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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • July 1, 1904
  • Page 17
  • Lodge St. David, No. 36, Edinburgh.
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The Masonic Illustrated, July 1, 1904: Page 17

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    Article Lodge St. David, No. 36, Edinburgh. ← Page 2 of 3 →
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Lodge St. David, No. 36, Edinburgh.

green for the Grand Officers . Bro . F . J . W . Crowe , who is an authority on this point , considers that the colour was selected because of the Thistle ; England choosing a special shade of blue to represent the Garter . There is much to favour this view of the matter .

BY-LAWS OF THE LODGE . The earliest " Regulations and Bye-Laws " of the lodge were agreed to 16 th May , 173 8 , which are reproduced in the latest cop } - of the by-laws ( 1902 . ) They have a pleasant flavour of antiquity and provided for unanimous election of

candidates . Only such Fellow Crafts could be raised to the degree of Master Mason " as ye Right Worshipfull thinks proper , " and any brother who was heard to swear , on testimony of two witnesses , was liable to a line , " besides a rebuke from the chair . " The jewels and furniture were

not to be exposed to strangers " without a dispensation from the lodge . " The " officer" of the lodge was required to attend " precisely at the stroke of ye hour appointed by the Master , and there shall set up an half-hour glass , and when the glass is run then the roll shall be called . " This was to discover

the " absents " or unpunctual members , who were lined in due course . I was fortunate to purchase and present to the members , through the R . W . M ., a copy of the lodge by-laws of 1757 , believed to be the earliest preserved printed code in Scotland . The rules are very like those of 1738 , and

were referred in the minutes of the lodge so late as 18 3 8 , concerning a printed copy and report of a committee of 1758 , which are in the " Signet Library . " The roll of members of the Lodge St . David is of a remarkable character , and so likewise is the " List of Right Worshipful Masters" from the year 173 8 , the latter being

given in the " Scottish Masonic Historical Directory" for 1904 . The crowning distinction , however , of the lodge , is that SIR WALTER SCOTT , the great novelist , selected " St . David , " No . 3 6 , in which to be initiated ; other poets also first seeing the " light" under its auspices , such as Hector McNeil , in 176 9 ( Author of " My Boy , Tammy , " ) and Henry Scott Riddell , in 1827 ( Author of "Scotland Yet . " )

NOBLE BRETHREN- . Of several distinguished members may be cited the Rt . Hon . the Earl of Leven and Melville , M . W . Grand Master of Scotland , 1759-60 ( R . W . M . 1758 ) ; the Rt . Hon . Lord Forbes , the R . W . M . in 177 8 , and M . W . Grand Master ,

A . D . 1754 ; Sir James Stirling , Bart ., Lord Provost of Edinburgh , M . W . Grand Master , 1798-9 ; the Rt . Hon . Earl of Dalkeith ( afterwards Duke of Buccleuch ) , M . W . Grand Master , iSoo-r ; the Rt . Hon . the Earl of Strathmore , and others . Lord Frederick Fit / . Clarence , M . W . Grand Master , 1841-2 , was elected an honorary member on 30 th November , 1841 .

On the 9 th January , 1760 , the Rt . Hon . Lord Aberdour , who was then the M . W . Grand Master of England , was present

as a visitor . His lordship occupied the thrones of the Grand Lodges of England and Scotland , A . D . i 757 " 6 r aild 1755-6

respectively , and later on became the Earl of Morton .

From June 24 th , 1745 , THE SEAL OF THE LODGE . to 27 th December , 1746 , " no meetings were held upon account of the Forty-five Rebellion , " but that slack period was soon made up by an inilux of candidates . In 1754 alone , over one hundred names were accepted , of whom 92 were initiated , including MR . WALTER

SCOTT , W . S ., the father of the " Wizard of the North , " and DR . ERASMUS DARWI . V , " physician , physiologist , and poet , the grandfather of CHARLES DARWIX , the naturalist . "

Bro . Walter Scott , W . S ., was an enthusiastic Craftsman and as S . W . of the lodge , was one of a "leet" of three in the ballot for R . W . M ., but not elected . He occasionally presided in the absence of the R . W . M ., and signed the minutes so late as 1785 .

THE LODGE CERTIFICATE . Naturally the " mother lodge" and her vigorous offspring were on the most intimate terms , and on 12 th May , 1756 , an " act of union" was proposed of an elaborate character , which meant , briefly , that the brethren of " Lodge

Canongate from Leith" were to be assumed members of " St . David , " and rice versa , which was agreed to before the expiration of that year . It was believed by some that the senior was actually united to the junior organization . This was an error , for so late as 1778 the parent lodge was

represented by a visitor . An entry , however , of 1799 is misleading , which states that a Bro . Fyfee was assumed an lion , member , who belonged originally to the lodge at Leith , " incorporated with St . David ' s many years ago . " The references in the minutes to the " Royal Order of

Scotland" are numerous and interesting , especially so considering the early period at which they begin . On the 19 th June , 1764 , it is recorded" We were visited on this occr . sion by the Rt . Worshipfull Br . Mitchell and a number of

brethren of the Royal Order /// plain chilling . " Doubtless this was the Bro . William Mitchell , to whom a charter was granted in 1750 as the head of the Order at the Hague , and whilst the headquarters were in London ; the constitution of the new organization for the " seven united

provinces" talcing place at the " Golden Horse-Shoe " in Cannon Street , Southwark , on the 22 nd July of that year , accordingly .

It is not likely that Bro . Mitchell returned to the Hague , as he presided at several meetings convened clown to 1777 as D . G . M . and Governor . His successor was Bro . James Kerr , a writer of Edinburgh , who joined the Lodge St . David in 1754 by petition , in which it is declared " he was admitted a Mason in the Lodge of Lanark in the year 1734 . " The members agreed to the affiliation , but considered that as it

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1904-07-01, Page 17” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01071904/page/17/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
United Grand Lodge of England. Article 2
Annual Festival of the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys. Article 2
Installation of the Provincial Grand Master of Devon. Article 5
installation Meeting of the Lodge of Amity No. 171. Article 6
The New Past Grand Officers. Article 7
Consecration of the Semper Vigilans Lodge, No. 3040. Article 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Aldershot Military Mark Loage, No. 54. Article 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Masonic Journalism Article 12
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 13
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 15
Lodge St. David, No. 36, Edinburgh. Article 16
Untitled Ad 18
Untitled Ad 18
Untitled Ad 18
Some Memorials of the Globe Lod ge,No. 23, and of the "Red Apron." Article 19
Bro. D. Canakia, Dist. G. Sec.Burma. Article 22
Untitled Ad 22
Killarney Lodge, No. 360 (T.C.), Cape Town. Article 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 24
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Lodge St. David, No. 36, Edinburgh.

green for the Grand Officers . Bro . F . J . W . Crowe , who is an authority on this point , considers that the colour was selected because of the Thistle ; England choosing a special shade of blue to represent the Garter . There is much to favour this view of the matter .

BY-LAWS OF THE LODGE . The earliest " Regulations and Bye-Laws " of the lodge were agreed to 16 th May , 173 8 , which are reproduced in the latest cop } - of the by-laws ( 1902 . ) They have a pleasant flavour of antiquity and provided for unanimous election of

candidates . Only such Fellow Crafts could be raised to the degree of Master Mason " as ye Right Worshipfull thinks proper , " and any brother who was heard to swear , on testimony of two witnesses , was liable to a line , " besides a rebuke from the chair . " The jewels and furniture were

not to be exposed to strangers " without a dispensation from the lodge . " The " officer" of the lodge was required to attend " precisely at the stroke of ye hour appointed by the Master , and there shall set up an half-hour glass , and when the glass is run then the roll shall be called . " This was to discover

the " absents " or unpunctual members , who were lined in due course . I was fortunate to purchase and present to the members , through the R . W . M ., a copy of the lodge by-laws of 1757 , believed to be the earliest preserved printed code in Scotland . The rules are very like those of 1738 , and

were referred in the minutes of the lodge so late as 18 3 8 , concerning a printed copy and report of a committee of 1758 , which are in the " Signet Library . " The roll of members of the Lodge St . David is of a remarkable character , and so likewise is the " List of Right Worshipful Masters" from the year 173 8 , the latter being

given in the " Scottish Masonic Historical Directory" for 1904 . The crowning distinction , however , of the lodge , is that SIR WALTER SCOTT , the great novelist , selected " St . David , " No . 3 6 , in which to be initiated ; other poets also first seeing the " light" under its auspices , such as Hector McNeil , in 176 9 ( Author of " My Boy , Tammy , " ) and Henry Scott Riddell , in 1827 ( Author of "Scotland Yet . " )

NOBLE BRETHREN- . Of several distinguished members may be cited the Rt . Hon . the Earl of Leven and Melville , M . W . Grand Master of Scotland , 1759-60 ( R . W . M . 1758 ) ; the Rt . Hon . Lord Forbes , the R . W . M . in 177 8 , and M . W . Grand Master ,

A . D . 1754 ; Sir James Stirling , Bart ., Lord Provost of Edinburgh , M . W . Grand Master , 1798-9 ; the Rt . Hon . Earl of Dalkeith ( afterwards Duke of Buccleuch ) , M . W . Grand Master , iSoo-r ; the Rt . Hon . the Earl of Strathmore , and others . Lord Frederick Fit / . Clarence , M . W . Grand Master , 1841-2 , was elected an honorary member on 30 th November , 1841 .

On the 9 th January , 1760 , the Rt . Hon . Lord Aberdour , who was then the M . W . Grand Master of England , was present

as a visitor . His lordship occupied the thrones of the Grand Lodges of England and Scotland , A . D . i 757 " 6 r aild 1755-6

respectively , and later on became the Earl of Morton .

From June 24 th , 1745 , THE SEAL OF THE LODGE . to 27 th December , 1746 , " no meetings were held upon account of the Forty-five Rebellion , " but that slack period was soon made up by an inilux of candidates . In 1754 alone , over one hundred names were accepted , of whom 92 were initiated , including MR . WALTER

SCOTT , W . S ., the father of the " Wizard of the North , " and DR . ERASMUS DARWI . V , " physician , physiologist , and poet , the grandfather of CHARLES DARWIX , the naturalist . "

Bro . Walter Scott , W . S ., was an enthusiastic Craftsman and as S . W . of the lodge , was one of a "leet" of three in the ballot for R . W . M ., but not elected . He occasionally presided in the absence of the R . W . M ., and signed the minutes so late as 1785 .

THE LODGE CERTIFICATE . Naturally the " mother lodge" and her vigorous offspring were on the most intimate terms , and on 12 th May , 1756 , an " act of union" was proposed of an elaborate character , which meant , briefly , that the brethren of " Lodge

Canongate from Leith" were to be assumed members of " St . David , " and rice versa , which was agreed to before the expiration of that year . It was believed by some that the senior was actually united to the junior organization . This was an error , for so late as 1778 the parent lodge was

represented by a visitor . An entry , however , of 1799 is misleading , which states that a Bro . Fyfee was assumed an lion , member , who belonged originally to the lodge at Leith , " incorporated with St . David ' s many years ago . " The references in the minutes to the " Royal Order of

Scotland" are numerous and interesting , especially so considering the early period at which they begin . On the 19 th June , 1764 , it is recorded" We were visited on this occr . sion by the Rt . Worshipfull Br . Mitchell and a number of

brethren of the Royal Order /// plain chilling . " Doubtless this was the Bro . William Mitchell , to whom a charter was granted in 1750 as the head of the Order at the Hague , and whilst the headquarters were in London ; the constitution of the new organization for the " seven united

provinces" talcing place at the " Golden Horse-Shoe " in Cannon Street , Southwark , on the 22 nd July of that year , accordingly .

It is not likely that Bro . Mitchell returned to the Hague , as he presided at several meetings convened clown to 1777 as D . G . M . and Governor . His successor was Bro . James Kerr , a writer of Edinburgh , who joined the Lodge St . David in 1754 by petition , in which it is declared " he was admitted a Mason in the Lodge of Lanark in the year 1734 . " The members agreed to the affiliation , but considered that as it

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