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  • June 15, 1861
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  • FREEMASONRY IN THE UNITED STATES.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasonry In The United States.

FREEMASONRY IN THE UNITED STATES .

LONDON , SATTJBDAT , JUNE 15 , 1861 .

It is no part of our duty to interfere in the politics of any country ; on the contrary , we are strictly prohibited from doing so ; hut no man , be he Mason or be he not , can have AA'atehed the events in America during the past sis months Avithout emotion and interest ; and hoiv these

events are telling on our Order is too truly before us , when one Masonic paper tells us that it is compelled to reduce its size from , the falling off in its circulation in the Southern states ; and another , the one which we believe took the lead of all the Masonic publications in the

United States admits that , so great has been the decline in its circulation , that it will require the utmost exertions on the part of its friends to sustain it ; and this , too , before hostilities , which we still hope may be happily averted , had commenced , or the demon of war

had taken such strong hold of the people as recent accounts would lead us to believe . Ofthe feeling existing amongst our Anierican brethren the following extract from a private letter we have received from a distinguished brother in Pennsylvania speaks volumes : —

"A few weeks ago ifc was thought there ivould be a settlement of the pending difficulties . ... It noiv appears as if the strong arm alone is to settle our differences . AA'hat the issue Avill be none but the Omniscient can foresee . A state of things similar to those existing here never existed in any country . There is no reliance to be placed upon the telegraph or newspaper reports . Before this reaches you the strife may have commenced , and , once begun , there

will be no end left us short of complete subjugation . It may bo a war of extermination . The picture before us is a bad one ; nay , it is horrid to contemplate . And yet God in His wisdom may preserve us still from a fratricidal war . Heaven grant it !"

Having thus introduced the painful subject to our readers , we ivill proceed to lay before them some eloquent remarks of Comp . Parke , the Grand High Priest ofthe Grand Royal Arch Chapter of Pennsylvania , as to the duty of Masons , delivered at the annual meeting on December 27 , when matters had only begun to assume the menacing aspect they noiv bear : —

"Companions—In the building ofthe first temple at Jerusalema symbol of our Order— ' there was neither hammer , nor axe , nor any tool of iron heard in the house while it was in building . ' No sounds discordant , nothing to prevent or jar upon the harmony of the Craft was alloived upon that holy mount . Even so do the rules of Masonry prohibit the introduction of party politics or sectarian reliious questions within our halls , as calculated to engender strife

g and stir up bitter feelings ; to arouse ambition and other emotions interfering with the siveet harmony and concord that should ever reign therein . "But JIasonry is not only piety , but patriotism . Its teachings , its spirit , and its influence tend to the highest welfare of the state or country in Avhich Jlasons reside . A bad citizen can never be a good JIason . He AVIIO is not faithful to his country will be

treacherous to his brethren . He ivho violates the UAVS of the land will not be particular as to his adherence to the landmarks or rules of our Order , ivhich , among other things , enjoin upon us 'to be peaceable citizens , and cheerfully to conform to the laws of the country in ivhich we reside—not to be concerned in plots and conspiracies against government , but patiently to submit to the decisions of the Supreme Legislature . ' AVe are members of a great Brotherhood . AA'hatever , therefore , comes home to us , or

befiils our country , liaving a direct connection with the peace and safety of ourselves and families , or the welfare and happiness of our brethren , commands onr attention and interest as Jlasons and citizens . Looking out , then , from our Grand Chapter , upon our country at present , ivhat answer can he given to the question , 'Watchman , Ai'hafc of the night ?' "An alarmlike a fire-bell at nihtis sounding throughout our

, g , land , so loudly as to reach our sacred and peaceful halls . It proclaims in tones not to be disregarded , that om-country is in danger . That this Union , the ivork of our fathers , cemented at the first with their blood , and consecrated hy a thousand hallowed associations , is about to be rent asunder ; its fragments , the scorn and contempt of nations , ivho have hitherto regarded it— ' the wonder of the world—an example to be copied . ' That States which have

hitherto revolved in harmony around a common centre , are about to leave their orbit , and either stand out alone in space , or so rush against each other , as to make foes of those who have been pledged as brothers . This threatened peril is not to be disregarded . It justifies , if not calls for an appeal from this place , to the patriotism and fraternal feeling of our Order ; of all ivho cherish the memory of our fathers , and ivho love our race . "American Alasonry ivas born of pure and noble parentage , and rocked in fche cradle of our country ' s revolutionary struggleIts

. walls , like those of the holy city in the days of Zerubbabel , have been roared in troublous times . She has met ivith persecution , calumny , and reproach ; stood against the storm and the tempest , and outlived the sirocco , ivhich , a feiv years since , sivept its poisoned breath over our land , leaving friendships ruined and morals corrupted in its trail . The roil of her membership contains the names of many of the greatest men and purest patriots that this or

anyother country has ever produced . A large number of the signers of our Declaration of Independence , the officers of our Revolutionary army , and the framers of our inimitable National Constitution , were brethren of AVashingtou , Franklin , AVarren , and Lafayette , men pledged at the altars of JIasonry , and trained in the lodge to lessons of self-denial , justice , fortitude / prudence , piety , and patriotism .

"That Constitution—emphatically the work of our fathershitherto regarded as a bond of sufficient strength to hold together as one people all ivho acceded to it , and a canopy of sufficient length and breadth to cover the whole of this Continent , is now to be tested . It is the supreme laiv of the land ; and tbe enactments of Congress , under and in conformity with it , are the decisions of our Supreme Legislature , which every JIason , North or South , is bound by his solemn promise to support and sustain . In vieiv of this , ivhat is the position , the influence , and mission of our Order afc this time ?

"The Arch of our JIasonic Union , like a bow of promise , now spans this Continent . The greater and the lesser lights of Heaven , in their coin-so , daily gild ) the turrets of our American JIasonic Temple , from tho Atlantic to the Pacific . Under its ample canopy are not less than 5000 lodges and chapters , and over 300 , 000 Jlasons—all men of greater or less influence , and all having received the same conservative and patriotic teaching . In our JIasonic Union and Brotherhood there are no sectional parties or

divisions to heal ; no balance of power between North and South to maintain ; no Mason ' s and Dixon ' s line to divide . All are members of the same fold ; all brothers of AA ' ashington , Franklin , Jackson , and Clay—citizens of our common country . If true Masons— -they are the most powerful conservative element now in . this nation—whether residing in Pennsylvania or South Carolina , they must regard each other as brethren , and not for ono moment do or countenance any act that looks to arraying brother against brother . Let us then arouse to our duty ;

' Hands round as faithful brothers , form a bright fraternal chain ;' Call to mind and practice our JIasonic teachings in relation to our country and each other ; exert the influence ive possess as citizens , as truly and' effectually as did our fathers in the " days that tried men's souls ; " speaking with a voice that shall be heard , the sentiments of AVashington and Jackson , ' This Union must not —shall not be sei'ered 1 ' unless by consent and agreement . "Let the glowing sentiment of a Southern brother he echoed and re-echoed from North to South , throughout our land : —

' Say , can the South sell out her share in Bunker's hoary height ? Or can the North give up her boast in Yorhtoivn ' s closing fight ? Can ye divide with equal hand a heritage of graves ? Or rend in tivain the starry flag that o'er them proudly waves ? ' Can ye cast lots for A ' ernon ' s soil , or chaffer ' mid the gloom That hangs its solemn folds about your common father's tomb ? Or could ye meet around his grave as fratricidal foes ,

And wake your burning curses o'er his pure and calm repose ? ' Ye dare not ! is the Alleghenian thunder-toned decree ! "lis echoed where Nevada guards the blue and tranquil soa ;

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-06-15, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 4 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_15061861/page/1/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
FREEMASONRY IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 1
ON SYMBOLS AS APPLIED TO MASONIC INSTRUCTION.* Article 2
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 4
STRAY THOUGHTS ABOUT BOOKS. Article 5
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 6
GENERAL ARCHITECTURAL INTELLIGENCE. Article 9
INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION OF 1862. Article 9
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 10
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 11
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 12
BRO. PETER, AND A LOVER OF REGULARITY. Article 13
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 13
ROYAL BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED MASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
NETHERLANDS. Article 18
Fine Arts. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasonry In The United States.

FREEMASONRY IN THE UNITED STATES .

LONDON , SATTJBDAT , JUNE 15 , 1861 .

It is no part of our duty to interfere in the politics of any country ; on the contrary , we are strictly prohibited from doing so ; hut no man , be he Mason or be he not , can have AA'atehed the events in America during the past sis months Avithout emotion and interest ; and hoiv these

events are telling on our Order is too truly before us , when one Masonic paper tells us that it is compelled to reduce its size from , the falling off in its circulation in the Southern states ; and another , the one which we believe took the lead of all the Masonic publications in the

United States admits that , so great has been the decline in its circulation , that it will require the utmost exertions on the part of its friends to sustain it ; and this , too , before hostilities , which we still hope may be happily averted , had commenced , or the demon of war

had taken such strong hold of the people as recent accounts would lead us to believe . Ofthe feeling existing amongst our Anierican brethren the following extract from a private letter we have received from a distinguished brother in Pennsylvania speaks volumes : —

"A few weeks ago ifc was thought there ivould be a settlement of the pending difficulties . ... It noiv appears as if the strong arm alone is to settle our differences . AA'hat the issue Avill be none but the Omniscient can foresee . A state of things similar to those existing here never existed in any country . There is no reliance to be placed upon the telegraph or newspaper reports . Before this reaches you the strife may have commenced , and , once begun , there

will be no end left us short of complete subjugation . It may bo a war of extermination . The picture before us is a bad one ; nay , it is horrid to contemplate . And yet God in His wisdom may preserve us still from a fratricidal war . Heaven grant it !"

Having thus introduced the painful subject to our readers , we ivill proceed to lay before them some eloquent remarks of Comp . Parke , the Grand High Priest ofthe Grand Royal Arch Chapter of Pennsylvania , as to the duty of Masons , delivered at the annual meeting on December 27 , when matters had only begun to assume the menacing aspect they noiv bear : —

"Companions—In the building ofthe first temple at Jerusalema symbol of our Order— ' there was neither hammer , nor axe , nor any tool of iron heard in the house while it was in building . ' No sounds discordant , nothing to prevent or jar upon the harmony of the Craft was alloived upon that holy mount . Even so do the rules of Masonry prohibit the introduction of party politics or sectarian reliious questions within our halls , as calculated to engender strife

g and stir up bitter feelings ; to arouse ambition and other emotions interfering with the siveet harmony and concord that should ever reign therein . "But JIasonry is not only piety , but patriotism . Its teachings , its spirit , and its influence tend to the highest welfare of the state or country in Avhich Jlasons reside . A bad citizen can never be a good JIason . He AVIIO is not faithful to his country will be

treacherous to his brethren . He ivho violates the UAVS of the land will not be particular as to his adherence to the landmarks or rules of our Order , ivhich , among other things , enjoin upon us 'to be peaceable citizens , and cheerfully to conform to the laws of the country in ivhich we reside—not to be concerned in plots and conspiracies against government , but patiently to submit to the decisions of the Supreme Legislature . ' AVe are members of a great Brotherhood . AA'hatever , therefore , comes home to us , or

befiils our country , liaving a direct connection with the peace and safety of ourselves and families , or the welfare and happiness of our brethren , commands onr attention and interest as Jlasons and citizens . Looking out , then , from our Grand Chapter , upon our country at present , ivhat answer can he given to the question , 'Watchman , Ai'hafc of the night ?' "An alarmlike a fire-bell at nihtis sounding throughout our

, g , land , so loudly as to reach our sacred and peaceful halls . It proclaims in tones not to be disregarded , that om-country is in danger . That this Union , the ivork of our fathers , cemented at the first with their blood , and consecrated hy a thousand hallowed associations , is about to be rent asunder ; its fragments , the scorn and contempt of nations , ivho have hitherto regarded it— ' the wonder of the world—an example to be copied . ' That States which have

hitherto revolved in harmony around a common centre , are about to leave their orbit , and either stand out alone in space , or so rush against each other , as to make foes of those who have been pledged as brothers . This threatened peril is not to be disregarded . It justifies , if not calls for an appeal from this place , to the patriotism and fraternal feeling of our Order ; of all ivho cherish the memory of our fathers , and ivho love our race . "American Alasonry ivas born of pure and noble parentage , and rocked in fche cradle of our country ' s revolutionary struggleIts

. walls , like those of the holy city in the days of Zerubbabel , have been roared in troublous times . She has met ivith persecution , calumny , and reproach ; stood against the storm and the tempest , and outlived the sirocco , ivhich , a feiv years since , sivept its poisoned breath over our land , leaving friendships ruined and morals corrupted in its trail . The roil of her membership contains the names of many of the greatest men and purest patriots that this or

anyother country has ever produced . A large number of the signers of our Declaration of Independence , the officers of our Revolutionary army , and the framers of our inimitable National Constitution , were brethren of AVashingtou , Franklin , AVarren , and Lafayette , men pledged at the altars of JIasonry , and trained in the lodge to lessons of self-denial , justice , fortitude / prudence , piety , and patriotism .

"That Constitution—emphatically the work of our fathershitherto regarded as a bond of sufficient strength to hold together as one people all ivho acceded to it , and a canopy of sufficient length and breadth to cover the whole of this Continent , is now to be tested . It is the supreme laiv of the land ; and tbe enactments of Congress , under and in conformity with it , are the decisions of our Supreme Legislature , which every JIason , North or South , is bound by his solemn promise to support and sustain . In vieiv of this , ivhat is the position , the influence , and mission of our Order afc this time ?

"The Arch of our JIasonic Union , like a bow of promise , now spans this Continent . The greater and the lesser lights of Heaven , in their coin-so , daily gild ) the turrets of our American JIasonic Temple , from tho Atlantic to the Pacific . Under its ample canopy are not less than 5000 lodges and chapters , and over 300 , 000 Jlasons—all men of greater or less influence , and all having received the same conservative and patriotic teaching . In our JIasonic Union and Brotherhood there are no sectional parties or

divisions to heal ; no balance of power between North and South to maintain ; no Mason ' s and Dixon ' s line to divide . All are members of the same fold ; all brothers of AA ' ashington , Franklin , Jackson , and Clay—citizens of our common country . If true Masons— -they are the most powerful conservative element now in . this nation—whether residing in Pennsylvania or South Carolina , they must regard each other as brethren , and not for ono moment do or countenance any act that looks to arraying brother against brother . Let us then arouse to our duty ;

' Hands round as faithful brothers , form a bright fraternal chain ;' Call to mind and practice our JIasonic teachings in relation to our country and each other ; exert the influence ive possess as citizens , as truly and' effectually as did our fathers in the " days that tried men's souls ; " speaking with a voice that shall be heard , the sentiments of AVashington and Jackson , ' This Union must not —shall not be sei'ered 1 ' unless by consent and agreement . "Let the glowing sentiment of a Southern brother he echoed and re-echoed from North to South , throughout our land : —

' Say , can the South sell out her share in Bunker's hoary height ? Or can the North give up her boast in Yorhtoivn ' s closing fight ? Can ye divide with equal hand a heritage of graves ? Or rend in tivain the starry flag that o'er them proudly waves ? ' Can ye cast lots for A ' ernon ' s soil , or chaffer ' mid the gloom That hangs its solemn folds about your common father's tomb ? Or could ye meet around his grave as fratricidal foes ,

And wake your burning curses o'er his pure and calm repose ? ' Ye dare not ! is the Alleghenian thunder-toned decree ! "lis echoed where Nevada guards the blue and tranquil soa ;

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