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Royal Arch Masonry.

The ages of the world are thus enumerated : — . 3 Methuselah . Abraham . Lamech . Isaac . Noah . 9 Judali . 5 Shein . Hezron . Arphaxad . Earn . Salah . Aminadab .

Eber . Nahshon . 7 Peleg . Salmon . Reu . Boaz .

Serug . Obed . Nah or . Jesse . Terah . David . ( To be continued . )

Excerpts From A Masonic Scrapbook.

EXCERPTS FROM A MASONIC SCRAPBOOK .

B Y W M . J AMES H UGHAN , P . M ., No . 131 , T RUKO . No . 2—M ASONS ON MASONRY . " All the plans of Freemasonry are pacific . It cooperates with our blessed religion in regulating the tempers , restraining the passions , sweetening the dispositions , and harmonizing the discordant interests of

man , breathes a spirit of universal love and benevolence ; adds one thread more to the silken cord of evangelical charity , which binds man to man ; and seeks to entwine the cardinal virtues and Christian graces in the web of the affections , and the drapery of the conduct . "The Rev . T . M . HARRIS , ( United States ) . "

" . I have ever felt it my duty to support and encourage the principles and practices of Masonry , because it powerfully developes all the social and benevolent affections ; because it mitigates without , and annihilates within , the virulence . of political and theological

controversy ; because it affords the only neutral ground on which men of all ranks and classes can meet oiiperfectequalifcyyind associate without degradation , or mortification , whether for the purpose of moral instruction or social enjoyment . " Thc lute Right Hon . the Earl of DURHAM , ( P . D . G . M ) . "

" The aid and moral purport of Masonry is to subdue our passions , not to do our own will , to make a daily progress in a laudible art , to promote morality , charity , good fellowship , good nature and humanity . "The Rev . JAMES ANDERSON , D . D ., ( P . G . W ) . "

" Masonry is one of the most sublime and perfect institutions that ever was formed for the advancement of happiness and general good to mankind , creating in all its varieties , universal benevolence ami brotherly love . It teaches us those useful , wise ami instructive doctrines upon which alone true happiness is founded ,

and at . the same time aflbrds those easy paths by which to attain the rewards of virtue ; it tenches us the duties which we owe to our neighbour , —never to injure him in any one situation , but to conduct ourselves with justice and impartiality ; it bills us not to divulge

the mystery to the public , and it orders ns to be true toonr trust , to bc above all meanness and dissimulation , and in all our avocations to perform religiously that which wc ought to do . " H . R . H . the Duke of SUSSEX ( P . G . M . )"

•* ' 1 " rcciiiasons are a public benefit to the world , uniting in the strongest ties the people of all countries , their language is as general as that ofthe eyes , and in all parts ofthe globe it is understood , by

communicative signs it has become peculiarly valuable , and Freemasons possess , what the learned have sought in vain , ah invariable cypher for general communication , a sort of personal shorthand . " ¦ Freemason ' s Magazine , p . 11 , A . D . 1793 . "

" Masonry has no princip le but what might still more ornament the purest mind , nor any appendage but what might give additional lustre , to the bri ghtest character . "The Rev . JETIIKO INWOOD , P . Prov . G . C . "

ROMAN ROADS . —But of all roadmakcrs ( though the Carthaginians arc supposed to be the fnvt people who had paved roads , and the Greeks the first to legislate for their repair ) the Romans stand preeminent . No other people , of ancient or modern times , are fit for a moment to bc compared to tlie hard y Roman soldiers in thc construction of firm and

spacious roads , which would have lasted until now , had tliey not been ruthlessly torn up , by savage numbskulls , in modern days , that they might steal the materials , and boast of living in a state of superior civilization . No matter what difficulties lay in the way , the Romans believed that their soldiers

¦ yyero nil the better for being inured to labour , . 'is it contributed alike to their health and morals ; knowing that idleness and dissipation generally go hand in hand ; and all obstacles wero surmounted by patient perseverance . —Thc History ofthe Stockton and Darlington Ilailway , by Buo . GEO . MARKHAM TWEDDEM ,, F . R . S . NA .

Reviews.

Reviews .

?¦ 'Grand C / tapter of Scotland ' s Reporter" March , . 1869 .

We are favoured by our esteemed Companion , "W . J . Hughan , with a copy of this interesting publication , which contains the proceedings of the Grand Chapter of Scotland for the year ending March , 1869 , in exienso , together with list ^ of the office-bearers , Chapters , and Mark Lodges . It appears from the G . Scribe ' s condensed report

that during the year seven new Chapters have received charters , and one Mark Master Lodge a warrant . A Provincial Grand Superintendent has been appointed over the province of Aberdeen , and representatives have been interchanged with the sister Grand Chapters of South Carolina and Tennessee .

At the quarterl y meeting held on the 16 th September , 1868 , the following important communication from Comp . Hnghan , on the antiquity of the R . A . degree was read , and a vote of thanks was unanimousl y awarded to that distinguished Mason for the same : —

"In the interesting Introduction to the Laws ofthe Supremo Grand Chapter of Scotland , 1861 , it is stated that ' The earliest printed notice of the Royal Arch is in an Address by Lawrence Dermott to the Gentlemen of the Fraternity , published about the middle of tho last century . ' In allusion to the differences between

the ancient and modern Grand Lodges of England , he asks , Whether it is possible to initiate or introduce a modern "Mason into a Royal Arch lodge ( the very essence of Masonry ) without making him go through ancient ceremonies ? ( page v . ) The answer to which was ' No . '

" It was also stated that the Minute-Book belonging to the Stirling Ancient Lodge , of 1743 , referring to the Royal Arch Degree , 'isthe oldest written record now extant ; and no other Chapter in Scotland has been able to show documentary evidence in its favour of an earlier date than 1705 , although in these years

the Chapters were already accounted old , and in full operation . ' ( Page xii . ) " It is my peculiar privilege to bc able to afford evidence of the notice of Royal Arch Masonry in print twenty years earlier than the ' Introduction '

allows of , through being in possession of two works , respectively dated A . n . 1756 and A . D . 17-11 . The edition of Ahiman Rezon , by Lawrence Dermott , containing 'The Address to the Gentlemen of the Fraternity , ' was not published until A . D . 170-1 , being the second edition .

"The first edition of Ahiman Rezon ( which we have ) was issued A . D . 1756 , and although it did not contain the Address in question , the editor ( then Grand Secretary of the Ancients ) inserted ' A Prayer repeated in the Royal Arch Lodge at Jerusalem , ' ( page 17 ) , concluding as follows : —

" Ilceause we nave trusted m thy Holy , Great , Mighty , and Terrible name , We will rejoice and he glad in thy salvation , and in thy mercies , ( I Lord , our God ; And the nmllitudc of thy mercies , 0 Lord our God ; and the inulliludc nf thy mercies ,

Sliall not forsake us for ever . Sclah : And now make haste and bring upon us a blessing , and peace from the Four corners of the earth ; for thou art a God that workest salvation , And has chosen us out of every people and language ; and

thou , our King , Hast caused us to cleave to thy great name , iu love to praise thee , And to lie united to thee , and to love thy name ; blessed art llmu , 0 Lord God , who hast chosen thy people , Israel in love . "

Brother Dermott ' having inserted this Prayer , and mentioned that part of Masonry commonly called the Royal Arch' ( page 17 ) , proceeds to eulogise it thus — ' I firmly believe the Royal Arch to be the root , heart , and marrow of Freemasonry . ' " Brother Dermott then mentions that the

candidate ior Royal Arch Masonry must first have ' passed the Chair in regular form , according to the ancient custom of the Craft , ' and to further enforce this law , he adds the opinion oftho Worshi pful Brother , Doctor Fifiold D ' Assigny , printed in the year 1711 . " Now , it is this work b y D'Assigny that we have

the pleasure of possessing , and which we beg to bring before the Supreme Grand Chapter of Scotland , as its evidence on the Royal Arch Degree is most important and uiv . quc . '' It has been thought by some never to have been

in existence , as no authority but Dermott , from 1756 down lo the last year , ever speaks of having seen it , but , like the late Brother the Rev . Dr . George Oliver , refer to thu quotation by Dermott only . '' The learned Mason , Brother J . G . Findel , ol Leipzig , when in England on a Masonic visit , says ,

Reviews.

' I have sought m vain for the book in the British Museum . ' " Dr . George Kloss , in his accurate and valuable ' Biblographie der Freimaurerei , ' of 1844 , is unable to do more than give the reference to Ahiman Rezon of A . D . 1756 .

" We arc , thanks bc , able to set the matter at rest , by having the work itself in our Masonic Library , having purchased it in London during the latter part of 1867 from a second-hand bookseller , who had no idea of its worth , and was in ignorance of its character .

" It was bound up with another work , and hence its being overlooked by the bookseller . Brother Findel , editor of' Die Banhiitte , ' has already acknowledged ( in the pages of that Masonic Magazine ) the importance of the discovery , and considers it to be the earliest printed work in the world that alludes to the

Royal Arch Degree . " The work is entitled , 'A Serious and Impartial Inquiry into the Cause of the Present 1 lecay of Free Masonry in the Kingdom of Ireland ' dedicated ' To the Most Noble and Puissant Prince Truth . ' Dublin : Printed by Edward Bate . MDCCLIV . ( Svo , pages 80 . )

"The work is mainly taken up with ** instructive remarks , which may be found useful to revive the honour of that ancient Craft , ' and the' Old and New Regulations of the London Constitutions ( i . e ., of A . D . 1723 and 1738 ) , by the consent and approbation of the Grand Lodge of Ireland , dedicated to the Right Worshipful and Right Hon . the Lord Viscount

Allen , Grand Master of this Kingdom , ' arc inserted . It will be seen that , owing to the fact of this work being issued in 1744 , all doubts of the degree being known at that date are disposed of at once . Some have tried to prove that the . Royal Arch was unknown before the eighth decade of the last century ; but such attempts are weak indeed , and wholly absurd .

" Bro . Dr . John Pearson Bell , D . P . G . M . of N . and E . Yorkshire , has lately issued an admirable illustrative chart , depicting the purposes of Masonry from an early period , in which lie dates the origin of the R . A . Degree in England'at A . D . 1740 . "Dr . Robert Morris , Dr . Albert G . Mackay , and other well-known writers on the History of the

Fraternity , concur as to this date ; and Bro . William A . Laurie , Grand Secretary of Scotland , observes , ' That beyond a mere assertion , there is no evidence of any kind of its existence in this country ( i . e ., Scotland ) previous to 1743 ' ( 'History of Freemasonry and the Grand Lodge of Scotland . ' Second edition . A . . 1859 . ) Whether the Degree was derived from

Scotland originally , or from England , it is impossible to say . Certainly it was unknown in Ireland before AD . 1740 , and was planted there by the English ancient Masons . " Scotland possesses the earliest Records of Royal Arch Masonry in the world , and , so far as wo know , is entitled to be considered as the chief authority in

ancient minutes relating to "Masonry , whether as to their operative or speciilative character . " The probability is , that tho Degree originated with the noted Chevalier Ramsay , of Ayr , and the 'Ancients . ' But to return to D'Assigny's work . There ai * e only two references to the Royal Arch , both of which we give in their entirety . The first is at

page 16 ; in a note the author says : — " ' I am informed in that city is held an assembly of Master Masons , under the title of ltoyal Arch Masons , who , as their qualifications and excellencies arc superior to oilier' ? , they receive a larger pay than working Masons . ' " We have personally visited the City of York , and have carefully perused the whole of thc Records of

the ancient Grand Lodge formerly held there , but now extinct ; but there is no evidence therein of any such arrangement as Dr . D'Assigny refers to , neither do the ' Fabric Rolls of York Minster' confirm it . The minutes of the Grand Lodge of York contain no reference to the Royal Arch whatever , until after A . i > . 1765 .

" The second reference to tho Royal Arch is appended at page 32 , and is thc one quoted generally bv Masonic writers , where it is printed in italics ; tin other part , and the . former quotation , have never been inserted in any other known Masonic work of any date whatever . —

" As the landmarks of the constitution of Freemasonry arc universally the same throughout all kingdoms , and ar <* so well fixed that they will not admit of removal , how conies it to pass that sonic have been led away with ridiculous innovations—au example of which I shall prove by a certain propagator of a false system some few years ago in this city , who imposed upon several very worthy men , under a pretence

of being Master of the Koyal Arch , which he asserted h < - had brought with him from the City of York ; and that tho beauties of the Craft did principally consist in the knowledge of this valuable piece of Masonry . However , he carried on tills scheme for several months , and many of tin learned and wise wero his followers , till at length hi '

fallacious art was discovered by a Itrothcr of probity . ui'l wisdom , who had some small space before attained that excellent part of Masonry iu London , and plainly proved that hi * doctrine was false , whereupon the Ilretlircn justly despised him , and ordered him to be expelled from all benefits ofthe Craft ; and although some of thc fraternity have expressed an uncasi-

“The Freemason: 1869-06-12, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_12061869/page/2/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
NOW READY. Article 1
ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. Article 1
EXCERPTS FROM A MASONIC SCRAPBOOK. Article 2
Reviews. Article 2
INTERESTING MASONIC NARRATIVE, Article 3
Reports of Masonic Meetings. Article 4
THE ROYAL ARCH. Article 4
ORDERS OF CHIVALRY. Article 5
MASONIC FEMALE ORPHAN SCHOOL, DUBLIN. Article 5
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 5
"ARE YOU A MASON?" Article 5
Births, Marrings, and Deaths. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
SPURIOUS MASONIC BODIES. Article 6
Multum in Parbo, or Hasonrc Notes and Queries. Article 6
Original Correspondencs. Article 7
ALLEGORICAL SCULPTURES IN MEDLEVAL CHURCHES. Article 7
H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES. Article 7
FRENCH MASONIC LITERATURE. Article 7
BEADON CHAPTER , No. 619. Article 7
THE BRETT TESTIMONIAL. Article 7
PAPERS ON MASONRY. Article 8
INELIGIBILITY OF BASTARDS AS FREEMASONS. Article 8
ANOTHER FENIAN OUTRAGE: Article 9
Agents. Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Royal Arch Masonry.

The ages of the world are thus enumerated : — . 3 Methuselah . Abraham . Lamech . Isaac . Noah . 9 Judali . 5 Shein . Hezron . Arphaxad . Earn . Salah . Aminadab .

Eber . Nahshon . 7 Peleg . Salmon . Reu . Boaz .

Serug . Obed . Nah or . Jesse . Terah . David . ( To be continued . )

Excerpts From A Masonic Scrapbook.

EXCERPTS FROM A MASONIC SCRAPBOOK .

B Y W M . J AMES H UGHAN , P . M ., No . 131 , T RUKO . No . 2—M ASONS ON MASONRY . " All the plans of Freemasonry are pacific . It cooperates with our blessed religion in regulating the tempers , restraining the passions , sweetening the dispositions , and harmonizing the discordant interests of

man , breathes a spirit of universal love and benevolence ; adds one thread more to the silken cord of evangelical charity , which binds man to man ; and seeks to entwine the cardinal virtues and Christian graces in the web of the affections , and the drapery of the conduct . "The Rev . T . M . HARRIS , ( United States ) . "

" . I have ever felt it my duty to support and encourage the principles and practices of Masonry , because it powerfully developes all the social and benevolent affections ; because it mitigates without , and annihilates within , the virulence . of political and theological

controversy ; because it affords the only neutral ground on which men of all ranks and classes can meet oiiperfectequalifcyyind associate without degradation , or mortification , whether for the purpose of moral instruction or social enjoyment . " Thc lute Right Hon . the Earl of DURHAM , ( P . D . G . M ) . "

" The aid and moral purport of Masonry is to subdue our passions , not to do our own will , to make a daily progress in a laudible art , to promote morality , charity , good fellowship , good nature and humanity . "The Rev . JAMES ANDERSON , D . D ., ( P . G . W ) . "

" Masonry is one of the most sublime and perfect institutions that ever was formed for the advancement of happiness and general good to mankind , creating in all its varieties , universal benevolence ami brotherly love . It teaches us those useful , wise ami instructive doctrines upon which alone true happiness is founded ,

and at . the same time aflbrds those easy paths by which to attain the rewards of virtue ; it tenches us the duties which we owe to our neighbour , —never to injure him in any one situation , but to conduct ourselves with justice and impartiality ; it bills us not to divulge

the mystery to the public , and it orders ns to be true toonr trust , to bc above all meanness and dissimulation , and in all our avocations to perform religiously that which wc ought to do . " H . R . H . the Duke of SUSSEX ( P . G . M . )"

•* ' 1 " rcciiiasons are a public benefit to the world , uniting in the strongest ties the people of all countries , their language is as general as that ofthe eyes , and in all parts ofthe globe it is understood , by

communicative signs it has become peculiarly valuable , and Freemasons possess , what the learned have sought in vain , ah invariable cypher for general communication , a sort of personal shorthand . " ¦ Freemason ' s Magazine , p . 11 , A . D . 1793 . "

" Masonry has no princip le but what might still more ornament the purest mind , nor any appendage but what might give additional lustre , to the bri ghtest character . "The Rev . JETIIKO INWOOD , P . Prov . G . C . "

ROMAN ROADS . —But of all roadmakcrs ( though the Carthaginians arc supposed to be the fnvt people who had paved roads , and the Greeks the first to legislate for their repair ) the Romans stand preeminent . No other people , of ancient or modern times , are fit for a moment to bc compared to tlie hard y Roman soldiers in thc construction of firm and

spacious roads , which would have lasted until now , had tliey not been ruthlessly torn up , by savage numbskulls , in modern days , that they might steal the materials , and boast of living in a state of superior civilization . No matter what difficulties lay in the way , the Romans believed that their soldiers

¦ yyero nil the better for being inured to labour , . 'is it contributed alike to their health and morals ; knowing that idleness and dissipation generally go hand in hand ; and all obstacles wero surmounted by patient perseverance . —Thc History ofthe Stockton and Darlington Ilailway , by Buo . GEO . MARKHAM TWEDDEM ,, F . R . S . NA .

Reviews.

Reviews .

?¦ 'Grand C / tapter of Scotland ' s Reporter" March , . 1869 .

We are favoured by our esteemed Companion , "W . J . Hughan , with a copy of this interesting publication , which contains the proceedings of the Grand Chapter of Scotland for the year ending March , 1869 , in exienso , together with list ^ of the office-bearers , Chapters , and Mark Lodges . It appears from the G . Scribe ' s condensed report

that during the year seven new Chapters have received charters , and one Mark Master Lodge a warrant . A Provincial Grand Superintendent has been appointed over the province of Aberdeen , and representatives have been interchanged with the sister Grand Chapters of South Carolina and Tennessee .

At the quarterl y meeting held on the 16 th September , 1868 , the following important communication from Comp . Hnghan , on the antiquity of the R . A . degree was read , and a vote of thanks was unanimousl y awarded to that distinguished Mason for the same : —

"In the interesting Introduction to the Laws ofthe Supremo Grand Chapter of Scotland , 1861 , it is stated that ' The earliest printed notice of the Royal Arch is in an Address by Lawrence Dermott to the Gentlemen of the Fraternity , published about the middle of tho last century . ' In allusion to the differences between

the ancient and modern Grand Lodges of England , he asks , Whether it is possible to initiate or introduce a modern "Mason into a Royal Arch lodge ( the very essence of Masonry ) without making him go through ancient ceremonies ? ( page v . ) The answer to which was ' No . '

" It was also stated that the Minute-Book belonging to the Stirling Ancient Lodge , of 1743 , referring to the Royal Arch Degree , 'isthe oldest written record now extant ; and no other Chapter in Scotland has been able to show documentary evidence in its favour of an earlier date than 1705 , although in these years

the Chapters were already accounted old , and in full operation . ' ( Page xii . ) " It is my peculiar privilege to bc able to afford evidence of the notice of Royal Arch Masonry in print twenty years earlier than the ' Introduction '

allows of , through being in possession of two works , respectively dated A . n . 1756 and A . D . 17-11 . The edition of Ahiman Rezon , by Lawrence Dermott , containing 'The Address to the Gentlemen of the Fraternity , ' was not published until A . D . 170-1 , being the second edition .

"The first edition of Ahiman Rezon ( which we have ) was issued A . D . 1756 , and although it did not contain the Address in question , the editor ( then Grand Secretary of the Ancients ) inserted ' A Prayer repeated in the Royal Arch Lodge at Jerusalem , ' ( page 17 ) , concluding as follows : —

" Ilceause we nave trusted m thy Holy , Great , Mighty , and Terrible name , We will rejoice and he glad in thy salvation , and in thy mercies , ( I Lord , our God ; And the nmllitudc of thy mercies , 0 Lord our God ; and the inulliludc nf thy mercies ,

Sliall not forsake us for ever . Sclah : And now make haste and bring upon us a blessing , and peace from the Four corners of the earth ; for thou art a God that workest salvation , And has chosen us out of every people and language ; and

thou , our King , Hast caused us to cleave to thy great name , iu love to praise thee , And to lie united to thee , and to love thy name ; blessed art llmu , 0 Lord God , who hast chosen thy people , Israel in love . "

Brother Dermott ' having inserted this Prayer , and mentioned that part of Masonry commonly called the Royal Arch' ( page 17 ) , proceeds to eulogise it thus — ' I firmly believe the Royal Arch to be the root , heart , and marrow of Freemasonry . ' " Brother Dermott then mentions that the

candidate ior Royal Arch Masonry must first have ' passed the Chair in regular form , according to the ancient custom of the Craft , ' and to further enforce this law , he adds the opinion oftho Worshi pful Brother , Doctor Fifiold D ' Assigny , printed in the year 1711 . " Now , it is this work b y D'Assigny that we have

the pleasure of possessing , and which we beg to bring before the Supreme Grand Chapter of Scotland , as its evidence on the Royal Arch Degree is most important and uiv . quc . '' It has been thought by some never to have been

in existence , as no authority but Dermott , from 1756 down lo the last year , ever speaks of having seen it , but , like the late Brother the Rev . Dr . George Oliver , refer to thu quotation by Dermott only . '' The learned Mason , Brother J . G . Findel , ol Leipzig , when in England on a Masonic visit , says ,

Reviews.

' I have sought m vain for the book in the British Museum . ' " Dr . George Kloss , in his accurate and valuable ' Biblographie der Freimaurerei , ' of 1844 , is unable to do more than give the reference to Ahiman Rezon of A . D . 1756 .

" We arc , thanks bc , able to set the matter at rest , by having the work itself in our Masonic Library , having purchased it in London during the latter part of 1867 from a second-hand bookseller , who had no idea of its worth , and was in ignorance of its character .

" It was bound up with another work , and hence its being overlooked by the bookseller . Brother Findel , editor of' Die Banhiitte , ' has already acknowledged ( in the pages of that Masonic Magazine ) the importance of the discovery , and considers it to be the earliest printed work in the world that alludes to the

Royal Arch Degree . " The work is entitled , 'A Serious and Impartial Inquiry into the Cause of the Present 1 lecay of Free Masonry in the Kingdom of Ireland ' dedicated ' To the Most Noble and Puissant Prince Truth . ' Dublin : Printed by Edward Bate . MDCCLIV . ( Svo , pages 80 . )

"The work is mainly taken up with ** instructive remarks , which may be found useful to revive the honour of that ancient Craft , ' and the' Old and New Regulations of the London Constitutions ( i . e ., of A . D . 1723 and 1738 ) , by the consent and approbation of the Grand Lodge of Ireland , dedicated to the Right Worshipful and Right Hon . the Lord Viscount

Allen , Grand Master of this Kingdom , ' arc inserted . It will be seen that , owing to the fact of this work being issued in 1744 , all doubts of the degree being known at that date are disposed of at once . Some have tried to prove that the . Royal Arch was unknown before the eighth decade of the last century ; but such attempts are weak indeed , and wholly absurd .

" Bro . Dr . John Pearson Bell , D . P . G . M . of N . and E . Yorkshire , has lately issued an admirable illustrative chart , depicting the purposes of Masonry from an early period , in which lie dates the origin of the R . A . Degree in England'at A . D . 1740 . "Dr . Robert Morris , Dr . Albert G . Mackay , and other well-known writers on the History of the

Fraternity , concur as to this date ; and Bro . William A . Laurie , Grand Secretary of Scotland , observes , ' That beyond a mere assertion , there is no evidence of any kind of its existence in this country ( i . e ., Scotland ) previous to 1743 ' ( 'History of Freemasonry and the Grand Lodge of Scotland . ' Second edition . A . . 1859 . ) Whether the Degree was derived from

Scotland originally , or from England , it is impossible to say . Certainly it was unknown in Ireland before AD . 1740 , and was planted there by the English ancient Masons . " Scotland possesses the earliest Records of Royal Arch Masonry in the world , and , so far as wo know , is entitled to be considered as the chief authority in

ancient minutes relating to "Masonry , whether as to their operative or speciilative character . " The probability is , that tho Degree originated with the noted Chevalier Ramsay , of Ayr , and the 'Ancients . ' But to return to D'Assigny's work . There ai * e only two references to the Royal Arch , both of which we give in their entirety . The first is at

page 16 ; in a note the author says : — " ' I am informed in that city is held an assembly of Master Masons , under the title of ltoyal Arch Masons , who , as their qualifications and excellencies arc superior to oilier' ? , they receive a larger pay than working Masons . ' " We have personally visited the City of York , and have carefully perused the whole of thc Records of

the ancient Grand Lodge formerly held there , but now extinct ; but there is no evidence therein of any such arrangement as Dr . D'Assigny refers to , neither do the ' Fabric Rolls of York Minster' confirm it . The minutes of the Grand Lodge of York contain no reference to the Royal Arch whatever , until after A . i > . 1765 .

" The second reference to tho Royal Arch is appended at page 32 , and is thc one quoted generally bv Masonic writers , where it is printed in italics ; tin other part , and the . former quotation , have never been inserted in any other known Masonic work of any date whatever . —

" As the landmarks of the constitution of Freemasonry arc universally the same throughout all kingdoms , and ar <* so well fixed that they will not admit of removal , how conies it to pass that sonic have been led away with ridiculous innovations—au example of which I shall prove by a certain propagator of a false system some few years ago in this city , who imposed upon several very worthy men , under a pretence

of being Master of the Koyal Arch , which he asserted h < - had brought with him from the City of York ; and that tho beauties of the Craft did principally consist in the knowledge of this valuable piece of Masonry . However , he carried on tills scheme for several months , and many of tin learned and wise wero his followers , till at length hi '

fallacious art was discovered by a Itrothcr of probity . ui'l wisdom , who had some small space before attained that excellent part of Masonry iu London , and plainly proved that hi * doctrine was false , whereupon the Ilretlircn justly despised him , and ordered him to be expelled from all benefits ofthe Craft ; and although some of thc fraternity have expressed an uncasi-

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