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  • April 1, 1857
  • Page 11
  • THE CANADIAN MOVEMENT.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 1, 1857: Page 11

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    Article THE CANADIAN MOVEMENT. ← Page 7 of 11 →
Page 11

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

The Canadian Movement.

between a Grand Lodge and its subordinates existing in a single state or territory , and a Grand Lodge and its subordinates existing in different countries , thousands of miles apart , and separated by an ocean . I think I can appreciate the existence of a very clear distinction between the difficulties of a few years ago with „ : the Grand Lodge of New York and a portion of her subordinate Lodges , and of those existing in 1855 befcween the Grand Lodge of England and her subordinate Lodges in Canada . In the first ease , the disaffectedLodges , in the outset , formed a part

of the Grand Lodge of New York . They were represented upon its floor , with as full privileges as to being heard as their associates ; and , if injured , with the undoubted right of renewing the consideration of the subject-matters of difference , from time to time , and of labouring to bring the majority to their views , and of convincing them by fact and argument , if they could . Thus situated , they preferred secession , and formed a new Grand Lodge for themselves . This was revolutionary beyond , doubt , and so has the Masonic world at large almost unanimously decided . But there is no fair parallel to this state of things in the case of Canada .

The subordinate Lodges of Canada had no representation in the Grand Lodge of England . They were in a state of complete and absolute dependence and pupilage . They could only appear at the door of that Grand Lodge as humble suppliants for their rights by written petition , without a single voice of their own upon its tesselated pavement to sustain and enforce their supplications . Their prayers of years were unheeded , their solicitations scorned , their injuries unredressed , and even their money taken from them without acknowledgment or notice . Are these cases analagous ? It would be the most palpable and wicked mendacity to say so . "Wrongs , such as I have named , could not be borne for ever . They left the

Canadian Lodges but a single alternative , —either to give up Masonry wholly and entirely , or to raise an independent Masonic standard , The impassable point had been reached ; the last drop of the cup of forbearance had been drained ; andunwilling to be forced from the privileges and enjoyments of the Order—they made the selection of honourable independence , and appealed to the justice of a worldwide Masonry for sanction and brotherhood . This , in my judgment , was not revolution but the exercise of a proper , necessary , and j ast right ; and the Masonic world will so decide , unless it is prepared to hold that there is not , in any case whatever , a remedy for Masonic oppression .

¦ U pon both grounds then , my Brethren , as I view this subject—of the tnhcrent right of every state , territory , or country , to establish a Grand Lodge of its own , and the right of a country holding its Masonry from a foreign source , to make a severance for unmitigated oppression—I maintain , that the independent Grand Lodge of Canada , established at Hamilton on the 10 th day of October , 1 . 855 , is legitimately and masonically established , and is entitled justly and of right to tbe sanction , countenance , and support of all the Grand Lodges in the world ;

"Within a few days after the Masonic action of the forty-one Lodges at Hamilton , the then Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of New York seems , evidently , to have become alarmed . Before the infant Grand Lodge of Canada was fairly invested with its swaddling-clothes , he appears perfectly prepared to strangle it in its cradle . Seven days only were suffered to pass before ho stigmatized many as good , men and worthy Masons as the world can elsewhere boast of , as being guilty of Masonic ' rebellion / and then sounded the old atabal alarm of ' rebellion' at home . Without taking the trouble to

distinguish between Canadian and New York ' rebellion , lie seized upon the matter—a petitio princiyvii assimilated the two unlike cases by a single dash of pen—raised from their quiet graves the long laid skeletons of ' heresy and schism , ' looked anxiously across the Atlantic to the long withheld patronizing smile winch had a few years past almost emblazoned tlie waves of old ocean in its passage i

from London to New York , and concluded that it would bo the height of ingratitude' to England to anything less than proscribe the new and independent 01 rand Lodge of Canada . The same panic alarm seized upon his Committee of Foreign Correspondence in June following . Leo the Tenth and the Cardinals of the Vatican could hardly have been more alarmed at the appearance of the new dogmas of Luther , The shadows of 'heresy and schism' triumphed , and glorious

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1857-04-01, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01041857/page/11/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
ELECTION OF GRAND MASTER. Article 1
THE CANADAS. Article 2
THE EIGHT OF REPORTING IN GRAND LODGE. Article 3
NOTICE OF GRAND LODGE BUISNESS. Article 5
THE CANADIAN MOVEMENT. Article 5
THE QUARRYMAN OF ST. POINT. Article 15
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 16
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 18
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 23
METROPOLITAN. Article 40
PROVINCIAL. Article 51
ROYAL ARCH. Article 59
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 63
THE HIGH GRADES. Article 68
MARK MASONRY. Article 68
SCOTLAND. Article 69
COLONIAL Article 75
INDIA Article 79
MASONIC FESTIVITIES Article 80
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR MARCH Article 83
MASONIC ARCHITECTURE. Article 89
Obituary. Article 90
NOTICE. Article 91
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Page 11

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

The Canadian Movement.

between a Grand Lodge and its subordinates existing in a single state or territory , and a Grand Lodge and its subordinates existing in different countries , thousands of miles apart , and separated by an ocean . I think I can appreciate the existence of a very clear distinction between the difficulties of a few years ago with „ : the Grand Lodge of New York and a portion of her subordinate Lodges , and of those existing in 1855 befcween the Grand Lodge of England and her subordinate Lodges in Canada . In the first ease , the disaffectedLodges , in the outset , formed a part

of the Grand Lodge of New York . They were represented upon its floor , with as full privileges as to being heard as their associates ; and , if injured , with the undoubted right of renewing the consideration of the subject-matters of difference , from time to time , and of labouring to bring the majority to their views , and of convincing them by fact and argument , if they could . Thus situated , they preferred secession , and formed a new Grand Lodge for themselves . This was revolutionary beyond , doubt , and so has the Masonic world at large almost unanimously decided . But there is no fair parallel to this state of things in the case of Canada .

The subordinate Lodges of Canada had no representation in the Grand Lodge of England . They were in a state of complete and absolute dependence and pupilage . They could only appear at the door of that Grand Lodge as humble suppliants for their rights by written petition , without a single voice of their own upon its tesselated pavement to sustain and enforce their supplications . Their prayers of years were unheeded , their solicitations scorned , their injuries unredressed , and even their money taken from them without acknowledgment or notice . Are these cases analagous ? It would be the most palpable and wicked mendacity to say so . "Wrongs , such as I have named , could not be borne for ever . They left the

Canadian Lodges but a single alternative , —either to give up Masonry wholly and entirely , or to raise an independent Masonic standard , The impassable point had been reached ; the last drop of the cup of forbearance had been drained ; andunwilling to be forced from the privileges and enjoyments of the Order—they made the selection of honourable independence , and appealed to the justice of a worldwide Masonry for sanction and brotherhood . This , in my judgment , was not revolution but the exercise of a proper , necessary , and j ast right ; and the Masonic world will so decide , unless it is prepared to hold that there is not , in any case whatever , a remedy for Masonic oppression .

¦ U pon both grounds then , my Brethren , as I view this subject—of the tnhcrent right of every state , territory , or country , to establish a Grand Lodge of its own , and the right of a country holding its Masonry from a foreign source , to make a severance for unmitigated oppression—I maintain , that the independent Grand Lodge of Canada , established at Hamilton on the 10 th day of October , 1 . 855 , is legitimately and masonically established , and is entitled justly and of right to tbe sanction , countenance , and support of all the Grand Lodges in the world ;

"Within a few days after the Masonic action of the forty-one Lodges at Hamilton , the then Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of New York seems , evidently , to have become alarmed . Before the infant Grand Lodge of Canada was fairly invested with its swaddling-clothes , he appears perfectly prepared to strangle it in its cradle . Seven days only were suffered to pass before ho stigmatized many as good , men and worthy Masons as the world can elsewhere boast of , as being guilty of Masonic ' rebellion / and then sounded the old atabal alarm of ' rebellion' at home . Without taking the trouble to

distinguish between Canadian and New York ' rebellion , lie seized upon the matter—a petitio princiyvii assimilated the two unlike cases by a single dash of pen—raised from their quiet graves the long laid skeletons of ' heresy and schism , ' looked anxiously across the Atlantic to the long withheld patronizing smile winch had a few years past almost emblazoned tlie waves of old ocean in its passage i

from London to New York , and concluded that it would bo the height of ingratitude' to England to anything less than proscribe the new and independent 01 rand Lodge of Canada . The same panic alarm seized upon his Committee of Foreign Correspondence in June following . Leo the Tenth and the Cardinals of the Vatican could hardly have been more alarmed at the appearance of the new dogmas of Luther , The shadows of 'heresy and schism' triumphed , and glorious

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