Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Sept. 23, 1871
  • Page 9
Current:

The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 23, 1871: Page 9

  • Back to The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 23, 1871
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Page 3 of 3
    Article SUMMARY OF MASONIC LAW. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 9

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

Masonic Notes And Queries.

at Strasbourg . " Now , while I admit that Strasbourg might be the head-quarters of a Masonic district , it was not the head-quarters of the French or English Masons . And as to modern Freemasonry being an "" imitation" of the old Operative Masonic Society , it is only so to a certain extent . Many terms are

eorjmon to both , but the things signified by those teims are different iu each . As a whole , the old Operative system , and the new Speculative system , are quite distinct and different . Again , seeing the Preemasonry which the Abbe speaks of in 1778 was an importation into Germany

, from abroad , it helps to show that it was not exactly a development of his wonderful Strasbourg fraternity ; for , bad it been so ; we would have expected to hear of Strasbourg exporting it , not importing it . All this therefore goes to support the 1717 theory . —TV . P . BTJCHAN .

MIDDLE AGES , APPRENTICE , FELLOW-CRAFT , MASTER , Page 228 . The classfiication—not " degrees " —of Apprentice , Fellow Craft , and Master , existed among the Operafcive Masons centuries ago . As it appears to me it is very probable that said classification instead of originating among the Masonswas simply copied b

, y them from some of the other crafts . Such a threefold division comes naturally to all trades , e . g ., there is the apprentice AA'IIO comes to learn the trade ; the journeyman who has served hts apprenticeship , and who has learned it ; and the Master who employs men to work for himOur " degrees " of EA

. .., P . O ., and M . M ., were not ™ instituted until about A . P > . 1717 , at least , no reliable evidence of their prior existence has ever as yet been produced . —TV . P . BTJCHAN .

GERMAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCHES . The "Pall Mall Gazette" says the Germans are pursuing their archaeological researches Avith a restlessness and energy which reminds one much of the late campaign . Asia Minor seems chiefly at this moment to engage their attention . The excavators

alread y busy there are about to be joined by Professor Cartius , unquestionably one of the most competentliving investigators on that ground . This expedition ¦ will start shortl y ; and as they do not like to do things by halves in Berlin , some superior Engineer officers , with a gunboat , are told off for that purpose .

It is said that the plan of Troy is to be the " first object of examination . Professor Alder will watch over the architectural interests of the expedition , and he is further commissioned to proceed while in those parts as far as Jerusalem , where he is to sketch on the spot a design for the restoration of the Church

of St . John , presented by the Sultan to the Prussian Government on the occasion of the CroAvn Prince ' s visit two years ago . BRANDT , THE INDIAN CHIEF , A FREEMASON . In a foot-note to page 237 of " A Narrative of the Anti-Masonic Excitementin tho "Western Part of

, the State of New York , during the years 1826 , ' 7 , ' 8 , and a part of 1829 , by HeDry Browne , Esq ., Counsellor at Law ; Batavia , N . T ., Printed by Adams & Cleary 1829 , " it is stated : — "At the battle of the Cedars , about thirty miles from Montreal , on the St .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Lawrence , Capt . M'Hinstry , of Col . Patterson ' s regiment of Continental troops , was twice wounded , aud taken prisoner by the Indians . His intrepidity as a partisan officer had excited the fears and unforgiving resentment of the savages , who determined to put him to death . Already had the victim been

bound to a tree , and surrounded by the faggots intended for his immolation . Hope had . fled , and in the agony and despair he uttered the last mystic appeal of a Mason , when , as if Heaven had interposed for his preservation , the warrior Brandt , understood and saved him . Brandt had been educated in Europe ,

aud was there made a Mason . Capt . M'Kinley died in June , 1 S 22 . " In the above extract , which I have copied literally , as I find it given by Councellor Brown , it will be noticed that the name of the captive captain is variously given as M'Kinstnj and M'Kinleijwhich is

, the correct ? As it is evidently a Scottish name , I guess the latter . Can any of the readers of the " Freemason ' s Magazine" give any further information of Bro . M'Kinley or M'Kinstry ?—GEOR & EMARKHAJ £ TWEDDELL .

Summary Of Masonic Law.

SUMMARY OF MASONIC LAW .

The folloAving decisions b y the Grand . Masters of the various Grand Lodges in the United States will point out to the Masonic student many interesting differences in the Masonic Law of the tAvo countries : —¦

( Continued from page 236 ) . The Worshipful Master of a Loda ; e is amenable only to the Grand Lodge or the Grand Master for his Masonic conduct , and no appeal lies to the Lodge from his decision . —Ohio . Neither the Worshipful Master nor Wardens of a Lodge can resign during their term of office ; nor can a brother elected to an office in a Lodge decline to be installed , unless he has served in the same station the year preceding . —lb .

Q . Gun an officer in a chartered Lodge hold office in a Lodge TJ . D . ? A . He may until the charter is issued . —North Carolina . The Master has a supervisory control over the Secretary , and it is his duty to correct errors in the record , and see that nothing improper is committed to Avriting , although the Lodge has passed upon it . —Alabama .

The Master of a Lodge has a right to refuse to entertain a petition , but the application cau be renewed at anyregular communication . —Delaware . A Master elect cannot be lawfully installed until he is invested with tho secrets of the chair . —Illinois . No brother can bo laAvfully elected and installed Worshipful Master Avithout previous service as Master or

Warden , except by dispensation . —Ib . It Avould not be proper for the Master of a Lodge to sign a petition for a dispensation for a new Lodge .- — Maine . It is the right and duty of the Worshipful Master of the Lodge Avithiu whose jurisdiction they reside , to require all persons claiming to be Masons , Avhether they visit the Lodge or not , to prove to be what they profess n '

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1871-09-23, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23091871/page/9/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE Article 1
THE WORSHIPFUL MASTER. Article 3
PRINCIPLES OF MASONRY. Article 4
A MASONIC PIC-NIC. Article 5
MASONIC JOTTINGS, No. 87. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
SUMMARY OF MASONIC LAW. Article 9
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 12
MASONIC MEMS. Article 12
LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 13
Craft Masonry. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
INSTRUCTION. Article 15
SCOTLAND. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
MARK MASONRY. Article 17
BOMBAY MASONIC WIDOWS' AND ORPHANS FUND Article 17
Poetry. Article 19
HOPE FOR THE BEST. Article 19
SLEEPING IN THE SNOW. Article 19
THE QUARRY. Article 20
REVIEWS. Article 20
LIST OF LODGE MEETINGS &c., FOR WEEK ENDING SEPTEMBER 30TH, 1871. Article 20
METROPOLITAN LODGES AND CHAPTERS OF INSTRUCTION. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
Page 1

Page 1

2 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

1 Article
Page 3

Page 3

2 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

2 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

3 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

3 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

2 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

1 Article
Page 9

Page 9

3 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

1 Article
Page 11

Page 11

1 Article
Page 12

Page 12

3 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

3 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

3 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

3 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

1 Article
Page 17

Page 17

5 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

4 Articles
Page 20

Page 20

6 Articles
Page 9

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

Masonic Notes And Queries.

at Strasbourg . " Now , while I admit that Strasbourg might be the head-quarters of a Masonic district , it was not the head-quarters of the French or English Masons . And as to modern Freemasonry being an "" imitation" of the old Operative Masonic Society , it is only so to a certain extent . Many terms are

eorjmon to both , but the things signified by those teims are different iu each . As a whole , the old Operative system , and the new Speculative system , are quite distinct and different . Again , seeing the Preemasonry which the Abbe speaks of in 1778 was an importation into Germany

, from abroad , it helps to show that it was not exactly a development of his wonderful Strasbourg fraternity ; for , bad it been so ; we would have expected to hear of Strasbourg exporting it , not importing it . All this therefore goes to support the 1717 theory . —TV . P . BTJCHAN .

MIDDLE AGES , APPRENTICE , FELLOW-CRAFT , MASTER , Page 228 . The classfiication—not " degrees " —of Apprentice , Fellow Craft , and Master , existed among the Operafcive Masons centuries ago . As it appears to me it is very probable that said classification instead of originating among the Masonswas simply copied b

, y them from some of the other crafts . Such a threefold division comes naturally to all trades , e . g ., there is the apprentice AA'IIO comes to learn the trade ; the journeyman who has served hts apprenticeship , and who has learned it ; and the Master who employs men to work for himOur " degrees " of EA

. .., P . O ., and M . M ., were not ™ instituted until about A . P > . 1717 , at least , no reliable evidence of their prior existence has ever as yet been produced . —TV . P . BTJCHAN .

GERMAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCHES . The "Pall Mall Gazette" says the Germans are pursuing their archaeological researches Avith a restlessness and energy which reminds one much of the late campaign . Asia Minor seems chiefly at this moment to engage their attention . The excavators

alread y busy there are about to be joined by Professor Cartius , unquestionably one of the most competentliving investigators on that ground . This expedition ¦ will start shortl y ; and as they do not like to do things by halves in Berlin , some superior Engineer officers , with a gunboat , are told off for that purpose .

It is said that the plan of Troy is to be the " first object of examination . Professor Alder will watch over the architectural interests of the expedition , and he is further commissioned to proceed while in those parts as far as Jerusalem , where he is to sketch on the spot a design for the restoration of the Church

of St . John , presented by the Sultan to the Prussian Government on the occasion of the CroAvn Prince ' s visit two years ago . BRANDT , THE INDIAN CHIEF , A FREEMASON . In a foot-note to page 237 of " A Narrative of the Anti-Masonic Excitementin tho "Western Part of

, the State of New York , during the years 1826 , ' 7 , ' 8 , and a part of 1829 , by HeDry Browne , Esq ., Counsellor at Law ; Batavia , N . T ., Printed by Adams & Cleary 1829 , " it is stated : — "At the battle of the Cedars , about thirty miles from Montreal , on the St .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Lawrence , Capt . M'Hinstry , of Col . Patterson ' s regiment of Continental troops , was twice wounded , aud taken prisoner by the Indians . His intrepidity as a partisan officer had excited the fears and unforgiving resentment of the savages , who determined to put him to death . Already had the victim been

bound to a tree , and surrounded by the faggots intended for his immolation . Hope had . fled , and in the agony and despair he uttered the last mystic appeal of a Mason , when , as if Heaven had interposed for his preservation , the warrior Brandt , understood and saved him . Brandt had been educated in Europe ,

aud was there made a Mason . Capt . M'Kinley died in June , 1 S 22 . " In the above extract , which I have copied literally , as I find it given by Councellor Brown , it will be noticed that the name of the captive captain is variously given as M'Kinstnj and M'Kinleijwhich is

, the correct ? As it is evidently a Scottish name , I guess the latter . Can any of the readers of the " Freemason ' s Magazine" give any further information of Bro . M'Kinley or M'Kinstry ?—GEOR & EMARKHAJ £ TWEDDELL .

Summary Of Masonic Law.

SUMMARY OF MASONIC LAW .

The folloAving decisions b y the Grand . Masters of the various Grand Lodges in the United States will point out to the Masonic student many interesting differences in the Masonic Law of the tAvo countries : —¦

( Continued from page 236 ) . The Worshipful Master of a Loda ; e is amenable only to the Grand Lodge or the Grand Master for his Masonic conduct , and no appeal lies to the Lodge from his decision . —Ohio . Neither the Worshipful Master nor Wardens of a Lodge can resign during their term of office ; nor can a brother elected to an office in a Lodge decline to be installed , unless he has served in the same station the year preceding . —lb .

Q . Gun an officer in a chartered Lodge hold office in a Lodge TJ . D . ? A . He may until the charter is issued . —North Carolina . The Master has a supervisory control over the Secretary , and it is his duty to correct errors in the record , and see that nothing improper is committed to Avriting , although the Lodge has passed upon it . —Alabama .

The Master of a Lodge has a right to refuse to entertain a petition , but the application cau be renewed at anyregular communication . —Delaware . A Master elect cannot be lawfully installed until he is invested with tho secrets of the chair . —Illinois . No brother can bo laAvfully elected and installed Worshipful Master Avithout previous service as Master or

Warden , except by dispensation . —Ib . It Avould not be proper for the Master of a Lodge to sign a petition for a dispensation for a new Lodge .- — Maine . It is the right and duty of the Worshipful Master of the Lodge Avithiu whose jurisdiction they reside , to require all persons claiming to be Masons , Avhether they visit the Lodge or not , to prove to be what they profess n '

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 8
  • You're on page9
  • 10
  • 20
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy