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all alike to be sacrificed to personal consideration or private interests of any kind whatever . Depend upon it tho authoritcs will take good care that all qualified members of Grand Lodge can vote freely , comfortably , and conscientiously . # *•* ** #

SEVERAL of our . correspondents in re the Election of Grand 1 reasurer seem to have got into a " fog- " on the question , and to be writing beside the mark . They confuse , according to our views , the privilege of public choice and thc propriety of private selection . No one disputes or can dispute the absolute legal rig ht of members of Grand Lodge to put forward

any duly qualified candidate for thc olfice of Grand Treasurer . The law allows it , and the annual election proves it . But a contrariety of opinion may exist as to the advisability and fitness of any select circle adopting any particular brother and " naming him" for Grand Treasurership , because it leads to inevitable imitation . No one indeed can allege

that such procedure is absolutely " contre leges , " though they may doubt its befittingness and good form . And therefore we think it well to make this remark once for all . The Freemason publishes the views and ideas of both sides in the controversy , as a truthful record of passing events interesting to the Craft , and , as a "Masonic paper , is neutral , as indeed it

must be from the necessity of the case , in the discussion , allowing the friends of the respective candidates fair play and a full hearing . ' All that it does seek to " bar " and object to are expressions of an " animus " which seem to overpass the wise and safe limits of Masonic forbearance , equity , and good feeling .

* * A PROOF of the value of the new rule that country petitioner ' s cases to the Lodge of Benevolence must be reported on by the Grand Secretaries of their respective provinces was shown on Wednesday last . These reports lessened both thc work and the responsibility of the Board , and the members were able to deal with the cases in a most satisfactory manner .

* » WE call attention to the review of the report of the Grand Lodge of Nova Scotia elsewhere , by which it would seem that in that far off jurisdiction they have a " free and easy , " " rough and ready " way of measuring the needs and value of Masonic membership . A

companion after apparently 17 years' secession from his chapter is declared by that chapter , on the payment of a sum of six dollars , never to have surrendered his membership , and to be ns real a member of thc chapter as those companions who have faithfully paid their subscriptions . We cannot

understand such a paradoxical position , and are not surprised that the Grand First Principal objects to such a state of things . It is this very laxity of Masonic membership which does so much harm to Freemasonry whereever it is permitted to exist .

• • • WE congratulate our good brethren in Scotland on " moving on " in the great cause of Masonic Charity . To enlarge their actual donations to deserving cases , and to create some subsidiary institutions would , we venture to think , react with singular good effect on Scottish

Freemasonry . It is not necessary , 111 order to grant annuities to decayed Freemasons and their Widows , to help to educate thc sons and daughters of Scottish Freemasons , to erect great buildings , neither need they run into great office expenses . A Board of Education might manage one division , a Board of Relief might manage the other . They might effect

in Scotland what is done in Lancashire and Cheshire and elsewhere pay for the schooling nnd board of thc children at thc schools near their homes , and grant annuities to Aged Freemasons and their Widows as the money comes in . There are no doubt two sides to this , as to any question under thc sun , but taking everything into account " pro and con , " it seems clear to

us that Freemasonry , to be consistent with Us own professions and to be perfectly developed , must carry out the golden precepts both of theoretical and practical charity ! . We hope too before long , however unpopular at first ,

the Grand Lodge of Scotland will enforce an annual subscription of some amount to each lodge by its members . As a tentative measure the compulsory " subscription " may be small at [ first , but the recognition of the principle itself will , we feel sure , both advantage nnd vitalize Scottish Freemasonry . »*»

WE are immensely amused by the following paragraph from the Rough Ashlar oi Adelaide , January 30 th , 1884 * . " Referring to the unpleasantnesses that have arisen between the Grand Lodges of England and Canada , several brethren in the cities of London and Liverpool ( England ) , by way of showing their sympathy with the Canadian Grand Lodge , are said to have

applied to that Grand Lodge for warrants to open lodges in London and Liverpool to work under the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodgeof Canada . Of course this is just as constitutional as for lodges in Canada , which has a Grand Lodge of its own , to be established under the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of England . " The Scribe must we think be very ignorant of

the feelings or practice of English brethren . Wc are struck by the audacity of the references to the Grand Lodge of Canada , which has no grievance whatever , and which originally made an open and deliberate concordat with the Grand Lodge of England in regard to the loyal English edges . We fancy there is a mistake somewhere .

* * # Wr . observe that a movement is making headway for an independent Giand Lodge of South Australia , but are astonished to find officials of the District Grand Lodge countenancing and heading such a movement . We agree with Bro . ROBERTS that there is not the slightest call for or justification of the movement . We shall recur to the subject more fully next week .

Seventeenth Century Masonry.

SEVENTEENTH CENTURY MASONRY .

It seems to us that for some reason or other sufficient store is not placed by many on the reality of seventeenth century Masonry , which , according to our views , is now historically before us , and which , though somewhat still in haze and dimness , will ere long be looked at and , let us hope , realized in fuller and clearer light . It always was a " Crux " for Masonic writers , and which they attempted to get over in various ways , why

Freemasonry should seem to start into ncw life and existence in 1717 , and yet that all evidence of it as an organized body was apparently wanting before 1700 . The admission of Ashmole into the Order in 1646 was known , and the meeting of that lodge in 1682 was recorded , but they were casual incidents some thought , isolated facts others

contended , and with little bearing on the current of general Masonic , history . But true criticisms can never long be silenced , or its canons safely neglected , and as facts have accumulated and evidences have multiplied , we have , undoubtedly , to deal with seventeenth century Freemasonry , and a very curious and difficult problem it is , after all , to solve .

1 . First of all , —we yet know about it only "in part . " We await still clearer " indicix " and more direct testimony before we can safely decide or discuss its main features , its undoubted outcome .

2 . But though this be so , there are certainly salient points in respect ol it which we cannot afford lo overlook or despise any longer , and which , though not conclusive so far , seem to point as a sign-post to what we may yet expect to be entirely and certainly before us . 3 . We begin then with this proposition—a seventeenth century

Freemasonry existed , and we prove it in this way . Ashmole ' s initiation tells us that he was admitted , as is clear , into a regularly organized system , and if it then existed in 1646 , we arc not stretching the laws of evidence or inference too far when we say the same system must have existed in or about 1600 .

Mr . Wallbran always said that the archaisms of the Sloane MS . " Freemasons' Secrets " were before the middle of the seventeenth century , and though its actual transcription is probably about 1715 , yet remembering Plot ' s evidence , to which we shall allude later , it is not too much to assume that that consummate judge of old English was right , and lhat wc have in it a representation of thc symbolical teaching of early seventeenth century

Freemasonry . Passing on from 16 46 to 1682 , we learn that in that year Ashmole received a " summons " to attend a lodge in London , so that a form of summons was then in use . Mis language is somewhat obscure , especially in his use of the word " fellow , " but an initiation took place of several candidates . To make the chain of sequence still more complete , wc ought to have alluded to Bro . Ryland ' s very able papers about Randle

Holmes , by which it clearly appears that he fully recognized the difference between the City Company and the Society of Freemasons , and that thc Harleian MS ., which is among thc Chester papers , belonged to a lodge at Chester , and that we have there a portion of the minutes of thc lodge . In 1686 Dr . Plot made a statement concerning Freemasonry in his " History of Staffordshire " which is an exact description of our Masonic

system still , as regards its speculative character , and no onc can doubt who reads thc words of this non-Masonic writer that he describes a system akin to our own . Thc MS . of the Lodge of Antiquity is another " missing link , " as it contains thc name of Bro . Padgett , who was Clerk to the Society of Freemasons , but was not , it is asserted , a member of thc Masons'

Company . We have traces ofa lodge at Vork in 1690 , at Alnwick in 1705 and which must necessarily be earlier even , at Swalwell , the Lodge of St . Paul ' s , now the Antiquity , and then , in 1717 , the old Masons revive the Order . I leave out hore thc consideration of the mention of Freemasons , or the use of the coat-of-arms and other points , as they are only collateral issues .

There are two further important points connected with seventeenth century Masonry to which we must shortly allude . What is thc exact force of the 1942 Harleian MS . Wc have always felt that it is a very important " factor " in the question , though Oliver by his uncritical and hasty use of it did much to discredit its authority and impair its value . If thc authorities of the British Museum arc correct , it is before 1663 . If so it

rather , as we see it , strengthens the argument we have been submitting for thc existence of a seventeenth century Masonry , and would , if really of early date in the seventeenth century , give the sanction of the Craft to . 1 system which wc apprehend had been creeping on all over thc country , from the suppression of the Guilds in the first or second year of the reign of Edward VI . The question of the connection of Inigo Jones and . Sir Christopher Wren

with our Order cannot be left unnoticed . There arc many difficulties about both admittedly , but on the whole we are strongly of opinion that the Masonic tradition in each case is true . Anderson ' s silence in 1723 is certainly a very difficult matter to explain , but it is quite possible that as time was precious , the 1723 Constitutions , which seem to bear on their face the marks of hurry and incompleteness , were solely issued to meet a

passing need of some authoritative publication , and were always intended to be preparatory to a fuller and more careful compilation . If Sir Christopher Wren is represented in this frontispiece it would confirm the old tradition , though the apparent ignoring of Sir Christopher Wren by the Grand Lodge is another severe difficulty , Dermott ' s later explanation , if unverified , no

doubt lends force tothe arguments of those who deny Sir Christopher Wren ' s Masonic claims as Grand Master . Those who doubt Anderson ' s assertions in 1738 must go further , for there is no " via media . " His statements are either true or untrue ; he either invented these " facts " or had access to MSS . unknown to us .

The use of the coat-of-arms is a very curious fact , which has never yet been satisfactorily explained . The arms were granted to the Masons' Company in the reign of Edward IV ., and were used by Guilds of Freemasons up and down thc country . Dermott declares that Leon Judah , the learned Rabbi of Modena , ( a real personage ) , left these arms on his papers , and that he

exhibited a plan of the Temple about 1680 , ( a fact ) , and we have seen a panel , which is believed to be seventeenth century work , with these identical arms . The }' , no doubt , may have belonged to a Guild . Thus there are four coats-of-arms for us to deal with—the old grant b y Benolt , the form published by Dermott , the York arms of Edwin , and the coat-of-arms finally approved of at the Union ,

“The Freemason: 1884-02-23, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_23021884/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY MASONRY. Article 2
CONSECRATION OF THE GRANITE LODGE, No. 2028, AT NARBOROUGH. Article 3
BOARD OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 3
LODGE DUTIES. Article 3
CONSECRATION OF THE GODSON MARK LODGE, No. 33°, AT KIDDERMINSTER. Article 5
A NEW MARK LODGE FOR THE LONDON DISTRICT. Article 5
OPENING OF A NEW ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER OF INSTRUCTION. Article 5
PRESENTATION TO A PRECEPTOR. Article 5
ANNUAL SOIREE OF THE CALEDONIAN LODGE AT MANCHESTER. Article 5
EXTRACT FROM THE RECENT ADDRESS OF THE GRAND MASTER OF QUEBEC. Article 5
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
To Correspondents. Article 6
THE FREEMASON Article 6
REVIEWS. Article 8
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 8
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 8
INSTRUCTION. Article 11
ROYAL Arch. Article 12
Mark Masonry. Article 12
Knights Templar. Article 12
New Zealand. Article 12
Obituary. Article 13
THE THEATRES. Article 13
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 14
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Ar00200

all alike to be sacrificed to personal consideration or private interests of any kind whatever . Depend upon it tho authoritcs will take good care that all qualified members of Grand Lodge can vote freely , comfortably , and conscientiously . # *•* ** #

SEVERAL of our . correspondents in re the Election of Grand 1 reasurer seem to have got into a " fog- " on the question , and to be writing beside the mark . They confuse , according to our views , the privilege of public choice and thc propriety of private selection . No one disputes or can dispute the absolute legal rig ht of members of Grand Lodge to put forward

any duly qualified candidate for thc olfice of Grand Treasurer . The law allows it , and the annual election proves it . But a contrariety of opinion may exist as to the advisability and fitness of any select circle adopting any particular brother and " naming him" for Grand Treasurership , because it leads to inevitable imitation . No one indeed can allege

that such procedure is absolutely " contre leges , " though they may doubt its befittingness and good form . And therefore we think it well to make this remark once for all . The Freemason publishes the views and ideas of both sides in the controversy , as a truthful record of passing events interesting to the Craft , and , as a "Masonic paper , is neutral , as indeed it

must be from the necessity of the case , in the discussion , allowing the friends of the respective candidates fair play and a full hearing . ' All that it does seek to " bar " and object to are expressions of an " animus " which seem to overpass the wise and safe limits of Masonic forbearance , equity , and good feeling .

* * A PROOF of the value of the new rule that country petitioner ' s cases to the Lodge of Benevolence must be reported on by the Grand Secretaries of their respective provinces was shown on Wednesday last . These reports lessened both thc work and the responsibility of the Board , and the members were able to deal with the cases in a most satisfactory manner .

* » WE call attention to the review of the report of the Grand Lodge of Nova Scotia elsewhere , by which it would seem that in that far off jurisdiction they have a " free and easy , " " rough and ready " way of measuring the needs and value of Masonic membership . A

companion after apparently 17 years' secession from his chapter is declared by that chapter , on the payment of a sum of six dollars , never to have surrendered his membership , and to be ns real a member of thc chapter as those companions who have faithfully paid their subscriptions . We cannot

understand such a paradoxical position , and are not surprised that the Grand First Principal objects to such a state of things . It is this very laxity of Masonic membership which does so much harm to Freemasonry whereever it is permitted to exist .

• • • WE congratulate our good brethren in Scotland on " moving on " in the great cause of Masonic Charity . To enlarge their actual donations to deserving cases , and to create some subsidiary institutions would , we venture to think , react with singular good effect on Scottish

Freemasonry . It is not necessary , 111 order to grant annuities to decayed Freemasons and their Widows , to help to educate thc sons and daughters of Scottish Freemasons , to erect great buildings , neither need they run into great office expenses . A Board of Education might manage one division , a Board of Relief might manage the other . They might effect

in Scotland what is done in Lancashire and Cheshire and elsewhere pay for the schooling nnd board of thc children at thc schools near their homes , and grant annuities to Aged Freemasons and their Widows as the money comes in . There are no doubt two sides to this , as to any question under thc sun , but taking everything into account " pro and con , " it seems clear to

us that Freemasonry , to be consistent with Us own professions and to be perfectly developed , must carry out the golden precepts both of theoretical and practical charity ! . We hope too before long , however unpopular at first ,

the Grand Lodge of Scotland will enforce an annual subscription of some amount to each lodge by its members . As a tentative measure the compulsory " subscription " may be small at [ first , but the recognition of the principle itself will , we feel sure , both advantage nnd vitalize Scottish Freemasonry . »*»

WE are immensely amused by the following paragraph from the Rough Ashlar oi Adelaide , January 30 th , 1884 * . " Referring to the unpleasantnesses that have arisen between the Grand Lodges of England and Canada , several brethren in the cities of London and Liverpool ( England ) , by way of showing their sympathy with the Canadian Grand Lodge , are said to have

applied to that Grand Lodge for warrants to open lodges in London and Liverpool to work under the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodgeof Canada . Of course this is just as constitutional as for lodges in Canada , which has a Grand Lodge of its own , to be established under the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of England . " The Scribe must we think be very ignorant of

the feelings or practice of English brethren . Wc are struck by the audacity of the references to the Grand Lodge of Canada , which has no grievance whatever , and which originally made an open and deliberate concordat with the Grand Lodge of England in regard to the loyal English edges . We fancy there is a mistake somewhere .

* * # Wr . observe that a movement is making headway for an independent Giand Lodge of South Australia , but are astonished to find officials of the District Grand Lodge countenancing and heading such a movement . We agree with Bro . ROBERTS that there is not the slightest call for or justification of the movement . We shall recur to the subject more fully next week .

Seventeenth Century Masonry.

SEVENTEENTH CENTURY MASONRY .

It seems to us that for some reason or other sufficient store is not placed by many on the reality of seventeenth century Masonry , which , according to our views , is now historically before us , and which , though somewhat still in haze and dimness , will ere long be looked at and , let us hope , realized in fuller and clearer light . It always was a " Crux " for Masonic writers , and which they attempted to get over in various ways , why

Freemasonry should seem to start into ncw life and existence in 1717 , and yet that all evidence of it as an organized body was apparently wanting before 1700 . The admission of Ashmole into the Order in 1646 was known , and the meeting of that lodge in 1682 was recorded , but they were casual incidents some thought , isolated facts others

contended , and with little bearing on the current of general Masonic , history . But true criticisms can never long be silenced , or its canons safely neglected , and as facts have accumulated and evidences have multiplied , we have , undoubtedly , to deal with seventeenth century Freemasonry , and a very curious and difficult problem it is , after all , to solve .

1 . First of all , —we yet know about it only "in part . " We await still clearer " indicix " and more direct testimony before we can safely decide or discuss its main features , its undoubted outcome .

2 . But though this be so , there are certainly salient points in respect ol it which we cannot afford lo overlook or despise any longer , and which , though not conclusive so far , seem to point as a sign-post to what we may yet expect to be entirely and certainly before us . 3 . We begin then with this proposition—a seventeenth century

Freemasonry existed , and we prove it in this way . Ashmole ' s initiation tells us that he was admitted , as is clear , into a regularly organized system , and if it then existed in 1646 , we arc not stretching the laws of evidence or inference too far when we say the same system must have existed in or about 1600 .

Mr . Wallbran always said that the archaisms of the Sloane MS . " Freemasons' Secrets " were before the middle of the seventeenth century , and though its actual transcription is probably about 1715 , yet remembering Plot ' s evidence , to which we shall allude later , it is not too much to assume that that consummate judge of old English was right , and lhat wc have in it a representation of thc symbolical teaching of early seventeenth century

Freemasonry . Passing on from 16 46 to 1682 , we learn that in that year Ashmole received a " summons " to attend a lodge in London , so that a form of summons was then in use . Mis language is somewhat obscure , especially in his use of the word " fellow , " but an initiation took place of several candidates . To make the chain of sequence still more complete , wc ought to have alluded to Bro . Ryland ' s very able papers about Randle

Holmes , by which it clearly appears that he fully recognized the difference between the City Company and the Society of Freemasons , and that thc Harleian MS ., which is among thc Chester papers , belonged to a lodge at Chester , and that we have there a portion of the minutes of thc lodge . In 1686 Dr . Plot made a statement concerning Freemasonry in his " History of Staffordshire " which is an exact description of our Masonic

system still , as regards its speculative character , and no onc can doubt who reads thc words of this non-Masonic writer that he describes a system akin to our own . Thc MS . of the Lodge of Antiquity is another " missing link , " as it contains thc name of Bro . Padgett , who was Clerk to the Society of Freemasons , but was not , it is asserted , a member of thc Masons'

Company . We have traces ofa lodge at Vork in 1690 , at Alnwick in 1705 and which must necessarily be earlier even , at Swalwell , the Lodge of St . Paul ' s , now the Antiquity , and then , in 1717 , the old Masons revive the Order . I leave out hore thc consideration of the mention of Freemasons , or the use of the coat-of-arms and other points , as they are only collateral issues .

There are two further important points connected with seventeenth century Masonry to which we must shortly allude . What is thc exact force of the 1942 Harleian MS . Wc have always felt that it is a very important " factor " in the question , though Oliver by his uncritical and hasty use of it did much to discredit its authority and impair its value . If thc authorities of the British Museum arc correct , it is before 1663 . If so it

rather , as we see it , strengthens the argument we have been submitting for thc existence of a seventeenth century Masonry , and would , if really of early date in the seventeenth century , give the sanction of the Craft to . 1 system which wc apprehend had been creeping on all over thc country , from the suppression of the Guilds in the first or second year of the reign of Edward VI . The question of the connection of Inigo Jones and . Sir Christopher Wren

with our Order cannot be left unnoticed . There arc many difficulties about both admittedly , but on the whole we are strongly of opinion that the Masonic tradition in each case is true . Anderson ' s silence in 1723 is certainly a very difficult matter to explain , but it is quite possible that as time was precious , the 1723 Constitutions , which seem to bear on their face the marks of hurry and incompleteness , were solely issued to meet a

passing need of some authoritative publication , and were always intended to be preparatory to a fuller and more careful compilation . If Sir Christopher Wren is represented in this frontispiece it would confirm the old tradition , though the apparent ignoring of Sir Christopher Wren by the Grand Lodge is another severe difficulty , Dermott ' s later explanation , if unverified , no

doubt lends force tothe arguments of those who deny Sir Christopher Wren ' s Masonic claims as Grand Master . Those who doubt Anderson ' s assertions in 1738 must go further , for there is no " via media . " His statements are either true or untrue ; he either invented these " facts " or had access to MSS . unknown to us .

The use of the coat-of-arms is a very curious fact , which has never yet been satisfactorily explained . The arms were granted to the Masons' Company in the reign of Edward IV ., and were used by Guilds of Freemasons up and down thc country . Dermott declares that Leon Judah , the learned Rabbi of Modena , ( a real personage ) , left these arms on his papers , and that he

exhibited a plan of the Temple about 1680 , ( a fact ) , and we have seen a panel , which is believed to be seventeenth century work , with these identical arms . The }' , no doubt , may have belonged to a Guild . Thus there are four coats-of-arms for us to deal with—the old grant b y Benolt , the form published by Dermott , the York arms of Edwin , and the coat-of-arms finally approved of at the Union ,

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