successes , in the achievement of which lie has played so conspicuous a part . He , more than any brother of whom we have read or heard , is entitled to bear on his achievement of arms the proudly-expressive device ' Non omnis moriar , ' and thrice fortunate will our liojs' School be , if , in what we hope and trust will be the far distant futurethe inheritor of Bro . Binckes' and responsibilities shall

, s cares prove to be the possessor of Bro . Binckes ' s energy , ability , and will . " That Frederick Binckes has possessed this " energy , ability , and will , " may perhaps be allowed b y those who are seeking to reward his efforts with a summary dismissal from the post he has for twenty-eight years so successfully filled . But the ways of the

MR . EREDE 1 UCK IilXCKKS .

aid of a bill of indictment drawn with a view to condemnation , instead of a report upon imperfections with the object

of amendment . You can yourself possess no opinions beyond those gathered from a perusal of that terrible Report ,

barren from Dan to Beersheba , without an oasis in the desert . The world of Masonry is asked to forget

twenty - eight years of successful working . It is not to remember the brilliant festivals , nor the services of the eighty-six members of

world get stranger day by day . Masons are mortals , and have all the idiosyncracies of mortal beings ; and generous men will no doubt forgive much of the vituperative outbursts of a certain section of the Craft . But it will be hard for Frederick Binckes to forgive , and it will be impossible for him to forget . Could you but place yourself for one moment in the position of the unfortunate Secretary of the

R . M . Institution for Boys , you would perhaps comment on the absence of judicial fairness in the Report of the inquiry committee . You could not but regret that , if objections were to have been made against the administrations of the institution , they should have been accomplished in an open and judicious manner , without the

the various Committees who have given their time to the welfare of the Institution . It is to have no thought of the large sums of money

which Frederick Binckes has , entirely by his own persuasive energies , weaned from the pockets of the charitable

Brethren . It is to forget the welfare of the boys who have left the Institution to become active members of the

great community outside ; and it is to ignore —if the wish of the minority were takenthe benefits which

Frederick Binckes has undoubtedly secured for the most important of the Masonic

Institutions . These are points which he will press upon you as you sit with him this October nig ht—with Frederick Binckes the man , and not the Mason . He discards for the moment any of the influences Masonry might be supposed to cast upon the situation . He will ask you to point out one instance in his connection with the Institution that can bring down upon him the

condemnation of honest men . He will tell you of the charge of forgery that his brother Masons have brought against him , a charge which he will not , he tells you also , disgrace his Brotherhood by meeting . He points out , and disposes of to your satisfaction , many of the matters which his enemies lay much stress upon , and

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