FREEMASONRY
FROM AD 1600 TO THE GRAND LODGE ERA
A SKETCH OF THE TRANSITION PERIOD
by
Bro. W.J. Hughan
There is such an abundance of evidence in proof of the
continuity of Freemasonry during the period selected, that it is only
necessary to study the special records of the old Lodges, happily still
preserved, the Rolls of the "Old Charges", and especially the extant minutes
of the Masons' Company of London, to be assured that the Freemasons of the
present day are the lineal descendants of the operative builders, who in the
17th century, and earlier, admitted speculative or non-professional members.
The 17th century operative Masons were most favourable to
the speculative element in their midst, and encouraged their admission to
such an extent, that sometimes the Lodges consisted almost exclusively of
brethren in no way connected with building. Several examples of this
remarkable feature may be cited, such as the Lodge at Warrington in which
Ashmole was initiated in 1646. An extraordinary instance of the
preponderance of gentlemen in an operative Lodge, is met with at Aberdeen in
1670, for of forty-nine members registered in the "Mark Book" with their
marks attached, not a dozen were operatives; the Master was a Tutor at Airth
and Collector of the King's Customs, while several of his companions were
noblemen or of the educated class.
The oldest Masonic minutes known are those of the senior
Lodge in the world, viz., No 1 Edinburgh. They begin in the year 1599, the
Lodge having continued at work, as the records testify, from then to now,
thus overlapping the transition period and the final predominance of the
speculative branch, by the formation of modern Grand Lodges. The monopoly of
the operatives gradually disappeared, and Masonry itself became as free
practically as Freemasonry is at the present time. A silent revolution was
going on in the Craft throughout the 17th century, and what with the changes
in Society generally, and the failure of the Companies to enforce
regulation, which had become obsolete and unsuitable to the times, Masonry,
as with other trades, had to alter its laws and customs accordingly.
The Lodge of Edinburgh and others in Scotland were
legally governed during the period in question by the statutes of 1598-9,
promulgated by William Schaw "Maister of wark, Wairden of ye Masons," of
Royal appointment. There were three "Head Lodges" in the kingdom, as
recognised in the code of 1599, which were described as Edinburgh "the first
and principall ludge," Kinwinning "the second ludge", and Stirling "the
third ludge". This trio still exists, and the Lodges are now on the roll of
the Grand Lodge of Scotland as Nos. 1, 0 and 30 respectively.
Naturally several of the clauses in the above-named
statutes relate to matters common to all the crafts, but others are of a
distinctive character and most suggestive. The Lodge of Edinburgh was a kind
of Metropolitan Grand Lodge, having control of the local, but before the
17th century ended, its rights were often violated or ignored, and Lodges
were formed in its vicinity or jurisdiction, that it was powerless to
prevent, although issuing fulminations that were still-born. The "Canongate
Kilwinning" Lodge No. 2, was formed in 1677, as an offshoot from "Mother
Lodge Kilwinning", and in 1688, a secession from the Lodge of Edinburgh
resulted in the establishment of the "Canongate and Leith, Leith and
Canongate" Lodge, now No. 5, and notwithstanding all the means used by the
Mother Lodge, only one of the seceders was induced to return to the fold.
Then, again, early in the 18th century, the journeymen were not satisfied
with the masters' regulation and control; they seceded and started a Lodge
on their own account, and what is more gained a victory over their powerful
opponents, though Master Masons, by persisting in giving the "Mason Word" to
neophytes, the prerogative previously of their superiors. Two of their
number were imprisoned for contumacy, but an appeal to the Court ended in
their being allowed, as per the "Decreet Arbitral" of 1715, to assemble as a
separate organisation, and esoterically -- i.e., to communicate the "word"
-- as well as generally, to conduct their own Lodge, then and since known as
the "Journeymen", now No. 8 on the roll. The Masters were fined a hundred
pounds for their high-handed conduct, which fine has not yet been paid.
The attendance of Apprentices at the Lodge during the
making of Fellow-crafts is confirmed by the minutes of 1601, 1606 and 1637,
while the "Schaw Ordinances" provided for the presence of six Masters and
two Apprentices, in like manner, on the making of Masters, a privilege
subsequently assumed by the Incorporation. Operative Essays were obligatory
in relation to both classes, Essay Masters being appointed, and also
"intenders for instruction;" represented in Modern Lodges by the questions
preparatory to promotion, and the proposers and seconders of candidates
respectively.
The first minute of the Lodge of Edinburgh containing an
entry concerning speculative membership is dated 8th June, 1600, and is the
oldest of the kind known in Great Britain and Ireland. The Brother was John
Boswell, Esq., the laird of Auchinleck, who attended as a member, and whose
name and mark attested the minutes, along with twelve operatives who
likewise agreed to the business transacted, and acquiesced in the same
manner. When he joined we cannot tell.
The head of the Lodge was generally styled "Deacon,"
while the "Warden" was the medium of communication with the "Warden
General", who was a kind of Grand Master, the prototype of our modern Grand
Lodge Rulers. William Schaw was styled "Chief Maister of Maissonis" in the
16th century and later.
In the 17th century, it was quite a common occurrence for
noblemen and gentlemen to occupy the Chairs of Lodges, even if only
Apprentices, as with the Earl of Cassillis, who in 1672 was Deacon of
"Mother Lodge Kilwinning", being followed by Sir Alexander Cunninghame and
the Earl of Eglintoune, also an Apprentice. Harry Elphington, Tutor of Airth
and Collector of the King';s Customs, was Master of the Lodge of Aberdeen -
now No. 1 tris - in 1670, the members of which were mostly speculatives,
though an operative Lodge. Lord Strathallan was the Master or President of
the Lodge of Dundee, -- known as the "Lady Luge of Dundee" in 1536. Other
instances could also be cited.
The old Lodge of Kilwinning ewxercised jurisdiction even
as far as Glasgow, according to the Code of 1599, and was to all intents and
purposes a Provincial Grand Lodge, thus foreshadowing the present
arrangement, whereby its R.W.M. for the time being occupies the honourable
position of Provincial Grand Master of Ayrshire.
Then, again, the protectorate of the Craft in Scotland
was hereditary in the St. Clair family, the Lairds of Roslin, being secured
by charters of 1600 and 1628 circa, which led to the claim being made that
they were Grand Masters, which the documents in no way countenance. The
Lairds of Roslin were simply Patrons and Protectors of the "Maissones and
Hammermen" with other crafts, but that obsolete and purely honorary
distinction was sufficient to secure trhe election in 1736, on sentimental
grounds, of one of the family, as the first Grand Master of Scotland.
Other local magnates were appointed to the oversight of
the Craftsmen in cerrtain districts, such as Patrick Coipland of Udaucht as
Warden of the "airt and craft of Maisonrie" over three sheriffdomes in
Scotland in 1590. These were clearly the precursors of the general and local
Craft bodies which sprang up during the 18th century in Great Britain and
Ireland. But time will not permit any reference to such just now. This much,
however, may be noted, that excepting the arrangement of separate Masonic
degrees and ceremonies peculiar to the post Grand Lodge period, it is not
easy to discover many important features of the Craft in the eighteenth
century, which are not represented in the regulations and customs of the
Scottish Craft in the present century.
Until the precise character of the Records of the Masons’
Company of London was made known -- quite recently -- it was believed that
the admission of Quarter Master General Moray, of the Scottish Army, at
Newcastle on Tyne in 1641, by membres of the Lodge of Edinburgh, was the
earliest instance of the initiation of a “speculative” in England. Now,
however, that the invaluable transactions of the before-mentioned Company
are accessible, it is found that there was a speculative Lodge at work,
under the wing of that body, the existing accounts of which go as far back
as 1620. The meetings were termed “the Acception,” and the candidates were
received as “Accepted Masons;” the Company being then known as Free masons,
though the prefix was dropped during the latter half of the 17th century.
The dual character of the Company is established by reference to the
accounts, for the actual minutes are missing prior to 1670. Beside those who
obtained the “freedom of the Company” by patrimony or servitude, there were
others who were admitted by redemption, and it is quite possible that being
“accepted” by the Lodge, though not connected with the building trade,
strengthened their application for the “freedom of the Company.” it appears
to have been optional for the “accepted” brethren to join the Company, or
for the members of the latter to enter the “Acception,” but both financially
and generally there was a most intimate connection between the two, as the
Company received the balance, if any, after each “Acception” had been held.
This Lodge became so influential and important, that in
the Inventory of 1663, and also in later ones, the names of the “Accepted
Masons” are delared to be exhibited “in a faire enclosed frame with a lock
and key.” In the same Inventory was also “One book of the constitutions
which Mr. Flood gave,” and which was described in a subsequent list of 1676
as “the constitutions of the Accepted masons,” as distinct from “One book of
the Ancient Constitutions and Orders” of the Company. The Inventory of 1722
is still more explicit, the Constitutions of the Company being entered as of
the year 1481, and the other “A Book wrote on parchment and bound or
stitched in parchment containing an account of the Antiquity Rise and
Progress of the Art and Mistery of Masonry.” This latter was doubtless a MS.
of the “Old Charges” but unfortunately it has not been heard of since the
year 1839, when it is said to have contained “113 annals of the antiquity
&c. of Masonry.” The “Phillipps MSS” Nos 1 and 2 would answer to this
description, and the first-noted has the name of Mr. Richard Bankes, a
Member of the Masons’ company, on the cover; the date of its caligraphy,
however, does not answer, being of about the middle of the 17th century,
therefore not old enough. Though not the original, which was doubtless much
older, and used in the reception of the “Accepted Masons,” it may be an
exact transcript. The “G.W. Bain MS” has also an equal claim to be
considered a representative of the missing book, having a similar text and
qualifications. there are also other MSS with a different text from the “Phillipps,”
which may be copies of the original document, having the “New Articles,”
such as the “Grand Lodge MS No. 2,” and the “Harleian No. 1942.” These later
regulations are quite suggestive of the rules in force for the “Accepted
Masons,” the term “Acception” is mentioned, and neophytes are termed
“Accepted Free-Masons,” while Certificates were provided just as in later
times.
It is quite likely that the Company dropping the prefix
“Free,” and the speculative branch becoming independent, led to the union of
the two prefixes as Free and Accepted Masons.
This is the Lodge that was visited by Elias Ashmole in
1682, for which he received a Summons, and which assembled in the Maosns’
Hall, London, when six gentlemen were admitted into the Fellowship, four of
whom were members of the Company. Nine of the “Acception” or Lodge attended,
besides Ashmole, who says he was “the Senior Fellow among them.” No
particulars whatever of the ceremony are afforded, but subsequently they all
dined “at the charge of the new-accepted Masons.” All the nine Fellows were
members of the Company, including the Master and the two Wardens.
It will thus be seen, that not a few customs of later
days were anticipated in the 17th century, such as the use of Maosnic
Certificates to aid in visitation, the issue of Lodge Summonses, masons’
marks used after the signatures, Essays and Intenders, as well as the
promotion of good-fellowship.
The “General Regulations” of the premier Grand Lodge of
England, printed in the year 1723, were for the use of “the Lodges in and
about London and Westminster,” being thus originally a Metropolitan
organisation. At the time they were printed, there was a Provincial
authority at work in the City of York, as a “time immemorial” Lodge, whose
preserved records date from 1712, but the Lodge was a very old one at that
time.
In Ireland, in like manner, there was a Grand Lodge
holding its meetings in the Metropolis of that Country from 1725, and no
doubt earlier; also a District or Grand Lodge, quite distinct, though not
essentially different, assembling at Cork, for the Province of Munster, and
having subordinate Lodges. these surely were anticipated in the 17th century
by the Metropolitan Lodge of Scotland, which Masonically in olden time,
governed the City, and “Mother Lodge Kilwinning,” which was in charge of
quite a large district, and authorised dependent Lodges, one of which is the
“Canongate Kilwinning” of 1677.
I claim that Edinburgh and Kilwinning were thus, in not a
few important respects, the Masonic prototypes of the London and York
organisations, as well as of the Dublin and Cork Grand Lodges.
As the Masonic bodies in ireland adopted the usage of
Deacons long before those in England, which officers, nominally at least if
not precisely as to duties, had been familiar to Scotland for centuries, it
is just possible that Ireland was more indebted to North Britain for its
Masonic laws and customs that has hitherto been recognised or acknowledged,
and thus proportionately less to England accordingly.
whilst it is true that the Craft records in England are
not so numerous and valuable as those of Scotland, some of the existing
minutes and other indications of Masonic activity are of great importance,
as already indicated, and though we do not know when and by whom these 17th
century Lodges were originally started or constituted, they assuredly had
much in common. Judging from the fact that Dr. Desaguliers, Past Grand
Master of England, visited the “Lodge of Edinburgh” in 1721, and having been
found to be “duly qualified in all points of Masonry, was received as a
Brother,” there seems no reason to suppose that Freemasonry of the 17th
century in England, as regards essentials, differed from that of Scotland.
Esoterically there is much to be said as to the Lodges in
England and Scotland, but that must be reserved to another time. I may note,
however, in passing, that the “Mason Word” was acknowledged to be given in
Scotland, and dues paid therefor, as late as 1715, and whilst a gratifying
reticence is generally observed, an incomplete minute of 1702 at Haughfoot
requires very careful consideration. It reads “of entrie as the apprentice
did. Leaving out (the common juudge - Probably an operative “test”-) -- they
then whisper the word as before, and the Master Mason grips his hand in the
ordinary way.”
It does not appear to me that this entry calls for any
remark just now, as it tells its own tale consistently with other records,
in relation to the simplicity of the Masonic ceremonial at that time.
The Presbytery of Kelso in 1652 sustained the action of
the Rev. James Ainslie in becoming a Freemason, declaring that “there is
neither sinne nor scandale in that word” -- i.e., the “Mason Word”.
Along with the “Harleian MS” (No. 2054, British Museum),
is a scrap of paper, which cites, “sevrall words and signes of a free Mason”
as a portion of an obligation. this MS of the “Old Charges” is in the
handwriting of Randle Holme (born 1627), the author of the “Academy of
Armory”, printed in 1688, wherein he says, “I Cannot but Honor the Felloship
of the Masons because of its Antiquity; and the more as being a Member of
that Society, called Free-Masons.”
The Oath that was taken by the Brethren during this
period, as given in various copies of the “Old Charges” &c., is not
indicative of the separate degrees of the post Grand Lodge era.
A remarkable Register of gentlemen and others, with the
MS just referred to -- Harleian No. 2054 -- states what each “giue for to be
a free Mason.” This is also in the handwriting of the same Randle Holme, and
apparently belonged to a speculative Lodge at Chester.
The references to the Craft in Plot’s “Natural History of
Staffordshire,” published in 1686, are of a most important character, and
should be carefully studied, as they concern admissions into the Fraternity,
the reading of the “Old Charges”, with prominent portions of their text, and
the early history of the Society.
There are many ways of proving the existence of the Craft
during the seventeenth century, but the foregoing must suffice for the
present, the evidence being so plentiful, that is is quite embarrassing to
make a selection. It cannot, in my opinion, be questioned, that modern Grand
Lodges are the direct representatives of the old Lodges previously existing,
many of which still continue working.
the records of one Scottish family offer eloquent
testimony, to the continuous working of the Craft for centuries, as
enshrined in the valuable Perth Charter, and in the “Lodge of Edinburgh”
records. From these documents the following facts are gleaned. John Mylne
came to Perth from the “North Countrie” and became the King’s Master Mason
and Master of the “Lodge at Scone” -- now No. 3 Scotland. He was succeeded
by his son, whose name is mentioned in the remarkable “Contract” of 1658,
who by His Majesty’s desire entered “King James the sixt as ffreeman,
measone and fellow craft.” His third son John was a member of the “Lodge of
Edinburgh,” and Master Mason to Charles I., 1631-6; John Mylne the younger,
his eldest son, succeeding, became in 1633 a Fellow Craft in No. 1, and was
Deacon eleven times within thirty years. Alexander Mylne was entered an
apprentice to his uncle in 1653, and was made a fellow-craft in 1660,
becoming Warden in 1663-4, and Deacon several times later on. then William
Mylne was entered an apprentice in 1721, and was Master in 1735,
representing the Lodge at the formation of the Grand Lodge of Scotland the
following year, and holding the office of Grand Treasurer from 1737 to 1755.
Another William was elected and initiated in the same Lodge in 1750, and a
Robert Mylne became a member in 1754, receiving the three degrees in that
year. He died in 1811 and “was buried in St. Paul’s Cathedral, having been
surveyor to that edifice for fifty years.” With his decease, terminated the
family’s connection with the “Lodge of Edinburgh”, which had extended
through five successive generations, and for a still longer period as
craftsmen.
There are two Lodges of the pre Grand Lodge era, which
also overlap that important period, which really require whole Papers to
themselves, to do their proceedings anything like justice. A few words about
each of these will fitly conclude my Address.
the records of the old Alnwick Lodge were brought to the
notice of the Craft by me in 1871, and are of special value, not only
because of their antiquity, but also in relation to their text. As with so
many of these venerable Lodges, its origin is unknown, but it may be
accepted as of the 17th century. A copy of the “Old Charges” precedes the
“Orders to be observed by the company and Fellowship of Free Masons, att A
Lodge held att Alnwick Septr 29 1701 being the Genrl head meeting day.”
Apprentices had to be entered and be given their “Charge” within “one whole
Year after” admission, and on the expiry of their term of seven years were
“Admitted or Accepted butt uon the ffeast of St. Michaell the Archangell.”
The Master and Wardens were elected by the members, and the frequent entries
“made free”, “made free Masons” or “made free brothers” are very suggestive
and important. On 20th January, 1708, it was ordered that no member “should
appear at the Lodge to be kept on St. John’s Day in Christmas without his
appron & Common Square fixt in the Belt,” and to be similarly attired on
attending Church on that day, when a special sermon was to be preached.
Although the Lodge was active far on in the 18th century, it never, so far
as is known, joined the Grand Lodge of England, although a Warrant issued by
that Body in 1779 for Alnwick may have been applied for by some of its
Brethren. It is of special interest to remember that on Christmas Day in
1755, Mr. “George Henderson of Alnwick. visiting Bro from Canongate
Kilwinning Lodge” is duly noted in the minutes; he was initiated in the
northern Lodge in 1751, receiving the two higher degrees on Nov 20th 1754.
There is no mention of separate Masonic ceremonies in the minutes, -- 1703
to 1756, -- and the Lodge was operative from first to last, the proceedings
of the modern Grand Lodge and its subordinate Lodges being entirely ignored.
The old operative Lodge at Swalwell, in its early
records, had much in common with its senior of Alnwick, its “Orders of
Antiquity” and its “Apprentice and General Orders” being virtually
reproductions of still earlier “Old Charges.” the three “ffraternal signs”
are mentioned, and the minutes generally from the third decade of the 18th
century are of considerable value and interest. the members accepted a
Charter from the Grand Lodge of England in 1735, being now, and for a long
time past, known as the :Lodge of Industry,” No. 48 Gateshead. It was thus
another link in the union between the Grand Lodge and its operative
ancestors.
It is the fashion of some to raise objections to our
claim as being “ancient”, as well as “free and accepted” Masons, but I trust
that the facts herein submitted, will “at once and for ever” prove, that our
beloved Society is fully entitled to the antiquity so long assumed by the
Fraternity.
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