The “Saucy Jack,” 250 tons, had been launched from Mr. I. Chapman’s yard.
March 18th.—Wm. Barth, Esq., had received an appointment in the Money Order Office of the Post Office, London.
March 25th.—Records the laying of the first stone on the Victoria Building Company’s Estate, when Captain Harmer, R.N., (W.M. of Lodge “United Friends,”) addressed the assembly as follows:—
“At the request of the Directors of the Victoria Building Company, we are here assembled as Masons to assist our Worthy Brother, who now occupies the civic chair of this borough, to lay the foundation stone of this important and interesting work—important and interesting indeed to Yarmouth. May the work prosper, and from the foundation about to be laid, may structures arise ornamental to the town, beneficial to its inhabitants, and advantageous to the builders. May the promoters of these buildings live to see their great and spirited design carried out, and when it shall please the Grand Leveller of human greatness to call them from hence, may they arrive at the point or centre where the World’s Great Architect lives and reigns for ever.”
Bro. Richard Ferrier, P.M.—“So mote it be.”
The Mayor then proceeded to deposit two coins of her present Majesty in the stone, over which a brass plate was laid bearing the following inscription:—
“The first stone of Kimberley Terrace, Great Yarmouth, to be erected by the Victoria Building Company, was laid by Samuel Palmer, Esq., Mayor of Great Yarmouth, on the 22nd day of March, in the Year of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty One, and in the Fourth year of the reign of Queen Victoria. William Steward, Esq., Chairman of the Board of Directors; Thomas Marsh Nelson, Esq., Architect.”
A public dinner was afterwards held at the Royal Hotel, George Danby-Palmer, Esq., in the chair.
April 1st.—The election of Guardians had ended in “the signal defeat of the Tories.”
April 15th.—Messrs. C. Davie and D. A. Gourlay had been elected Churchwardens by the Vestry.