Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • Jan. 31, 1891
  • Page 5
  • RISE AND DEVELOPMENT OF AFRICAN RACE MASONS IN AMERICA.
Current:

The Freemason's Chronicle, Jan. 31, 1891: Page 5

  • Back to The Freemason's Chronicle, Jan. 31, 1891
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article RISE AND DEVELOPMENT OF AFRICAN RACE MASONS IN AMERICA. ← Page 2 of 3
    Article RISE AND DEVELOPMENT OF AFRICAN RACE MASONS IN AMERICA. Page 2 of 3 →
Page 5

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

Rise And Development Of African Race Masons In America.

another charter , and hence the African Lodge worked under a mere copy of a charter . Dr . Lewis ' s letter was published by Moore in his magazine , and all the white American Masons believed it , and every spouting American

Grand Master repeated it . The Master of the African Lodge was , however , informed about the new fib of Moore ' s invention , and in the minutes of the African Lodge of 12 th January 1846 , 1 found recorded as follows : —

An article was read from the Freemasons Magazine , Vol . v ., No . 2 ( edited by C . W . Moore ) , 1 st December 1845 , stating that the African Lodge was not a legal body . A history of tbe whole transaction was given by the Master , to the satisfaction of the Lodge . As the coloured Masons had no access to Masonic

publications , the fact tbat the story in "Moore ' s Magazine" was an invention remained known to the coloured Masons only . In 1867 I learned from Bro . Findel ' s History that the

African Lodge possessed its original charter . In 1868 the lato Bro . Lewis Hayden , then Grand Master of the Prince Hall G . L ., showed me the original African Lodge charter . 1 told Dr . Winslow Lewis about it . Ho said thafc ho was

very sorry that he had been misinformed , in 1845 , and gave me leave to state his confession openly whenever I thought proper to do so . I must here add . that the year 1868 forms an epoch in the history of African Masonry in America . First , in 1868 a coloured man was for the first timo since 1755 initiated

in a Lodge ( composed of whito men ) in Boston ; and second , in 1868 the coloured Masons were somehow induced to petition tho G . L . of Massachusetts to acknowledge their legality as Masons , and for tho first time the said Grand Lodgo showed good manners by performing the farce of

referring the coloured Masons' petition to a committee . These events soon became known in other American Masonic jurisdictions , which of course created a stir amon g our Masonic jurisprudence-mongers . In January 1869 Bro . Gouley , G . Sec . of Missouri , fired off his battery against the

coloured Masons , not forgetting to make a point out of the African Lodge possessing only a copy of a charter , and challenging every Mason in creation to disprove it , when I replied by first calling his attention to Bro . Findel ' s " History of Masonry , " second I added my own evidence

that the African Lodge charter was in existence , and third I appealed to Dr . Winslow Lewis for confirmation of the fact that he was misinformed in 1845 about the said charter , and that he was sorry for it . Bro . Gouloy would

not print my reply , but ifc was printed by Bro . Brennan , in the American Freemason , at Cincinnati , in the June and July numbers of 1869 . Bro . John T . Heard was chairman of the committee on

the coloured Masons' petition . 1 know that he took tho trouble to examine the record of the African Lodge . Indeed I happened to come into Bro . Haydon ' s office a few miuutes after Bro . Heard left , and saw the records which were examined by Bro . " Hoard . In December 1869

Bro . Heard read his report to me privately , when he said , " You see the committee would not concede to acknowledge tho coloured Masons , but I insisted in stating that I saw the original African Lodge charter . " I then suggested that he ought to have inserted that he examined the

African Lodge records , and that fche meetings of the Lodge were continuous from its beginning to tho present time . He answered , " So I ought , but ifc is too late now . " Tbe

report of the committee was , of course , unanimously adopted , and no one who was acquainted with American Grand Lodge tactics was disappointed or surprised thereat .

In December 1870 , Grand Master Gardner tried to prove from tho American Masonic jurisprudence standpoint , with the addition of a little sophistry and quibble , the illegitimacy of the coloured Masons or of Prince Hall Grand Lodge . A reply to Bro . Gardner ' s mode of

reasoning may be seen by my English readers , in the Masonic Monthly , Vol . 7 , pp 216 to 221 , in Freemasons ' Hall , in London . One statement of Bro . Gardner I entirely overlooked , he said , thafc fche African Lodge was dormant from the time of Prince Hall ' s death uutil 1826 ,

when ifc was revived by John T . Hilton , I remained ignorant of my oversight until I received a letter , dated 25 th January 1876 , from the Rev . Charles Griswold , Grand Master of Minnesota , inquiring about the alleged

dormancy of the African Lodge . And I must here add , thafc between 1870 and 1876 the Masonic Temple of the Prince Hall Grand Lodge was destroyed by fire , together with the African Lodge records , which were examined by Bro . John T , Heard , in 1869 . Bro , Heard , however , was

Rise And Development Of African Race Masons In America.

too honourable to deny tho fact -thafc he had examined fcho records of the period in questiou , so I called upon Bro . Gardner , and told him all I knew , and appealed to Bro . Heard for confirmation , that tho alleged dormancy of tho African Lodgo was a mistake , and subsequently I

found out how tho mistake was made by Bro . Gardner , viz ., John T . Hilton ' s statement in 1826 , that the African Lodge had made no progress since the death of Prince Hall , was transformed in Bro . Gardner ' s imagination into dormancy , and as soon as I explained ifc to Bro . Gardner ,

he frankly confessed fchat I was right . I musfc here further add , that in the Proceedings of the Minnesota and of the Ohio Grand Lodges for 1874 and 1877 , the reader will find ample evidence that the African Masonio organisations in the United States of America are just as legitimate as the

Grand Lodge of Massachusetts , or any other Grand Lodgo in North America . Indeed , whatever reasons the white Masonic luminaries have brought forward to prove the illegality of the coloured American Masons , can with equal

justice be brought forward to prove the illegality of the Masonry of the whites in America . As far as legality and illegality is concerned between the white and coloured Masons in America , it may be briefly summed np , as " six of one and half a dozen of the other . "

I gave above two reasons for regarding the year 1868 as an epoch in the history of the African Masons in America , and I will here add a third reason , even more important than the former ones , viz ., when Bro . Hayden showed

me , in 1868 , the original African Lodge Charter , I showed him Bro . Findel ' s " History of Freemasonry . " Bro . Hayden was of course highly gratified with the part therein referring to the African Lodge . I then advised him to write a letter of thanks to Bro . Findel , which he did , and

by Bro . Findel , in an obituary notice of tbe late Bro . Lewis Hayden , in the Bauhutte , of 27 th April 1889 , and reprinted in the Prince Hall Grand Lodge Proceedings of the same year , on page 75 , as follows : —

thia was the beginning of a correspondence which eventuated in the acknowledgment of Prince Hall Grand Lodge by the United Grand Lodge of Germany , and by some other European Grand Lodges . This facfc is corroborated

The Princo Hall Grand Lodge of Boston has suffered a severe loss . Ono of the most meritorious members , our oldest friend there , Bro . Lewis Hayden has entered the Eternal Ease . Having his attention drawn to onr History of Freemasonry , by Bro . Jacob Norton ,

he commenced communication with us , that resulted in tbe recognition of tho Prince Hall Grand Lodgo . He reached a remarkable high age . Even the political papers in Germany consider him worth noticing .

Bro . Gould devotes bufc a short space to the subject of tbe African Masonic organisations in America . He says : — Thirty-one Grand Lodges in difl ' orent States of the Union aro montiot . od in the statistic- * before me , which show a total of 691 Lodges and 17 , 909 members . Those coloured or lesser Grand

Lodges have been more or less recognised as legally constituted bodies in France , Germany , Hungary , Peru and Siberia , and in Ohio a resolution by the white [ Masons ] acknowledging the regularity of tho Black Grand Lodge in tbat State was only lost by fifty-eight votes , the numbers being 332 to 390 in 1875 . The caso of the

" Negro Masons in America" has been ably stated by Mr . Samuel Clark , Grand Master of the coloured Masons of the State of Ohio , from whoso pamphlet and the other authorities at my disposal I am

inclined to think that the claim of the black Mason to be placed on a footing of equality with the white one is destined to pass through a somewhat similar ordeal in America to that which has been ( in parfc ) undergono by the famous Jewish question in Germany .

The fact is " Masonic universality in America is a sham , and truth and justice are discarded when either of theso clash with American prejudice or pride . Thus , firsfc the coloured Masons were snubbed by the white Masons , because they were not legally initiated , and later on because

the G . L . of England recalled the African Lodge charter . Having disproved these statements , ifc was next argued thafc the coloured Masons had no right fco rebel against the Grand Lodge of England . The rebellion against the Grand Lodge of England by the white Masons of Massachusetts in

1792 , without having paid some sixty or more guineas which was due to tho G . L . of England , was all right , but the rebellion of the coloured Masons in 1827 , when they owed nothing to the G . L . of England , was all wrong . Quibbles and lies satisfied the conscience of fche white

American Masonic luminaries to violate their Masonio obligation to thousands of Masons , because their skins were a shade darker than their own . The Grand Orient of France , the United Grand Lodge of Germany , and , I believe , the Grand Lodges of Switzerland and of tho Netherlands , and other Grand Lodges , have , however .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1891-01-31, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_31011891/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MASONIC PANTOMIME. Article 1
ROYALTY AND FREEMASONRY. Article 1
DEGREE OF PAST MASTER. Article 2
SINCERITY CHAPTER. No. 189. Article 3
Untitled Ad 3
THE THEATRES. &c. Article 3
Untitled Article 3
RISE AND DEVELOPMENT OF AFRICAN RACE MASONS IN AMERICA. Article 4
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 8
ROYAL ARCH. Article 8
TORONTO. Article 9
REVIEWS. Article 9
ISCA LODGE, No. 683. Article 10
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
INSTRUCTION. Article 12
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
LIST OF RARE AND VALUABLE WORKS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 14
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
THE THEATRES, AMUSEMENTS, &c. Article 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Page 1

Page 1

3 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

3 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

5 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

2 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

2 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

3 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

3 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

9 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

4 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

2 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

4 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

4 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

8 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

2 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

13 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

13 Articles
Page 5

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

Rise And Development Of African Race Masons In America.

another charter , and hence the African Lodge worked under a mere copy of a charter . Dr . Lewis ' s letter was published by Moore in his magazine , and all the white American Masons believed it , and every spouting American

Grand Master repeated it . The Master of the African Lodge was , however , informed about the new fib of Moore ' s invention , and in the minutes of the African Lodge of 12 th January 1846 , 1 found recorded as follows : —

An article was read from the Freemasons Magazine , Vol . v ., No . 2 ( edited by C . W . Moore ) , 1 st December 1845 , stating that the African Lodge was not a legal body . A history of tbe whole transaction was given by the Master , to the satisfaction of the Lodge . As the coloured Masons had no access to Masonic

publications , the fact tbat the story in "Moore ' s Magazine" was an invention remained known to the coloured Masons only . In 1867 I learned from Bro . Findel ' s History that the

African Lodge possessed its original charter . In 1868 the lato Bro . Lewis Hayden , then Grand Master of the Prince Hall G . L ., showed me the original African Lodge charter . 1 told Dr . Winslow Lewis about it . Ho said thafc ho was

very sorry that he had been misinformed , in 1845 , and gave me leave to state his confession openly whenever I thought proper to do so . I must here add . that the year 1868 forms an epoch in the history of African Masonry in America . First , in 1868 a coloured man was for the first timo since 1755 initiated

in a Lodge ( composed of whito men ) in Boston ; and second , in 1868 the coloured Masons were somehow induced to petition tho G . L . of Massachusetts to acknowledge their legality as Masons , and for tho first time the said Grand Lodgo showed good manners by performing the farce of

referring the coloured Masons' petition to a committee . These events soon became known in other American Masonic jurisdictions , which of course created a stir amon g our Masonic jurisprudence-mongers . In January 1869 Bro . Gouley , G . Sec . of Missouri , fired off his battery against the

coloured Masons , not forgetting to make a point out of the African Lodge possessing only a copy of a charter , and challenging every Mason in creation to disprove it , when I replied by first calling his attention to Bro . Findel ' s " History of Masonry , " second I added my own evidence

that the African Lodge charter was in existence , and third I appealed to Dr . Winslow Lewis for confirmation of the fact that he was misinformed in 1845 about the said charter , and that he was sorry for it . Bro . Gouloy would

not print my reply , but ifc was printed by Bro . Brennan , in the American Freemason , at Cincinnati , in the June and July numbers of 1869 . Bro . John T . Heard was chairman of the committee on

the coloured Masons' petition . 1 know that he took tho trouble to examine the record of the African Lodge . Indeed I happened to come into Bro . Haydon ' s office a few miuutes after Bro . Heard left , and saw the records which were examined by Bro . " Hoard . In December 1869

Bro . Heard read his report to me privately , when he said , " You see the committee would not concede to acknowledge tho coloured Masons , but I insisted in stating that I saw the original African Lodge charter . " I then suggested that he ought to have inserted that he examined the

African Lodge records , and that fche meetings of the Lodge were continuous from its beginning to tho present time . He answered , " So I ought , but ifc is too late now . " Tbe

report of the committee was , of course , unanimously adopted , and no one who was acquainted with American Grand Lodge tactics was disappointed or surprised thereat .

In December 1870 , Grand Master Gardner tried to prove from tho American Masonic jurisprudence standpoint , with the addition of a little sophistry and quibble , the illegitimacy of the coloured Masons or of Prince Hall Grand Lodge . A reply to Bro . Gardner ' s mode of

reasoning may be seen by my English readers , in the Masonic Monthly , Vol . 7 , pp 216 to 221 , in Freemasons ' Hall , in London . One statement of Bro . Gardner I entirely overlooked , he said , thafc fche African Lodge was dormant from the time of Prince Hall ' s death uutil 1826 ,

when ifc was revived by John T . Hilton , I remained ignorant of my oversight until I received a letter , dated 25 th January 1876 , from the Rev . Charles Griswold , Grand Master of Minnesota , inquiring about the alleged

dormancy of the African Lodge . And I must here add , thafc between 1870 and 1876 the Masonic Temple of the Prince Hall Grand Lodge was destroyed by fire , together with the African Lodge records , which were examined by Bro . John T , Heard , in 1869 . Bro , Heard , however , was

Rise And Development Of African Race Masons In America.

too honourable to deny tho fact -thafc he had examined fcho records of the period in questiou , so I called upon Bro . Gardner , and told him all I knew , and appealed to Bro . Heard for confirmation , that tho alleged dormancy of tho African Lodgo was a mistake , and subsequently I

found out how tho mistake was made by Bro . Gardner , viz ., John T . Hilton ' s statement in 1826 , that the African Lodge had made no progress since the death of Prince Hall , was transformed in Bro . Gardner ' s imagination into dormancy , and as soon as I explained ifc to Bro . Gardner ,

he frankly confessed fchat I was right . I musfc here further add , that in the Proceedings of the Minnesota and of the Ohio Grand Lodges for 1874 and 1877 , the reader will find ample evidence that the African Masonio organisations in the United States of America are just as legitimate as the

Grand Lodge of Massachusetts , or any other Grand Lodgo in North America . Indeed , whatever reasons the white Masonic luminaries have brought forward to prove the illegality of the coloured American Masons , can with equal

justice be brought forward to prove the illegality of the Masonry of the whites in America . As far as legality and illegality is concerned between the white and coloured Masons in America , it may be briefly summed np , as " six of one and half a dozen of the other . "

I gave above two reasons for regarding the year 1868 as an epoch in the history of the African Masons in America , and I will here add a third reason , even more important than the former ones , viz ., when Bro . Hayden showed

me , in 1868 , the original African Lodge Charter , I showed him Bro . Findel ' s " History of Freemasonry . " Bro . Hayden was of course highly gratified with the part therein referring to the African Lodge . I then advised him to write a letter of thanks to Bro . Findel , which he did , and

by Bro . Findel , in an obituary notice of tbe late Bro . Lewis Hayden , in the Bauhutte , of 27 th April 1889 , and reprinted in the Prince Hall Grand Lodge Proceedings of the same year , on page 75 , as follows : —

thia was the beginning of a correspondence which eventuated in the acknowledgment of Prince Hall Grand Lodge by the United Grand Lodge of Germany , and by some other European Grand Lodges . This facfc is corroborated

The Princo Hall Grand Lodge of Boston has suffered a severe loss . Ono of the most meritorious members , our oldest friend there , Bro . Lewis Hayden has entered the Eternal Ease . Having his attention drawn to onr History of Freemasonry , by Bro . Jacob Norton ,

he commenced communication with us , that resulted in tbe recognition of tho Prince Hall Grand Lodgo . He reached a remarkable high age . Even the political papers in Germany consider him worth noticing .

Bro . Gould devotes bufc a short space to the subject of tbe African Masonic organisations in America . He says : — Thirty-one Grand Lodges in difl ' orent States of the Union aro montiot . od in the statistic- * before me , which show a total of 691 Lodges and 17 , 909 members . Those coloured or lesser Grand

Lodges have been more or less recognised as legally constituted bodies in France , Germany , Hungary , Peru and Siberia , and in Ohio a resolution by the white [ Masons ] acknowledging the regularity of tho Black Grand Lodge in tbat State was only lost by fifty-eight votes , the numbers being 332 to 390 in 1875 . The caso of the

" Negro Masons in America" has been ably stated by Mr . Samuel Clark , Grand Master of the coloured Masons of the State of Ohio , from whoso pamphlet and the other authorities at my disposal I am

inclined to think that the claim of the black Mason to be placed on a footing of equality with the white one is destined to pass through a somewhat similar ordeal in America to that which has been ( in parfc ) undergono by the famous Jewish question in Germany .

The fact is " Masonic universality in America is a sham , and truth and justice are discarded when either of theso clash with American prejudice or pride . Thus , firsfc the coloured Masons were snubbed by the white Masons , because they were not legally initiated , and later on because

the G . L . of England recalled the African Lodge charter . Having disproved these statements , ifc was next argued thafc the coloured Masons had no right fco rebel against the Grand Lodge of England . The rebellion against the Grand Lodge of England by the white Masons of Massachusetts in

1792 , without having paid some sixty or more guineas which was due to tho G . L . of England , was all right , but the rebellion of the coloured Masons in 1827 , when they owed nothing to the G . L . of England , was all wrong . Quibbles and lies satisfied the conscience of fche white

American Masonic luminaries to violate their Masonio obligation to thousands of Masons , because their skins were a shade darker than their own . The Grand Orient of France , the United Grand Lodge of Germany , and , I believe , the Grand Lodges of Switzerland and of tho Netherlands , and other Grand Lodges , have , however .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 4
  • You're on page5
  • 6
  • 16
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy