Page 173 - An account of the Lodge of Nine Muses No. 235. 1777 to 2012UGLE
P. 173

APPENDIX A

                                 LIST OF MEMBERS
                   OF THE LODGE OF THE NINE MUSES, NO. 235

               The list from 1777 to the end of 1813 is taken from the Grand Lodge
            Register, with a few additions derived from the Freemasons’ Magazine, the Lodge
            Signature-Book, and other sources. Names not in the Register are marked with
            an asterisk*.
               From 1814 the Minutes have been followed.
               The Register extends to 1823, and so overlaps the Minutes; the dates in the
            Register, the Minutes, the Signature-Book, and the Magazine do not always
            agree, and before 1814 they cannot be absolutely relied on, though they are no
            doubt approximately correct.
               The occupations and addresses are those recorded when membership began;
            those after 1913 are not printed.
               For the notes the usual books of reference have been consulted and
            investigations have been made in various public and private libraries, to the
            officials of which the writer offers cordial thanks, as he does also to a number
            of correspondents, to whose ready courtesy in answering his questions he
            gratefully bears witness.
               Some of these debts have already been acknowledged in the text; to the
            following also the writer wishes to express his obligation:

               The Count von Moltke, Berlin.
               The Secretaries of the  Portuguese, Italian, and Polish Embassies, and the
                 Danish Legation.
               Monsieur le Directeur des Services de l’Institut de France.
               The Grand Secretary, State of New York, U.S.A.
               The Librarians and officials of the Libraries of the Royal Academy of Arts,
               The Royal United Service Institution, the Guildhall, Gray’s and Lincoln’s Inns,
                 and the Royal Institute of British Architects; of the Leicester Freemasons’
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