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  • Jan. 29, 1881
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  • THE PHILADELPHIA QUESTION.
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The Philadelphia Question.

brother invented a series of decrees , viz ., " Ancient and Accopted Eitf , " and crowds of our silk stocking brethren believe that said Rito is ancient ; another invented degrees , which he called tho " Primitive Kite , " and crowds of cotton stocking Masons now swear that it is a Primitive Rite . I reallv cannot understand how Masons who teach

that " truth is a divine attribute , and the foundation of every virtue , " shonld so zoatbusly come forward in defenco of those inventors and inventions , whilo the oxposorof thoso errors is compolled to vim the ganntlet . This proclivity on tho part of Masonic writors to falsify history , imposes upon tho Masonic student tho necessity of extra caution .

Thns , in studying any branch of history ( early ecclesiastical history always excepted ) wo may , as a rule , believe in tho statements made in original records , or by contemporary writers ; but in studying Masonic history , we are first bound to ascertain whether the records are original , and whether tho contemporary writers are reliable . For instance , since 18421 have been assured again and again by high

authorities that the Massachusetts Grand Lodge possessed original records from 30 th July 1733 . In 1867 , when conversing with . P . G . M , Dr . Winslow Lewis about tho claims of New Jersey to Masonic priority in America on account of Daniel Coxe ' s deputation of 1730 , " Oh ! " replied Bro . Lowis , " New Jersey has not got a sorap of

record of that period , while wo have original records from 1733 . " In I 860 , tho said records were submitted to'my examination , and in less than n quarter of an hour I became fully satisfied that up to 1750 Massachusetts had no record at all . And what is more , I found the whole record from 1733 to 1750 abounding in mis-statements .

Now , nnder date 21 th June 1734 , is the following paragraph : — " About this timo our Worshipful Bro . Benjamin Franklin , from Philadelphia , became acquainted with our Rt . W . Grand Master Mr . Price , who further instructed him ( Franklin ) in the Royal Art , and the said Franklin , on his retnrn to Philadelphia , called the brethren there together , who petitioned our Rt . W . G . Master for a constitution

to hold a Lodge ; and our Rt . W . Grand Master having this year Teceivod . orders from the G . L . of England to establish . Masonry in all North Amorica , did send a deputation to Philadelphia , appointing the Rt . W . Benjamin Franklin first Master , which is the beginning of Masonry there . " Since 1792 , when the Rev . Bro . Harris ' s history of Masonry in

Massachusetts was printed , until I overhauled the record in 1869 , every one believed in the above paragraph . In Moore ' s " Life of Price , 1857 , " he assures us that Franklin ' s warrant " bears date June 24 tb , 1734 , " & c , & c , though Franklin ' s petition was not written before the 28 th November following ; as Moore was a very high , authority , no one doubted his statements .

In January 1874 , Bro . MacOalla ' s article appeared in the " Masonic Magazine , " in which he stated , " The City of Boston , Massachusetts , is the mother of American Masonry . . . And from this G . L . the earliest Lodges in Pennsylvania , Virginina , Maryland , New Jersey , North Carolina , South Carolina , & c , & c , owed their origin . " In my article , in the same magazine , of April ensuing , I called

Bro . MacCalla ' s attention to Franklin ' s letter of 28 th November 1734 , signed "B . Franklin , G . M ., " and further informed him , that Hyneman ' s Register refers to a Masonic meeting in 1732 , at Philadelphia , and advised him to look over the Philadelphia newspapers of that time , & c . My arguments turned Bro . MacCalla ' s Masonic history topsy tarvy ; and Masonic fashion , he jumped from one error into another . Having

found out that in 1730 Coxe got a deputation , and that in 1732 a G . L . was organised at Philadelphia , he put this and that together and made one out of the two . And as soon as Bro . MacCalla proclaimed that he saw ( metaphorically speaking ) the Philadel phia tail wag tho lion , a crowd of Masonic luminaries immediately believed in the wagging lion . Now , as I was really the instigator of Bro .

MacCalla ' s researches , and as I am not over and above in Iovo with the G . L . of Massachusetts , I would have been anything but sorry had the pride of the Massachusetts G . L . been pulled a little further down . But , as I do not allow my likes and dislikes to bias my judgment on historical questions , I was compelled to take issue with Bro . MacCalla ' s assumption .

In my subsequent reply to Bro . MacCalla , I called his attention to the strongest evidence on his side , viz ., the letter of Henry Bell , of 1754 ( already quoted in this paper by Bros . Gould and Hnghan ) , which had slipped Bro . MacCalla ' s memory . But I added my want of faith in its authenticity . The existence of that letter was first revealed to the world at the dedication of the Philadelphia Masonic

Temple , in 1873 , and but a fragment of it was quoted by the orator . The questions I asked were , —Who has got that letter ? Why do they not print tho whole document ? and how came that letter to be preserved from 1754 to 1873 ? These questions must bo answered before the said letter is admitted as evidence ; we must also be satisfied that the letter is genuine , and that the writer of it was reliable . The late

Bro . Leon Hyneman , a Philadelphia P . M ., told me that he did not believe in tho said letter , and he wrote the same to P . G . M . Nickorson , of Boston . I shall now call attention to a fact which ought to shako tho credulity of even Bros . Philadelphos and Hnghan . I have referred above to Hyiienmii ' s Register , which was published in 1860 . I glanced

over the said work long before J . began to write for the Masonic press . Therein I lirst read Franklin ' s letter , and also about tho Masonic ingathering at Philadelphia 1732 . I also remembered some allusion therein to Thomas Oxnard having granted a charter or deputation to Philadelp hia . A few clays ago I thought that I ought to refresh my memory about these subjects , and the following paragraph therefrom will I hope throw new light upon the question at issue . Bro .

Hyneman ' s book says ( p 3 oo)—" On the 10 th of July 1749 , Thomas Oxnard , Esq ., who had received the appointment of Provincial Grand Master of North America , appointed Benjamin Franklin , Esq ., Provincial Grand Master of Pennsylvania , with authority to appoint other Grand Officers , to hold a Grand Lodge , i .-wio warrants , & o . Under fchis warrant a Grand Lodge was held on tho 5 th of September 5749 , at the ' Royal Standard , ' on Market-sU-eet , near Second ; and Grand Master

The Philadelphia Question.

Franklin appointed Dr . Thomas Bond D . G . M . ; Joseph Shippen S . G . W . ; Philip Syng J . G . W . ; William Plnmsted G . Treasurer ; Daniel Bylos G . Secretary . At the same meeting a warrant was granted for a new Lodge in the City of Philadelphia to James Pogreen and others . At a communication of the Grand Lodge , held 13 th March 5750 , William Allen , Esq ., Recorder of the City of Philadelphia ,

presented his commission from tho Grand Lodge of England , appointing him P . G . M . His commission was recognised , and he appointed Benjamin Franklin D . G . M . " To which Bro . Hyneman adds : — " The record from which we extract the above states , 'As far as the minutes of the modern G . L . go , Dr . Franklin was never absent from the meetings . '"

Having discussed the two theories advanced for the origin of legitimate Masonry in Philadelphia , and having shown that both are untenable , I shall now proceed to argue , from the above paragraph , that Oxnard was the actual foundor of legitimate Masonry there . Henry Price claimed to have been appointed in 1733 P . G . M . of New England , and to have received from the G . L . of England , in 1734 , power to establish

Masonry in all North America . I believe that his claims were unfounded . Bnfc be that as it may , Robert Tomlinson was certainly appointed P . G . M . of New England , in 1736 . Tomlinson was lost by shipwreck in 1742 , or 43 ; then Oxnard succeeded Tomlinson , with the additional title of P . G . M . of North America ; or at least , over those colonies where no P . G . M . was appointed by the ~& . h . of

England ; and his deputation was dated 23 rd September 1743 . Now , it seems that in 1749 Messrs . Allen , Franklin , and Co ., of Philadelphia , got tired of playing bogus Grand Masters , and were desirous of having a G . M . appointed by the G . M . of England . And as the English G . M . would have refused a deputation to bogus Masons , hence Oxnard made Franklin G . M ., in 1749 a Philadelphia G . L . was

established , & c , & c ; and this appointment by Oxnard answered the purpose ; for Bro . Allen received from Lord Byron ( the English G . M . ) a deputation a few months after Oxnard established legiti . mate Freemasonry in Pennsylvania . Within a few days Bro . P . G . M . Nickerson called my attention to a minute in the Boston G . L . record . under date April 10 th 1752 ; viz .

" For the Lodge at Philadelphia , Bro . MaoDaniel appeared , and paid for their Constitution £ 3110 s . " * The above minute confirms the truth of Bro . Hyneman ' s quotation from a Philadelphia record of the Franklin G . L . When I wrote upon the Philadelphia subject about four weeks ago ( the paper was differently headed ) I intended to find serious fault

with Bro . Gonld for the hesitating and ambiguous style of his first communication . But in the succeeding articles he makes amends , and we now stand on the same platform on the Philadelphia question , Bro . Gould disbelieves that No . 79 was a Philadelphia Lodge , and disagrees with the interpretation ascribed to tb . e Henry Bell letter , if he does not even doubt its authenticity . So far so good . But I

think that he ought to have given Bro . Hughan's knuckles a few sharp raps , which he richly deserved . Instead of doing so , in order to comfort Bro . Hnghan , Bro . Gonld made suggestions as unfounded and opposed to reason as the Coxe-Philadelphia theory itself . To remove a cancer effectually , every rootlet and particle must be cut out , and the same must bo done when removing Masonic errors . I

wish Bro . Hughan , from the bottom of my heart , all the comfort m the world he desires , save and except the comfort of indulging in Masonic errors ; for he is justly accepted as a great Masonic authority , hence his indulgence in error is apt to make a great number of converts ; and this very diffusion of error goes , as it were , against my grain . Now , to comfort Bro . Hughan , Bro . Gould assures him that

he agrees with him in the belief " that the entry in the Dublin Pocket Com / panion referring to Lodge No . 79 was no invention of the [ Dublin ] compiler . " And he intimates that the Dublin editor copied " No . 79 , Hoop , etc ., Philadelphia , " from an English Lodge list of 1734 . That " 79 , Hoop in Water Street , " etc ., is a pure fabrication , Bro . Gould does not deny . But why he attributes the said fabrication to an

English Mason of 1734 , instead of to an Irish Mason of 1735 , is more than I can conjecture . Surely English Masons have enough sins to answer for in the fabrication line , and I cannot see why Bro . Gould shonld take the trouble of laying an additional sin upon English shoulderswhen the evidence clearly denotes that the sin belongB

, to an Iri 3 h shoulder . Bro . Gould ' s suggestion abont a pictnre of a tun having been mistaken for a picture of a hoop , is equally farfetched and unfounded ; for I do not believe that either a Philadelphia tun , or a Philadelphia hoop , was ever engraved on an English Lodge list . Let us not forget the adage , —

" A man convinced against his will , Remains of the same opinion still . " Hence , while Bro . Hnghan at last submits to Bro . Gould's decision on the question at issue , the suggestions _ of Bro . Gould above referred to , may , I very much fear , cause in Bro . Hughan ' s mind

a revival of all the errors against which I have been contending . In conclusion , I thank Bro . Gould for the trouble he has-taken on behalf of reason and truth , and I hope aud trust that in the next editioTi of Bro . Woodford ' s Cyclopaedia the account of the origin of legitimate Masonry in Pennsylvania will differ from that of tho first edition of said work .

Boston , U . S ., 7 th January 1881 .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1881-01-29, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 19 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_29011881/page/2/.
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THE ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 1
THE PHILADELPHIA QUESTION. Article 1
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 3
THE ST. AMBROSE LODGE, No. 1891. Article 3
Untitled Ad 3
SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER OF ROYAL ARCH MASONS OF ENGLAND. Article 3
COMMITTEE MEETING OF THE GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 3
ROYAL ARCH. Article 3
INSTALLATION MEETINGS, &c. Article 4
LODGE OF PRUDENT BRETHREN, No. 145 Article 4
LION LODGE, No 312. Article 5
LODGE OF UNION, No. 414. Article 5
BOSCAWEN LODGE, No. 699, CHACEWATER. Article 5
EUPHRATES LODGE, No. 212. Article 6
CAMDEN LODGE, No. 704. Article 6
CITY OF LONDON LODGE, No. 901. Article 6
GREAT NORTHERN LODGE, No. 1287. Article 6
THE THEATRES, &c. Article 7
Untitled Ad 7
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YORK MARK LODGE (T.I) Article 9
THE LATE BRO. J. DANIEL MOORE, M.D. Article 10
FUNERAL OF BRO. ROCKETT. Article 10
INDUSTRY LODGE, No. 186. Article 10
OLD GLOBE LODGE, No 200. Article 10
ISRAEL LODGE, No. 205. Article 11
TENTERDEN LODGE OF MARK MASTERS, No. 251. Article 11
INSTALLATION OF BRO. H. C. E. MUECKE AS R.W. D.G.M. SCOTTISH CONSTITUTION. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 13
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Philadelphia Question.

brother invented a series of decrees , viz ., " Ancient and Accopted Eitf , " and crowds of our silk stocking brethren believe that said Rito is ancient ; another invented degrees , which he called tho " Primitive Kite , " and crowds of cotton stocking Masons now swear that it is a Primitive Rite . I reallv cannot understand how Masons who teach

that " truth is a divine attribute , and the foundation of every virtue , " shonld so zoatbusly come forward in defenco of those inventors and inventions , whilo the oxposorof thoso errors is compolled to vim the ganntlet . This proclivity on tho part of Masonic writors to falsify history , imposes upon tho Masonic student tho necessity of extra caution .

Thns , in studying any branch of history ( early ecclesiastical history always excepted ) wo may , as a rule , believe in tho statements made in original records , or by contemporary writers ; but in studying Masonic history , we are first bound to ascertain whether the records are original , and whether tho contemporary writers are reliable . For instance , since 18421 have been assured again and again by high

authorities that the Massachusetts Grand Lodge possessed original records from 30 th July 1733 . In 1867 , when conversing with . P . G . M , Dr . Winslow Lewis about tho claims of New Jersey to Masonic priority in America on account of Daniel Coxe ' s deputation of 1730 , " Oh ! " replied Bro . Lowis , " New Jersey has not got a sorap of

record of that period , while wo have original records from 1733 . " In I 860 , tho said records were submitted to'my examination , and in less than n quarter of an hour I became fully satisfied that up to 1750 Massachusetts had no record at all . And what is more , I found the whole record from 1733 to 1750 abounding in mis-statements .

Now , nnder date 21 th June 1734 , is the following paragraph : — " About this timo our Worshipful Bro . Benjamin Franklin , from Philadelphia , became acquainted with our Rt . W . Grand Master Mr . Price , who further instructed him ( Franklin ) in the Royal Art , and the said Franklin , on his retnrn to Philadelphia , called the brethren there together , who petitioned our Rt . W . G . Master for a constitution

to hold a Lodge ; and our Rt . W . Grand Master having this year Teceivod . orders from the G . L . of England to establish . Masonry in all North Amorica , did send a deputation to Philadelphia , appointing the Rt . W . Benjamin Franklin first Master , which is the beginning of Masonry there . " Since 1792 , when the Rev . Bro . Harris ' s history of Masonry in

Massachusetts was printed , until I overhauled the record in 1869 , every one believed in the above paragraph . In Moore ' s " Life of Price , 1857 , " he assures us that Franklin ' s warrant " bears date June 24 tb , 1734 , " & c , & c , though Franklin ' s petition was not written before the 28 th November following ; as Moore was a very high , authority , no one doubted his statements .

In January 1874 , Bro . MacOalla ' s article appeared in the " Masonic Magazine , " in which he stated , " The City of Boston , Massachusetts , is the mother of American Masonry . . . And from this G . L . the earliest Lodges in Pennsylvania , Virginina , Maryland , New Jersey , North Carolina , South Carolina , & c , & c , owed their origin . " In my article , in the same magazine , of April ensuing , I called

Bro . MacCalla ' s attention to Franklin ' s letter of 28 th November 1734 , signed "B . Franklin , G . M ., " and further informed him , that Hyneman ' s Register refers to a Masonic meeting in 1732 , at Philadelphia , and advised him to look over the Philadelphia newspapers of that time , & c . My arguments turned Bro . MacCalla ' s Masonic history topsy tarvy ; and Masonic fashion , he jumped from one error into another . Having

found out that in 1730 Coxe got a deputation , and that in 1732 a G . L . was organised at Philadelphia , he put this and that together and made one out of the two . And as soon as Bro . MacCalla proclaimed that he saw ( metaphorically speaking ) the Philadel phia tail wag tho lion , a crowd of Masonic luminaries immediately believed in the wagging lion . Now , as I was really the instigator of Bro .

MacCalla ' s researches , and as I am not over and above in Iovo with the G . L . of Massachusetts , I would have been anything but sorry had the pride of the Massachusetts G . L . been pulled a little further down . But , as I do not allow my likes and dislikes to bias my judgment on historical questions , I was compelled to take issue with Bro . MacCalla ' s assumption .

In my subsequent reply to Bro . MacCalla , I called his attention to the strongest evidence on his side , viz ., the letter of Henry Bell , of 1754 ( already quoted in this paper by Bros . Gould and Hnghan ) , which had slipped Bro . MacCalla ' s memory . But I added my want of faith in its authenticity . The existence of that letter was first revealed to the world at the dedication of the Philadelphia Masonic

Temple , in 1873 , and but a fragment of it was quoted by the orator . The questions I asked were , —Who has got that letter ? Why do they not print tho whole document ? and how came that letter to be preserved from 1754 to 1873 ? These questions must bo answered before the said letter is admitted as evidence ; we must also be satisfied that the letter is genuine , and that the writer of it was reliable . The late

Bro . Leon Hyneman , a Philadelphia P . M ., told me that he did not believe in tho said letter , and he wrote the same to P . G . M . Nickorson , of Boston . I shall now call attention to a fact which ought to shako tho credulity of even Bros . Philadelphos and Hnghan . I have referred above to Hyiienmii ' s Register , which was published in 1860 . I glanced

over the said work long before J . began to write for the Masonic press . Therein I lirst read Franklin ' s letter , and also about tho Masonic ingathering at Philadelphia 1732 . I also remembered some allusion therein to Thomas Oxnard having granted a charter or deputation to Philadelp hia . A few clays ago I thought that I ought to refresh my memory about these subjects , and the following paragraph therefrom will I hope throw new light upon the question at issue . Bro .

Hyneman ' s book says ( p 3 oo)—" On the 10 th of July 1749 , Thomas Oxnard , Esq ., who had received the appointment of Provincial Grand Master of North America , appointed Benjamin Franklin , Esq ., Provincial Grand Master of Pennsylvania , with authority to appoint other Grand Officers , to hold a Grand Lodge , i .-wio warrants , & o . Under fchis warrant a Grand Lodge was held on tho 5 th of September 5749 , at the ' Royal Standard , ' on Market-sU-eet , near Second ; and Grand Master

The Philadelphia Question.

Franklin appointed Dr . Thomas Bond D . G . M . ; Joseph Shippen S . G . W . ; Philip Syng J . G . W . ; William Plnmsted G . Treasurer ; Daniel Bylos G . Secretary . At the same meeting a warrant was granted for a new Lodge in the City of Philadelphia to James Pogreen and others . At a communication of the Grand Lodge , held 13 th March 5750 , William Allen , Esq ., Recorder of the City of Philadelphia ,

presented his commission from tho Grand Lodge of England , appointing him P . G . M . His commission was recognised , and he appointed Benjamin Franklin D . G . M . " To which Bro . Hyneman adds : — " The record from which we extract the above states , 'As far as the minutes of the modern G . L . go , Dr . Franklin was never absent from the meetings . '"

Having discussed the two theories advanced for the origin of legitimate Masonry in Philadelphia , and having shown that both are untenable , I shall now proceed to argue , from the above paragraph , that Oxnard was the actual foundor of legitimate Masonry there . Henry Price claimed to have been appointed in 1733 P . G . M . of New England , and to have received from the G . L . of England , in 1734 , power to establish

Masonry in all North America . I believe that his claims were unfounded . Bnfc be that as it may , Robert Tomlinson was certainly appointed P . G . M . of New England , in 1736 . Tomlinson was lost by shipwreck in 1742 , or 43 ; then Oxnard succeeded Tomlinson , with the additional title of P . G . M . of North America ; or at least , over those colonies where no P . G . M . was appointed by the ~& . h . of

England ; and his deputation was dated 23 rd September 1743 . Now , it seems that in 1749 Messrs . Allen , Franklin , and Co ., of Philadelphia , got tired of playing bogus Grand Masters , and were desirous of having a G . M . appointed by the G . M . of England . And as the English G . M . would have refused a deputation to bogus Masons , hence Oxnard made Franklin G . M ., in 1749 a Philadelphia G . L . was

established , & c , & c ; and this appointment by Oxnard answered the purpose ; for Bro . Allen received from Lord Byron ( the English G . M . ) a deputation a few months after Oxnard established legiti . mate Freemasonry in Pennsylvania . Within a few days Bro . P . G . M . Nickerson called my attention to a minute in the Boston G . L . record . under date April 10 th 1752 ; viz .

" For the Lodge at Philadelphia , Bro . MaoDaniel appeared , and paid for their Constitution £ 3110 s . " * The above minute confirms the truth of Bro . Hyneman ' s quotation from a Philadelphia record of the Franklin G . L . When I wrote upon the Philadelphia subject about four weeks ago ( the paper was differently headed ) I intended to find serious fault

with Bro . Gonld for the hesitating and ambiguous style of his first communication . But in the succeeding articles he makes amends , and we now stand on the same platform on the Philadelphia question , Bro . Gould disbelieves that No . 79 was a Philadelphia Lodge , and disagrees with the interpretation ascribed to tb . e Henry Bell letter , if he does not even doubt its authenticity . So far so good . But I

think that he ought to have given Bro . Hughan's knuckles a few sharp raps , which he richly deserved . Instead of doing so , in order to comfort Bro . Hnghan , Bro . Gonld made suggestions as unfounded and opposed to reason as the Coxe-Philadelphia theory itself . To remove a cancer effectually , every rootlet and particle must be cut out , and the same must bo done when removing Masonic errors . I

wish Bro . Hughan , from the bottom of my heart , all the comfort m the world he desires , save and except the comfort of indulging in Masonic errors ; for he is justly accepted as a great Masonic authority , hence his indulgence in error is apt to make a great number of converts ; and this very diffusion of error goes , as it were , against my grain . Now , to comfort Bro . Hughan , Bro . Gould assures him that

he agrees with him in the belief " that the entry in the Dublin Pocket Com / panion referring to Lodge No . 79 was no invention of the [ Dublin ] compiler . " And he intimates that the Dublin editor copied " No . 79 , Hoop , etc ., Philadelphia , " from an English Lodge list of 1734 . That " 79 , Hoop in Water Street , " etc ., is a pure fabrication , Bro . Gould does not deny . But why he attributes the said fabrication to an

English Mason of 1734 , instead of to an Irish Mason of 1735 , is more than I can conjecture . Surely English Masons have enough sins to answer for in the fabrication line , and I cannot see why Bro . Gould shonld take the trouble of laying an additional sin upon English shoulderswhen the evidence clearly denotes that the sin belongB

, to an Iri 3 h shoulder . Bro . Gould ' s suggestion abont a pictnre of a tun having been mistaken for a picture of a hoop , is equally farfetched and unfounded ; for I do not believe that either a Philadelphia tun , or a Philadelphia hoop , was ever engraved on an English Lodge list . Let us not forget the adage , —

" A man convinced against his will , Remains of the same opinion still . " Hence , while Bro . Hnghan at last submits to Bro . Gould's decision on the question at issue , the suggestions _ of Bro . Gould above referred to , may , I very much fear , cause in Bro . Hughan ' s mind

a revival of all the errors against which I have been contending . In conclusion , I thank Bro . Gould for the trouble he has-taken on behalf of reason and truth , and I hope aud trust that in the next editioTi of Bro . Woodford ' s Cyclopaedia the account of the origin of legitimate Masonry in Pennsylvania will differ from that of tho first edition of said work .

Boston , U . S ., 7 th January 1881 .

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