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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1855
  • Page 14
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 1, 1855: Page 14

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Page 14

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

Untitled Article

Bunker ' s Hill , in which the Grand Master , Warren , fell , —the Prince Hall Grand Lodge of coloured Masons , in full costume , a coloured lodge of Odd Fellows , and white and coloured divisions of

Cadets of Temperance , participated in a procession of white Brethren ; and the Catalogue of Books in the Masonic Institution , adds , that the hlack Odd Fellows , and black Sons of Temperance , and all other secret societies , were doubtless bastards of the ill-reputed mother [ Freemasonry .

A petition of the free coloured people of the republic Liberia , for a dispensation to erect a Lodge in this town ( Monrovia ) , under the Grand Lodge of Columbia , slave district , was rejected , in 1851 , without stating any reasons . The requisition was signed with the name of the President and his brother . The Grand Lodge of

Connecticut , free state , found this refusal unreasonable ; meanwhile , one of the states , Mississippi , slave state , pronounces against the opinion of the former , and declares the introduction of Freemasonry amongst the coloured people a trespass upon the invariable landmarks of the

Union . The Grand Master of Texas , slave state , said , in 1852 , at the opening of the Grand Lodge : —" That all Grand Lodges of slave states seriously protest against the admittance of coloured people , and that they had to urge the withdrawal of dispensations , if such have been given , by England . "

The Grand Lodge of New Hampshire , free state , gave its opinion , in 1852 , against the severe resolution of the Grand Lodge of Illinois . " We belong , " they say , " not to those who harbour a strong prejudice for or against men of colour ; if we have an inclination , this goes from the dark to the white colour . We sympathise with pleasure with those of our'Masonic Brethren who live in circumstances

where they have to experience difficulties and trials , the consequence ef the difference of the two races . But we are so free as to confess that our Masonic doctrines point thereto ; that the whole human race , particularly in so far as it is united by the mystic ties , should be contemplated in a somewhat different light than as shown by the resolutions of the Illinois , which completely excludes the coloured

man . We do not intend to initiate in our Order a negro or mulatto ; there is no occasion for the violation of the existing and mutually accepted regulations . If , however , a negro , or mulatto , or Indian comes at the door of our Lodge , and shows that he is a working Brother Mason , accepted by a true and lawful Lodge , we shall certainly treat him as such . "We could not shut against him the door of our Lodge . "

"We find m the correspondence of the Grand Lodge of New York , free state , the following remarks : — " People of the negro race must not he accepted ; their exclusion is in harmony with the Masonic law , and with the old charges and regulations . The social condition of the coloured people is a suppressed one ; their mental capacities are few , they are generally not free-born ; it is difficult , often even impossible , to procure the certainty of the free-birth of a negro ; generally they are not men of

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-12-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01121855/page/14/.
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Title Category Page
THE SIGNS OF ENGLAND. Article 16
GERMANY. Article 55
THE MACHINERY OF SOCIAL LIFE; Article 6
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. (Concluded from page 684.) Article 10
COLOURED LODGES IN AMERICA. Article 13
THE FREEMASONS MONTHLY MAGAZINE AND THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 1
MASONIC SONGS.-No. 5 Article 20
AUTUMN. Article 20
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 21
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 29
MUSIC. Article 28
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 32
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 33
METROPOLITAN Article 34
PROVINCIAL. Article 37
THE EDITOR OF THE MASONIC MIRROR TO THE CRAFT. Article 3
FRANCE. Article 52
SCOTLAND. Article 51
COLONIAL. Article 54
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE Article 56
Obituary Article 56
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 56
SEVERANCE OF THE CANADIAN LODGES FROM THE GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 5
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Page 14

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

Untitled Article

Bunker ' s Hill , in which the Grand Master , Warren , fell , —the Prince Hall Grand Lodge of coloured Masons , in full costume , a coloured lodge of Odd Fellows , and white and coloured divisions of

Cadets of Temperance , participated in a procession of white Brethren ; and the Catalogue of Books in the Masonic Institution , adds , that the hlack Odd Fellows , and black Sons of Temperance , and all other secret societies , were doubtless bastards of the ill-reputed mother [ Freemasonry .

A petition of the free coloured people of the republic Liberia , for a dispensation to erect a Lodge in this town ( Monrovia ) , under the Grand Lodge of Columbia , slave district , was rejected , in 1851 , without stating any reasons . The requisition was signed with the name of the President and his brother . The Grand Lodge of

Connecticut , free state , found this refusal unreasonable ; meanwhile , one of the states , Mississippi , slave state , pronounces against the opinion of the former , and declares the introduction of Freemasonry amongst the coloured people a trespass upon the invariable landmarks of the

Union . The Grand Master of Texas , slave state , said , in 1852 , at the opening of the Grand Lodge : —" That all Grand Lodges of slave states seriously protest against the admittance of coloured people , and that they had to urge the withdrawal of dispensations , if such have been given , by England . "

The Grand Lodge of New Hampshire , free state , gave its opinion , in 1852 , against the severe resolution of the Grand Lodge of Illinois . " We belong , " they say , " not to those who harbour a strong prejudice for or against men of colour ; if we have an inclination , this goes from the dark to the white colour . We sympathise with pleasure with those of our'Masonic Brethren who live in circumstances

where they have to experience difficulties and trials , the consequence ef the difference of the two races . But we are so free as to confess that our Masonic doctrines point thereto ; that the whole human race , particularly in so far as it is united by the mystic ties , should be contemplated in a somewhat different light than as shown by the resolutions of the Illinois , which completely excludes the coloured

man . We do not intend to initiate in our Order a negro or mulatto ; there is no occasion for the violation of the existing and mutually accepted regulations . If , however , a negro , or mulatto , or Indian comes at the door of our Lodge , and shows that he is a working Brother Mason , accepted by a true and lawful Lodge , we shall certainly treat him as such . "We could not shut against him the door of our Lodge . "

"We find m the correspondence of the Grand Lodge of New York , free state , the following remarks : — " People of the negro race must not he accepted ; their exclusion is in harmony with the Masonic law , and with the old charges and regulations . The social condition of the coloured people is a suppressed one ; their mental capacities are few , they are generally not free-born ; it is difficult , often even impossible , to procure the certainty of the free-birth of a negro ; generally they are not men of

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