Skip to main content
Back to top

Northumberland Freemasons Help With Hong Kong Detective Work

Percy Lodge members were recently contacted by Dr Albert Leung, the Almoner of The Perseverance Lodge of Hong Kong. The purpose was to introduce them to the Masonic Memorial Project.

Posted:
tombstone of Nichol Harvey, a Freemason buried in Hong Kong

 

Through time-consuming research and analysis, a small working group in Hong Kong identified the final resting places of many members, some of whom were Initiated in the UK and subsequently joined lodges or were buried there. In so doing, they identified a certain member: Nichol Harvey, initiated in Percy Lodge who died on 8th December 1881, aged 33 years.

However, they had no further record of him. Reaching across the continents to Ken Atkinson, Secretary of Percy Lodge, they were able to fill in many of the gaps.

The Life of Nichol Harvey 

Nichol Harvey was born in 1848 in Newcastle to Nichol Ferguson Harvey, who lived between 1822 and 1853, a Master Mariner, and Jane Walker, who lived between 1822 and 1869. The 1851 Census showed Nichol, then aged 2, was living with his family at 3 Howard Street; in the 1861 Census, aged 12, he was now a scholar at the Royal Hospital School in Greenwich, which was founded in 1717 to provide boys from seafaring backgrounds with the rare privilege of learning arithmetic and navigation.

By the 1871 Census, aged 23, he was listed as a Mariner and living with his maternal Grandfather, John Walker, who was born in 1797, as his parents, by then, had died.

As Percy Lodge was consecrated on 5th June 1873 - and is interestingly celebrating its sesquicentennial anniversary this year - Nichol must have undertaken all his degrees between then and 1881, probably all in one leave.

In addition, he is mentioned on the family gravestone in Jesmond Old Cemetery and listed as dying on 8th December 1881 in Hong Kong on board the SS Cleveland.

The Masonic Memorial Project

Coming under the overall control of the District Grand Lodge of Hong Kong and the Far East, the project has identified somewhere in the region of 142 graves with connections to Freemasonry, of which 71 have been linked to a specific Lodge. The project proposes a cleaning and maintenance program of the graves in tandem with an annual visit to the Cemetery, perhaps during the Ching Ming Festival, to lay flowers and pay their respects to the Brethren.

Join Freemasonry today

Locate your local lodge where you live, work or study.
International lookup by area

Enter your location or post code
Units: Miles
Address, City, Zip-Code, Country, ...