Worshipful Brother
Lumley Franklin
(1820-1873)
Occidental Lodge, No. 22 (San Francisco); Victoria Lodge, No. 1085; Victoria-Columbia Lodge, No.1
Worshipful Brother Lumley Franklin, circa 1865
Worshipful Brother Franklin was one of the ten Charter Members of Victoria Lodge, No. 1085, the first Masonic Lodge constituted in what is now British Columbia. Victoria Lodge, No. 1085 was constituted on 28 August 1860 in Victoria.
The ten Charter members of Victoria Lodge, No. 1085 were:
James Johnson Southgate,  Merchant. 
      George Pearkes, Solicitor. 
      James N. Thain, Merchant. 
      Amor de Cosmos, Editor. 
      Kady Gambitz, Draper. 
      Thomas Harris, Gentleman. 
      Lumley Franklin, Broker. 
      John T. Howard, Publican. 
      William Henry Thain, Carrier. 
      H. J. McDonell (vocation not given). 
Lumley Franklin was elected as Victoria's second Mayor in 1865. He served with distinction and, although asked to seek re-election, declined to run for a second term. In 1867 he served on Victoria's first School Board with M.W. Brother Israel Wood Powell.
Wor. Brother Franklin went into business in Victoria as an auctioneer, real estate agent and commission merchant. A few representative advertisements for his business appear below.
Wor. Brother Franklin was a very prominent member of Victoria's Jewish community and played a leading role in organizing and financing the building of Temple Beth Emanu-el in 1863. Victoria's Freemasons laid the cornerstone of this building on 2 June 1863, starting a close relationship with Victoria's Jewish community that still lasts today. On 2 June 2013, the Grand Master, M.W. Brother G. Murray Webster, presided over a symbolic re-enactment of the original cornerstone ceremony as part of the 150th anniversary celebration of Temple Beth Emanu-el.
Here is brief biographical sketch of Wor. Brother Lumley Franklin taken from various sources:
"FRANKLIN, LUMLEY, businessman and amateur musician; b. probably c.1820 in England, son of Lewis Franklin, a Liverpool banker, and Miriam Abraham; d. 3 Aug. 1873 in San Francisco, Calif.
        At least as early as 1857 Lumley  Franklin was in San Francisco, where his brother Selim had been in business  since 1849, and in July 1858 he followed Selim to Victoria, Vancouver  Island. Here the brothers established the firm of S. Franklin and Company,  auctioneers and land agents, and were soon recognized as among the most able  and highly respected members of the Jewish business community, whose growth had  been stimulated by the gold rush to the Fraser River. In 1863 Lumley was  president of the short-lived Eureka Copper Company. Both Franklins were active  in the Victoria Philharmonic Society, which was organized at their place of  business, the “Anchor Rooms,” on 26 Jan. 1859. Lumley is said to have  “had the advantage of an Italian musical education” and was a composer as well  as a performer: at a concert in 1865 he sang his own setting of Byron’s “Adieu,  adieu my native shore.” He was also active in masonic circles. While in San  Francisco he had been a member of the Occidental Lodge no.22, A.F. & A.M.,  and in 1865 he became worshipful master of Victoria Lodge no.1085 of which he  was considered a founding member.
        In November 1865 Lumley  Franklin was elected mayor of Victoria, and when the laying of the Atlantic  cable was completed in July 1866 he signed the city’s telegram of  congratulation to the mayor of London. Urged to seek a second term he declined,  but continued to take an active interest in public affairs, serving on the  board of education for Vancouver Island and as president of the Mechanics’  Literary Institute, and advocating the removal of the capital from New  Westminster to Victoria. In October 1871 he left for England and returned  a year later, after “a lengthened tour of Europe and Canada.” In 1873 he was in  San Francisco administering the estate of his brother Edward when he had a  paralytic stroke; he died soon after, leaving a reputation as “a most amiable  gentleman . . . always foremost in good works.”
      Source: http://biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?id_nbr=4990 
      It is our painful  duty to-day to announce the death at San Francisco, on the 3d inst., of Mr.  Lumley Franklin, ex-Mayor of Victoria, after a long illness. Mr. Franklin came  this coast in 1849, and arrived at Victoria in 1858. Both here and at San  Francisco Mr. Franklin' was regarded as one of the most public-spirited men.  In 1865 he was elected Mayor of Victoria by an almost unanimous vote. He  discharged his duty with fidelity and ability, but declined a re-election.  About two years ago his brother (Mr. Edward Franklin) died, and it was whilst  administering the estate of his deceased brother that the ex-Mayor was stricken  down. Mr. Franklin was a most amiable gentleman. He possessed a kind and genial  disposition and was always foremost in good works. His loss is greatly deplored  by our citizens."
      Source: British Daily Colonist, 10 August 1873, page 3
- Vancouver Island Masonic History Project -
- Deceased Brethren -
- Victoria Columbia Lodge, No.1 -
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