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  • April 6, 1889
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The Freemason's Chronicle, April 6, 1889: Page 9

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    Article THE 1757 NOVA SCOTIA WARRANTS. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article THE 1757 NOVA SCOTIA WARRANTS. Page 2 of 2
Page 9

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The 1757 Nova Scotia Warrants.

before the end of the year 1749 , and consequently supposed that Masonry was established both at Annapolis and at Halifax some time before 1740 , and I was not the only one

that was misled by the " 1740 . Omitted in place , " for , in 1871 , Grand Master Gardner , in his oration on Henry Price , ascribed those events to about the year 1735 . Bro . Gardner ' s address was extensively read , but no one

found fault with it . Guess then Bro . Gardner s surprise when , in 1872 , 1 placed before him Haliburton ' s History of Novia Scotia , and pointed out that Halifax in Nova Scotia was unknown before 1749 . Now Bro . Gardner ' s address , in 1871 , was designed to upset my arguments against the then belief that Price was appointed Grand Master iu 1733 over New England , and in 1734 over all North America .

In 1873 I surprised Bro . Gardner still further by laying before him a pamphlet , printed at Halifax in 1786 , purporting to give a sketch of the origin of Masonry in Nova Scotia , which ascribes to Erasmus Jas . Philips ( fche

name is variously spelled ) , of Annapolis , in 1750 , the introduction of Masonry into Halifax , by virtue of his being some how a Deputy Grand Master ) , of which , however , they

were not certain ) . So after referring to the death of the Prince of Wales , which took place in 1751 , the pamphlet goes on to say : —

"At this time our R . W . Bro . Philips probably acted nnder a deputation , for we find a Grand Warrant dated seven years after this from tbe R . W . and Hon . William Stuart , Earl of Blessington , Grand Master of England , constituting Erasmus James Philips , Esq ., Provincial Grand Master of Nova Scotia , " & c , & c .

Now , in the first place , it is evident from the above that tbe Nova Scotia Masons of 1786 had not the remotest idea thafc Erasmus Jas . Philips had any knowledge of Henry Price . And second , if E . J . Philips had been initiated in

Boston , and if he had received a Warrant or a Deputation from a Boston Grand Master , he could readily have obtained all fche authority he wanted in 1757 , either from Boston or from the Grand Lodge of England , and therefore would never have applied to Dermott for such authority .

Now , E . J . Philips was certainly in Annapolis in 1726 . The probability is that he was initiated in England in one of the irregular Lodges we read of . At Annapolis he

initiated some of his fellow officers , and opened a Lodge the same as a man did in Philadelphia in 1731 , and as half a dozen men did in Boston in 1752 , and thinking that he could more easily obtain acknowledgment from the

Ancients than from the aristocratic Moderns , Bro . Philips therefore applied in 1757 to Dermott . Now , on the 19 th July 1750 , Gov . Cornwallis and Lord Colvill , the commander of the fleet , were initiated in the Halifax new

Lodge . After Lord Colvill left Halifax he was for some months stationed in Boston . 24 th October 1750 , his Lordship was elected a member of the Boston Lodge * . 2 nd November following he was raised to the third degree

in the Master Masons' Lodge , be also served as Master or the first Lodge , and as Provincial Deputy Grand Master . From Lord Colvill they doubtless learned in Boston about E . Jas . Philips and his Lodges in Nova Scotia , and as Henry

Price was ambitious to be regarded as the founder of all the then Lodges in America , for he claimed to have chartered the first Lodge in Philadelphia in 1734 , a Lodge in New Hampshire in 1735 , also a Lodge in South Carolina , and as

the first Boston Lodge had not in 1750 a scrap of a record older than 1738 , and as the Prov . G . L . never had a record or Secretary before 1750 or 1751 , aud as Bro . Charles Pelham was in 1751 employed to write up a record of fche

Grand Lodge from 1733 , for the contents of which ho was wholly indebted to Price ' s information , hence he committed the blunder of ascribing the origin of Masonry

in Nova Scotia to a period anterior to 1740 . There is no doubt , therefore , iu my mind , that Nova Scotia Masonry had no connection whatever with Henry Price , or with tho Massachusetts Provincial Grand Lodge .

Now for the Nova Scotia Warrants of 1757 . From n

letter I received from Bro . Sadler I learned that he still believed thafc the Nova Scotia Warrants were signed by " Blesinton . " This induced me to reperuse Bro . Brennan ' s History of Freemasonry in Nova Scotia , which I havo not

road since 1875 , and also an article of mine , viz ., " Origin of Freemasony in Nova Scotia , " in tho Masonic Mdgnzine , "Vol . I . p 131 , where tlie reader will find the g ist of tinpamphlet printed at Halifax in 1780 , which , by the bye ,

Bro . Brennan believed fc > bj uaioyne . Well thf-n , Brother E . J . Philips received three documents in 1758 from Dermott , respectively numbered 1 , 2 , and 3 , two of which were written on parchment and one on paper . The

The 1757 Nova Scotia Warrants.

Provincial Grand Lodge Warrant No . 1 , and Lodge Warrant No . 2 , both written on parchment , evidently by Dermott , are " stamped with slightly oval seal of wax ,

having on the superior portion thereof the impress of a square and compass , and beneath a naked dagger , the whole partially surrounded with tho words 'Virtue and Silence . '"

This proves that the Ancients had a seal in 1757 . The

name of Erasmus James Philips was in the Grand Lodge Warrant given as Provincial G . M ., and the names of the D . G . M . and of two Grand Wardens are also given . The Grand Lodge Warrant is thus headed : —

"B LKSINTON Grand Master . Wm . Halford D . G . M . Eobert Goodman S . G . W . Wm . Osborn J . G . W . To all to whom it may concern , & o .

No . 65 in England . > We , tbe Grand Lodge of the Most No . 1 in Nova Scotia , j Ancient and Hon'ble Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons , in ample

form assembled , viz ., the Right Worshipful and Right Honourable William Stuart , Earl of Blesinton ( in the Kingdom of Ireland ) Grand Master in England , William Halford , Esq . Deputy Grand Master , Mr . Robert Goodman Senior Grand Warden , Mr . Wm .

Osborn Junior Grand Warden , by and with the approbation and consent of Forty-seven Lodges , held in the cities and suburbs of London and Westminster , Do hereby authorise and empower our Trnsty and Well beloved Brethren that are now or hereafter may become

inhabitants in fcho Province of Nova Scotia to form and hold a Provincial Graud Lodge in the said Province independent of any former Dispensation , Warrant , or Constitution granted by us or our Predecessors to New England or elsewhere . "

There are two misstatements in the above , to which I must direct Bro . Sadler ' s attention . First , "forty seven Lodges , " located near London , could not have given their consent to the Halifax Warrants in 1757 , because Dermott

could not then have mustered more than about 34 living Lodges from far and near . And second , as neither Lord " Blesinton " nor any of bis predecessors , had , previous to 27 th December 1757 , ever granted any Masonic powers to

any part of America , it was simply a piece of humbug on the part of Dermott to insert into the Nova Scotia Warrant that Lord Blessingfcon , or his predecessors , had granted Constitutions or Warrants to New England .

This Warrant winds up with the signature of " Laur . Dermott Gd . Secretary . " Now , as all the copies of Deputations or Charters issued by the Grand Lodge of England that I have met with , either

in records or in print , were invariably signed at the bottom by the Deputy G . M ., as well as by the Wardens and G . Sec , I naturally supposed that the Nova Scotia Warrants were signed by Dermott only , but on reperusing Bro . Brennan ' s Book , I found , on page 304 , as follows : —

" For this organization , in 1756 , he [ Dermott ] in some manner obtained tha consent of the Earl of Blessington to become its Grand Master . Certainly those Charters or Warrants , sent by him to Halifas , bear at the top , in manner as if written by the hand of thafc

nobleman , the signature of'Blesinton Grand Master , ' the last two words being written by the hand which wrote the Warrants . The spelling of the name is different from thafc of its appearance anywhere in print . "

After perusing the above , said 1 to myself , " Well ! we must live and learn . " Who would have supposed that in fche second half of the last century a British nobleman did not know how to spell his own title , and thafc Masonic

Warrants were signed by the Grand Officers at the top instead of tbe bottom . Such , however , was the case , and Bro . Sadler was right in this case also to charge me with carelessness . This frank confession of mine will , I hope ,

satisfy Bro . Sadler thafc I am opjn to conviction , and that I am always ready to confess my errors when 1 am convinced they are such . lam sorry , however , to inform him that vve are still as wide apart as ever on fche main question

at issue . I still believe that Dermott and his gang in 1751-2 had no just cause to create a schism in the Oraft , that if they imagined they had a cause they certainly never made au effort , either by petition or otherwise , to induce

the Grand Lodge to remove the alleged cause . And after looking afc Dennett ' s conduct from every point of view , I am still convinced that he w ; is a most unscrupulous bra « f gcr and Masonic quack , and I assure Bro . Sadler that other Americans beside Bro . MacCalla s ' mre in my opinion . BOSTON , U . S ., 22 nd M > , ™ h 1889 .

NO MORE DEAF . —Niohulsou ' d Pi . t-ntu . J Artificial Ear Drums cure Deiifness siiul X-iises in tho He .-id in sip stages . 1 : 12 pasre illustrated Book , with full de .-icriptioji live . Addioc . s J . II . NICUULHON , __ !! Bedfordsquare , London , W . C .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1889-04-06, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_06041889/page/9/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE APPROACHING ELECTION FOR THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 1
FREE MASONRY. Article 2
MASONIC GRUMBLERS. Article 2
THE EMPEROR-FREEMASONS. Article 3
OLD FREEMASONS. Article 3
BRO. JACOB NORTON AND HIS "FURTHER COMMENTS "ON "FACTS AND FICTIONS." Article 4
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 6
THE THEATRES, &c. Article 6
PORTSMOUTH FREEMASONS' HALL AND CLUB COMPANY. Article 6
Untitled Ad 7
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Untitled Ad 8
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Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 8
THE 1757 NOVA SCOTIA WARRANTS. Article 8
Obituary. Article 10
BRO. JOHN WHITEHOUSE. Article 10
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 11
REVIEWS. Article 11
MARK MASONRY. Article 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
Untitled Ad 13
LIST OF RARE AND VALUABLE WORKS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 14
Untitled Ad 15
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THE THEATRES. AMUSEMENTS. &c. Article 15
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The 1757 Nova Scotia Warrants.

before the end of the year 1749 , and consequently supposed that Masonry was established both at Annapolis and at Halifax some time before 1740 , and I was not the only one

that was misled by the " 1740 . Omitted in place , " for , in 1871 , Grand Master Gardner , in his oration on Henry Price , ascribed those events to about the year 1735 . Bro . Gardner ' s address was extensively read , but no one

found fault with it . Guess then Bro . Gardner s surprise when , in 1872 , 1 placed before him Haliburton ' s History of Novia Scotia , and pointed out that Halifax in Nova Scotia was unknown before 1749 . Now Bro . Gardner ' s address , in 1871 , was designed to upset my arguments against the then belief that Price was appointed Grand Master iu 1733 over New England , and in 1734 over all North America .

In 1873 I surprised Bro . Gardner still further by laying before him a pamphlet , printed at Halifax in 1786 , purporting to give a sketch of the origin of Masonry in Nova Scotia , which ascribes to Erasmus Jas . Philips ( fche

name is variously spelled ) , of Annapolis , in 1750 , the introduction of Masonry into Halifax , by virtue of his being some how a Deputy Grand Master ) , of which , however , they

were not certain ) . So after referring to the death of the Prince of Wales , which took place in 1751 , the pamphlet goes on to say : —

"At this time our R . W . Bro . Philips probably acted nnder a deputation , for we find a Grand Warrant dated seven years after this from tbe R . W . and Hon . William Stuart , Earl of Blessington , Grand Master of England , constituting Erasmus James Philips , Esq ., Provincial Grand Master of Nova Scotia , " & c , & c .

Now , in the first place , it is evident from the above that tbe Nova Scotia Masons of 1786 had not the remotest idea thafc Erasmus Jas . Philips had any knowledge of Henry Price . And second , if E . J . Philips had been initiated in

Boston , and if he had received a Warrant or a Deputation from a Boston Grand Master , he could readily have obtained all fche authority he wanted in 1757 , either from Boston or from the Grand Lodge of England , and therefore would never have applied to Dermott for such authority .

Now , E . J . Philips was certainly in Annapolis in 1726 . The probability is that he was initiated in England in one of the irregular Lodges we read of . At Annapolis he

initiated some of his fellow officers , and opened a Lodge the same as a man did in Philadelphia in 1731 , and as half a dozen men did in Boston in 1752 , and thinking that he could more easily obtain acknowledgment from the

Ancients than from the aristocratic Moderns , Bro . Philips therefore applied in 1757 to Dermott . Now , on the 19 th July 1750 , Gov . Cornwallis and Lord Colvill , the commander of the fleet , were initiated in the Halifax new

Lodge . After Lord Colvill left Halifax he was for some months stationed in Boston . 24 th October 1750 , his Lordship was elected a member of the Boston Lodge * . 2 nd November following he was raised to the third degree

in the Master Masons' Lodge , be also served as Master or the first Lodge , and as Provincial Deputy Grand Master . From Lord Colvill they doubtless learned in Boston about E . Jas . Philips and his Lodges in Nova Scotia , and as Henry

Price was ambitious to be regarded as the founder of all the then Lodges in America , for he claimed to have chartered the first Lodge in Philadelphia in 1734 , a Lodge in New Hampshire in 1735 , also a Lodge in South Carolina , and as

the first Boston Lodge had not in 1750 a scrap of a record older than 1738 , and as the Prov . G . L . never had a record or Secretary before 1750 or 1751 , aud as Bro . Charles Pelham was in 1751 employed to write up a record of fche

Grand Lodge from 1733 , for the contents of which ho was wholly indebted to Price ' s information , hence he committed the blunder of ascribing the origin of Masonry

in Nova Scotia to a period anterior to 1740 . There is no doubt , therefore , iu my mind , that Nova Scotia Masonry had no connection whatever with Henry Price , or with tho Massachusetts Provincial Grand Lodge .

Now for the Nova Scotia Warrants of 1757 . From n

letter I received from Bro . Sadler I learned that he still believed thafc the Nova Scotia Warrants were signed by " Blesinton . " This induced me to reperuse Bro . Brennan ' s History of Freemasonry in Nova Scotia , which I havo not

road since 1875 , and also an article of mine , viz ., " Origin of Freemasony in Nova Scotia , " in tho Masonic Mdgnzine , "Vol . I . p 131 , where tlie reader will find the g ist of tinpamphlet printed at Halifax in 1780 , which , by the bye ,

Bro . Brennan believed fc > bj uaioyne . Well thf-n , Brother E . J . Philips received three documents in 1758 from Dermott , respectively numbered 1 , 2 , and 3 , two of which were written on parchment and one on paper . The

The 1757 Nova Scotia Warrants.

Provincial Grand Lodge Warrant No . 1 , and Lodge Warrant No . 2 , both written on parchment , evidently by Dermott , are " stamped with slightly oval seal of wax ,

having on the superior portion thereof the impress of a square and compass , and beneath a naked dagger , the whole partially surrounded with tho words 'Virtue and Silence . '"

This proves that the Ancients had a seal in 1757 . The

name of Erasmus James Philips was in the Grand Lodge Warrant given as Provincial G . M ., and the names of the D . G . M . and of two Grand Wardens are also given . The Grand Lodge Warrant is thus headed : —

"B LKSINTON Grand Master . Wm . Halford D . G . M . Eobert Goodman S . G . W . Wm . Osborn J . G . W . To all to whom it may concern , & o .

No . 65 in England . > We , tbe Grand Lodge of the Most No . 1 in Nova Scotia , j Ancient and Hon'ble Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons , in ample

form assembled , viz ., the Right Worshipful and Right Honourable William Stuart , Earl of Blesinton ( in the Kingdom of Ireland ) Grand Master in England , William Halford , Esq . Deputy Grand Master , Mr . Robert Goodman Senior Grand Warden , Mr . Wm .

Osborn Junior Grand Warden , by and with the approbation and consent of Forty-seven Lodges , held in the cities and suburbs of London and Westminster , Do hereby authorise and empower our Trnsty and Well beloved Brethren that are now or hereafter may become

inhabitants in fcho Province of Nova Scotia to form and hold a Provincial Graud Lodge in the said Province independent of any former Dispensation , Warrant , or Constitution granted by us or our Predecessors to New England or elsewhere . "

There are two misstatements in the above , to which I must direct Bro . Sadler ' s attention . First , "forty seven Lodges , " located near London , could not have given their consent to the Halifax Warrants in 1757 , because Dermott

could not then have mustered more than about 34 living Lodges from far and near . And second , as neither Lord " Blesinton " nor any of bis predecessors , had , previous to 27 th December 1757 , ever granted any Masonic powers to

any part of America , it was simply a piece of humbug on the part of Dermott to insert into the Nova Scotia Warrant that Lord Blessingfcon , or his predecessors , had granted Constitutions or Warrants to New England .

This Warrant winds up with the signature of " Laur . Dermott Gd . Secretary . " Now , as all the copies of Deputations or Charters issued by the Grand Lodge of England that I have met with , either

in records or in print , were invariably signed at the bottom by the Deputy G . M ., as well as by the Wardens and G . Sec , I naturally supposed that the Nova Scotia Warrants were signed by Dermott only , but on reperusing Bro . Brennan ' s Book , I found , on page 304 , as follows : —

" For this organization , in 1756 , he [ Dermott ] in some manner obtained tha consent of the Earl of Blessington to become its Grand Master . Certainly those Charters or Warrants , sent by him to Halifas , bear at the top , in manner as if written by the hand of thafc

nobleman , the signature of'Blesinton Grand Master , ' the last two words being written by the hand which wrote the Warrants . The spelling of the name is different from thafc of its appearance anywhere in print . "

After perusing the above , said 1 to myself , " Well ! we must live and learn . " Who would have supposed that in fche second half of the last century a British nobleman did not know how to spell his own title , and thafc Masonic

Warrants were signed by the Grand Officers at the top instead of tbe bottom . Such , however , was the case , and Bro . Sadler was right in this case also to charge me with carelessness . This frank confession of mine will , I hope ,

satisfy Bro . Sadler thafc I am opjn to conviction , and that I am always ready to confess my errors when 1 am convinced they are such . lam sorry , however , to inform him that vve are still as wide apart as ever on fche main question

at issue . I still believe that Dermott and his gang in 1751-2 had no just cause to create a schism in the Oraft , that if they imagined they had a cause they certainly never made au effort , either by petition or otherwise , to induce

the Grand Lodge to remove the alleged cause . And after looking afc Dennett ' s conduct from every point of view , I am still convinced that he w ; is a most unscrupulous bra « f gcr and Masonic quack , and I assure Bro . Sadler that other Americans beside Bro . MacCalla s ' mre in my opinion . BOSTON , U . S ., 22 nd M > , ™ h 1889 .

NO MORE DEAF . —Niohulsou ' d Pi . t-ntu . J Artificial Ear Drums cure Deiifness siiul X-iises in tho He .-id in sip stages . 1 : 12 pasre illustrated Book , with full de .-icriptioji live . Addioc . s J . II . NICUULHON , __ !! Bedfordsquare , London , W . C .

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