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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • July 1, 1874
  • Page 14
  • EARLY HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN AMERICA.
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1874: Page 14

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    Article EARLY HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN AMERICA. ← Page 7 of 10 →
Page 14

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Early History Of Freemasonry In America.

pleased to nominate and appoint a Provincial G . M . of the said provinces Now know ye , that Ave have nominated , ordained , constituted , and appointed , and do by these presents nominate , ordain , constitute , and appoint our R . AV .

and well-beloved Brother , the said Daniel Cox , Provincial Grand Master of the said provinces of New York , New Jersey , and Pennsylvania , Avith full poAver and authority to nominate and appoint his Deputy Grand Master

and Grand Wardens for the space of two years from the Feast of St . John the Baptist now next ensuing , after which time it is our Avill and pleasure , and we do hereby ordain that the brethren AVIIO do now resideor AVIIO may

, hereafter reside , in all or any of the said provinces shall , and they are hereby empoAvered every other year on the Feast of St . John tho Baptist to elect a Provincial Grand Master

who shall have the power of nominating and appointing his Deputy G . M . and Grand Wardens . And Ave do hereby empoAver our said Provincial Grand Master , and the Grand Master , Deputy Grand Master , and Grand Wardens for

the time being , for us and in our place and stead to constitute the brethren ( Free and Accepted Masons ) now residing , or AVIIO shall hereafter reside in those parts into one or more regular lodge or lodges , as he shall think lit , and

as often as occasion shall require . . . And lastly , Ave will and require that our said Provincial G . M " ., and the G . M . for the time being or his Deputy , do annually cause the brethren to keep the Feast of St . John the Evangelist

, and dine together on that day , and . . do recommend a general charity to be established for the relief of poor brethren of the said province .

" Given under our hand and seal of office at London , this fifth dav of June , 1730 , and of Masonry 5730 . " " [ The Italics are mine . ] NOAV COX , under this deputation , undoubtedly , as Provincial G . M . of New York , NeAV Jersey , and Pennsylvania ,

warranted the first lodges in Pennsylvania , in the same year hi which bis deputation Avas granted , and these lodges Avere the ones which Franklin ' s paper of December , 1730 , asserts Avere then in existence ; and , under the same

authority , given in the subsequent part of the deputation , tAvo years after the date ( June 5 , 1730 ) the brethren in any of the said provinces Avere empowered to elect a Provincial G . M ., which , as Franklin ' s paper of June 26 ,

1732 , states , the brethren in the province of Pennsylvania did , on June 24 , 1732 , the very earliest day Avithin their poAver , being at the close of the two years mentioned in Cox ' s deputation . All of these facts are borne out by the Masonic authority under Avhich they arose . No strained construction is

necessary . There Avas the deputation , on record in England , and actually issued ; there were the subordinate lodges and the Grand Lodge in Pennsylvania—public facts noticed in conteniporaneous newspapers , whose authenticity cannot be questioned—both were links in the same chain , and the evidence of both no reasonable man

can doubt . It has heretofore generally bean taken for granted , that because Cox made no return to the Grand Lodge of England of his having Avarranted any lodges , that therefore none Avere Avarranted ,

and his deputation Avas practically inoperative . But , as Grand Secretary Clark of the Grand Lodge of England , on April 10 , 1863 , wrote to the Historical Committee of Massachusetts : "At the period Avhen he ( Cox ) Avas

appointed , it ivas a rare thing for any reports to be made by the Provincial Grand Masters abroad of their doings . Brief details came in once or twice from Bengal , but I find none from any other foreign country . " This does aAvay Avith the objection that no returns meant no Avork .

Bear this fact in mind also—Cox ashed for his deputation ; it was not thrust upon him ; and it is fair to suppose that , after having received it he

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-07-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071874/page/14/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
PREFACE. Article 2
INDEX. Article 4
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 6
MYSTIC SYMBOLS. Article 7
THE MASON'S GRAVE. Article 7
EARLY HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN AMERICA. Article 8
THE OLD MASONIC POEM. Article 18
MONSIEUR LE BARON. Article 20
THE NEW MORALITY. Article 23
THE BROKEN EMBLEM. Article 24
THE MYSTERY. Article 31
DISPERSION OF LANGUAGE. Article 32
THE BRICKLAYER. Article 33
Review. Article 34
AN ELEPHANT HUNT IN SIAM. Article 34
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Early History Of Freemasonry In America.

pleased to nominate and appoint a Provincial G . M . of the said provinces Now know ye , that Ave have nominated , ordained , constituted , and appointed , and do by these presents nominate , ordain , constitute , and appoint our R . AV .

and well-beloved Brother , the said Daniel Cox , Provincial Grand Master of the said provinces of New York , New Jersey , and Pennsylvania , Avith full poAver and authority to nominate and appoint his Deputy Grand Master

and Grand Wardens for the space of two years from the Feast of St . John the Baptist now next ensuing , after which time it is our Avill and pleasure , and we do hereby ordain that the brethren AVIIO do now resideor AVIIO may

, hereafter reside , in all or any of the said provinces shall , and they are hereby empoAvered every other year on the Feast of St . John tho Baptist to elect a Provincial Grand Master

who shall have the power of nominating and appointing his Deputy G . M . and Grand Wardens . And Ave do hereby empoAver our said Provincial Grand Master , and the Grand Master , Deputy Grand Master , and Grand Wardens for

the time being , for us and in our place and stead to constitute the brethren ( Free and Accepted Masons ) now residing , or AVIIO shall hereafter reside in those parts into one or more regular lodge or lodges , as he shall think lit , and

as often as occasion shall require . . . And lastly , Ave will and require that our said Provincial G . M " ., and the G . M . for the time being or his Deputy , do annually cause the brethren to keep the Feast of St . John the Evangelist

, and dine together on that day , and . . do recommend a general charity to be established for the relief of poor brethren of the said province .

" Given under our hand and seal of office at London , this fifth dav of June , 1730 , and of Masonry 5730 . " " [ The Italics are mine . ] NOAV COX , under this deputation , undoubtedly , as Provincial G . M . of New York , NeAV Jersey , and Pennsylvania ,

warranted the first lodges in Pennsylvania , in the same year hi which bis deputation Avas granted , and these lodges Avere the ones which Franklin ' s paper of December , 1730 , asserts Avere then in existence ; and , under the same

authority , given in the subsequent part of the deputation , tAvo years after the date ( June 5 , 1730 ) the brethren in any of the said provinces Avere empowered to elect a Provincial G . M ., which , as Franklin ' s paper of June 26 ,

1732 , states , the brethren in the province of Pennsylvania did , on June 24 , 1732 , the very earliest day Avithin their poAver , being at the close of the two years mentioned in Cox ' s deputation . All of these facts are borne out by the Masonic authority under Avhich they arose . No strained construction is

necessary . There Avas the deputation , on record in England , and actually issued ; there were the subordinate lodges and the Grand Lodge in Pennsylvania—public facts noticed in conteniporaneous newspapers , whose authenticity cannot be questioned—both were links in the same chain , and the evidence of both no reasonable man

can doubt . It has heretofore generally bean taken for granted , that because Cox made no return to the Grand Lodge of England of his having Avarranted any lodges , that therefore none Avere Avarranted ,

and his deputation Avas practically inoperative . But , as Grand Secretary Clark of the Grand Lodge of England , on April 10 , 1863 , wrote to the Historical Committee of Massachusetts : "At the period Avhen he ( Cox ) Avas

appointed , it ivas a rare thing for any reports to be made by the Provincial Grand Masters abroad of their doings . Brief details came in once or twice from Bengal , but I find none from any other foreign country . " This does aAvay Avith the objection that no returns meant no Avork .

Bear this fact in mind also—Cox ashed for his deputation ; it was not thrust upon him ; and it is fair to suppose that , after having received it he

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