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Bezaleel Lodge No. 234, Kinsale
Constituted 1877
Meets at The Masonic Hall, Upper
O’Connell Street, Kinsale
Fourth Thursday of every month, at 8.00 pm
(excluding July, August and December)
Lodge Contact:
lesliesmyth@eircom.net
Our Lodge Room
is to be found on Higher O’Connell St. It is clearly indicated by a
black triangular stone on the first floor, and the door pictured
above.
Known Masonic
activity in Kinsale goes back to 1747 when a warrant was granted to
Lodge 156 of ‘The Regiment of Foot’, but there may well have been
Masonic activity prior to this; however, it is not registered in any
way. Indeed, some oak chairs in the lodge room have been dated to the
late seventeenth century and are carved with Masonic symbols.
In the
eighteenth and nineteenth century several military lodges registered
with Grand Lodge of Ireland were active in the town of Kinsale. The
presence of these military lodges can be explained by the importance
of Kinsale as a port town, with two star forts – James Fort, built in
1604 and Charles Fort, built in 1653 – flanking the entrance to the
harbour, and considerable numbers of troops stationed in each up to
1922.
There is little
knowledge about these early lodges, other than letters in the archives
of Grand Lodge of Ireland, referring to their warrants. They include:
No. 528 (1775); No. 156 (1747); No. 179 (1749) and No. 220 (1814).
The first lodge
for which we have a minute-book for is No. 31. This lodge got its
warrant in 1787 and took the name ‘Bezaleel’. A number of prominent
local people were connected to it, as there are the names of such as
Lord Kingsale, de Courcey, Daunt etc. Lodge 31 was certainly not a
military lodge, although some of its members were connected with the
garrison in Kinsale. The minute book mentions a conflict with Grand
Lodge in about 1820 and, in 1822, following non-payment of dues, this
warrant was cancelled.
It was another
fifty years before our Kinsale Lodge No. 234 got its Grand Lodge of
Ireland warrant. Our warrant No. 234 was first granted in 1742 to the
13th Dragoons and cancelled in 1815.
In 1895, it
took the name ‘Bezaleel’, which is recorded in our second minute book.
Our first meeting is dated 6th December 1877. There is no indication
why Lodge No. 234 took the name ‘Bezaleel’ and therefore we have to
speculate that it was done to make a historical link with the
cancelled Lodge 31. Indeed we do find some similar surnames in the
minute book of Lodge 234.
The name
‘Bezaleel’ is rare, and does not occur elsewhere in the Irish
Constitution to the best of our knowledge. It refers to a name
mentioned in Exodus 31:2 and 35:30 and its meaning is ‘Shadow of God’.
This name was given the artificer who executed works of art in
connection with the tabernacle in the wilderness. Bezaleel was also
summoned by Moses to make the robe for Aaron, the High Priest.
History of
Warrant No. 234
This warrant,
initially a military one, first issued 8 July 1752 to the 13TH
DRAGOONS (later known as the 13th Hussars), who held it
until cancelled 1 July 1815.
It was reissued
to DROMOHAIRE (i.e. Drumahaire), Co. Leitrim, 1 April 1819, where it
was held seven years until cancelled a second time, 6 July 1826.
The warrant was
reissued 8 September 1828 to MALLOW, Co. Cork where it was worked
almost twenty years until suspended, 1 May 1848.
This number
then lay dormant until reissued a third time, 28 May 1877, to KINSALE,
Co. Cork, under the title ‘Bezaleel Lodge’, where it has worked since.
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them.
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Reserved
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