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Hibernian
Lodge No 95, Cork
Constituted 1750
Meets 27, Tuckey Street, Cork
First Tuesday of every month, at 8.00 pm
(excluding June, July and August)
Lodge Contact:
johnjallcorn@yahoo.co.uk
The warrant of
Lodge No. 95 was issued to Brethren in Cashel on the 1st of December
1738 and was signed by Lord Mountjoy, the Grand Master. It is likely
that the Lodge was working for some years prior to this. Following
the issue of the Warrant it appears that the actual duration of the
Lodge in Cashel was quite limited and it survived there for only a
year or so. On the 17th of May 1748, Bro. John Calder was requested
by Grand Lodge to make a report on the working of various Lodges in
the Munster region and to collect dues. In his report as regards
Lodge No. 95 he stated ‘no Lodge assembled there these past nine
years’.
David Fitzgerald
was appointed Deputy Grand Master of Munster in 1750 and was given the
power to move any warrant which was not working to a new location and
to there constitute a new Lodge to work under it. The first use of
this authority was in the same year, when the Lodge 95 Warrant was
transferred to Cork and this Lodge was constituted. The Lodge 95
Warrant bears an endorsement to this effect on its back where it is
written:
‘By the virtue of the powers granted to
me, I do hereby nominate, constitute and appoint our trusty and well
beloved Brothers Domk. Sarsfield M.D. to be Master, James Hennssy and
John McDonagh to be Wardens and their lawful successors of Lodge 95
formerly held in the City of Cashel and now established in the City of
Cork’
dated 24th June 1750 and signed
David Fitzgerald
The Dominick
Sarsfield appointed above was a descendant of General Patrick de
Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan. He lived in Glanmire, Co Cork at Sarsfield
Court.
T he situation
became somewhat confused during 1758 when Brethren in Cashel submitted
a letter to Grand Lodge stating that their Warrant had been lost and
requested a duplicate one. This was considered at the Grand Lodge
Meeting on 24th June 1758 and surprisingly, a duplicate was issued.
The outcome was that two seperate Lodges were now operating under the
Number 95. This led to enquiries being made by the Grand Secretary
[John Calder] which resulted in a meeting of Cork Lodges on the 17th
June 1761 to consider and inspect the Lodge 95 Warrant. The Warrant
was approved, held to be valid and a report sent to Grand Lodge to
this effect.
After a protracted
perod of correspondence lasting ten years the matter was finally dealt
with at a Grand Lodge Meeting on the 1st August 1771. It was decided
that Warrant No.95 was properly established in Cork by David
Fitzgerald on the 24th June 1750 but registration of this was
neglected and accordingly a duplicate was improperly given to
Cashel. Grand Lodge cancelled the duplicate and confirmed the
original as rightfully belonging to the Brethren in Cork.
It is interesting
to note that at this time Lodge 95 was one of thirteen Lodges that met
in Cork. These were Nos. 1, 25, 27, 28, 67, 95, 167, 224, 295, 347,
383, 395, and 400.
The meeting places
of Lodge No. 95 have been mny and varied over the years. The first
meeting place in Cork was the Globe Tavern on the South side of the
South Gate Bridge at the bottom of Barrack Street where meetings were
held from 1750 to 1776. The tavern of Bro. William Hodkiss in
Hannover Street served as the venue from 1776 until his death in
1822. Meetings were held in various locations for the following two
years including South Main Street, Parliament Street, Georges Street
and Coburg Street. The Lodge returned to Hodkiss’s Tavern in 1824 at
the invitation of his son and it remained there until 1844 when it
moved again, firstly to No. 6 Coburg Street and then to the New Royal
Oyster Tavern in Market Lane. Of all the taverns used by the Lodge
the Oyster Tavern is the only one which is still open.
Lodge 95 later
purchased No.1 Warren Place [later renamed Parnell Place] where the
Bus Station is now built, as their own lodge rooms. In 1870, the
lodge moved to 32 Maylor Street, where both Lodge No. 3 and No. 8 were
already meeting for some time. In 1926, all the lodges of Cork city
came together at the First Lodge of Ireland rooms, 27 Tuckey Street,
where we have been meeting ever since.
History of
Warrant No. 95
This number
was issued to CASHEL, Co. Tipperary, 1 December 1738 but in 1740 was
called in by Provincial Grand Lodge authorities at CORK, and in 1749
it was noted ‘no lodge assembled these nine years’ (Calder, 1749). It
was officially transferred to CORK, 24 June 1750, by David Fitzgerald,
P.G.D.M. of Munster; in the meantime, Grand Lodge of Ireland issued a
duplicate warrant to CASHEL, 24 June 1758, where some 40 members
registered between this date and 1764, so that for some years there
were two No. 95 meeting (Vide
Transactions, Lodge of Research,
1927, 212).
The meeting
at CORK was confirmed by Grand Lodge, 1 August 1771. Its warrant was
suspended 1 October 1857, and restored 6 May 1858 under the present
‘Hibernian Lodge’ title, which is worked to this day.
All photographs on this website can be enlarged by clicking on
them.
Copyright 2007 - Provincial Grand Lodge of Munster - All Rights
Reserved
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