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The first
meeting
of the Lodge (then No. 607) took place on Monday 6 October 1834, so
2009 was its 175th Anniversary year. St Peter's is the 4th oldest extant Masonic Lodge in Staffordshire, and
the oldest still meeting in the Masonic Hall, Wolverhampton.
The Lodge was created at the instance of Noah's Ark Lodge, and the
then Master of that Lodge, George Hilton, installed the first Master
of St Peter's Lodge.
In December
1835
the members of St Peters Lodge presented a commemorative jewel to
George Hilton, and this was returned to the Lodge in 1964 and
remains in its possession. Each year it is traditionally
presented to the Immediate Past Master.
The first
Master
of St Peter's Lodge was Christopher Taylor Darby, Chief Clerk at
Wolverhampton's Cock Street Post Office. He presented the
Lodge with a 1614 edition of the so-called "Breeches Bible", which still appears on the
Master's pedestal today.
The Lodge
originally met on Mondays but in 1852 this was changed to the
Thursdays still used today (see Lodge Programme for details of the
Lodge formal and social programme for the current calendar year).
In 1863 the Lodge number was changed to its current 419.
The Lodge
had membership difficulties in its early years but eventually
prospered and in 1853 a former Master of the Lodge, Col. George
Augustus Vernon, became Provincial
Grand Master for Staffordshire. In the early years the Lodge
generally met at the Star and Garter Hotel in Victoria Street, but
in 1923 it moved to the new Masonic Temple in Darlington Street and
to the present Masonic Hall when it was opened in 1964.
The
Lodge
celebrated its 1,500th meeting in 1993 and celebrated its 175th
anniversary in October 2009. St Peter's is proud of the high
standard of presentation of Masonic ritual for which it is renowned.
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