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  • Aug. 2, 1862
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 2, 1862: Page 8

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 2 of 3
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Page 8

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

Sussex , Moira , Frederick , Zetland , and Robert Burns and in this country , with Washington , La Fayette , Clinton , Franklin , and Clay . Care must , however , be taken that no name be selected except of one who is both a Mason and has distinguished himself either by services to his country , to the world , or to the Order . Oliver says that "the most appropriate titles are those which are assumed from the names of some ancient benefactor

or ineritorius individual who was a native of the place where the lodge is held ; as , in a city , the builder of the cathedral church . " In this country we are , it is true , precluded from a selection from such a source ; but there are to be found some of those old benefactors of Freemasonry , who , like Shakespeare and Milton , or Homer ancl Virgil , have ceased to belong to any particular country , and have now become the common property of

the whole world-wide Craft . There are , for instance , Carausius , tbe first royal patron of Masonry iu England , ancl St . Alban , the first Grand . Master , and Athelstane ancl Prince Edwin , both active encouragers of the art , in the same kingdom ; there are Wykeham , Gundulph , G-ift ' ard , Langham , Yevele ( called in the old records the king ' s Freemason ) , and Chicheley , Jermyn , ancl Wren , all illustrious Grand Masters of England , each of whom would be well entitled to the honour of giving a name to a

lodge , and any one of whom would bo better , more euphonious and more spirit-stirring than the unmeaning ancl often-times crabbed sound of some obscure village or post-office , from which too many of our lodges derive their titles . " And then , again , among the great benefactors to Masonic literature and labourers in Masonic science , there are such names as Anderson , Dunckerley , Preston , Hutchinson , and hosts of others , who , though dead , still live by their writings iu our

memories . " The virtues and tenets , the inculcation and practice of which constitute an important part of the Masonic system , form very excellent and appropriate names for lodges , and have always been exceedingly popular among correct Masonic nonienclators Thus we everywhere find such names of lodges as Charity Concord , Equality , Faith , Fellowship , Friendship , Harmony , Hope , Humility , Mystic Tie , Relief , Truth , Union and Virtue . Frequently by tlie transposition of the word ' Lodge' ancl the destructive appellation , with the interposition of the preposition

' of , ' a moro sonorous ancl emphatic namo is given by our English and European brethren , although the custom is bufc rarely followed in this country . I would that it were oftener done . Thus we have by this method the Loclge of Regularity , the Lodge of Fidelity , the Lodge of Industry , and the Loclge of Prudent Brethren , in England ¦ ancl in France , the Lodge of Benevolent Friends , the Lodge of Perfect Union of Perseverance , and the Lodge of the Friends of Peace . In this country

, I recollect at present but- two lodges named according to this method , and those are the Lodge of Strict Observance ancl the Lodge of True Brotherhood , both situated in South Carolina . There may be mora , but as I have already said , the custom has not been generally pursued by American Masons . "As the names of illustrious men will sometimes stimulate the members of the lodges which bear them to an emulation of

their characters , so the names of the Masonic virtues may serve to incite the brethren to their practice , lest the inconsistency of their name and their conduct should excite the ridicule of the world ; for it has been well observed that , ' if the members of a loclge dedicated to Friendship or Harmony be notoriously at variance with each other ; if the brethren of a Lodge of Fidelity , he , in practice , unfaithful to every trust ; if a Lodge called

Social Union be distinguished by bickerings and disputes ; or of Good Faith by defrauding or swindling their neighbours what can be expected to result from such anomalies but disorder amongthemselves and unpopularity in the world ; their own character will be compromised , the lodge disgraced , and Freemasonry , which ought to be the vehicle of perfect friendship , will become a bye-word and a reproach in the estimation of all good and

worthy men . "Another fertile aud appropriate source of names for lodges is to be found in the symbols ancl implements of tho Order . Hence we frequently meet with such titles as Level , Trowel , Rising Star , Rising Sun , Olive Branch , Evergreen , Doric , Ionic , Corinthian , Delta , and in London , Corner Stone Lodges . Acacia is one of the most common and at the same time the most

beautiful of these symbolic names ; but unfortunately , through gross ignorance , it is often corrupted into Cassia , an insignificant plant which has no Masonic or symbolic meaning . "An important rule in the nomenclature of lodges , and one which must at once recommend itself to every person of taste , is

Masonic Notes And Queries.

that the name should be euphonious . This principle of euphony has been too little attended to in the selection of even geographical names in this country , where names of impracticable sound or with ludicrous associations are often affixed to our toUms ancl rivers . Speaking of a certain island with the incommunicable name of 'Scio , ' Lieber says , ' if Homer himself were born on such an islandit could not become immortalfor the

, , best disposed scholar would be unable to remember the name / ancl he thinks that it was no trifling obstacle to the fame of many Polish heroes in the revolution of that country , that they had names ivhich left upon the mind of foreigners no effect but that of utter confusion . An error like this must always be avoided in bestowing a name upon a lodge . The word selected should be soft , vocal—not too long nor too short—and above all ,

be accompanied in its sound or meaning by no low , indecorous , or ludicrous association . For this reason I should reject such names of lodges as Sheboygan and Oconomowoe from the registry of Wisconsin , because of the uncouthness of the sound ; and Rough and Ready and Indian Diggings from that of California , on account of the ludicrous associations which these names convey . AgainPythagoras Lodge is preferable to Pthagorean

, y ancl Archimedes is better than Archimedean , because the noun is more euphonious and more easily pronounced than the adjective . But this rule it is difficult to illustrate or enforce , for after all , euphony is a mere matter of taste , - and we all know the adage , ' de qustibm . '

"Afew negative rules , ivhich are , however , easily deduced from the affirmative ones already given , will complete the topic . No name of a lodge should be adopted which is not in some way connected with Masonry . Every body will acknowledge that Morgan Loclge ivould be an anomaly , and that Cowan Lodge would , if possible , be worse . But there are some names ivhich , although not quite as had as these , are on principle equally objectionable . Why should any of our lodges , for

instance , assume , as many of them have , the names of Madison , Jelferson , or Taylor , since none of these distinguished men were Masons , or patrons of the Craft ? " The indiscriminate use of the names of Saints , unconnected with Masonry , is for a similar reason objectionable . Besides our patrons , St . John the Baptist ancl St . John the Evangelist , I remember but two other saints who can lay any claim to Masonic honour , and these are St . Alban , who introduced or is said to

have introduced the Order into England , ancl has heen liberally complimented in the nomenclature of lodges ; ancl St . Swithin , who was at the head of the Craft in the reign of Ethelwolf , but after whom I do nofc think a single lodge was ever named . But St . Mark , St . Luke , or St . Andrew , all of whom have given names to lodges in numerous lists before me , can have no pretensions to assist as sponsors in these Masonic ^ bap tisms , since they were not afc all connected with the Graft , ancl the use of their names has rather a tendency tojgive a sectarian character hi the institution .

" To the Indian names of lodges there is a radical objection . It is true that these names are often very euphonious and always significant , for the Indians are tasteful and ingenious hi their selection of names , much more so indeed than the whites who borrow from them ; but their significance has nothing to do with Masonry . * The Father of the Waters' is a profoundly poetic name in the original Indian tongue , now represented by the word Mississippiancl beautifully expresses tho name of

, that majestic river which pursues its long course of three thousand miles from beyond the lakes to the gulf , receiving in its stately progress , all its mighty children to its bosom ; but the same name has no significance whatever when applied to a loclge . Mississippi , as the name of a river , has a meaning and an appropriate one , too ; as the name of a loclge it has none , or a wholly inappropriate one . Such namethereforeas Chnlahoma

, , , Tehopeka , Tuscarawas , or Keosauqua , mellifluous as some of them are in sound , I ivould reject , because , if they have an appropriate meaning , scarcely any one knows what it is , and ifc it is much more probable that they have no appropriate meaning at all . The Indian names of rivers , mountains , and towns , I ivould preserve because they are the memorials of the original owners of the soilbut the Indians have no such claims upon

, Masonry . " There is , in the jurisdiction of New York , a Manhattan Lodge ; now I have been told that in the aboriginal language Manhattan means " the place where wo all got drunk , " and the island was so called because it was there that the savages first met the white men ancl tasted to excess their "fire water . " Ifc is nofc difficult , 1 think , to decide whether a name with such

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-08-02, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_02081862/page/8/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE PROPOSED APPROPRIATION OF THE PROPERTY FOR MASONIC PURPOSES. Article 1
KABBALISM, SECRET SOCIETIES , AND MASONRY. Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
ANCIENT RECORDS AMISSING. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
METROPOLITAN. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
COLONIAL. Article 12
TURKEY. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 15
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Sussex , Moira , Frederick , Zetland , and Robert Burns and in this country , with Washington , La Fayette , Clinton , Franklin , and Clay . Care must , however , be taken that no name be selected except of one who is both a Mason and has distinguished himself either by services to his country , to the world , or to the Order . Oliver says that "the most appropriate titles are those which are assumed from the names of some ancient benefactor

or ineritorius individual who was a native of the place where the lodge is held ; as , in a city , the builder of the cathedral church . " In this country we are , it is true , precluded from a selection from such a source ; but there are to be found some of those old benefactors of Freemasonry , who , like Shakespeare and Milton , or Homer ancl Virgil , have ceased to belong to any particular country , and have now become the common property of

the whole world-wide Craft . There are , for instance , Carausius , tbe first royal patron of Masonry iu England , ancl St . Alban , the first Grand . Master , and Athelstane ancl Prince Edwin , both active encouragers of the art , in the same kingdom ; there are Wykeham , Gundulph , G-ift ' ard , Langham , Yevele ( called in the old records the king ' s Freemason ) , and Chicheley , Jermyn , ancl Wren , all illustrious Grand Masters of England , each of whom would be well entitled to the honour of giving a name to a

lodge , and any one of whom would bo better , more euphonious and more spirit-stirring than the unmeaning ancl often-times crabbed sound of some obscure village or post-office , from which too many of our lodges derive their titles . " And then , again , among the great benefactors to Masonic literature and labourers in Masonic science , there are such names as Anderson , Dunckerley , Preston , Hutchinson , and hosts of others , who , though dead , still live by their writings iu our

memories . " The virtues and tenets , the inculcation and practice of which constitute an important part of the Masonic system , form very excellent and appropriate names for lodges , and have always been exceedingly popular among correct Masonic nonienclators Thus we everywhere find such names of lodges as Charity Concord , Equality , Faith , Fellowship , Friendship , Harmony , Hope , Humility , Mystic Tie , Relief , Truth , Union and Virtue . Frequently by tlie transposition of the word ' Lodge' ancl the destructive appellation , with the interposition of the preposition

' of , ' a moro sonorous ancl emphatic namo is given by our English and European brethren , although the custom is bufc rarely followed in this country . I would that it were oftener done . Thus we have by this method the Loclge of Regularity , the Lodge of Fidelity , the Lodge of Industry , and the Loclge of Prudent Brethren , in England ¦ ancl in France , the Lodge of Benevolent Friends , the Lodge of Perfect Union of Perseverance , and the Lodge of the Friends of Peace . In this country

, I recollect at present but- two lodges named according to this method , and those are the Lodge of Strict Observance ancl the Lodge of True Brotherhood , both situated in South Carolina . There may be mora , but as I have already said , the custom has not been generally pursued by American Masons . "As the names of illustrious men will sometimes stimulate the members of the lodges which bear them to an emulation of

their characters , so the names of the Masonic virtues may serve to incite the brethren to their practice , lest the inconsistency of their name and their conduct should excite the ridicule of the world ; for it has been well observed that , ' if the members of a loclge dedicated to Friendship or Harmony be notoriously at variance with each other ; if the brethren of a Lodge of Fidelity , he , in practice , unfaithful to every trust ; if a Lodge called

Social Union be distinguished by bickerings and disputes ; or of Good Faith by defrauding or swindling their neighbours what can be expected to result from such anomalies but disorder amongthemselves and unpopularity in the world ; their own character will be compromised , the lodge disgraced , and Freemasonry , which ought to be the vehicle of perfect friendship , will become a bye-word and a reproach in the estimation of all good and

worthy men . "Another fertile aud appropriate source of names for lodges is to be found in the symbols ancl implements of tho Order . Hence we frequently meet with such titles as Level , Trowel , Rising Star , Rising Sun , Olive Branch , Evergreen , Doric , Ionic , Corinthian , Delta , and in London , Corner Stone Lodges . Acacia is one of the most common and at the same time the most

beautiful of these symbolic names ; but unfortunately , through gross ignorance , it is often corrupted into Cassia , an insignificant plant which has no Masonic or symbolic meaning . "An important rule in the nomenclature of lodges , and one which must at once recommend itself to every person of taste , is

Masonic Notes And Queries.

that the name should be euphonious . This principle of euphony has been too little attended to in the selection of even geographical names in this country , where names of impracticable sound or with ludicrous associations are often affixed to our toUms ancl rivers . Speaking of a certain island with the incommunicable name of 'Scio , ' Lieber says , ' if Homer himself were born on such an islandit could not become immortalfor the

, , best disposed scholar would be unable to remember the name / ancl he thinks that it was no trifling obstacle to the fame of many Polish heroes in the revolution of that country , that they had names ivhich left upon the mind of foreigners no effect but that of utter confusion . An error like this must always be avoided in bestowing a name upon a lodge . The word selected should be soft , vocal—not too long nor too short—and above all ,

be accompanied in its sound or meaning by no low , indecorous , or ludicrous association . For this reason I should reject such names of lodges as Sheboygan and Oconomowoe from the registry of Wisconsin , because of the uncouthness of the sound ; and Rough and Ready and Indian Diggings from that of California , on account of the ludicrous associations which these names convey . AgainPythagoras Lodge is preferable to Pthagorean

, y ancl Archimedes is better than Archimedean , because the noun is more euphonious and more easily pronounced than the adjective . But this rule it is difficult to illustrate or enforce , for after all , euphony is a mere matter of taste , - and we all know the adage , ' de qustibm . '

"Afew negative rules , ivhich are , however , easily deduced from the affirmative ones already given , will complete the topic . No name of a lodge should be adopted which is not in some way connected with Masonry . Every body will acknowledge that Morgan Loclge ivould be an anomaly , and that Cowan Lodge would , if possible , be worse . But there are some names ivhich , although not quite as had as these , are on principle equally objectionable . Why should any of our lodges , for

instance , assume , as many of them have , the names of Madison , Jelferson , or Taylor , since none of these distinguished men were Masons , or patrons of the Craft ? " The indiscriminate use of the names of Saints , unconnected with Masonry , is for a similar reason objectionable . Besides our patrons , St . John the Baptist ancl St . John the Evangelist , I remember but two other saints who can lay any claim to Masonic honour , and these are St . Alban , who introduced or is said to

have introduced the Order into England , ancl has heen liberally complimented in the nomenclature of lodges ; ancl St . Swithin , who was at the head of the Craft in the reign of Ethelwolf , but after whom I do nofc think a single lodge was ever named . But St . Mark , St . Luke , or St . Andrew , all of whom have given names to lodges in numerous lists before me , can have no pretensions to assist as sponsors in these Masonic ^ bap tisms , since they were not afc all connected with the Graft , ancl the use of their names has rather a tendency tojgive a sectarian character hi the institution .

" To the Indian names of lodges there is a radical objection . It is true that these names are often very euphonious and always significant , for the Indians are tasteful and ingenious hi their selection of names , much more so indeed than the whites who borrow from them ; but their significance has nothing to do with Masonry . * The Father of the Waters' is a profoundly poetic name in the original Indian tongue , now represented by the word Mississippiancl beautifully expresses tho name of

, that majestic river which pursues its long course of three thousand miles from beyond the lakes to the gulf , receiving in its stately progress , all its mighty children to its bosom ; but the same name has no significance whatever when applied to a loclge . Mississippi , as the name of a river , has a meaning and an appropriate one , too ; as the name of a loclge it has none , or a wholly inappropriate one . Such namethereforeas Chnlahoma

, , , Tehopeka , Tuscarawas , or Keosauqua , mellifluous as some of them are in sound , I ivould reject , because , if they have an appropriate meaning , scarcely any one knows what it is , and ifc it is much more probable that they have no appropriate meaning at all . The Indian names of rivers , mountains , and towns , I ivould preserve because they are the memorials of the original owners of the soilbut the Indians have no such claims upon

, Masonry . " There is , in the jurisdiction of New York , a Manhattan Lodge ; now I have been told that in the aboriginal language Manhattan means " the place where wo all got drunk , " and the island was so called because it was there that the savages first met the white men ancl tasted to excess their "fire water . " Ifc is nofc difficult , 1 think , to decide whether a name with such

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