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

The Dumfries Kilwinning Mss.

The Dumfries Kilwinning MSS .

. ^ fjMk . EADERS of the excellent History of the " Dumfries KilfPP | g vinning Lodge , No . 53 , " by Bro . James Smith , Avill be | jff |? £ aware that through our Brother ' s researches , assisted by * - ^|| i |» oth er local Craftsmen , five moro copies of the " Old £ MU $ &> Charges " have been traced , all of Avhich are domiciled ll ^ fyvf * ** in Dumfries . The oldest four belong to Lodge No . 53 , iT < *• ' anl the junior is the property of the " Thistle Lodge , No . 62 . " '

Prior to thar discovery , but five of these important documents were known in Scotland , one of Avhich is simply a late transcript . These are familiar to Alasonic students by their ordinary titles , viz ., 1 , The "Kilwinning MS" of A . D . 1665 circa ; ( Alother Lodge Kilwinning , No , 0 . ); 2 , The " Atcheson Haven AIS , " dated 19 th Ala ) ' , 1666 ( an extinct lodge , but the scroll is in the library of the Grand Lodge of Scotland ) ; 3 , The " Aberdeen AIS . " of A . D . 1670 ( " The

Aberdeen Lodge , No . P . " ) ; 4 , " The Melrose AIS . No . 2 , " of December , 1674 ( "The Afelrose Lodge , N ° - P " ); 5 , Thc "Melrose MS . N ° 3 , " a transcript of the fourth , made in 1762 . Practically , AVC ha \ e now ten AISS . of the " Old Charges , " traced iu North Britain , most of which exhibit proofs of their having been in the custody of the lodges named for a vory long period , some probably being so preserved from their ori gin to now .

These five , as numbered , belong the " Grand Lodgo family , according to Dr . W . Begemanivs classification , and are , in no sense , remarkable texts , save the " Melrose" version , which , in the final clauses respecting Apprentices , is certainly Avholly different to any other AIS . known . Being in all probability a copy of a Roll of 1581 , or earlier , these special rules are all the more noteworthy and valuable , and arc as folloAV : *

APPRENTICE REGULATIONS , 1074 . " V > - is no frie mason neither JI nor fellow y t ought to take any more prentises during his lifetymo but thrie , which prentises ho must take for vii years ( y t is to sa )*) The first of them seven yeire after he he frio mason , and then vii yeirs after his ycirs is expired to take another , and so yo next and y t he ought to take no more except he cause ane Lodge to be set and havo the leavo if all his

masters and fellows , of ye set Lodge and y t ye prentisc yt is so taken av lawfully taken and they y t aro otherways taken arc not lawfully takin . They that aro lawfully takin , after thoy come out of y ' prentisschipo ought not to ho name loses but they ought to ho named frio men from their M or fellows if thoy have their JI *™ Discharge and all other y * aro not lawfully takiu aro to bo namifc Loses , y ought neither JI nor fellows , make no frie mason except ono of his

lawfull prentisc nor he ought not to bc made mado frie mason except ho givo in his ( say ) before ane sett Lodge to sec what he can begin from ye ground and furnish to yo tope for staining of a noble scienc . V ' ought no frio mason neither M nor fellow y t taketh his work hy great to tak any Loses , if ho can havc any frie masons , or lawfull taken prentises , & if he can have none of them , ho may take as many as will serve his turne and hc ought not to let y"' know yo

priviledge of yo compass Square , lovell , and ye plum-rule but to sett out their plnniming to them , it let them work between y w ** a lyne , and ought not to let them know any more for putting down ye noble scienc and if there come any frio mason , ho ought to displace one of ye Loses , nnd put in his brother y t taketh worke or if v conic one of ye lawful ! taken prentices likeways , and if hc or neither

have no work for them he ought to give them money , to bring them to yo next l . odge or next frie mason , also if any . M or fellow have any lawfull taken prentices Hoe run away and Doe come there to M ** or fellow he shall sett him in worko till he can send his M word of him , and also if he pay any wages ho shall answer his M and for ye performance of these covenent . Wo Do swear , so ( iod us helpe and holv Dome and bv tho contents of this book to our power—lines . "

The " Dumfries Kilwinning MSS , " I have numbered 1 to 4 , for the purpose of identification , and according to their approximate age . Nos . 1 and 3 are given for the lirst time in Bro . Smith's welcome History ; No , 2 is herewith reproduced , and No . 4 , transcribed by Bro . John Lane , will he printed in the first part of tlic " Ars Quatuor Coronatorum " for 1803 .

No . 1 is described as "Anent lite Office of Masanric , " and is apparentl y of the latter part of the seventeenth century . The Avagcs are unusual for St . Albans' period , viz ., ' * four shillings and sixpence per week , " and some of the old worthies are uot described as they ure generall y ; still the version may be classed with the same group as tlic previous live AISS ., as the differences are but slight , which

distinguish it from the other members of that family . I do not think it was over used in the form of a roll , being written on three leaA'es of paper about 15 by 12 inches , Avhich exhibit no signs of any such treatment . No . 2 is a roll of paper ( of three pieces ) , running to nearly 4 feet in length , and 7 ** .- inches in Avidth . Unfortunately , the

commencement is imperfect , owing to portions being removed , Avhich is all the more regretted , as the few words left indicate that a prayer originall y preceded the Invocation ( peculiar lo litis copy ) , and even Avhat remains of tlie latter is not quite of tlie ordinary text . This Roll ( which has been kindly transcribed , rerlalim cl literatim , by Bro . lames Smith for reproduction ) , evidently AVIIS not so correctly copied is

¦ No . 1 ( iflneh it gem-rally resembles ) , and possibly was carelcssly inade and varied from Ihe same original , sometime during the latter part of the seventeenth century . The watermark in the paper is composed of a crown ami flour de lis , as No . 1 , but is not dated , and tlie scroll , not like No . 1 , has numbered clauses . It appears to im * that the 18 th Regulation was overlooked by the scribe in copying ; ° r may have been intentionally omitted , which is unlikely . It

The Dumfries Kilwinning Mss.

is to bo found , though nofc numbered , in tho previous AIS ., and concludes that scroll . This interesting document has not been printed hitherto . No . 3 is a valuable Roll , Avritten on vellum , the seven strips of which , joined together , extend to the extraordinary length of 14 }

feet , the Avidth ranging * from 5 to 6 inches . It is referred to in the records of Lodge No . 53 , on November 22 nd , 1696— "The qlk day , the fraternity ordered William AI'George , ye clerk , to deliver up the institutions in parchment to Robert Anderson ; " and likeAvise later on . The first thieo AISS . are about the same age , as respects transcription .

In 1882 , the " Harris AIS ., No . 1 , " was copied and published b y Bro . John Constable , and at that time was accepted as a std generis . Some six years later , Bro . John Lane and myself discovered the "Harris MS ., No . 2 , " in the British Museum , Avhich for all practical purposes may be accounted a duplicate of No . 1 , Avritten during the latter part of the last century . I now find that these

two AISS . are virtually , ' possibly actually , copies of the " Dumfries Kilwinning AIS ., No . 3 , " their ori gin being probably due to members of Lodge No . 53 , AVIIO left Dumfries for London early last century . The owner of the " Harris AIS ., No . 1 , " is the " Bedford Lodge , No . 157 , " Avhich Avas known as an operative lodge , years before its constitution b y the Grand Lodge of England in 1766 . It

is but fair to state , however , that this document Avas nofc presented to the lodge by Bro . James Harris ( according to the records ) before 1809 , thus leaving its earlier history in doubt , but I think it likely tho Secretary had received it from an older member . As to this , and other points , Bro . Smith ' s history and volume IV . of the

" Alasonic Reprints" of No . 2076 , edited by Bro . G . W . Speth , should be consulted , especially as the latter fine A-olume ( containing several complete facsimiles of AISS . ) includes an exact reproduction of the junior of tho curious trio , all of which possess features so far untraced in any other AISS .

Alany are the departures in the text of these AISS ., as compared Avith the "famil y " to Avhich they may be said to belong . Tho marginal titles alono single them out as quite a distinct variet y to themselves . Bro . Speth has pointed out the llth Regulation , Avhich in the AIS . No . 3 of Lodge No . 53 reads , " You shall not make any mould , square or rule for any Avho is but a Lewis . A Lewis is such as

served an apprenticeship to a Alason , but not admitted as ye custom of makeing Alasons " ( Freemason , 25 th August , 1888 ) : and rightly , states that " as far as wo know , the word [ Lewis ] Avas first , used Alasonically and applied to George III ., the infant son of Frederick , Prince of Wales . " B y tlie discovery of this Dumfries Roll , the use of that Avord , Alasonically , is dated back at least 50 years , and it is also used in the " Harris AIS ., No . 1 , early in the last century .

The Avords introducing the " Oath , " and also the obligation itself , are not usual in AISS . of the " Old Charges , " and should be read , sido by side ,. Avith the " Harleian , " " Buchanan , " and some other scrolls reproduced by the " Quatuor Coronati Lodge . " The

conclusion to the vellum roll concerning the " Charges yt Prince Edwin gave yo Assembly at York , " ancl instructions respecting "Tutors " are important additions , and record certain customs of the lodge during the seventeenth century , which have , more or less , continued to this clay .

No 4 ; of the "Sloane Family , " is , in some respects , the cevn of this remarkable quartette , but , historically nnd Alasonically , the third of the series is the most valuable , because evidentl y it is the roll that AVIIS in use by the members of "Dumfries Kilwinning" moro than 200 years ago ; whereas the others , though so long in lodge custody , were not , apparently , the favoured versions of the brethren .

It is quite impossible to do justice to this version , Avhich has came down to ns in book form ( 8 by 4 inches , elongated ) , Avithout reproducing nearly all its text . Until its publication early in 1893 ( as already mentioned ) , I should like simply to note some of its

peculiarities . Not a few of the additions appear to me purely fanciful , and unless other documents are found to partake of the same character , it will not do to accept such curious readings as having been in actual use by one or more lodges , for recital to initiates early last century , especially as they seem to be such modern innovations .

Like tlio preceding three , this AIS . states that marhle . Avas one of the two stones selected on which to Avrite the " Seven Sciences , '' but instead of mentioning some variety of " later " ( a brick ) as the other , styles the second " monument . " As Ave cannot say a brick " Avould not drown in water , " it is difficult to understand how a burnt tile Avonld

answer that description . Bro . Oscar Guttmann suggests that h j' -lacus" ( " la terns , " etc . ) , is meant amber , as that word is frequently to be met with in mediu-val histories of Alining , and always meant , and is so translated , as he favours . That would burn but not drown .

Thc Avagcs noted for "St . Albans' Day" were the "third part to yr payment ; " whatever that may mean . The length of the " cable tow " in regard to the annual assembly is stated to be fire miles , but the other three AISS . havo fifty , which is the ordinary distance specified . 'Ihe "William Watson , " " Hope , " * ' Waistell , " and three others agree with MS . No . 4 .

Of Hiram , the MS . says " the world hath not produced his equal to this day , he was a Alaster Mason of exquisite knowledge . " Nimrod taught the Alasons " sigrs and tokens , " so Ave are told , and such words as " duly qualified and orderly created in a true lodge , " certainly indicate a modern usage . The " Special Charges " ' end with the hitherto unknoAvn , but suggestive , injunctions " That no lodge or coram of Alasons shall give the Royal Secret to any suddenly , but upon great deliberation . First ' let him learn hi

“The Freemason: 1892-12-21, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_21121892/page/9/.
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Untitled Ad 1
Untitled Ad 2
Untitled Ad 2
"The Queen and the Craft." Article 3
Brotherly Love. Article 7
THE SEVEN AGES OF MASONRY Article 8
The Dumfries Kilwinning MSS. Article 9
The Grand East of Ulster. Article 11
Craft or Conspiracy? A Tale of Masonry Article 16
Hungarian Masonic Medals. Article 17
The Priest's Secret. Article 18
"Mrs. Quilliam." Article 21
Untitled Ad 22
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 25
Untitled Ad 26
Frank Featherstone's Fairy. Article 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 29
Mademoiselle Aoremac; or, The power of Song. Article 30
Untitled Ad 30
Untitled Ad 31
Ballad. Article 33
"The Secret Tribunal." Article 34
Untitled Ad 36
A Carol at Eventide. Article 37
Untitled Ad 37
Masonic Honours. Article 38
Untitled Ad 38
Untitled Ad 38
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Untitled Ad 39
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Dumfries Kilwinning Mss.

The Dumfries Kilwinning MSS .

. ^ fjMk . EADERS of the excellent History of the " Dumfries KilfPP | g vinning Lodge , No . 53 , " by Bro . James Smith , Avill be | jff |? £ aware that through our Brother ' s researches , assisted by * - ^|| i |» oth er local Craftsmen , five moro copies of the " Old £ MU $ &> Charges " have been traced , all of Avhich are domiciled ll ^ fyvf * ** in Dumfries . The oldest four belong to Lodge No . 53 , iT < *• ' anl the junior is the property of the " Thistle Lodge , No . 62 . " '

Prior to thar discovery , but five of these important documents were known in Scotland , one of Avhich is simply a late transcript . These are familiar to Alasonic students by their ordinary titles , viz ., 1 , The "Kilwinning MS" of A . D . 1665 circa ; ( Alother Lodge Kilwinning , No , 0 . ); 2 , The " Atcheson Haven AIS , " dated 19 th Ala ) ' , 1666 ( an extinct lodge , but the scroll is in the library of the Grand Lodge of Scotland ) ; 3 , The " Aberdeen AIS . " of A . D . 1670 ( " The

Aberdeen Lodge , No . P . " ) ; 4 , " The Melrose AIS . No . 2 , " of December , 1674 ( "The Afelrose Lodge , N ° - P " ); 5 , Thc "Melrose MS . N ° 3 , " a transcript of the fourth , made in 1762 . Practically , AVC ha \ e now ten AISS . of the " Old Charges , " traced iu North Britain , most of which exhibit proofs of their having been in the custody of the lodges named for a vory long period , some probably being so preserved from their ori gin to now .

These five , as numbered , belong the " Grand Lodgo family , according to Dr . W . Begemanivs classification , and are , in no sense , remarkable texts , save the " Melrose" version , which , in the final clauses respecting Apprentices , is certainly Avholly different to any other AIS . known . Being in all probability a copy of a Roll of 1581 , or earlier , these special rules are all the more noteworthy and valuable , and arc as folloAV : *

APPRENTICE REGULATIONS , 1074 . " V > - is no frie mason neither JI nor fellow y t ought to take any more prentises during his lifetymo but thrie , which prentises ho must take for vii years ( y t is to sa )*) The first of them seven yeire after he he frio mason , and then vii yeirs after his ycirs is expired to take another , and so yo next and y t he ought to take no more except he cause ane Lodge to be set and havo the leavo if all his

masters and fellows , of ye set Lodge and y t ye prentisc yt is so taken av lawfully taken and they y t aro otherways taken arc not lawfully takin . They that aro lawfully takin , after thoy come out of y ' prentisschipo ought not to ho name loses but they ought to ho named frio men from their M or fellows if thoy have their JI *™ Discharge and all other y * aro not lawfully takiu aro to bo namifc Loses , y ought neither JI nor fellows , make no frie mason except ono of his

lawfull prentisc nor he ought not to bc made mado frie mason except ho givo in his ( say ) before ane sett Lodge to sec what he can begin from ye ground and furnish to yo tope for staining of a noble scienc . V ' ought no frio mason neither M nor fellow y t taketh his work hy great to tak any Loses , if ho can havc any frie masons , or lawfull taken prentises , & if he can have none of them , ho may take as many as will serve his turne and hc ought not to let y"' know yo

priviledge of yo compass Square , lovell , and ye plum-rule but to sett out their plnniming to them , it let them work between y w ** a lyne , and ought not to let them know any more for putting down ye noble scienc and if there come any frio mason , ho ought to displace one of ye Loses , nnd put in his brother y t taketh worke or if v conic one of ye lawful ! taken prentices likeways , and if hc or neither

have no work for them he ought to give them money , to bring them to yo next l . odge or next frie mason , also if any . M or fellow have any lawfull taken prentices Hoe run away and Doe come there to M ** or fellow he shall sett him in worko till he can send his M word of him , and also if he pay any wages ho shall answer his M and for ye performance of these covenent . Wo Do swear , so ( iod us helpe and holv Dome and bv tho contents of this book to our power—lines . "

The " Dumfries Kilwinning MSS , " I have numbered 1 to 4 , for the purpose of identification , and according to their approximate age . Nos . 1 and 3 are given for the lirst time in Bro . Smith's welcome History ; No , 2 is herewith reproduced , and No . 4 , transcribed by Bro . John Lane , will he printed in the first part of tlic " Ars Quatuor Coronatorum " for 1803 .

No . 1 is described as "Anent lite Office of Masanric , " and is apparentl y of the latter part of the seventeenth century . The Avagcs are unusual for St . Albans' period , viz ., ' * four shillings and sixpence per week , " and some of the old worthies are uot described as they ure generall y ; still the version may be classed with the same group as tlic previous live AISS ., as the differences are but slight , which

distinguish it from the other members of that family . I do not think it was over used in the form of a roll , being written on three leaA'es of paper about 15 by 12 inches , Avhich exhibit no signs of any such treatment . No . 2 is a roll of paper ( of three pieces ) , running to nearly 4 feet in length , and 7 ** .- inches in Avidth . Unfortunately , the

commencement is imperfect , owing to portions being removed , Avhich is all the more regretted , as the few words left indicate that a prayer originall y preceded the Invocation ( peculiar lo litis copy ) , and even Avhat remains of tlie latter is not quite of tlie ordinary text . This Roll ( which has been kindly transcribed , rerlalim cl literatim , by Bro . lames Smith for reproduction ) , evidently AVIIS not so correctly copied is

¦ No . 1 ( iflneh it gem-rally resembles ) , and possibly was carelcssly inade and varied from Ihe same original , sometime during the latter part of the seventeenth century . The watermark in the paper is composed of a crown ami flour de lis , as No . 1 , but is not dated , and tlie scroll , not like No . 1 , has numbered clauses . It appears to im * that the 18 th Regulation was overlooked by the scribe in copying ; ° r may have been intentionally omitted , which is unlikely . It

The Dumfries Kilwinning Mss.

is to bo found , though nofc numbered , in tho previous AIS ., and concludes that scroll . This interesting document has not been printed hitherto . No . 3 is a valuable Roll , Avritten on vellum , the seven strips of which , joined together , extend to the extraordinary length of 14 }

feet , the Avidth ranging * from 5 to 6 inches . It is referred to in the records of Lodge No . 53 , on November 22 nd , 1696— "The qlk day , the fraternity ordered William AI'George , ye clerk , to deliver up the institutions in parchment to Robert Anderson ; " and likeAvise later on . The first thieo AISS . are about the same age , as respects transcription .

In 1882 , the " Harris AIS ., No . 1 , " was copied and published b y Bro . John Constable , and at that time was accepted as a std generis . Some six years later , Bro . John Lane and myself discovered the "Harris MS ., No . 2 , " in the British Museum , Avhich for all practical purposes may be accounted a duplicate of No . 1 , Avritten during the latter part of the last century . I now find that these

two AISS . are virtually , ' possibly actually , copies of the " Dumfries Kilwinning AIS ., No . 3 , " their ori gin being probably due to members of Lodge No . 53 , AVIIO left Dumfries for London early last century . The owner of the " Harris AIS ., No . 1 , " is the " Bedford Lodge , No . 157 , " Avhich Avas known as an operative lodge , years before its constitution b y the Grand Lodge of England in 1766 . It

is but fair to state , however , that this document Avas nofc presented to the lodge by Bro . James Harris ( according to the records ) before 1809 , thus leaving its earlier history in doubt , but I think it likely tho Secretary had received it from an older member . As to this , and other points , Bro . Smith ' s history and volume IV . of the

" Alasonic Reprints" of No . 2076 , edited by Bro . G . W . Speth , should be consulted , especially as the latter fine A-olume ( containing several complete facsimiles of AISS . ) includes an exact reproduction of the junior of tho curious trio , all of which possess features so far untraced in any other AISS .

Alany are the departures in the text of these AISS ., as compared Avith the "famil y " to Avhich they may be said to belong . Tho marginal titles alono single them out as quite a distinct variet y to themselves . Bro . Speth has pointed out the llth Regulation , Avhich in the AIS . No . 3 of Lodge No . 53 reads , " You shall not make any mould , square or rule for any Avho is but a Lewis . A Lewis is such as

served an apprenticeship to a Alason , but not admitted as ye custom of makeing Alasons " ( Freemason , 25 th August , 1888 ) : and rightly , states that " as far as wo know , the word [ Lewis ] Avas first , used Alasonically and applied to George III ., the infant son of Frederick , Prince of Wales . " B y tlie discovery of this Dumfries Roll , the use of that Avord , Alasonically , is dated back at least 50 years , and it is also used in the " Harris AIS ., No . 1 , early in the last century .

The Avords introducing the " Oath , " and also the obligation itself , are not usual in AISS . of the " Old Charges , " and should be read , sido by side ,. Avith the " Harleian , " " Buchanan , " and some other scrolls reproduced by the " Quatuor Coronati Lodge . " The

conclusion to the vellum roll concerning the " Charges yt Prince Edwin gave yo Assembly at York , " ancl instructions respecting "Tutors " are important additions , and record certain customs of the lodge during the seventeenth century , which have , more or less , continued to this clay .

No 4 ; of the "Sloane Family , " is , in some respects , the cevn of this remarkable quartette , but , historically nnd Alasonically , the third of the series is the most valuable , because evidentl y it is the roll that AVIIS in use by the members of "Dumfries Kilwinning" moro than 200 years ago ; whereas the others , though so long in lodge custody , were not , apparently , the favoured versions of the brethren .

It is quite impossible to do justice to this version , Avhich has came down to ns in book form ( 8 by 4 inches , elongated ) , Avithout reproducing nearly all its text . Until its publication early in 1893 ( as already mentioned ) , I should like simply to note some of its

peculiarities . Not a few of the additions appear to me purely fanciful , and unless other documents are found to partake of the same character , it will not do to accept such curious readings as having been in actual use by one or more lodges , for recital to initiates early last century , especially as they seem to be such modern innovations .

Like tlio preceding three , this AIS . states that marhle . Avas one of the two stones selected on which to Avrite the " Seven Sciences , '' but instead of mentioning some variety of " later " ( a brick ) as the other , styles the second " monument . " As Ave cannot say a brick " Avould not drown in water , " it is difficult to understand how a burnt tile Avonld

answer that description . Bro . Oscar Guttmann suggests that h j' -lacus" ( " la terns , " etc . ) , is meant amber , as that word is frequently to be met with in mediu-val histories of Alining , and always meant , and is so translated , as he favours . That would burn but not drown .

Thc Avagcs noted for "St . Albans' Day" were the "third part to yr payment ; " whatever that may mean . The length of the " cable tow " in regard to the annual assembly is stated to be fire miles , but the other three AISS . havo fifty , which is the ordinary distance specified . 'Ihe "William Watson , " " Hope , " * ' Waistell , " and three others agree with MS . No . 4 .

Of Hiram , the MS . says " the world hath not produced his equal to this day , he was a Alaster Mason of exquisite knowledge . " Nimrod taught the Alasons " sigrs and tokens , " so Ave are told , and such words as " duly qualified and orderly created in a true lodge , " certainly indicate a modern usage . The " Special Charges " ' end with the hitherto unknoAvn , but suggestive , injunctions " That no lodge or coram of Alasons shall give the Royal Secret to any suddenly , but upon great deliberation . First ' let him learn hi

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