| History
THE MASONIC HALL, CORK – HISTORICAL
BACKGROUND
Prior
to the mid-eighteenth century, the city of Cork had just one main
street, now known as South Main Street and North Main Street, and from
these two streets led a maze of smaller streets and laneways. The
street on which this premises is located was formerly called Tuckey’s
Lane, just 20ft wide, and terminating in the city wall; the present
street was created by this lane being widened on the north (park)
side, a development commemorated on the limestone wall tablet halfway
down the street on the opposite side, which reads ‘Tuckey’s Street,
1761’. The Grand Parade at the end of this street remained a shipping
canal until covered over during the 1790s, and that portion comprising
the present entrance front of Bishop Lucey Park was called Tuckey’s
Quay.
In the
eighteenth century in what is now known as Oliver Plunkett Street
(formerly George’s Street) stood an assembly house, a meeting place
where social evenings were held. This building, situated at 25–27
Tuckey Street, was built c.1770 and is shown as ‘The New
Assembly Rooms’ on a Cork map of 1771. By 1790, it was known as ‘The
King’s Theatre’ and was used for musical and amateur dramatic events
by the Apollo Society. Many plays were preformed and, in addition, the
army garrison stationed at Cork held musical evenings known as
‘Drums’, with dancing, card playing and light refreshments served, the
attendance being confined to the officers and their ladies.
Many groups and societies used the building, most notably the
fledgling Scots Presbyterian congregation of the city, which rented
the Assembly Room between 1833 and 1840.
The Assembly
Rooms Theatre had a gallery running from the interior wall of the
present Lodge Room to the outer wall on the eastern (Grand Parade) end
of the building. The foundation of this outer wall is built upon the
medieval city wall of Cork, which was demolished early in the
eighteenth century, having last seen defensive use in the 1690 siege
of the city during the Williamite campaign. The line of the wall is
partially revealed in Bishop Lucey Park and may be visually traced
across the end of Tuckey Street through what is now the Christian
Bookshop. The large building next to this – directly opposite our
entrance – was the Main Guard Room of the city, where some men were
questioned and tried during the 1798 Rising. This premises later
became an R.I.C. Barracks until converted in the 1920s to the City
Library; today it houses the St Vincent de Paul Society.
Our
building is stone built and was not originally end-of-terrace; the
gable end was revealed in the early 1970s, following the demolition of
the adjacent Jenning’s Furniture Store which had been destroyed by
fire in September 1970, a fire that damaged the Chapter Room on the
top floor, destroying its contents. Following extensive smoke and
water damage on that occasion, all meetings were transferred to
temporary premises at nearby Cove Street until renovations were
completed in 1971.
It was the end of an unfortunate decade in our history; in 1962, the
‘Great Flood of Cork’ resulted in a large area of central Cork –
including the Tuckey Street premises – being flooded to a depth of
several feet for two days. The major loss on that occasion was portion
of our lodge and provincial records which, being stored in safes at
ground floor level, were irretrievably damaged by water.
However, the vast majority of our archival documents remained
unscathed and, during 2007, all provincial, lodge, chapter and council
records were transferred on permanent loan to the Cork City and County
Archives, Blackpool, where they may be consulted by permit.
The First Lodge
of Ireland purchased the Tuckey Street premises in 1844; prior to
this, it met in the taverns of the city and notably the Oyster Tavern
(which is still in existence today), in common with the other city
lodges. The First Lodge had previously considered purchasing the Glass
Works in South Terrace.
The first meeting as owners of the building took place on 20 December
1844; there was no official opening on that date, it having been
previously agreed ‘that £10.00 be taken from funds for to defray the
expenses of the rent for the new Lodge Room’.
Since this time,
it has also
been the venue for quarterly meetings of Provincial Grand Lodge of
Munster. The Lodge Room was finally consecrated on 24 June 1880.
The internal design of this building has not changed
much since it was constructed. At the ground floor level were 3 shops
– 2 on the left of the present entrance door (now comprising the
Supper Room area), and 1 on the right, now the Kitchen.
This was the fashion of the time and the shop front facia on the
exterior of the building still displays the consoles that divided
these commercial premises. The original entrance frontage was designed
in 1845 by Edward Martin & Son, architects, whose plans are on
display in the Supper Room. The door was replaced in 1990 by the
present front door; a photo of the original may be seen in the city
archives.
The staircase from ground level to the Robing Room is
the original and is a very fine example of eighteenth-century
staircase manufacture; the continuation to the Chapter Room was added
in 1924–25 when, in preparation for the amalgamation of the city
lodges at Tuckey Street, another floor was added to the building for
use as the Royal Arch Chapter Room by the building firm, Mahony of
Cork.
This upper room was used along with the Robing Room for many
Installation Dinners and socials prior to acquisition of the present
supper room.
The first floor
comprises a Lodge Room and Ante Room Library; together they comprised
the old assembly room, while the present Robing Room was the gallery,
now walled in. The main Lodge room is rectangular in shape, and
measures 38 feet in length by 26 feet in width. The wall panelling and
stalls of the Lodge Room are hung with armorial family stall plates
and banners emblazoned with the coats of arms of Prince Masons past
and present, whose membership is limited to 33 at any given time.
Those banners positioned high up on the walls are of deceased
brethren; those directly over the stall are of the present incumbent,
whose stall plate is centrally positioned behind.
The stalls were
installed in 1866 and formerly comprised the choir stalls of Old St
Fin Barre’s Cathedral. They are over 300 years old, and were purchased
by the Prince Masons for the sum of £30.00. The canopy over the
master’s throne was that which had been over the bishop’s throne in
the old cathedral building, while the Master’s throne was itself
commissioned in 1872 by the First Lodge from Mr Casey of Cook Street,
with the addition of a level, to keep in harmony with the Ash canopy
and stalls.
The present Senior Warden’s chair previously functioned as the
Master’s throne; the Junior Warden’s chair was reputedly used during
the early eighteenth century initiation in Doneraile Court of The Lady
Freemason, The Hon. Elizabeth St Leger. It was presented to the Third
Lodge of Ireland in 1864, and came into these premises with them, in
1926.
The
fireplace was situated behind the Junior Warden’s Chair; in 1905, it
was covered over in appropriate panelling designed by Brother H. Hill,
an architect in the city.
The richly
carved secretary’s desk was presented to the First Lodge of Ireland in
1898 by RW Bro. Anderson Cooper 33°, a Past Provincial Deputy Grand
Master of Munster.
The chairs on
either side of the Senior Wardens Chair – used by the Organist and
Junior Deacon, and those in the North East corner, used by visiting
dignitaries – are of Edwardian Masonic design, c.1900.
The three
triangular tables also date to c.1900, with the engraving on
the lower level indicating to which office they belong; they are
covered with a canopy and are a nineteenth-century deviation of the
eighteenth century Porter Chair. The two brass pillars were donated to
the province by the brethren of Harmony Lodge No. 67 for general use;
however, lodges may continue to use their own, if desired. The wooden
stands for the ballot box and the attendance book were presented to
the province in recent years by W Bro. Patrick Caborne-Bassett, a
professional antique restorer.
High
up on the wall of the former gallery, behind the Senior Warden, is
mounted a massive mosaic depicting the first degree tracing board,
surrounded by plaster cast figures of the four Evangelists which
surround the west window in St Fin Barre’s Cathedral. In 1871, it is
recorded that the Dean of Cork requested these casts be removed from
the cathedral yard and erected in the Lodge room under the direction
of Bros. Noblett, Edwards, Gregg, and Jermyn.
On either side of the Senior Warden hang the other two tracing boards.
The tripod,
commissioned in 1862 by the First Lodge of Ireland from a Mr Laurence
Casey, was designed by Anthony Perrier Esq. It is carved out of a lime
tree and its purpose is to hold the Lodge warrants. At the top of the
tripod stands the Square and Compass, supported by a Corinthian
Pillar. The three legs represent the three pillars of King Solomon’s
temple and the figures represent Faith, Hope, and Charity. Each leg
terminates in the head of a Lion, to denote strength, a woman to
denote beauty, and a serpent head for wisdom. The painting and
colouring was carried out by Messrs Clarke of Princes Street, the
entire cost being £7 8s. 3d.
The Lodge Room
pillars are a gift from Hibernian Lodge No. 95, and were used by that
Lodge in their former premises in Parnell [Warren] Place.
The
American organ dates from 1918 and was presented to the Provincial
Grand Lodge of Munster for use in the Lodge room by Neptune Lodge No.
190 Cobh, to whom it was originally presented by ‘American & British
Service Brethren in appreciation of their being made Honorary Members
of Neptune Lodge No. 190, Cobh, while allied in fighting for the love
of truth and loyalty to freedom, 12 Dec. 1918.’
The bespoke
carpet was specially woven and commissioned from Youghal Carpets in
1971; the tessellated pavement and stall cushion covers (which depict
various symbols of Freemasonry) were made by RW Bro. Alec Day, P.G.M.
and his wife, assisted by his deputy, RW Bro. J. MacLeod Pratt.
There are three
oil portraits in the Lodge Room. On the former gallery wall hang
portraits of two past D.P.G.M., RW
Bro Anderson Cooper 33°, painted by Sir Walter Osborne R.H.A. in 1895
and RW Bro. William H. Beamish 33°,
painted in 1918; over the Junior Warden’s chair hangs the third, being
that of RW Bro. Charles J. Lane, Esq., P.G.M.
This last
portrait, painted in 1949, is
by James
Sleator P.H.R.A.
Click on
this hyperlink to view photographs of the portraits.
The walls of
all parts of the premises are hung with unique historical memorabilia
of past and present lodges, chapters and councils of the province.
The staircase walls display photos of many Past Provincial Grand
Masters of Munster and items from the provincial lodges; a large
commemorative print of Queen Victoria’s tour of the fleet moored in
the harbour of Cork, 3 August 1849 is of special interest, being
commissioned for the benefit of the Cork Masonic Female Asylum.
Perhaps the oldest item – an old Irish Level found 7 feet beneath the
surface in Co. Antrim in 1864, presented in 1892 by RW Bro. Robert Day
F.S.A., M.R.I.A., a founding member of the Cork Historical and
Archaeological Society – hangs encased in the Inner Entrance Hall.
The
Supper Room doubles as a museum, with all walls given over to the
display of a large collection of jewels, aprons and Masonica, most
notably the portion relating to The Lady Freemason, comprising her
apron, autograph signature, and photographs of her homes at Doneraile
Court and Newmarket House.
An eighteenth century
miniature portrait, painted in during her lifetime and an oil painting
dated 1877 complete the collection.
Also in the supper room is a painting of the Master’s Throne, a
commission of RW Bro. Charles J. Lane P.G.M., painted in 1919 by W.
Bro. Dermod O’Brien, P.R.H.A.
Further items of interest include
the original
ceremonial level used by the Lord Lieutenant, the earl of Carlisle, at
the laying of the foundation stone of the modern St Patrick’s Bridge
on 12 November 1859 (depicted in a large framed print on the
staircase) and subsequently on 12 January 1865 (at the foundation
ceremony of the present St Fin Barre’s Cathedral),
a Napoleonic
Sword and French Masonic Certificate (which was found on the body of a
dead French Officer in the battlefield at Waterloo) and the Chatteron
sword, which was presented by RW Bro. General Sir James Chatterton,
Bart., P.G.M.
to Mourne Preceptory No. 1, Cork.
The first member of the Tuckey family arrived in Cork in the army
of the Lord Protector, Oliver Cromwell. A leading figure in the
parish of Christ Church, Tuckey died in 1668, and is interred in a
vault in the crypt; this former church is situated to the rear of
the Masonic Hall, across the park facing South Main Street.
Tuckey’s son was elected Mayor of Cork, and it is after him the
lane, street and quay was named.
The area to
the side and the rear of this building has been converted into
Bishop Lucey Park. During the restoration of the premises, all
meetings were held in the old St Nicholas Parish Hall (beside the
Diocesan Office in Cove Street, just off Barrack Street). The
Grand Re-dedication of Tuckey Street was in September 1971,
when RW Bro. Alec R. Day was installed as P.G.M. by the Grand
Master, The Earl of Donoughmore, in the presence of an overflow
attendance that included Dr J. Wallace, Deputy Grand Master. The
proceedings were relayed by television link to brethren in the
Royal Arch Chapter Room upstairs by VW Bro. Keith Carroll. The
meeting was opened by RW Bro. Frank Brewitt, outgoing P.G.M.; at
this PGL meeting it was also announced that RW Bro. J. McLeod
Pratt was to become D.P.G.M.
Cork city, being located on an island in
the River Lee, has been prone to flooding over the years, mostly
of a limited, short-term nature. The most dramatic floods occurred
in 1870, 1916 and 1962. The flood of 1916 was the largest, but
that which occurred in 1962 was related to a tidal wave, flooding
the city centre and the Courthouse to a depth of several feet for
two days. Improvements to the city drainage and the building of
river dams have since limited the potential for flooding.
This includes references to Famous Cork Masons such as: Sir John
Benson, Architect (who designed St Patrick’s Bridge and St
Vincent’s Church in Sunday’s Well); Sharman Crawford, after whom a
street is named and also The Municipal School of Art; he was a
leading industrialist of his time, a member of the Crawford
brewing dynasty, a banker, shipbuilder and member of the Third
Lodge of Ireland; Ebenezer Pike of Bessboro (where the Cork City
Heritage centre is now situated) was a director of the St George’s
Steam Packet Company who owned the ‘Sirus’, the first steam vessel
to sail the Atlantic Ocean from East to West starting at Passage
West, near Cork. Her Captain was Lt. Cpt. Roberts RN of Wise’s
distillery in Cork, also a member of Lodge No. 8; Alexander &
Henry Deane, Architects who designed many buildings including the
Cork City Gaol (now a Heritage Centre) and the former Cork Lunatic
Asylum (now developed as apartments) – were members of Lodge No.
209, now amalgamated with Lodge No. 8; Joshua Hargraves who
designed the Custom House and many country residences and resided
in Summerhill; he was also Secretary of the Royal Cork Yacht Club
at Crosshaven and built its Clubhouse in 1829.
The paintings of Anderson Cooper and The Lady Freemason were
restored in 1976 by Mr Christopher Ramsden M.A., M.B.E., a nephew
by marriage of RW Bro. Alec R. Day, P.G.M., whose portrait on the
stairs, painted by Marshall C. Hutson R.H.A. in 1978, was
commissioned by his wife, Raymonde.
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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