History of Five Orders Lodge -
"Fifty Years of The
Five Orders Lodge No. 3696"
The
following is a transcription of a booklet produced to commemorate the
first fifty years' history of the Lodge, and is reproduced without
amendment or update. The recording of the next fifty years' history is
a work in progress, and instalments will appear here in future.
Fifty Years of The Five
Orders Lodge No. 3696
Compiled by W. Bro. Douglas Hall, P.M., P.Z., L.G.R., L.G.C.R.
Officers 1963-1964
W. Bro. F.R. Hall Master
W. Bro. W.T.C. Hammond I.P.M.
Bro. H. Silverstone S.W.
Bro. L.A. Milligan J.W.
W. Bro. J.S. Brotchie, P.M., P.Z., L.G.R. Chaplain
W. Bro. R.A.R. Wells, P.M., P.Z. Treasurer
W. Bro. F.C. Freeman, P.M. Secretary
W. Bro. J.H. Manning, P.M., P.Z., L.G.R. D.C.
Bro. A.F. Baird S.D.
Bro. W.G. Salmons J.D.
W. Bro. C.L. Mumford, P.M., P.Z., L.G.R. A.D.C.
W. Bro. F.C. Richardson, P.M. Almoner
W. Bro. W.H. Peterson, P.M., P.Z., L.G.R. Organist
W. Bro. J. Lucas, P.M. Asst. Secty
Bro. J.T. Philp I.G.
W. Bro. E.T. Bates, P.M. Steward
Bro. J. Benn Steward
Bro. S.H. Fryer Steward
Bro. G.E. Vaus Steward
Bro. A.W. Geeson Steward
Bro. A.W. Linton Steward
Bro. R. Hennessey Steward
Bro. C.J. Jackson Tyler
Foreword
To be elected Master of one’s Lodge is an honour –
to be
entrusted with the Mastership in Golden Jubilee Year is a privilege
which I am happy to acknowledge. In thanking the Lodge I affirm that I
shall do my best to justify this confidence – I need not
emphasize how warmly I appreciate it. I value, also, the opportunity to
pen a foreword to this History of the Lodge, which has been so
carefully compiled by W. Bro. Douglas Hall: to him and to all who have
helped, the thanks of all present and future members are due. It is a
humbling thought that this booklet will be studied by Masons yet
unborn, and certainly in the year 2013 when the Officers at that time
will undoubtedly be preparing for the Lodge Centenary Celebrations.
What they will know of us, and of the beginnings of the Five Orders
Lodge, will have come to them from the Lodge records and from booklets
such as this. Language and customs change – they may well
smile
at our phraseology and at our photographs – but we hope that
something of the spirit of the Lodge has been captured in these pages.
Standing as we do at the midway of the first hundred years, we can
still grasp the hand of our surviving founder, W. Bro. F. Arnold
Greenwood, and extend the hand of fellowship to our brothers of the
years to come. In our practice of the principles and tenets of the
Craft we hope we have maintained the standard which our Founders would
have wished. Certainly, in all sincerity, we have tried to do so. We
may be forgiven, then, for approaching our Golden Jubilee Meeting with
the feeling that our jubilation is justified, and with the confidence
that, on the foundation firmly laid, the Lodge will continue to
develop, and to bring satisfaction and serenity to its members. In this
memorable year, all Officers and Members of the Lodge join W. Bro. F.
Arnold Greenwood, the Past Masters and me in in offering fraternal
greetings and good wishes to the Brethren visiting us on our Golden
Jubilee Meeting, and to those who, in the years ahead, will continue to
uphold and enhance the proud reputation of this, The Five Orders Lodge.
Frank R. Hall Master 1963
– 1964

The Master during the Golden Jubilee Year, W. Bro. F.R Hall
The Foundation of the
Lodge
It is often interesting to remember and to reflect upon the small, and
sometimes accidental, incidents from which important institutions have
grown; such was the case with The Five Orders Lodge, which actually
owes its formation to a chance meeting of W. Bro. Cordell and Bro. S.
H. Bassett in Bishopsgate on a Monday afternoon early in May, 1913.
Whilst walking through Bishopsgate to keep a business appointment W.
Bro. Cordell noticed Bro. Bassett at his shop window. A nod
of
recognition and an invitation to “Come in” was the
small
seed from which the flourishing tree we now know has grown. During
their brief conversation they were joined by Bro. W. H. Short (all
three being members of the New Concord Lodge No. 813). Naturally it was
to be expected that things Masonic were being discussed, and it may be
assumed that freedom of thought and speech were being indulged in by
virtue of the fact that when W. Bro. Cordell remarked “Well,
why
not form another Lodge?” the suggestion was accepted with
alacrity, and immediate action decided upon. During the following days
other interested brethren were sought and the suggestion put before
them. So enthusiastic were they with the proposal that a meeting was
convened and held in the office of W. Bro. Alex Russell, in Great St.
Helen’s, further to discuss ways and means. At this meeting
the
assembled brethren gave very definite expressions of their opinions
that the formation of a new Lodge would afford them increased
opportunities for more active and useful service to the Craft. They
decided to invite the New Concord Lodge, No. 813 to sponsor it. The
petition to Grand Lodge was strengthened by the association of a Grand
Officer, W. Bro. P. Vernon Taylor, P.D.G.O., Eng., who later, as one of
the Founders, took a keen interest in the new Lodge.
The following brethren gladly accepted the invitation to become Founder
Members: W. Bro. J. Anley, 3536. P.M. 177 Bro. S.H. Bassett, 813 Bro.
R.H. Batchelor, 3575. Sec. 2944 W. Bro. J.H.R. Coredell, 813 Bro. H.G.
Fisher, 2697 Bro. F. Arnold Greenwood, 2242 Bro. E.A. Labrouse, 183
Bro. C.J. Looney, 813 W. Bro. A.R. Rita, 3539. W.M. 1524 Bro. H.B.
Rosenthal, 1349, 3398 W. Bro. A. Russell, 3536 Bro. J.J. Selman, 3008
Bro. W.H. Short, 3119, 813 Bro. Dr. Montague-Smith, 2944 Bro. F.
Stoner, 2944 W. Bro. P. Vernon Taylor, P.M., P.D.G.O. W. Bro. H. West,
P.M. 813 W. Bro. T. Jetson White, P.M. 860 W. Bro. R.J. Woods, I.P.M.
2697 Bro. J.F. Yapp, 813 The petition to form the Lodge, which was to
be called “The Five Orders Lodge”, was duly
granted. It is
interesting to recall that Sir Edward Letchworth, F.S.A., the Grand
Secretary, when discussing the new Lodge with W. Bro. Cordell, asked
his reason for naming it The Five Orders Lodge. He thought it to be a
rather curious name – where had he got it from and what was
its
significance? W. Bro. Cordell pointed out that it had been chosen from
the Second Tracing Board, “The Five Noble Orders of
Architecture”, when Sir Edward exclaimed, “Of
course, a
very excellent name – a name that will add dignity to the
Lodge”. The date of the Warrant is October 21, 1913.
Consecration
The following is a copy of the first page of the programme of that
important ceremony:-
CONSECRATION Of THE FIVE ORDERS LODGE, No. 3696
at The Restaurant Frascati, Oxford Street, W.1
On Wednesday, November 12, 1913, at 4.30 p.m.
By The V.W. Brother Sir Edward Letchworth, F.S.A., Grand Secretary
Assisted by: W. Bro. Henry Lovegrove, P. Asst. Gd. Supt. Wks. As S.W.
W. Bro. Major C. Woolmer Williams, P. Dep. Gd. Swd. Br. As J.W.
W. Bro. The Rev. W.H. Maynard, M.A., Asst. Gd. Chap. As Chaplain
W. Bro. A.G. Neville, P. Dep. Gd. D.C. As D.C.
W. Bro. Robert J. Hatfield, P. Asst. Gd. D.C. As I.G.
W. Bro. J.H.R. Cordell Master Designate
Bro. W.H. Short S.W. Designate
Bro. R.H. Batchelor J.W. Designate
The following is a copy of the last page of the Consecration Programme:
Officers
W. Bro. J.H.R. Cordell W.M.
W. Bro. Alex Russell Acting I.P.M.
Bro. W.H. Short S.W.
Bro. R.H. Batchelor J.W.
W. Bro. R.J. Woods Treasurer
Bro. F. Arnold Greenwood Secretary
Bro. Dr. Montague Smith S.D.
W. Bro. T.J. White J.D.
W. Bro. J. Anley D.C.
Bro. F. Stoner A.D.C.
W. Bro. H. West Almoner
Bro. H. B. Rosenthal I.G.
W. Bro. A.R. Rita Steward
Bro. H.G. Fisher Steward
Bro. C.J. Looney Steward
W. Bro. John Spencer Tyler
This record of the Lodge’s first meeting would not be
complete
without some reference to the important work done by Bro. F. Arnold
Greenwood during the period leading up to the Consecration; to the fact
that W. Bro. P. Vernon Taylor, P.D.G.O., not only associated himself in
the list of Founders, but undertook the direction of the musical
arrangements at the Consecration ceremony and at the subsequent
banquet, assisted by the Cathedral Glee Singers; and the speed with
which the Consecration took place – only twenty-two days
after
the date of the Warrant. There were present, in addition to the six
consecration Officers, three Grand Officers, nineteen Founders and
thirty-five visitors. The latter represented twenty-five Lodges all of
which are still in existence, four having celebrated their one
hundredth anniversary. The Early Years The first year in the life of
the Lodge was full of promise, there being one joining member and five
initiates, three of whom passed through the three degrees during the
year. The attendance of the members was good and there was a gratifying
number of visitors. At the November 1914 meeting W. Bro. J.H.R. Cordell
was re-elected as Master for the ensuing year, this being the only
occasion of a Master serving two years in that capacity in this Lodge.
The advent of the 1914-1918 war naturally restricted the activities of
the Lodge and matters were not improved by the resignation of four of
the Founders and of the first joining member – announced at
the
November 1914 meeting.

The first Master of the Lodge, W. Bro. J.H.R. Cordell,
P.A.G.Std.Br.
In the first year the highest attendance, including visitors, was
thirty-two but this figure was not again reached until the November
1919 meeting. In the interval the attendance figures got as low as ten.
Nevertheless, there had been some growth. At the first meeting the
total membership was twenty-five. By the end of the War, in 1918, it
had reached thirty-two; not perhaps a spectacular progress in five
years but sufficient to show that the Founders had not allowed the
unfavourable circumstances to dismay them.

W. Bro. F. Arnold Greenwood, the first Secretary and the only surviving
Founder.
The Second Five
Years
A perusal of the records clearly indicates a determination of the
brethren to improve the Lodge, having got rid of the war-time
restrictions. In the five years ending September, 1923 thirty-five
members were initiated and four brethren became joining members. Five
emergency meetings were held. As early as April, 1919 a proposal was
made that the number of regular meetings be increased from four to five
a year but it was not until 1922 that this became operative. At the
same time, the Installation meeting was altered from November to
September. In October, 1919 the first Ladies’ evening was
held
and appears to have been very successful. In this connection a minute
of the General Purposes Committee, dated March, 1920, dealing with the
next Ladies’ evening is worthy of notice. It reads:
“It was
resolved that the second Ladies’ Festival, to consist of a
reception, dinner, and concert, at the Holborn Restaurant be held on
May 12, 1920. That the tickets be one guinea each, including wines, and
the members present agreed to be responsible, pro rata, for any
deficiency in the financing of the function.” November, 1919
saw
approval by the Lodge of a proposal to become a Founding Lodge of the
“Freemason’s Hospital and Nursing Home”,
and the sum
of fifteen guineas was voted from the General Fund “on
account of
this”. Six brethren promptly promised donations of five
guineas
in aid of the effort. It is not clear when the object was achieved but
the September, 1925 summons was the first to bear the caption
“Founding Lodge, Freemasons’ Hospital”. A
matter
which was to occupy the attention of the Lodge, the General Purposes
Committee, and particularly W. Bro. Woods, Treasurer, for the next two
years was the receipt of a letter from Grand Lodge relating to the
Masonic Million Memorial Fund – a fund to finance the
erection
and equipment of the building in which the Lodge now meets. By April,
1022 the Treasurer had prepared a scheme enabling the Lodge to become a
Hall Stone Lodge and this scheme was approved by the General Purposes
Committee for submission to the Lodge at the April, 1922 regular
meeting. The writer has a vivid recollection of this meeting. It
happened to be the meeting at which he was initiated and it is not
difficult to realize that he had not the remotest idea of what was
under discussion. However, every member present had apparently given
the matter much thought and the discussion went on with question and
answer at such length that there appeared to be no possibility of a
conclusion when it was proposed, seconded and carried that the matter
be adjourned to the next meeting. An Emergency meeting was held one
month later especially to deal with the matter, but on this occasion
the question was adjourned for a period of six months. During the
interval consultation with Grand Lodge took place on certain features
and arrangements were made for a Grand Officer to address the November
meeting on the subject. Finally, a ballot was taken resulting in a vote
of twenty-two in favour of becoming a Hall Stone Lodge and fourteen
against. This involved the Lodge in a contribution representing ten
guineas from each member. Despite the fact that out of a total vote of
thirty-six, fourteen voted against, it is very gratifying to record
that every member completed his qualification. The November, 1922
meeting also records an important resolution, namely “That
the
application from the Cyclists’ Lodge of Instruction for
authority
from this Lodge enabling ot to carry on its meetings as the Five Orders
Lodge of Instruction, be granted”. The membership had now
reached
sixty.
Towards the Quarter
Century The
period commences with an item unique in the history of the Lodge; ten
proposals were read at the September meeting, and at the following two
meetings nine of the applicants were balloted for, one of the ten
having died in the meantime. The year 1923/24 saw for the first time
the Installation as Master of an initiate of the Lodge – Bro.
R.H. Orchard. There is no evidence as to what gave rise to a discussion
by the General Purposes Committee during this year as to the precedence
of Officers in the Lodge but the decision reached was that this should
be in accordance with the Book of Constitutions. Another decision
reached by the Committee at this time was that no more than two
ceremonies should be undertaken at any one meeting. Ladies’
evenings had always consisted of a banquet and concert, but at the
September 1924 meeting two comparatively junior members at that time
– Bros. Peterson and Mattick – proposed the evening
should
in future comprise a banquet, concert and dance. The proposal was
eventually approved but as a concession to some of the elder brethren
it was provided that a whist drive would be arranged for those not
wishing to dance. This arrangement continued for some years with the
card room gradually becoming less popular until it was eventually
abandoned. The mention here of the Ladies’ Festival calls to
mind
a proposal, carried unanimously, that each gentleman attending should
wear a badge. No information is available as to the kind of badge, the
purpose to be served, or if the idea ever became operative. At the
fifty-fifth meeting held in February, 1926 the membership reached
seventy, an increase of twenty in twenty-one meetings. The Installation
meeting this year was unusual in that Bro. A. Neilson, a Past Grand
Steward installed as Master, was privileged to have visiting Grand
Officers acting as Wardens and Inner Guard. This year also saw the of
W. Bro. W.H. Parsons, Past Assistant Grand Pursuivant, as an honorary
member of the Lodge in recognition of his having occupied the chair at
the Lodge of Instruction for the working of fifteen Sections of the
Lectures. For the next two years the Lodge pursued a course of business
consisting almost entirely of the usual ceremonies except that in 1928
the contributions made by the Lodge towards the members’
donations to the Masonic Million Memorial Fund ceased. At the
September, 1929 meeting amended by-laws, approved by the Grand
Secretary, were received. The title page referred to them as the
“By-Laws of The Five Orders Lodge No.3696 of the Antient and
Honourable Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons”. Following
this was information as to the Consecration, a list of the Founders,
another list showing the first officers, and a list of honorary
members. Finally, there were twenty by-laws. To-day there are twelve
by-laws and the title page is not nearly so ambitious. One of the old
by-laws is interesting in that it does not permit the Master, Past
Masters or officers to vote in the election of three lay members to the
General Purposes Committee, but they may propose candidates. At this
time, the Committee adopted a suggestion that a Lodge banner be
provided, members of the Lodge to be invited to contribute to the cost.
A proposal to this effect was accordingly put forward by W. Bro. J.H.R.
Cordell and seconded by W. Bro. F. Arnold Greenwood to the November,
1929 meeting and approved at the January, 1930 meeting. W. Bro. Cordell
took a very active part in securing designs, particulars of suitable
materials and estimates as to cost. So much importance was attached to
the project and the desire to secure a banner of which the Lodge could
justly be proud that it was not until January, 1932 that the completed
banner was available and was dedicated by Canon J.C. Morris, Past Grand
Chaplain and later Provincial Grand Master for Surrey. Unfortunately,
W. Bro Cordell, who had done so much work leading to the dedication,
was too ill to be present. At the January, 1930 meeting another
noteworthy resolution was passed; that the Lodge should become a Patron
Lodge of the Royal Masonic Hospital by donating one hundred guineas.
The Lodge qualified as a Patron Lodge on July 6, 1932. At the January,
1931 meeting it was proposed that the Lodge should form its own
Charities Association. This aroused considerable opposition from two
Founders of The Five Orders Lodge who were Secretary and Treasurer of
the St. Michael–Le–Querne Charities Association,
which the
Lodge had used hitherto. After being referred to the General Purposes
Committee the proposal was brought forward again at the April meeting,
when further opposition was met with, including a proposal to defer
decision for 12 months. Tiring of the delay a W. Bro. Moved that
“the proposition be now put to the vote” and it was
duly
carried. Apart from what has already been recorded the work of the
Lodge consisted almost entirely of the normal business of the
ceremonial work associated with the Craft until the November, 1934
meeting, except that in 1933 a proposition was put forward that
meetings should be held on Saturdays instead of Wednesdays. The
suggestion was not popular and was withdrawn at the next meeting.
Subsequently war conditions moved us to Saturday meetings, an
arrangement which has continued to the present time. The November, 1934
meeting celebrated the Lodge’s twenty-first birthday. About
one
hundred brethren were present, almost half members and half visitors,
the latter including Sir Sydney White, K.C.V.O., at that time Assistant
Grand Secretary, and later Grand Secretary. The Lodge having been
opened and the minutes read, the Worshipful Master had the regrettable
duty of announcing the death of W. Bro. J.H.R. Cordell, Past Assistant
Grand Standard Bearer, A Founder, Past Master and Secretary of the
Lodge, which took place on November 12, 1934, which by date, was the
actual twenty-first anniversary of the Consecration. The Master made
touching reference to the loss to the Lodge by the death of W. Bro.
Cordell and to the outstanding service he had rendered throughout the
whole period of the Lodge’s existence. He then called upon W.
Bro. Dr. Montague Smith to address the brethren, who did so with
characteristic feeling and affection. The normal business of the Lodge
was then resumed, after which the proceedings took place in a happier
and more reminiscent atmosphere. Six Founders were still on the
membership list and of these five were present and the W.M., W. Bro.
W.H. Peterson, invited them to occupy their original offices, then
vacating the chair in favour of W. Bro. Russell, the acting Immediate
Past Master at the Consecration. Each addressed the brethren in
reminiscent terms and W. Bro. Russell called on W. Bro. F.A. Greenwood,
the first Secretary, to read the minutes of the first meeting. Having
done so, W. Bro. Greenwood announced that he did not propose to submit
them for approval! A report of the proceedings was published in the
December issue of “The Freemason”. The one
hundredth
meeting passed without celebration. From discussions between the Master
(W. Bro. W.H. Peterson) and the Immediate Past Master (W. Bro. F.A.
Chopping) the idea grew of presenting copies of the Oxford Bible for
Masons to Initiates, and at the April, 1935 meeting the first of such
presentations was made, and a notice of motion given that in
celebration of the twenty-first anniversary a copy of the volume be
presented to each member.
The Second
Quarter Century
In late 1938 and early 1939 much thought was given to the rules
governing the Benevolent Fund. It was felt necessary to make provision
for avoiding delay in dealing with cases of urgent need. Amendments to
this end were adopted and the rules altered accordingly. At the same
time it was also agreed, on the suggestion of W. Bro. W.H. Peterson,
that any Benevolent Fund recommendation should in future be provided
for on the Summons in general rather than specific terms, to avoid
undue publicity which might be hurtful to the intended recipient. He
added “it is desirable not only to give quickly but quietly
as
well”. On the outbreak of war in 1939 Grand Lodge ordered a
suspension of Lodge meetings and the usual September meeting, at which
W. Bro. C.J. Sadler would have been installed as Master, was not held.
The suspension was countermanded later and this brought about a
considerable volume of work for the Executive Officers. It was the
predominant wish of the members that meetings should continue but the
war conditions made it desirable for dispersal to be earlier than had
hitherto been the case. Up to this time meetings had been held on
Wednesday evenings at the Holborn Restaurant. To permit of earlier
commencement and dispersal it was now agreed to meet on Saturday
afternoon but the Holborn Restaurant could not offer Saturday
accommodation. Fortunately, satisfactory accommodation was found at the
Manchester Hotel, E.C.1, and the Installation meeting was eventually
held on December 2, 1939. At this meeting it was agreed that the
circumstances arising out of the war conditions made it desirable to
consider some modification in the scale of subscriptions and the
decision reached was an annual subscription sufficient to cover the
standing expenses of the Lodge with a supplementary charge for dining
as and when incurred. In January, 1940 the Secretary was able to advise
members by post that meetings had been arranged at the Manchester Hotel
until the end of the 1939-1940 session. This letter also contained two
appeals. The first stressed the need for the Lodge to continue with
greater effort their support of outside charities such as the Royal
National Lifeboat Institution and other funds for seamen. The second
appeal was that the Almoner should be informed of any brother who might
be in distress because of the war and who might be “too
diffident
to reveal his position”. The need for advising the Brethren
where
and on what dates meetings would be held continued throughout the war
years. Needless to say, Ladies’ Festivals were out of the
question but it was agreed, without discussion, that the practice of
the members making a presentation to the Master’s Lady should
not
be abandoned. Until it was possible to resume Ladies’
evenings
these presentations usually took place after dinner following a Lodge
meeting. In May, 1940 it was decided to revert to Wednesday meetings,
still at the Manchester Hotel, and the first Wednesday meeting took
place in October, 1940. However, only one more meeting was destined to
be held there. Thirty-six hours before the January, 1941 meeting the
Manchester Hotel was completely destroyed by enemy action. Efforts were
made immediately to obtain other accommodation and in February, 1941
the postponed meeting was held at Freemasons’ Hall. This was
the
only meeting in the history of the Lodge at which no visiting brethren
were present. From then for a period of more than three years the
arrangements with Freemasons’ Hall were on a temporary basis,
meetings being arranged one by one, but from late 1944
Freemasons’ Hall became the permanent meeting place of the
Lodge.
In March, 1942 consideration was given to the position of members on
Active Service in so far as Lodge dues were concerned, and steps were
taken to safeguard their interests. At the end of hostilities the need
for special war-time arrangements gradually disappeared. Bro. Rigby
Fisher, who had always been helpful in connection with certain Lodge
requirements, had obtained a supply of Bibles for Masonic use, which
had for some time been unobtainable, thus enabling arrears to be
cleared. He also presented a supply of Hymn books to the Lodge. The
normal rate of annual subscription was resumed. It was not, however,
until March, 1950 that the Lodge Banner, which had been stored in
Freemasons’ Hall for safe keeping, again became available. At
the
April, 1946 meeting the Secretary reported that at the request of the
Master and certain other brethren he had written to the Grand Secretary
offering a welcome to visiting overseas brethren wishing to attend a
London Lodge. During the next five years there were few meetings at
which advantage was not taken of this offer. In fact, the average
attendance of such visitors was rather more than one per meeting, and
at the present time we occasionally receive a Brother from overseas.
The overseas Brethren, invariably excellent after-dinner speakers, and
coming from widely scattered parts of the Commonwealth, have
entertained our members with interesting accounts of proceedings in
their own Lodges and of the extraordinary journeys some of them make to
attend their meetings. W. Bro. Dr. Montague Smith – a Founder
of
the Lodge – was invited at the May, 1946 meeting to initiate
Bro.
F.J. Chopping, the son of a Past Master, W. Bro. F.A. Chopping. It
later transpired that this candidate was the one hundredth Brother Dr.
Montague Smith had initiated into Freemasonry, a remarkable record. In
the same year the Lodge was honoured by the presence at one meeting of
the Assistant Grand Master, R. W. Bro. W.H.P. Darell. Membership had
tended to fall for some years, but by November, 1947 the number had
recovered to eighty, a figure which had been reached eighteen years
earlier. A report of the Board of General Purposes was submitted by its
President to Grand Lodge at this time, expressing the view that in the
interests of history some permanent record should be made of the
effects of the impact of war upon Freemasonry. The Board therefore
required each Lodge to collect information and prepare a report for
incorporation in the minute book of the Lodge – a copy being
sent
to the Grand Secretary for preservation in the records of Grand Lodge.
Amongst other items the report was to include the names of Brethren who
took part in any form of National Service at home or abroad.
Information as to the activities of the Lodge is already recorded
herein and the following is the record of National Service rendered by
its members.
Royal Navy
Bros. R.A.R. Wells, F.R. Hall, S. McVeigh, D.S.M., and W. Williamson.
Army
W. Bro. C.H. Voak.
Royal Air Force
Bros.A. Hudson and R.W. Lewin.
Home Guard
W. Bros. D. Hall, W.H. Peterson and C.J. Sadler; Bros. A.M.A. Smith,
A.R. Camidge, W.J. Baker and J.H. Brigden.
Auxiliary Fire Service
W. Bros. J.S. Brotchie and J.H. Manning; Bro. F.C. Freeman (Chief Fire
Prevention Officer, City of London).
St. John’s Ambulance
Bro. J.H. Driscoll.
Special Constabulary W. Bro. A. Sellors.
Metropolitan Police War Reserve
W. Bro. A. Shipley.
Civil Defence
W. Bros. E.E. Harsant and B.F. Rickwood.
The very comprehensive report was compiled by the Secretary, W. Bro.
W.H. Peterson. In 1949 the Secretary called the attention of the
General Purposes Committee to the fact that the Summons issued by the
Lodge, containing as it did a full list of members, Officers and Past
Masters had, with the growth of the Lodge over the years, become
overburdened with detail. It was suggested that future Summonses be
issued in the simplest form and the list of members circulated in the
form of a yearly booklet. The alteration took effect from the 1950-1951
session and, in addition to the full list of members, the booklet
contains a brief article of interest to Freemasons, a review of the
previous year’s work, and other information concerning the
Lodge.
For the next few years the Lodge pursued its main function of
Installation, Initiation, Passing and Raising with very little other
business requiring attention. The year 1951 saw the first appointment
to Grand Rank of an Initiate of the Lodge in the person of W. Bro. C.F.
Day who was honoured with the rank of Past Assistant Grand Standard
Bearer. It is interesting to note how few and far between such honours
are when it is realized that since W. Bro. Day joined the Lodge there
have been over one hundred and fifty Initiations, but no further Grand
Honour. In the same year a suggestion was put forward that a Trust Deed
be entered into to regularize the custody of the Benevolent Fund, but
after consideration this was not considered desirable on the ground
that it would impose too rigid a control. The same proposal came up
again in 1962, was approved and put into effect. In 1952 the membership
reached ninety, and in the following year a proposal to increase the
Initiation fee to twenty-five guineas was defeated, only to be revived
and approved a year later. The last of the Founders to remain on the
list of subscribing members – W. Bro. F. Arnold Greenwood
–
and now the only remaining Founder, was elected to Honorary Membership
in 1955. It was about this time that Bro. W.E. Brigden had the
misfortune to lose his eyesight but he did not allow this to deter him
from regular attendance. In 1955 his brother – W. Bro. J.H.
Brigden – who was at that time Master of the Lodge, was able
to
present him in the Lodge a volume of the Ritual, in Braille, given by
the National Institute for the Blind and the Publishers, and eighteen
months later Bro. W.E. Brigden received a similar volume of the
Lectures. This was given by St. Dunstan’s. Within a
comparatively
short time he had mastered the problem of reading Braille and had given
an excellent explanation of the Second Tracing Board.
Executive Officers
Reading through fifty years of Lodge minutes reveals a variety of
interesting features, but what the minutes show most clearly is how
fortunate the Lodge has been in its Executive Officers. While space
precludes little more than the bare details given on the next page some
exceptions must be made. The first is W. Bro. W.H. Peterson, who was
Secretary for twenty-five years. On his relinquishing the office in
September, 1962 the Lodge marked this memorable occasion at the Festive
Board by presenting W. Bro. Peterson with a tape recorder on which had
been recorded messages of affection from the Lodge, the first by the
most senior Member and the other by the latest Initiate. Two Almoners
have served for twenty years. The first, W. Bro. H. West, from the
Consecration of the Lodge until his death in 1933. The second is Bro.
E.A. Westley, who, after being Secretary for three years, from 1934 to
1937, was Almoner from 1937 to 1057. As mentioned elsewhere, Bro.
Westley was also Secretary of the Lodge of Instruction for twenty-eight
years. He was elected an Honorary Member in 1958.
Treasurers
W. Bro. R.J. Woods, L.R. Founder. From Consecration until his death in
March, 1932. W. Bro. H.S. O’Keefe, L.G.R. 1932 until his
death in
1945 W. Bro. E.E. Harsant 1945 until his death in 1947 W, Bro. C.T.
Day, L.G.R. 1947 to 1959 W. Bro. R.A.R. Wells 1959 to date.
Secretaries
W. Bro. F. Arnold Greenwood. Founder. 1913 to 1914. Relinquished office
to become Junior Warden. W. Bro. A. Russell, P.A.G.St.Br.
1914 to
1919 W. Bro. R.H. Batchelor, L.G.R. 1919 to 1923 W. Bro. J.H.R.
Cordell, P.A.G.St.Br., L.R. Bro. E.A. Westley 1934 to 1937. W. Bro.
W.H. Peterson, L.G.R. 1937 to 1962 W. Bro. F.C. Freeman 1962 to date
Directors of Ceremonies
W. Bro. J. Anley, L.R. Founder 1913 to 1922 W. Bro. Dr. Montague Smith,
P.A.G.D.C., 1922 to 1936 L.G.R., Founder W. Bro. F. Mills, L.G.R. 1936
to 1941 W. Bro Dr. Montague Smith 1941 to 1944 W. Bro. A. Sellors,
L.G.R. 1944 until his death in September, 1949 W. Bro. J.H. Manning,
L.G.R. 1949 to 1950 W. Bro. C.J. Sadler, L.G.R. 1950 to 1952
(Relinquished owing to ill health). w. Bro. J.H. Manning, L.G.R. 1952
to date
Almoners
W. Bro. H. West, L.R. Founder. 1913 until his death in
December,1933 W. Bro. A.H. Cordell December 1933 to 1934 Bro. E.A.
Westley 1937 to 1957 W. Bro. F.C. Freeman 1957 until appointment
as Secretary, 1962 W. Bro. F.C. Richardson 1962 to date.
Past Masters of the Lodge
W. Bro. J.H.R. Cordell, P.A.G.St.Br., L.R. 1913-15 W. Bro. F. Arnold
Greenwood 1915-16 W. Bro. R.H. Batchelor, L.G.R. 1916-17 W. Bro. Dr.
Montague Smith, P.A.G.D.C., L.G.R. 1917-18 W. Bro. H.B. Rosenthal
1918-19 W. Bro. A.R. Rita, L.R. 1919-20 W. Bro. J.F. Yapp 1920-21 W.
Bro. H.G. Fisher, P.G.St.Br., L.G.R. 1921-22 W. Bro. A. Marshall, L.R.
1922-23 W. Bro. R.H. Orchard, L.G.R. 1923-24 W. Bro. J.F. Goodey
1924-25 W. Bro. A.H. Cordell 1925-26 W. Bro. A. Neilson, P.G.Std.
1926-27 W. Bro. A.E. Hurworth 1927-28 W. Bro. C.F. Day, P.A.G.St.Br.,
L.G.R. 1928-29 W. Bro. H.S. O’Keefe, L.G.R. 1929-30 W. Bro.
F.
Mills, L.G.R. 1930-31 W. Bro. D.V. Hoddy 1931-32 W. Bro. J.A. Hunt
1932-33 W. Bro. F.A. Chopping, L.G.R. 1933-34 W. Bro. W.H. Peterson,
L.G.R. 1934-35 W. Bro. A. Sellors, L.G.R. 1935-36 W. Bro. J.S.
Brotchie, L.G.R. 1936-37 W. Bro. E. Harrison 1937-38 W. Bro. R. Lewin
1938-39 W. Bro. C.J. Sadler, L.G.R. 1939-40 W. Bro. J. H. Hammond
1940-41 W. Bro. B.F. Rickwood 1941-42 W. Bro. E.E. Harsant 1942-43 W.
Bro. C.T. Day, L.G.R. 1943-44 W. Bro. J.H. Manning, L.G.R. 1944-45 W.
Bro. D. Hall, L.G.R. 1945-46 W. Bro. C.H. Voak, L.G.R. 1946-47 W. Bro.
G.F. Furlong, L.G.R. 1947-48 W. Bro. C.L. Mumford, L.G.R. 1948-49 W.
Bro. T.E. Watson 1949-50 W. Bro. A.S. Hunt, L.G.R. 1950-51 W. Bro.
A.M.A. Smith 1951-52 W. Bro. R.A.R. Wells 1952-53 W. Bro. C.E. Carter
1953-54 W. Bro. R.W. Lewin 1954-55 W. Bro. J.H. Brigden 1955-56 W. Bro.
F.C. Freeman 1956-57 W. Bro. J.H. Driscoll 1957-58 W. Bro. E. Money
1958-59 W. Bro. F.C. Richardson 1959-60 W. Bro. J. Lucas 1960-61 W.
Bro. E.T. Bates 1961-62 W. Bro. W.T.C. Hammond 1962-63 F = Founder D =
Deceased R = Resigned
Present Members
In addition to the twenty Founders already mentioned the number of
Initiates to date is 183, joining members numbering 20. Following is
the list of present day members, with date of initiation or joining.
F. Arnold Greenwood Founder J.A. Hunt 26.11.19 J.S. Brotchie 01.06.21
D. Hall 26.04.22 W.H. Peterson 22.11.22 T.W.P. Smith 28.01.25 J.J.
Pratt 24.02.26 J. Hammond 24.11.26 E.A. Westley 31.08.27 C.T. Day
23.11.27 J.H. Manning 22.02.28 G.F. Furlong 26.02.30 W.R. Foster
28.01.31 C.E. Pascoe 28.11.34 C.L. Mumford 22.01.36 A.M.A. Smith
27.01.37 R.A.R. Wells 26.01.38 C.E. Carter 23.11.38 R.W. Lewin 22.02.39
F.R. Hall 13.04.40 A.S. Hunt 06.11.40 D. Cox 09.01.43 F.C. Freeman
06.11.43 J.H. Driscoll 20.05.44 E. Money 04.11.44 L.C. Collins 16.06.45
S. McVeigh 16.06.45 W. Williamson 16.06.45 F.C. Richardson 03.11.45
T.M. Pratt 12.01.46 F.J. Chopping 18.05.46 J. Lucas 02.11.46 C.E.
Simpkins 11.01.47 E.T. Bates 11.01.47 F.W. Killingback 29.03.47 W.T.C.
Hammond 29.03.47 H. Silverstone 17.05.47 J.W. Leslie 13.09.47 L.A.
Milligan 01.11.47 R.W.T. Pratt 10.01.48 A.F. Baird 03.04.48 F.G. Cannon
22.05.48 E.F. Langer 06.11.48 W.G. Salmons 05.11.49 W.W. Mumford
14.01.50 E.J. Tilbury 14.01.50 F.G. Gibbins 04.03.50 J.T. Philp
06.05.50 S.H. Fryer 04.11.50 J. Benn 13.01.51 L.J. Perry 13.01.51 A.T.
Airs 03.03.51 H.J. McFarlane 03.03.51 G.E. Vaus 05.05.51 W.E. Brigden
05.05.51 L. Martin 05.05.51 A.W. Geeson 03.11.51 A.W. Linton 01.03.52
J.G. Rowlands 13.09.52 S. Drake 01.11.52 R. Hennessey 10.01.53 R.C.
Draper 10.01.53 R.A. Phelps 02.05.53 W. Stoner 06.03.54 B. Mack
01.05.54 G.H. Phelps 01.05.54 J.T. Clark 06.11.54 C.A.A. Wild 06.11.54
R.G. Chatwin 08.01.55 D.W. Martin 08.01.55 G.H. Cox 07.05.55 G.A.
Draper 05.11.55 D.W. Foster 14.01.56 E.W. Stockbridge 14.01.56 A.W.
Shaw 03.05.56 W.A. Mandy 03.05.56 A.V.F. Doughty 02.03.57 A. Newton
02.11.57 T. G. Gardner 01.03.58 R.C. Colvill 03.05.58 S. Robinson
01.11.58 F. Johnson 10.01.59 J.J. Chalkwright 02.05.59 J.G. Rowlands
02.05.59 R.C. Rayner 07.11.59 W. Jackson 09.01.60 T.C. Hempstead
09.01.60 F.J. Hopkinson 07.05.60 E.T. Jones 05.11.60 H. Kanolty
14.01.61 P.R. Graves 14.01.61 L.D. Sorrell 04.03.61 G.W. Linehan
13.01.62 D.G. Cannon 05.05.62 J.B. Jackson 03.11.62 W. Andrews 12.01.63
J.A. Ivins 02.03.63
There is always a sense of added pleasure in the Lodge when a Brother
introduces a son, brother, or as we have had, a son introducing a
father. From the Consecration to date the membership has included fifty
blood brothers and fourteen brothers-in-law and it is perhaps not out
of place to mention twenty namesakes not related. A further cause of
pleasure among the Brethren arises out of the honours conferred by the
Most Worshipful the Grand Master as indicated hereunder:-
Grand Rank
W. Bro. Dr. Montague Smith, P.A.G.D.C. W. Bro. H.G. Fisher, P.G.St.Br.
W. Bro. J.H.R. Cordell, P.A.G.St.Br. W. Bro. A. Russell, P.A.G.St.Br.
W. Bro. C.F. Day, P.A.G.St.Br.
London Rank (now London Grand Rank)
W. Bros.: J.H.R. Cordell R.J. Woods A. Russell H. West Dr. Montague
Smith R.H. Batchelor H.G. Fisher A. Rita C.F. Day J. Anley A. Marshall
H.S. O’Keefe W.H. Peterson F.A. Chopping A. Sellors F. Mills
C.T.
Day C.J. Sadler C.H. Voak D. Hall C.L. Mumford R.H. Orchard J.S.
Brotchie J.H. Manning G.F. Furlong A.S. Hunt
Provincial Grand Officer
W. Bros. H.G. Fisher, P.A.G.D.C. (Essex) R.H. Orchard, P.S.G.D.
(Herts.)
The Lodge of Instruction
No history of the Five Orders Lodge would be complete without some
reference to the Lodge of Instruction. On the summons of the second
Regular Meeting of the Lodge, held on February 25, 1914, the Brethren
were invited to attend the New Concord Lodge of Instruction, held at
the Farleigh Hotel, Amhurst Road, Hackney. A few years later, the
members associated themselves with the Cyclists’ Lodge of
Instruction, meeting at the “Three Crowns”. Stoke
Newington. In 1922, an application from the Cyclists’ Lodge
of
Instruction for authority from this Lodge enabling it to carry on its
meetings as The Five Orders Lodge of Instruction was granted and the
first meeting under the new title was held at the “Three
Crowns” on January 3, 1923. Preceptors W. Bro. R.J. Woods,
P.Z.,
L.G.R. W. Bro. J.H.R. Cordell, P.A.G.St.Br., L.R. W. Bro. H.S.
O’Keefe, L.G.R. W. Bro. F.A. Chopping, L.G.R. W. Bro. E.E.
Harsant W. Bro. J.H. Manning, L.G.R. Secretaries W. Bro. J.H.R.
Cordell, P.A.G.St.Br. 1923 to 1928 Bro. E.A. Westley 1928 to 1956 W.
Bro. C.H. Voak, L.G.R. 1956 to 1963 W. Bro. F.G. Richardson 1963 to
date
The Lodge of Instruction had several homes before settling at the
Manchester Hotel in 1936, but with the destruction of this Hotel in
1940 it lost all its furniture. After a year in temporary
accommodation, W. Bro. J.H. Manning found a suitable permanent meeting
place at the “King’s Arms”, St.
Botolph’s
Churchyard, Bishopsgate. And it is here that the Lodge continues to
meet under W. Bro. Manning’s preceptorship. The furnishings
were
soon replaced, principally by gifts. The Lodge of Instruction Hospital
Collecting Box has raised nearly £400 for the Royal Masonic
Hospital. Finally reference must be made to the outstanding service
given to the Lodge of Instruction by Bro. E.A. Westley. He was
Secretary for twenty-eight years from 1928 until he resigned in 1956.
At eighty-four years of age Bro. Westley still regularly attends the
Lodge of Instruction and he recently made the gift of a set of collars
as a tribute to the memory of his late wife.
The Five Orders
Chapter
On the Summons of the Lodge Meeting held on February 23, 1916, there
appeared a notice of motion “That the consent of the Lodge be
given to the petition for the formation of a Royal Arch Chapter
attached to the Lodge and named “The Five Orders
Chapter”.
The minutes briefly record that the proposal was carried unanimously.
The Consecration took place at the Holborn Restaurant on June 14, 1916.
Of the present membership of the Chapter twenty-three are members of
the Five Orders Lodge, and of these nine are Past First Principals.
Further Points of Interest
During the fifty years from Consecration to its fiftieth anniversary
the Lodge has consistently contributed to the several Masonic
Charitable Organizations, the total payments to date being very little
short of £8000. In addition, a number of non-masonic
charities
have benefited by periodic financial assistance. We have always been
honoured by the attendance of a gratifying number of visitors and, as
mentioned earlier herein, there has been only one regular meeting at
which no visitors attended. Guests are frequently heard to comment
favourably on the personal welcome received immediately on arrival,
often from brethren they have not previously met, and it can
unhesitatingly be said that the Lodge has a high reputation for the
friendly atmosphere which prevails. Moreover, it has an equally high
reputation for the dignity and efficiency with which its work is
conducted, due to the zeal and assiduity of the members down to the
latest initiate. In fact, a Master remarked on one occasion that he had
no anxieties about the temporary absence of Officers, all offices could
be filled efficiently at short notice by members not in office. An
example of this occurred as long ago as 1930 when illness amongst
members was unusually high and no less than five brethren in office
were absent on one day. Nevertheless, the vacancies were filled without
difficulty and the business of the Lodge proceeded without incident.
Another pleasing feature is the number and variety of presentations
made to the Lodge by its members. It is not desired to record these but
an Alms Dish presented by a visiting brother is of particular interest.
It is of oak used in St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, in the
fifteenth century and is a beautiful example of the
Woodcarvers’
craftsmanship carried out by W. Bro. Ferguson, L.G.R., who presented it.
In conclusion, we hope that in the year 2013 the Lodge will be
celebrating its centenary and that brother will find what is contained
herein helpful in the compilation of a history of the first one hundred
years.
