. Towns of New England and old England, Ireland and Scotland . are called, and an attrac-tive set of drinking glasses, each one of which has the picture of a beaver on the walls of the American Lodge are a dozen or so photographs of Beverley andthe Minster, and there is also a large photograph of the same church in the mainroom of the Lodge. It may be interesting also to record that the American Lodgeraised a sum of money to help repair the statues on the outside of the EnglishCathedral, and in addition to this, during the war, the American Lodge sent moneyto Constitutional Lodge to take


. Towns of New England and old England, Ireland and Scotland . are called, and an attrac-tive set of drinking glasses, each one of which has the picture of a beaver on the walls of the American Lodge are a dozen or so photographs of Beverley andthe Minster, and there is also a large photograph of the same church in the mainroom of the Lodge. It may be interesting also to record that the American Lodgeraised a sum of money to help repair the statues on the outside of the EnglishCathedral, and in addition to this, during the war, the American Lodge sent moneyto Constitutional Lodge to take care of its wounded soldiers. Still another inter-change of presents is interesting to note; while St. Johns Church at Beverly Farms,Mass., was being built, the Beverley Minister sent to the Rev. E. J. V. Huiginntwo splendid photographs to decorate the vestry room of the Church. In 1906 Roland W. Boyden, Esq., of Liberty Lodge was the official representa-tive to the EngHsh Lodge and was treated with great hospitahty by the members 66 BEVERLY, MASSACHUSETTS. From a print owned bv a Boston collector Formerly in the collu li / THE MARKET PLACE, BEVERLEY, ENGLAND of the Beverley fraternity, among whom were John Elwell, Esq., the Master, BrotherHobson, Brother Gates, Brother Thomson Foley, the Secretary, and Brother TomTurner. On his return Mr. Boyden gave an account of his visit at a meeting ofLiberty Lodge held on October 31, 1906, and in this address he said: The Eng-lish, too, feel strongly the race tie which exists between the two countries, andthey feel pride in the progress and success of the English blood on this sideof the water. Near the spot where the Beverley Minster now stands there used to be a mon-astery which was built in 721 , by St. John of Beverley, who was at the timeArchbishop of York; and to him the town, therefore, owes much of its Danes destroyed the town, together with the monastery, which was rebuilt,St. John of Beverley being then canoni


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1921