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The Four Old Lodges.

THE FOUR OLD LODGES .

Bi : o . R , F . Gort . D . ( Continued from page 4 . ) § 17 .

I . —On tho 1 st of May 1777 , Lord Potro was succeeded by tho Duke of Manchester , during whose administration the tranquillity of the Society Avas interrupted by private dissensions . An unfortunate dispute having arisen among the members of tho Lodge of Antiquity , on acconnt of some proceedings of tlio brethren of thafc Lodgo on the Festival of St . John the Evangelist , after his Grace ' s election ,

tho complaint was introdnccd into the Grand Lodge , where it necnpicrt the attention of every Committee and Communication for twelve months . It originated from tho Master , Wardens , and somo of tho ¦ members , having , in conseqnenco of a resolution of tlio Lodgo , attended divine service at St . Dunstan ' s Chnrch in Fleet Street , in the clothing of tho Order , and walked back to the Mitro Tavern in

their regalia , without having obtained a dispensation for the purpose . The Graud Lodgo determined the measure to bo a violation of tho general regulations respecting pnblic processions . Varions opinions wero formed on tbo subject , and several brethren highly disgnsted . Another circumstance tended still farther to widen the breach . This Lodgo having expelled threo members for

misbehaviour , the Grand Lodge interfered , and Avithout proper investigation , ordered them to bo reinstated . With this order tho Lodge refused to comply , conceiving themselves competent judges in the choice of their own members . The privileges of the Lodge of Antiquity wero then set np iu opposition to tho SUPPOSED uncontrollable authority of tho Grand Lodgo ; and iu tho investigation of this

important point the original canso of dispute was totally forgotten . Matters were agitated to tho extreme on both sides ; resolutions wero precipitately entered into , and edicts inadvertently issued ; memorials and remonstrances wero presented . At last a rupture ensued . Tho Lodge of Antiquity supported its immemorial privileges ; appointed Committees to examine records ; applied to tho

old Lodgo in York City , and to the Lodges in Scotland and Ireland , for advice ; entered a protest against , and peremptorily refused to comply with , the resolutions of tho Grand Lodge ; discontinued the attendance of its Master aud Wardens at tho Committees of Charity and Quarterly Communications as its representatives ; published a Manifesto in its vindication ; notified its separation from the Grand

Lodge ; and avowed an alliance with tho Grand Lodge of all England held in tho City of York , and every Lodgo and Mason who wished to act iu conformity to tho original Constitutions . Tbo Grand Lodgo enforced its edicts , and extended protection to tho brethren whose cause it had espoused . Anathemas were issued , several Avorthy men in thoir absence expelled from tho Society for refusing to surrender

the property of the Lodge to threo persons who had been regularly expelled from it ; nnd printed letters wero circulated , with tho Grand Treasurer ' s accounts , highly derogatory to the dignity of the Society . This produced a schism , which subsisted for tho space of ten years . II . —To justify tho proceedings of tho Grand Lodge , the following resolution of tho Committee of Charity , hold in Feb . 1779 , was

printed and dispersed among the Lodges : — " Resolved—That every private Lodge derives its authority from the Grand Lodge , aud that no authority bufc the Grand Lodgo can withdraw or take away that power . That though tho majority of a Lodge may determine to quit tho Society tho constitution , or power of assembling remains with , and is vested in the rest of tho

members who may be desirous of continuing their allegiance ; and that if all tho members withdraw themselves , tho constitution is extinct , and tho authority reverts to tbo Grand Lodge . " III . —This resolution , it Avas argued might operate Avith respect to a Lodge Avhich derives its Constitution from tho Grand Lodge , but conld nofc apply to one which derived its authority from another

channel , long before tbe establishment of the Grand Lodge , and Avhich authority had been repeatedly admitted ancl acknowledged . ( ' ) Had it appeared upon record , thafc after tho establishment of the Grand Lodge this original authority had been surrendered , forfeited , or exchanged for a warrant from tlie Grand Lodge . ( 2 ) The Lodgo of Antiquity mnsfc have admitted tho resolution of the Grand Lodge in its full force .

But as 110 snch circumstance appeared npon record , tho members of tbo Lodgo of Antiquity wero justified in considering their immemorial constitution sacred , while thoy chose to exist as a Lodge and act in obedience to the ancient Constitutions .

The Four Old Lodges.

Considering tho subject in this point of view , ifc evidently appears that the resolutions of the Grand Lodge , could have no effect on the Lodgo of Antiqnity ; especially after the publication of the Manifesto avowing its separation . The members of thafc Lodgo Continued to meet regularly as heretofore , and to promote the laudable purposes of Masonry on their old independent foundation .

IV . —The Lodgo of Antiqnity , it was asserted , conld not bo dissolved , whilo the majority of its members kept together , and acted in conformity to tho original Constitution ; and no edict of tho Grand Lodge or its committees could deprive the members of that Lodgo of a right which had been admitted to be vested in themselves , collectively , from time immemorial ; a right which

had never been derived from , or ceded to , any Grand Lodgo whatever . To understand more clearly tho nature of that Constitution , by which tho Lodge of Antiquity is upheld , wo must havo recourse to the usage and customs which prevailed among Masons at the end of tho last , and beginning of tho present century . Tbe Fraternity then had a discretionary power to meet as Masons , in certain numbers ,

according to their degrees , with tho approbation of tho Master of the work where any public building Avas carrying on , as often as they found it necessary so to do ; and Avhen so mot , to receive into the Order brothers and fellows , and practise the rites of Masonry . The ideaof investing Masters and Wardens of Lodges in Grand Lodge assembled , or tho Grand Master himself , with a power to grant

Warrants of Constitution to certain brethren to meet as Masons , on the observance of certain conditions at certain houses , had no existence . The Fraternity , were nnder no such restrictions . The ancient charges wero tho only standard for tbe regulation of conduct , and no law was known in the Society which those charges did not inculcate . To the award of tho Fraternity at largo , in general meeting assem .

bled , onco or twice in a year , all brethren Avere subject , and tho authority of the Grand Master never extended beyond the bounds of thafc general meeting . Every private assembly or Lodgo was nnder tho direction of its particular Master , chosen for tho occasion whose authority terminated with tho mooting . (•¦) When a Lodge Avas fixed at any particular place for a certain timo , an attestation from

the brethren present , entered on record , Avas a snfficient proof of its regular constitution ; and this practice prevailed for many years after the revival of Masonry in the South of England . By this authority , which never proceeded from the Grand Lodgo , unfettered by any other restrictions than tho Constitutions of Masonry , the Lodge of Antiqnity has always been , and still continues to bo governed .

V . —[(*) And it is wen known to have been an invariable rule , long after tho establishment of tbo Grand Lodgo in London , on its present system , for the Grand Master , at his installation , solemnly to engage to observe the ancient Constitutions , ancl to preserve the ancient privileges , of tho Masons of England , as landmarks nofc to bo removed . From this state of tho caso , it must appear obvious that any

regulation of tho Society that is subversive o £ tho original Constitutions , must bean encroachment on tho ancient privileges of Masonry ; and however , it may operate with respect to Lodges which havo been consfcitnted in conformity to that regulation , it can never affect others which aro nofc Avarranted by their constitution to give it a sanction . " ]

VI . —While I havo endeavoured to explain the subject of this tiufor . innate dispute , I rejoice in the opportunity which tho proceedings of the grand feast in 1700 have afforded of promoting harmony , by restoring to the privileges of the Society all tho brethren of the Locige of Antiqnity Avho had been falsely accused and unjustly expelled in 1779 . By the operation of our professed principles , and throngh the

mediation of that true friend to genuine Masonry , "William Birch , Esq ., present Master of the Lodgo of Anticpiity , nnanimity has been happily restored , tho Manifesto published by that Lodgo in 1779 revoked , and tho Master and Wardens of that truly ancient Association , the first Lodgo under the English Constitution , havo resumed

their seats in Grand Lodgo as heretofore ; whilo the brethren who had received the sanction of the Society as nominal members of the Lodgo of Antiqnity during tho separation , havo been reunited Avith the original members of the real Lodgo , and all tho privileges of thafc venerable body now centre in one channel .

§ 18 . —Brother Preston , however , in tho foregoing narrative , omits to mention , thafc during the pendency of the secession , the Lodge of Antiquity , original INb . 1 , founded a separate Grand Lodge of its OAVU , under the title of the

" Grand Lodge ot England South ot tlio Trent . " Tnore boing in consequence , at such time , four Grand Lodges of England in contemporaneous existence , viz .: —(" ' ) 1 . The Grand Lodge of England ( Regular Grand Lodge ) , Established 1717 . 2 . The Grand Lodge of all England , York Masons / " )

1725 . 8 . The Grand Lodgo of England according * to tho Old Institutions ( " Secedors " ) , 1753 . 4 The Grand Locige of England South of the Trent ( ) ( Lodge of Antiquity , original No . 1 ) , 1778 .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1878-07-27, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_27071878/page/3/.
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THE LATE CONTEST FOR SECRETARYSHIP R.M.I.G. Article 1
LODGE VICTORIA IN BURMAH. Article 2
THE FOUR OLD LODGES. Article 3
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 5
THE LONDON MASONIC CLUB LODGE OF INSTRUCTION, Article 6
SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN'S CONNECTION WITH FREEMASONRY. Article 6
VISIT OF AMERICAN MASONIC KNIGHTS TEMPLAR TO LONDONDERRY. Article 7
ANECDOTES, &c, IN RELATION TO MILITARY MASONRY. Article 7
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MEETING OF THE LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 9
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EVERTON LODGE, No. 823. Article 10
DEATH. Article 11
THE CONSECRATION OF THE EZRA, No. 1489, AND METROPOLITAN, No. 1507, CHAPTERS. Article 11
SURREY MASONIC CLUB ENTERTAINMENT. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
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MASONIC GATHERING AT LISKEARD. Article 14
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Four Old Lodges.

THE FOUR OLD LODGES .

Bi : o . R , F . Gort . D . ( Continued from page 4 . ) § 17 .

I . —On tho 1 st of May 1777 , Lord Potro was succeeded by tho Duke of Manchester , during whose administration the tranquillity of the Society Avas interrupted by private dissensions . An unfortunate dispute having arisen among the members of tho Lodge of Antiquity , on acconnt of some proceedings of tlio brethren of thafc Lodgo on the Festival of St . John the Evangelist , after his Grace ' s election ,

tho complaint was introdnccd into the Grand Lodge , where it necnpicrt the attention of every Committee and Communication for twelve months . It originated from tho Master , Wardens , and somo of tho ¦ members , having , in conseqnenco of a resolution of tlio Lodgo , attended divine service at St . Dunstan ' s Chnrch in Fleet Street , in the clothing of tho Order , and walked back to the Mitro Tavern in

their regalia , without having obtained a dispensation for the purpose . The Graud Lodgo determined the measure to bo a violation of tho general regulations respecting pnblic processions . Varions opinions wero formed on tbo subject , and several brethren highly disgnsted . Another circumstance tended still farther to widen the breach . This Lodgo having expelled threo members for

misbehaviour , the Grand Lodge interfered , and Avithout proper investigation , ordered them to bo reinstated . With this order tho Lodge refused to comply , conceiving themselves competent judges in the choice of their own members . The privileges of the Lodge of Antiquity wero then set np iu opposition to tho SUPPOSED uncontrollable authority of tho Grand Lodgo ; and iu tho investigation of this

important point the original canso of dispute was totally forgotten . Matters were agitated to tho extreme on both sides ; resolutions wero precipitately entered into , and edicts inadvertently issued ; memorials and remonstrances wero presented . At last a rupture ensued . Tho Lodge of Antiquity supported its immemorial privileges ; appointed Committees to examine records ; applied to tho

old Lodgo in York City , and to the Lodges in Scotland and Ireland , for advice ; entered a protest against , and peremptorily refused to comply with , the resolutions of tho Grand Lodge ; discontinued the attendance of its Master aud Wardens at tho Committees of Charity and Quarterly Communications as its representatives ; published a Manifesto in its vindication ; notified its separation from the Grand

Lodge ; and avowed an alliance with tho Grand Lodge of all England held in tho City of York , and every Lodgo and Mason who wished to act iu conformity to tho original Constitutions . Tbo Grand Lodgo enforced its edicts , and extended protection to tho brethren whose cause it had espoused . Anathemas were issued , several Avorthy men in thoir absence expelled from tho Society for refusing to surrender

the property of the Lodge to threo persons who had been regularly expelled from it ; nnd printed letters wero circulated , with tho Grand Treasurer ' s accounts , highly derogatory to the dignity of the Society . This produced a schism , which subsisted for tho space of ten years . II . —To justify tho proceedings of tho Grand Lodge , the following resolution of tho Committee of Charity , hold in Feb . 1779 , was

printed and dispersed among the Lodges : — " Resolved—That every private Lodge derives its authority from the Grand Lodge , aud that no authority bufc the Grand Lodgo can withdraw or take away that power . That though tho majority of a Lodge may determine to quit tho Society tho constitution , or power of assembling remains with , and is vested in the rest of tho

members who may be desirous of continuing their allegiance ; and that if all tho members withdraw themselves , tho constitution is extinct , and tho authority reverts to tbo Grand Lodge . " III . —This resolution , it Avas argued might operate Avith respect to a Lodge Avhich derives its Constitution from tho Grand Lodge , but conld nofc apply to one which derived its authority from another

channel , long before tbe establishment of the Grand Lodge , and Avhich authority had been repeatedly admitted ancl acknowledged . ( ' ) Had it appeared upon record , thafc after tho establishment of the Grand Lodge this original authority had been surrendered , forfeited , or exchanged for a warrant from tlie Grand Lodge . ( 2 ) The Lodgo of Antiquity mnsfc have admitted tho resolution of the Grand Lodge in its full force .

But as 110 snch circumstance appeared npon record , tho members of tbo Lodgo of Antiquity wero justified in considering their immemorial constitution sacred , while thoy chose to exist as a Lodge and act in obedience to the ancient Constitutions .

The Four Old Lodges.

Considering tho subject in this point of view , ifc evidently appears that the resolutions of the Grand Lodge , could have no effect on the Lodgo of Antiqnity ; especially after the publication of the Manifesto avowing its separation . The members of thafc Lodgo Continued to meet regularly as heretofore , and to promote the laudable purposes of Masonry on their old independent foundation .

IV . —The Lodgo of Antiqnity , it was asserted , conld not bo dissolved , whilo the majority of its members kept together , and acted in conformity to tho original Constitution ; and no edict of tho Grand Lodge or its committees could deprive the members of that Lodgo of a right which had been admitted to be vested in themselves , collectively , from time immemorial ; a right which

had never been derived from , or ceded to , any Grand Lodgo whatever . To understand more clearly tho nature of that Constitution , by which tho Lodge of Antiquity is upheld , wo must havo recourse to the usage and customs which prevailed among Masons at the end of tho last , and beginning of tho present century . Tbe Fraternity then had a discretionary power to meet as Masons , in certain numbers ,

according to their degrees , with tho approbation of tho Master of the work where any public building Avas carrying on , as often as they found it necessary so to do ; and Avhen so mot , to receive into the Order brothers and fellows , and practise the rites of Masonry . The ideaof investing Masters and Wardens of Lodges in Grand Lodge assembled , or tho Grand Master himself , with a power to grant

Warrants of Constitution to certain brethren to meet as Masons , on the observance of certain conditions at certain houses , had no existence . The Fraternity , were nnder no such restrictions . The ancient charges wero tho only standard for tbe regulation of conduct , and no law was known in the Society which those charges did not inculcate . To the award of tho Fraternity at largo , in general meeting assem .

bled , onco or twice in a year , all brethren Avere subject , and tho authority of the Grand Master never extended beyond the bounds of thafc general meeting . Every private assembly or Lodgo was nnder tho direction of its particular Master , chosen for tho occasion whose authority terminated with tho mooting . (•¦) When a Lodge Avas fixed at any particular place for a certain timo , an attestation from

the brethren present , entered on record , Avas a snfficient proof of its regular constitution ; and this practice prevailed for many years after the revival of Masonry in the South of England . By this authority , which never proceeded from the Grand Lodgo , unfettered by any other restrictions than tho Constitutions of Masonry , the Lodge of Antiqnity has always been , and still continues to bo governed .

V . —[(*) And it is wen known to have been an invariable rule , long after tho establishment of tbo Grand Lodgo in London , on its present system , for the Grand Master , at his installation , solemnly to engage to observe the ancient Constitutions , ancl to preserve the ancient privileges , of tho Masons of England , as landmarks nofc to bo removed . From this state of tho caso , it must appear obvious that any

regulation of tho Society that is subversive o £ tho original Constitutions , must bean encroachment on tho ancient privileges of Masonry ; and however , it may operate with respect to Lodges which havo been consfcitnted in conformity to that regulation , it can never affect others which aro nofc Avarranted by their constitution to give it a sanction . " ]

VI . —While I havo endeavoured to explain the subject of this tiufor . innate dispute , I rejoice in the opportunity which tho proceedings of the grand feast in 1700 have afforded of promoting harmony , by restoring to the privileges of the Society all tho brethren of the Locige of Antiqnity Avho had been falsely accused and unjustly expelled in 1779 . By the operation of our professed principles , and throngh the

mediation of that true friend to genuine Masonry , "William Birch , Esq ., present Master of the Lodgo of Anticpiity , nnanimity has been happily restored , tho Manifesto published by that Lodgo in 1779 revoked , and tho Master and Wardens of that truly ancient Association , the first Lodgo under the English Constitution , havo resumed

their seats in Grand Lodgo as heretofore ; whilo the brethren who had received the sanction of the Society as nominal members of the Lodgo of Antiqnity during tho separation , havo been reunited Avith the original members of the real Lodgo , and all tho privileges of thafc venerable body now centre in one channel .

§ 18 . —Brother Preston , however , in tho foregoing narrative , omits to mention , thafc during the pendency of the secession , the Lodge of Antiquity , original INb . 1 , founded a separate Grand Lodge of its OAVU , under the title of the

" Grand Lodge ot England South ot tlio Trent . " Tnore boing in consequence , at such time , four Grand Lodges of England in contemporaneous existence , viz .: —(" ' ) 1 . The Grand Lodge of England ( Regular Grand Lodge ) , Established 1717 . 2 . The Grand Lodge of all England , York Masons / " )

1725 . 8 . The Grand Lodgo of England according * to tho Old Institutions ( " Secedors " ) , 1753 . 4 The Grand Locige of England South of the Trent ( ) ( Lodge of Antiquity , original No . 1 ) , 1778 .

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