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  • April 1, 1878
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The Masonic Magazine, April 1, 1878: Page 7

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    Article EARLY FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 7

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

Early Freemasonry In Ireland.

EARLY FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND .

BY AVILLIAM JAMES HUGHAN . Dedicated to the R . W . Bro . James Homer Neilson , of Dublin . ONLY quite recently attention has been again draAvn to the early history of Freemasonry in Irelandby the happy discovery through my friend and BrotherJ .

, , H . Neilson , of the old Records of the " Hig h Knight Templar ' s Lodge , " Dublin , which , though chartered as a Craft Lodge by the ancient " Mother Kilwinning , " soon struck out an independent path of its OAVU , and worked the " high degrees . " These Minutes , however , only refer to the latter part of the last century , but it is to a period at least sixty years earlier that our remarks have to do , about AA'hich but little seems to be known , and that little not having as yet received the attention it deserves .

The best book on the subject Ave have ever read is one HOAV before us , kindly forwarded for our perusal by the R . W . Brother Neilson . It is entitled " Historieo-Masonic Tracts , " and is by "Robert Milliken , R . A . M ., H . K . T ., KM ., 4 c . " Cork , 1848 . There is a deal of fanciful Avriting in it , but Avhen the author conies to . deal Avith the actual history of Freemasonry in Ireland , he speaks either from personal knowledge or from the testimony of those who took part in many of the proceedings narrated , and who were knoAvn to him . Bro . Milliken himself Avas initiated about 1790 , and Avhen

57 years a Mason , aud in the 80 th year of his age , addressed the work in cpiestion " To the Freemasons of Ireland . " - In speaking of the Province of Munster , Bro . Milliken says : " This Grand Lodge granted Warrants , ancl performed all the functions of a National Grand Lodge , perhaps from necessity , on the cessation of a superior poAver . " The fact is , its origin is uncertain , but in our opinion was clue to the action of certain members of the premier Grand Lodge of England ( of A . D . 1717 celebrity ) . The Records came into Bro . Milliken's

possession about the year 1824 , having received them as a present from Bro . the Rev . James Pratt , Rector of Ovens Parish , who had bought them , Avith other old books , at an auction . They were presented by our Brother soon afterwards to Brother Justin McCarth y , "then Deputy to the Earl of Shannon , Provincial Grand Master of Munster ; and contains Transactions of the Provincial Grand Lodge , and of No . 1 , the first Lodge of Ireland . " It appears that "from the last date in the Transaction Book to the next document as yet discovered , bearing date 1769 , there is a lapse of about forty years , " excepting a Minute of a Committee of No .- 1 of the year 1761 , formed to investigate the validity of that old Lodge , Avhich had been called in question , so Ave are told , by some Dublin Brethren . " The Committee was held at the instance of the

brand Secretary , John Calder , Avho also at the same time laid before the Committee a charge against Lodge 95 . " The Brethren ( composed of the Masters and Wardens of nine Lodges ) declared the Warrant of No . 1 to be valid , and confirmed the members of No . 95 in their privileges . The " mal-practices " of No . 95 " it is supposed had reference to the initiation of the Hon . Mrs . Aldworth , who became a Mason in that Lodge . This Lodge must have held very high rank—Avhen the early respectability of Lodges is

considered—her brothers , members of a noble family , and her husband , equally high in societ y , being members . Mrs . Alchvorth presented No . 95 , her parent Lodge , a chair of elegant construction , the first Masonic chair seen in Cork , Avhich is still in Cork . " Bro . Milliken is , we think , in error as to the reason for the Committee being appointed in 1761 , as Mrs . Aldworth must have been initiated before 1744 , we having discovered the name of our Sister amongst the list of subscribers to Dr . Dassigny ' s '' Enquiry " of that year ( 1744 ) , all the rest of the many subscribers being Brethren . The work itself is very scarce , the only known copy being UOAV in the magnificent library of the Hon ,

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-04-01, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 March 2023, masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01041878/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
IMPORTANT CIRCULAR. Article 1
Untitled Article 2
SONNET. Article 3
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 4
EARLY FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND. Article 7
THE CHAMBER OF IMAGERY. Article 10
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 11
PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID. Article 13
In Memoriam. Article 17
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 18
FROM IDEALITY TO NATURE. Article 24
THE TRUE MASON. Article 25
AMABEL VAUGHAN. Article 26
"VALE PONTIFEX MAXIME!" Article 30
JILTED. Article 34
ON THE TESTING AND STRENGTH OF RAILWAY MATERIALS, &c. Article 35
MORITZ GRAF VON STRACHWITZ. Article 40
STANZAS. Article 41
LEBENSANSICHT. Article 42
A SONNET. Article 43
DU GEHEST DAHIN. Article 43
A PRAHLEREI. Article 43
I WOULD I WERE A POET. Article 44
GERMANIA. Article 44
THE TRUE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. Article 45
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 47
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Page 7

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

Early Freemasonry In Ireland.

EARLY FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND .

BY AVILLIAM JAMES HUGHAN . Dedicated to the R . W . Bro . James Homer Neilson , of Dublin . ONLY quite recently attention has been again draAvn to the early history of Freemasonry in Irelandby the happy discovery through my friend and BrotherJ .

, , H . Neilson , of the old Records of the " Hig h Knight Templar ' s Lodge , " Dublin , which , though chartered as a Craft Lodge by the ancient " Mother Kilwinning , " soon struck out an independent path of its OAVU , and worked the " high degrees . " These Minutes , however , only refer to the latter part of the last century , but it is to a period at least sixty years earlier that our remarks have to do , about AA'hich but little seems to be known , and that little not having as yet received the attention it deserves .

The best book on the subject Ave have ever read is one HOAV before us , kindly forwarded for our perusal by the R . W . Brother Neilson . It is entitled " Historieo-Masonic Tracts , " and is by "Robert Milliken , R . A . M ., H . K . T ., KM ., 4 c . " Cork , 1848 . There is a deal of fanciful Avriting in it , but Avhen the author conies to . deal Avith the actual history of Freemasonry in Ireland , he speaks either from personal knowledge or from the testimony of those who took part in many of the proceedings narrated , and who were knoAvn to him . Bro . Milliken himself Avas initiated about 1790 , and Avhen

57 years a Mason , aud in the 80 th year of his age , addressed the work in cpiestion " To the Freemasons of Ireland . " - In speaking of the Province of Munster , Bro . Milliken says : " This Grand Lodge granted Warrants , ancl performed all the functions of a National Grand Lodge , perhaps from necessity , on the cessation of a superior poAver . " The fact is , its origin is uncertain , but in our opinion was clue to the action of certain members of the premier Grand Lodge of England ( of A . D . 1717 celebrity ) . The Records came into Bro . Milliken's

possession about the year 1824 , having received them as a present from Bro . the Rev . James Pratt , Rector of Ovens Parish , who had bought them , Avith other old books , at an auction . They were presented by our Brother soon afterwards to Brother Justin McCarth y , "then Deputy to the Earl of Shannon , Provincial Grand Master of Munster ; and contains Transactions of the Provincial Grand Lodge , and of No . 1 , the first Lodge of Ireland . " It appears that "from the last date in the Transaction Book to the next document as yet discovered , bearing date 1769 , there is a lapse of about forty years , " excepting a Minute of a Committee of No .- 1 of the year 1761 , formed to investigate the validity of that old Lodge , Avhich had been called in question , so Ave are told , by some Dublin Brethren . " The Committee was held at the instance of the

brand Secretary , John Calder , Avho also at the same time laid before the Committee a charge against Lodge 95 . " The Brethren ( composed of the Masters and Wardens of nine Lodges ) declared the Warrant of No . 1 to be valid , and confirmed the members of No . 95 in their privileges . The " mal-practices " of No . 95 " it is supposed had reference to the initiation of the Hon . Mrs . Aldworth , who became a Mason in that Lodge . This Lodge must have held very high rank—Avhen the early respectability of Lodges is

considered—her brothers , members of a noble family , and her husband , equally high in societ y , being members . Mrs . Alchvorth presented No . 95 , her parent Lodge , a chair of elegant construction , the first Masonic chair seen in Cork , Avhich is still in Cork . " Bro . Milliken is , we think , in error as to the reason for the Committee being appointed in 1761 , as Mrs . Aldworth must have been initiated before 1744 , we having discovered the name of our Sister amongst the list of subscribers to Dr . Dassigny ' s '' Enquiry " of that year ( 1744 ) , all the rest of the many subscribers being Brethren . The work itself is very scarce , the only known copy being UOAV in the magnificent library of the Hon ,

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