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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Nov. 19, 1870
  • Page 5
  • NOTES ON AMERICAN FREEMASONRY.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 19, 1870: Page 5

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    Article NOTES ON AMERICAN FREEMASONRY. ← Page 2 of 3 →
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Notes On American Freemasonry.

for several years , has enabled me to form some estimate of the amount of labor required of your Grand Officers in their correspondence with the officers of the subordinate Lodges and other brethren , in furnishing to them the information

sought on the various questions which arise in the Lodges . This labor , I am gratified to find , has been greatly diminished by the publication of the edicts and decisions of the Grand Lodge , together with the Grand Constitution , Rules of the Order ,

Old Constitution and Regulations , Forms of Trial , & c . With this work in the hands of the officers of the subordinate Lodges , they are readily prepared to decide intelligently almost every question that

may arise in their Lodges . " In his exordium he says : — " Forty years ago I first knelt at our sacred altar and received the first light in Masonry . Being deeply impressed with the sublime principles of the Order , and its

excellent teachings , it has been my desire through life to be guided by its landmarks , and with zealous efforts to cultivate and practise those virtues which preserve and adorn the Masonic character . If I have committed errors , they were

of the head , and not of the heart , and I ask that you cover them with the broad mantle of Masonic charity , recollecting that it is human to err , but divine to forgive . "

The Committee on Communications reported the following among others : 1 st . A paper which purports to be a Communication from three persons of the colored race , who designate themselves as a committee of

Eureka Lodge , No . 11 , in the city of Savannah , Working under what they term a charter from the " Prince Hall Grand Lodge of the State of Massachusetts , " commonly called the African Grand Lodge . The object of said communication , as

well as can be gathered from the document itself , is to learn the feeling of this Grand Lodge towards themselves and their so-called Lodge , . and to ask our counsel in reference to the organization of a coloured Grand Lodge in this State .

" Your committee would prefer to treat this Communication with a dignified silence , but as it has been referred to them , they have felt it a duty to give it a passing notice by informing these persons that we cannot now , or ever hereafter ,

acknowledge them to be A . Y . Masons , or hold any Masonic intercourse whatever with them . We know of no such lodge as the " Prince Hall

Grand Lodge of Massachusetts . " We are in . fraternal correspondence with the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts , and know nor recognize any other Grand Lodge in that State , and that grand body , we are confident , would not trespass upon

the jurisdiction of this Grand Lodge by granting a charter to any body of men , white or black , within our bounds , Without referring , in any manner , to what is likely , at no distant day , to be a vexed question with the Masonic fraternity

throughout the United States , viz : Negro Masonry , we close the subject by quoting Section 3 rd . of Article I , of oar Grand Constitutions ,

which is in these words : No lodge can exist , or exercise any Masonic privilege or duty in this State without the sanction of this Grand Lodge , either by warrants or dispensations , duly granted for that purpose . And all convocations or

assemblies of persons , calling themselves Lodges of Free Masons , assuming to exercise the duties , or perform the ceremonies of Free Masonry in this State , of either or all the three Symbolic Degrees , without the sanction of this Grand Lodge first

had and obtained , are hereby declared to be spurious and clandestine , and of no Masonic authority whatever . " Number of Lodges , 266 ; total number of members , 15 , 555 ; initiations , 894 ; passings , 806 ; raisings , 853 ; admissions , 717 .

IDAHO . At the First Annual Communication of the Grand Lodge of Idaho , the Grand Master delivered the annual address . After returning thanks to a kind Providence for the blessings of the past year ,

and invoving like blessings for the future , he proceeded to state in detail the official acts performed j and those which he had been prevented from performing . He regrets that the subordinate lodges were so financially deficient that he could not incur the expense of employing a Grand Lecturer to visit their Lodges and exemplify the Avork .

A resolution was offered and adopted , requiring all the M . W . Grand Masters of this Grand Lodge to have a life-size photograph taken of themselves as soon as practicable after their installation , at the expense of the Grand Lodge .

Number of Lodges up to June 23 , 1868 , 5 j number of Masons up to June 23 , 1868 , 195 ; initiated , 54 ; passed , 58 ; rejected , 66 . From the large number rejected we are glad to see that the subordinate Lodges are beginning ir *

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1870-11-19, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_19111870/page/5/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
A MUSICAL LODGE. Article 1
FREEMASONRY IN SOUTH WALES. BY BRO. J. C. MANNING. Article 1
NOTES ON AMERICAN FREEMASONRY. Article 4
MASONIC JOTTINGS.—No. 45. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 8
Untitled Article 9
MASONIC MEMS. Article 9
Craft Masonry. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
NEW BRUNSWICK. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
MARK MASONRY. Article 17
GRAND MASONIC RITE. Article 18
Obituary. Article 19
LIST OF LODGE MEETINGS &c., FOR WEEK ENDING 25TH NOVEMBER, 1870. Article 20
METROPOLITAN LODGES AND CHAPTERS OF INSTRUCTION. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On American Freemasonry.

for several years , has enabled me to form some estimate of the amount of labor required of your Grand Officers in their correspondence with the officers of the subordinate Lodges and other brethren , in furnishing to them the information

sought on the various questions which arise in the Lodges . This labor , I am gratified to find , has been greatly diminished by the publication of the edicts and decisions of the Grand Lodge , together with the Grand Constitution , Rules of the Order ,

Old Constitution and Regulations , Forms of Trial , & c . With this work in the hands of the officers of the subordinate Lodges , they are readily prepared to decide intelligently almost every question that

may arise in their Lodges . " In his exordium he says : — " Forty years ago I first knelt at our sacred altar and received the first light in Masonry . Being deeply impressed with the sublime principles of the Order , and its

excellent teachings , it has been my desire through life to be guided by its landmarks , and with zealous efforts to cultivate and practise those virtues which preserve and adorn the Masonic character . If I have committed errors , they were

of the head , and not of the heart , and I ask that you cover them with the broad mantle of Masonic charity , recollecting that it is human to err , but divine to forgive . "

The Committee on Communications reported the following among others : 1 st . A paper which purports to be a Communication from three persons of the colored race , who designate themselves as a committee of

Eureka Lodge , No . 11 , in the city of Savannah , Working under what they term a charter from the " Prince Hall Grand Lodge of the State of Massachusetts , " commonly called the African Grand Lodge . The object of said communication , as

well as can be gathered from the document itself , is to learn the feeling of this Grand Lodge towards themselves and their so-called Lodge , . and to ask our counsel in reference to the organization of a coloured Grand Lodge in this State .

" Your committee would prefer to treat this Communication with a dignified silence , but as it has been referred to them , they have felt it a duty to give it a passing notice by informing these persons that we cannot now , or ever hereafter ,

acknowledge them to be A . Y . Masons , or hold any Masonic intercourse whatever with them . We know of no such lodge as the " Prince Hall

Grand Lodge of Massachusetts . " We are in . fraternal correspondence with the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts , and know nor recognize any other Grand Lodge in that State , and that grand body , we are confident , would not trespass upon

the jurisdiction of this Grand Lodge by granting a charter to any body of men , white or black , within our bounds , Without referring , in any manner , to what is likely , at no distant day , to be a vexed question with the Masonic fraternity

throughout the United States , viz : Negro Masonry , we close the subject by quoting Section 3 rd . of Article I , of oar Grand Constitutions ,

which is in these words : No lodge can exist , or exercise any Masonic privilege or duty in this State without the sanction of this Grand Lodge , either by warrants or dispensations , duly granted for that purpose . And all convocations or

assemblies of persons , calling themselves Lodges of Free Masons , assuming to exercise the duties , or perform the ceremonies of Free Masonry in this State , of either or all the three Symbolic Degrees , without the sanction of this Grand Lodge first

had and obtained , are hereby declared to be spurious and clandestine , and of no Masonic authority whatever . " Number of Lodges , 266 ; total number of members , 15 , 555 ; initiations , 894 ; passings , 806 ; raisings , 853 ; admissions , 717 .

IDAHO . At the First Annual Communication of the Grand Lodge of Idaho , the Grand Master delivered the annual address . After returning thanks to a kind Providence for the blessings of the past year ,

and invoving like blessings for the future , he proceeded to state in detail the official acts performed j and those which he had been prevented from performing . He regrets that the subordinate lodges were so financially deficient that he could not incur the expense of employing a Grand Lecturer to visit their Lodges and exemplify the Avork .

A resolution was offered and adopted , requiring all the M . W . Grand Masters of this Grand Lodge to have a life-size photograph taken of themselves as soon as practicable after their installation , at the expense of the Grand Lodge .

Number of Lodges up to June 23 , 1868 , 5 j number of Masons up to June 23 , 1868 , 195 ; initiated , 54 ; passed , 58 ; rejected , 66 . From the large number rejected we are glad to see that the subordinate Lodges are beginning ir *

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