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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1874
  • Page 13
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The Masonic Magazine, Jan. 1, 1874: Page 13

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    Article ANCIENT MASONIC LODGES No. 2. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY, No. 1. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 13

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Ancient Masonic Lodges No. 2.

at the lodge held June 24 th , 1756 , when a net balance Avas declared of £ 51 16 s . lOd , The following entry is made : — " Inrollments of Apprentices—James Swan bound apprentice to Patrick Mills , November , 1751 ; Edward Robinson bound apprentice to

Michael Robinson , Aprill , 1752 . " We find that these two Master Masons ( i . e . Mills and Eohinson ) Avere members of ' the lodge .

The minutes conclude Avith a statement of accounts dated "June ye 24 th , 1757 , " and mentions that tAvo shillings Avere " paid far Travelling Brother . " Whether any but operative Masons Avere admitted Ave cannot determine from the volume of records . It ii probable other than Masons Avere accepted

as members , Avhich , after all , would be nothing unusual , for gentlemen Avere received into operative lodges in the seventeenth century . Mainly , liOAvever , if not wholly , the Almvicke Ledge AA'as an operative one , and Avas for the protection of the Craft and the benefit of the Craftsmen . The question as to " Three Degrees " being

Avorked prior to A . D . 1720 , receives no additional light from these minutes . In common Avith all old Lodge Eecords that Ave have examined there is a uniform silence as to Masonic degrees of any kind , and Ave do not think that these Alnwicke Lodge Minutes are likely to prove more than

usually valuable , although , of course , these heing the earliest of their kind yet discovered in England gives them a peculiar prominence , and confers a special English value on their contents . In Scotland the fact of lodge records dating hack to 1701 is nothing uncommon .

According to the "Bombay Gazette , " " a large lumber of European , Parsee , Mahommedan and Hindoo Freemasons had tbe pleasure of witnessing 'lie presentation of a Past Master ' s Jewel , a beautiful 'ime piece with a glass dome , and a Masonic work to < V . Bro . Darasba Euttonjee Cliiclrgur , the immediate P Mof Lod ' Rising Star of AVestern

. . ge India , ' as a token of the appreciation of members of "io lodge of his services to the Craft during his year of office—1872 . The same evening the Provincial Grand Master , with his Officers , happened to ^} on an official visit to the lodge , and these , with the Masters and members of sister lodges who had been "ivitcd at the interesting proceedingsformed a

, very respectable gathering at the Scottish Masonic Hall , w . Bro . Chichgur acknowledged the presentation in f 111 appropriate address , and assured his adherence to he interests of the Craft in future years . "—Masonic ¦ Herald , Calcutta .

The Present Position Of Masonic History, No. 1.

THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY , No . 1 .

I propose from time to time to call the attention of the readers of this Magazine , to the present position of Avhat perhaps may not inaptly be termed the " Historical Question " amongst usthatso Ave may see how far Ave have

, , hitherto successfully travelled along the somewhat dusty higliAvay of our Masonic Annals . Now there are certain canons of criticism , I feel hound to lay doAvn strongly at the outset , as otherAvise Ave are but repeating in truth an "

ofttold tale ; " Ave are in our turn but handing on to others , Avhat Ave have received AAdthout consideration and investigation , from those Avho Avent before us in' our Masonic life , from our predecessors in the " Ancient and Eoyal Art "'

The first canon of criticism that I would therefore lay down to-day , Avhen we approach the Historical Question of Freemasonry is , that , Ave must not treat Freemasonry in any other Avay , than , Ave would treatthe many grave and

in-, teresting topics of historical discussion and consideration . We must not draw near the " vexata qucestio " of the Antiquity of Freemasonry , or its origin ; Avith any pre-conceived notions or favourite theories of our OAVII . We must not

sacrifice the ever great cause of historical truth , at the shrine of any false god , Avhether of sentimentalism on the one hand , or of scepticism on the other . In the next place Ave must , in treating

the subject historically and critically , really carry out the rules and regulations of historical criticism . AVe must not put forward our OAvn VIBAVS , and defend them " a l ' outrance , " unmindful of evidences which are undoubted , and

of facts which are incontestable . We must not call our treatment of so serious a subject , as the Antiquity of Freemasonry , history or criticism , and then make it a personal question or an individual theory , and then complacently assume , that , Ave are right , and that , everybody else is wrong .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-01-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01011874/page/13/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
A NEW YEAR'S GREETING. Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
THE OLD YEAR AND THE NEW YEAR. Article 5
WHEN YOUR'E DOWN. Article 6
STATISTICAL ACCOUNT OF FREEMASONRY IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Article 6
TIME'S WARNING Article 9
ANCIENT MASONIC LODGES No. 2. Article 10
THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY, No. 1. Article 13
MEMBERSHIP OF THE GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND ; WHAT IT IS AND WHAT IT OUGHT TO BE. Article 16
SILENCE AND DARKNESS. Article 23
WHAT OUR LODGES DO FOR THE CHARITIES. Article 24
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 25
TRACES OF CHAUCER. Article 26
COSMOPOLITAN MASONIC CALENDAR, DIARY AND POCKET BOOK, 1874. Article 27
Reviews. Article 27
WHAT NON-MASONS SAY.OF US. Article 28
ARTIOLE IV. Article 30
NEW YEAR'S DAY.—A MASONIC CAROL. Article 33
Monthly Odds and Ends. Article 33
Untitled Ad 34
Untitled Ad 34
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ancient Masonic Lodges No. 2.

at the lodge held June 24 th , 1756 , when a net balance Avas declared of £ 51 16 s . lOd , The following entry is made : — " Inrollments of Apprentices—James Swan bound apprentice to Patrick Mills , November , 1751 ; Edward Robinson bound apprentice to

Michael Robinson , Aprill , 1752 . " We find that these two Master Masons ( i . e . Mills and Eohinson ) Avere members of ' the lodge .

The minutes conclude Avith a statement of accounts dated "June ye 24 th , 1757 , " and mentions that tAvo shillings Avere " paid far Travelling Brother . " Whether any but operative Masons Avere admitted Ave cannot determine from the volume of records . It ii probable other than Masons Avere accepted

as members , Avhich , after all , would be nothing unusual , for gentlemen Avere received into operative lodges in the seventeenth century . Mainly , liOAvever , if not wholly , the Almvicke Ledge AA'as an operative one , and Avas for the protection of the Craft and the benefit of the Craftsmen . The question as to " Three Degrees " being

Avorked prior to A . D . 1720 , receives no additional light from these minutes . In common Avith all old Lodge Eecords that Ave have examined there is a uniform silence as to Masonic degrees of any kind , and Ave do not think that these Alnwicke Lodge Minutes are likely to prove more than

usually valuable , although , of course , these heing the earliest of their kind yet discovered in England gives them a peculiar prominence , and confers a special English value on their contents . In Scotland the fact of lodge records dating hack to 1701 is nothing uncommon .

According to the "Bombay Gazette , " " a large lumber of European , Parsee , Mahommedan and Hindoo Freemasons had tbe pleasure of witnessing 'lie presentation of a Past Master ' s Jewel , a beautiful 'ime piece with a glass dome , and a Masonic work to < V . Bro . Darasba Euttonjee Cliiclrgur , the immediate P Mof Lod ' Rising Star of AVestern

. . ge India , ' as a token of the appreciation of members of "io lodge of his services to the Craft during his year of office—1872 . The same evening the Provincial Grand Master , with his Officers , happened to ^} on an official visit to the lodge , and these , with the Masters and members of sister lodges who had been "ivitcd at the interesting proceedingsformed a

, very respectable gathering at the Scottish Masonic Hall , w . Bro . Chichgur acknowledged the presentation in f 111 appropriate address , and assured his adherence to he interests of the Craft in future years . "—Masonic ¦ Herald , Calcutta .

The Present Position Of Masonic History, No. 1.

THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY , No . 1 .

I propose from time to time to call the attention of the readers of this Magazine , to the present position of Avhat perhaps may not inaptly be termed the " Historical Question " amongst usthatso Ave may see how far Ave have

, , hitherto successfully travelled along the somewhat dusty higliAvay of our Masonic Annals . Now there are certain canons of criticism , I feel hound to lay doAvn strongly at the outset , as otherAvise Ave are but repeating in truth an "

ofttold tale ; " Ave are in our turn but handing on to others , Avhat Ave have received AAdthout consideration and investigation , from those Avho Avent before us in' our Masonic life , from our predecessors in the " Ancient and Eoyal Art "'

The first canon of criticism that I would therefore lay down to-day , Avhen we approach the Historical Question of Freemasonry is , that , Ave must not treat Freemasonry in any other Avay , than , Ave would treatthe many grave and

in-, teresting topics of historical discussion and consideration . We must not draw near the " vexata qucestio " of the Antiquity of Freemasonry , or its origin ; Avith any pre-conceived notions or favourite theories of our OAVII . We must not

sacrifice the ever great cause of historical truth , at the shrine of any false god , Avhether of sentimentalism on the one hand , or of scepticism on the other . In the next place Ave must , in treating

the subject historically and critically , really carry out the rules and regulations of historical criticism . AVe must not put forward our OAvn VIBAVS , and defend them " a l ' outrance , " unmindful of evidences which are undoubted , and

of facts which are incontestable . We must not call our treatment of so serious a subject , as the Antiquity of Freemasonry , history or criticism , and then make it a personal question or an individual theory , and then complacently assume , that , Ave are right , and that , everybody else is wrong .

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