Lead Masonic Lodge Records, 1871-2002 5005 Finding Aid Prepared by Randi Sue Smith and Jenna Himsl

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Lead Masonic Lodge Records, 1871-2002 5005 Finding Aid Prepared by Randi Sue Smith and Jenna Himsl Lead Masonic Lodge Records, 1871-2002 5005 Finding aid prepared by Randi Sue Smith and Jenna Himsl This finding aid was produced using the Archivists' Toolkit January 23, 2018 Describing Archives: A Content Standard Homestake Adams Research and Cultural Center December 2017 Deadwood History, Inc. 150 Sherman Street Deadwood, South Dakota, 57732 (605) 722-4800 Lead Masonic Lodge Records, 1871-2002 5005 Table of Contents Summary Information ................................................................................................................................. 3 Biographical/Historical Note......................................................................................................................... 4 Scope and Contents Note.............................................................................................................................. 5 Arrangement Note..........................................................................................................................................6 Administrative Information .........................................................................................................................6 Collection Inventory...................................................................................................................................... 8 Golden Star Lodge No. 9, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons.............................................................8 Dakota Chapter No. 3, Royal Arch Masons......................................................................................... 24 Black Hills Council No. 3, Royal and Select Masters..........................................................................30 Dakota Commandery No. 1, Knights Templar..................................................................................... 31 Lead Chapter No. 18, Order of the Eastern Star.................................................................................. 38 Black Hills Chapter, Order of DeMolay...............................................................................................47 Lead Chapters, Modern Brotherhood of America................................................................................ 49 - Page 2 - Lead Masonic Lodge Records, 1871-2002 5005 Summary Information Repository Homestake Adams Research and Cultural Center Creator Black Hills Chapter, Order of DeMolay. Creator Black Hills Council No. 3, Royal and Select Masters. Creator Dakota Chapter No. 3, Royal Arch Masons. Creator Dakota Commandery No. 1, Knights Templar. Creator Golden Star Lodge No. 9, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons. Creator Lead Chapter No. 18, Order of the Eastern Star. Creator Modern Brotherhood of America. Title Lead Masonic Lodge records Date 1871-2002 Extent 41.0 Linear feet 46 boxes; 1 oversize folder Language English Abstract This collection primarily contains administrative and organizational records of Lead-Deadwood Masonic organizations, including Lodges and York Rite bodies. These records accumulated from 1871 to 2002 and were housed in the Lead Masonic Temple. The collection includes annual reports or returns, officers’ reports, correspondence, financial and membership records, applications to join or advance, meeting minutes, sheet music, and photographs. - Page 3 - Lead Masonic Lodge Records, 1871-2002 5005 Biographical/Historical Note Freemasonry or Masonry is the oldest known men’s fraternal organization in the world, tracing its origins to associations of stone masons. The entry-level Masonic unit is the Symbolic or Blue Lodge of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons. Advancing beyond the Lodge in the York Rite are Royal Arch Masons, Royal and Select Masters, and Knights Templar. The Scottish Rite is a different advancement track. Each unit in an area is a chartered group, approved at a higher level. Each unit has a name and a number, an officer structure, and approved procedures and rituals. There are also auxiliary groups for women, boys, and girls, known as the Order of the Eastern Star, DeMolay, and Job's Daughters, respectively. In South Dakota, there was Masonic activity as early as 1862. The first charter was issued under the jurisdiction of Iowa to a lodge in Yankton, Dakota Territory, in 1863. By 1875, there were five lodges, all in the southeastern part of the territory. In 1875, the Iowa Grand Lodge instituted the Grand Lodge of Dakota at Vermillion. In October 1899, ten years after statehood was granted, North Dakota and South Dakota were split into two Grand Lodges. Masonic units in the Black Hills were established soon after the discovery of gold in the 1870s. In the first half-century of settlement, many small towns had their own lodges and often York Rite bodies. Deadwood Lodge No. 7 was chartered in 1877; Lead’s Golden Star Lodge No. 9 was chartered June 12, 1879; and Central City Lodge No. 22 was chartered June 15, 1881. York Right Bodies soon followed. Royal Arch Masons first started to organize in the Black Hills in Lead in 1879. The charter was granted August 27, 1880 for Dakota Chapter No. 3. At the first meeting on October 13, 1880, a resolution requesting a move to Deadwood was passed. Lead’s Black Hills Council No. 3, Royal and Select Masters, began forming in 1907 and was chartered in 1910. Deadwood Commandery No. 1 of the Knights Templar was chartered in May 1880. The group met in a log building on Charles Street near the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad. Lead Commandery No. 18 operated from roughly 1902 to 1918. The Lead group surrendered its charter so that the Deadwood Commandery could transfer to Lead, retaining the No. 1 designation for the area. At this point, all York Rite bodies were in Lead, with the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, a different advancement track of masonry, meeting in Deadwood. Many prominent citizens were members of the Masons, including W.E. Adams. To facilitate their activities, Masonic groups maintained buildings and cemeteries within the Northern Black Hills. By 1929, the Lead Masonic Lodge was on the northwest corner of Main and Bleeker Streets at 7 North Bleeker Street. With two stories, a basement, and an asbestos roof, the lodge was used for both mercantile and Masonic activities. The Masonic Building Association of Lead was incorporated March 11, 1932 to fund and operate a new building, with bonds issued to members only. Beginning about September 1932, the old building was removed and salvaged. The new Masonic Temple on Main Street was dedicated in Lead on February 4, 1933. Two mining claims were patented to form the Masonic Cemetery. Five acres were divided between Golden Star Lodge No. 9, Lead Independent Order of Odd Fellows No. 17, Dakota Lodge No. 6 Knights of Pythias, and the Central City Odd Fellows. The name of - Page 4 - Lead Masonic Lodge Records, 1871-2002 5005 the Masonic Building Association was changed to the Masonic Cemetery Association in 1947, formally incorporating the cemetery association and including building operation under it. As fraternal organization membership declined in the late twentieth century, many local Masonic units consolidated. Whitewood Lodge No. 144 surrendered its charter on December 9, 1961, and the Central City Lodge disbanded on November 1, 1972. Royal Arch Masons Dakota Chapter No. 3, Deadwood, consolidated with Lookout Chapter No. 36, Spearfish, in 1995. In the same year, Lead Commandery No. 1 consolidated with Spearfish’s Black Hills No. 23. When units consolidated or merged, the lowest or earliest number was usually kept for the merged body. In 2012, the Lead Masonic Lodge was sold. Golden Star Lodge No. 9 met at the Masonic Lodge in Deadwood, although the Lead and Deadwood lodges did not merge. Scope and Contents Note This collection primarily contains administrative and organizational records of Lead-Deadwood Masonic organizations, including Lodges and York Rite bodies. Little material relates to the Scottish Rite. Materials in the collection include annual reports or returns, officers’ reports, correspondence, financial records of the secretary and treasurer (the secretary handled much of the daily cash flow), membership records, petitions or applications to join or advance, and meeting minutes. Some photographs are included. The collection is arranged in seven series corresponding to the different bodies represented: Golden Star Lodge No. 9, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons; Dakota Chapter No. 3, Royal Arch Masons; Black Hills No. 3, Royal and Select Masters; Dakota Commandery No. 1, Knights Templar; Lead Chapter No. 18, Order of the Eastern Star; Black Hills Chapter, Order of DeMolay; and Lead Chapters, Modern Brotherhood of America. While the Modern Brotherhood of America is not a Masonic organization, its materials were donated as part of this collection. Subseries contain the records of bodies that merged into each organization. These records, accumulated from the 1870s to the very early 2000s, were housed in the Masonic Temple in Lead. Storage conditions and access varied through the years, with some resultant damage, loss, or disorder. Original order is lacking, and the records are not complete or consistent. The filing system changed often, e.g. a membership petition might be filed in a petition file in 1920, but in an individual’s file in 1955, sometimes with an associated transfer or resignation paper (known as a “demit”). Rejected petitions might be included with accepted petitions. Annual reports or returns might be found in correspondence instead of a separate file. Many items
Recommended publications
  • Colonial American Freemasonry and Its Development to 1770 Arthur F
    University of North Dakota UND Scholarly Commons Theses and Dissertations Theses, Dissertations, and Senior Projects 12-1988 Colonial American Freemasonry and its Development to 1770 Arthur F. Hebbeler III Follow this and additional works at: https://commons.und.edu/theses Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Hebbeler, Arthur F. III, "Colonial American Freemasonry and its Development to 1770" (1988). Theses and Dissertations. 724. https://commons.und.edu/theses/724 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, and Senior Projects at UND Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of UND Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. - ~I lII i I ii !I I I I I J: COLONIAL AMERICAN FREEMASONRY I AND ITS DEVELOPMENT TO 1770 by Arthur F. Hebbeler, III Bachelor of Arts, Butler University, 1982 A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the University of North Dakota in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Grand Forks, North Dakota December 1988 This Thesis submitted by Arthur F. Hebbeler, III in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts from the University of North Dakota has been read by the Faculty Advisory Committee under whom the work has been done, is hereby approved. ~~~ (Chairperson) This thesis meets the standards for appearance and conforms to the style and format requirements of the Graduate School of the University of North Dakota, and is hereby approved. -~ 11 Permission Title Colonial American Freemasonry and its Development To 1770 Department History Degree Master of Arts In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the require­ ments for a graduate degree from the University of North Dakota, I agree that the Library of this University shall make it freely available for inspection.
    [Show full text]
  • The Issue of Masonic Regularity, Past and Present John L
    Proceedings of the Policy Studies Organization New Series, No. 31 1527 New Hampshire Ave, NW Washington DC, 20036 Tel: (202) 483 2512 Fax: (202) 483 2657 www.ipsonet.org http://bit.ly/proceedingsofpso The Proceedings appear four times a year as an adjunct to all of the PSO journals and are among the most widely distributed sources in the policy world. All Proceedings are permanently available online at http://bit.ly/proceedingsofpso. Material for the Proceedings, including syllabi, meeting and professional announcements, scholarships and fellowships should be sent to the Proceedings editor, Daniel Gutierrez at [email protected] Sponsored by American Public University System Advisory Board Karen McCurdy Carol Weissert Southern Political Science Florida State University Association William Morgan Mark Vail Midwest Political Science Tulane University Association Catherine E. Rudder Norman A. Bailey George Mason University Norman A. Bailey Inc. David Oppenheimer Edward Khiwa Prime Oppenheimer Langston University Charles Doran Mark B. Ryan School of Advanced International Wisdom University Studies, Johns Hopkins University Guillermo Izabal Kingsley Haynes PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP George Mason University Frank McCluskey Wallace E. Boston American Public University American Public University System System Fred Stielow American Public University System John Cooper and Problems in Masonic Research We are fortunate to have scholars like John Cooper who are also Freemasons. The history of secret and ritualistic organizations has never received the attention that the subject deserves. Although their influence has been and continues to be considerable, they are viewed as having members who are enjoined to be tight- lipped about the activities. Despite the manifest differences between the branches of this fascinating group, their culture has a commonality whose consideration has been neglected, and the research problems they present for scholars have similarities.
    [Show full text]
  • Lodge Leadership & Management Aka The
    Lodge Leadership & Management aka The Masters' & Wardens' Handbook Table of Contents Preface .......................................................................................................................................... 1 Be A Leader ................................................................................................................................... 2 Planning a Great Lodge Year ........................................................................................................ 11 Conducting a Good Lodge Meeting .............................................................................................. 19 Financial Planning and Budgeting ................................................................................................ 24 Lodge Budget Worksheet ......................................................................................................... 28 Examining Visitors ....................................................................................................................... 29 Focus on Fellowship..................................................................................................................... 30 New Member Orientation............................................................................................................ 35 Communications from the Lodge ................................................................................................. 38 Internet Presence – The Electronic Frontier ................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Common, Present, Or Historic
    Historic/Current Name: Sunset Telephone & Telegraph Garfield Exchange Masonic Lodge 242 (Queen Anne Masonic Temple) Historic Uses/Current Use: Telephone Exchange / Fraternal Hall / Vacant Year Built: 1905 and 1924 (renovation) Address: 1608 4th Avenue West Seattle, Washington 98119 Assessor's File No.: 423290-2100 Legal Description: Laws 2nd Addition, Block 26, Lots 8-9 as recorded in Volume 1, page 53. Original Designer: Unknown Original Builder: Unknown Present Owner: Queen Anne Masonic Development, LLC 1608 4th Avenue West Seattle, Washington 98119 Owner’s Representative: Rich Rogers, Managing Member 1958 8th Avenue W Seattle, Washington 98119 206.240.2255 Submitted by: Susan Boyle, AIA, Principal, BOLA Architecture + Planning Address: 3800 Ashworth Avenue N Seattle, WA 98103-8119 Phone: 206.383.2649 Date: March 7, 2019 Reviewed (historic preservation officer): ____________________ Date: ____________ Queen Anne Masonic Temple 1608 4th Avenue West Seattle Landmark Nomination BOLA Architecture + Planning Seattle March 7, 2019 Queen Anne Masonic Temple Seattle Landmark Nomination 1608 4th Avenue W, Seattle March 7, 2019 CONTENTS City of Seattle Application 1. Introduction 1 Background Research Seattle’s Landmark Process 2. Property Data 3 5. Architectural Description 4 The Setting The Structure and Exterior Facades The Interior Changes to the Original Building 4. Historic Significance 8 Historic Development of Queen Anne Hill The Telephone Exchange Fraternal Organizations in America History of the Freemasons Masonic Lodge No. 242 and its Queen Anne Temple The Building Style and Type The Designers and Builders 5. Bibliography 16 6. Illustrations 18 Index to Figures Historic Maps and Photographs Contemporary Photographs Current Site Plan Cover: A 1905 drawing from the Seattle Times of the building and a current view (BOLA, 2018).
    [Show full text]
  • Membership and Class in Calumet's Masonic Lodge
    Michigan Technological University Digital Commons @ Michigan Tech Dissertations, Master's Theses and Master's Dissertations, Master's Theses and Master's Reports - Open Reports 2011 "Brethren upon the same level" : membership and class in Calumet's Masonic Lodge Brandon Anthony Sexton Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/etds Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons Copyright 2011 Brandon Anthony Sexton Recommended Citation Sexton, Brandon Anthony, ""Brethren upon the same level" : membership and class in Calumet's Masonic Lodge", Master's Thesis, Michigan Technological University, 2011. https://doi.org/10.37099/mtu.dc.etds/288 Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/etds Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons “BRETHREN UPON THE SAME LEVEL”: MEMBERSHIP AND CLASS IN CALUMET’S MASONIC LODGE By Brandon Anthony Sexton A THESIS Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE (Industrial Archaeology) MICHIGAN TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY 2011 © 2011 Brandon Anthony Sexton This thesis, ““Brethren Upon The Same Level”: Membership and Class in Calumet’s Masonic Lodge,” is hereby approved in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE IN INDUSTRIAL ARCHAEOLOGY. Department of Social Sciences Signatures: Thesis Advisor _____________________________________ Dr. Larry Lankton Department Chair _____________________________________ Dr. Patrick Martin Date _____________________________________ To my parents Table
    [Show full text]
  • VOLUME LXVII April 2021 NUMBER 4 Contents
    VOLUME LXVII April 2021 NUMBER 4 Contents Milford CoMMandery no. 11 Complete Summer Uniform $205 Includes: Battalion Cap, Shirt, Collar Brass, Brass Nameplate, Cap Badge, Orders Bar, Tie and Tie Clasp Caps, Brass & Accessories also Available Separately! www.milfordcommanderystore.com store @ milfordcommandery.com 155 Main Street, Milford, MA 01757 • 508.482.0006 All Proceeds go to the Knights Templar Eye Foundation! VOLUME LXVII APRIL 2021 NUMBER 4 Published monthly as an official publication of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar of the United States of America. Jeffrey N. Nelson Grand Master Jeffrey A. Bolstad Contents Grand Captain General and Publisher 325 Trestle Lane Lewistown, MT 59457 Grand Master’s Message Grand Master Jeffrey N. Nelson ..................... 4 Address changes or corrections and all membership activity including deaths Are Knights Templar Truly Masonic? should be reported to the recorder of Sir Knight Sir Knight James A. Marples ............ 7 the local Commandery. Please do not report them to the editor. Grand Encampment Triennial Announcement .............................. 22 Lawrence E. Tucker Grand Recorder Survival by Sacrifice Grand Encampment Office Sir Knight Dick E. Browning ........................... 28 5909 West Loop South, Suite 495 Bellaire, TX 77401-2402 Phone: (713) 349-8700 Rejecting Self While Fax: (713) 349-8710 Praising God in Three Persons E-mail: [email protected] Sir Knight Robert Elsner P.G.C ....................... 29 Magazine materials and correspon- dence to the editor should be sent in elec- Holy Land Pilgrimage tronic form to the managing editor whose for Knights and their Guests ......................... 30 contact information is shown below. Materials and correspondence concern- ing the Grand Commandery state supple- ments should be sent to the respective Features supplement editor.
    [Show full text]
  • Fort Collins Masonic Temple State Register
    OAHP1414 (Rev. 11/2001) COLORADO HISTORICAL SOCIETY COLORADO STATE REGISTER OF HISTORIC PROPERTIES NOMINATION FORM SECTION I Name of Property Historic Name Fort Collins Masonic Temple Other Names Fort Collins Masonic Building Address of Property address not for publication Street Address 225 West Oak Street City Fort Collins County Larimer Zip 80524 Present Owner of Property (for multiple ownership, list the names and addresses of each owner on one or more continuation sheets) Name Masonic Home Board Address 225 West Oak Street Phone 970-223-7053 City Fort Collins State CO Zip 80524 Owner Consent for Nomination (attach signed consent from each owner of property - see attached form) Preparer of Nomination Name Wayne R. Davis Date 2 December 2007 Organization Masonic Home Board Address 3913 Lynda Ln. Phone City Fort Collins State CO Zip 80526 FOR OFFICIAL USE: Site Number 5LR.11896 Nomination Received Senate # House # 2/22/2008 Review Board Recommendation 2/28/2008 CHS Board State Register Listing Approval Denial Approved Denied Listing Criteria A B C D E Certification of Listing: President, Colorado Historical Society Date COLORADO STATE REGISTER OF HISTORIC PROPERTIES Property Name Fort Collins Masonic Temple SECTION II Local Historic Designation Has the property received local historic designation? no yes --- individually designated designated as part of a historic district Date designated Designated by (Name of municipality or county) Use of Property Historic SOCIAL: meeting hall/ fraternal organization Current SOCIAL: meeting hall/ fraternal organization Original Owner Fort Collins Masonic Home Association Source of Information Archives of Collins Lodge 19; Collins Lodge 19 A.F. and A.M.
    [Show full text]
  • The Landmarks of Freemasonry
    THE L,ANDMARKS OF FREEMASONRY By CHARLES CLYDE HUNT Grand Secretary GRAND LODGE OF lOW A, A. F. & A. M. Printed by LAURANCE PRESS COMPANY CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA 1943 • Price SOc per Copy CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY I once visited an optician to have my eyes tested for a new pair of eye glasses. I offered hiln the glasses I was then wearing as a guide, but he declined, saying, "I will look at them later. I prefer to make an independent exam­ ination first." I have thought of that remark many times since when I have found myself being led astray by relying on the work of other students instead of making an independent investigation. Such is the case with the subject of the present paper. I have made statements on the subject, based on the writings of other students, which I now, believe, after making an independent investigation, to have been errone­ ous. In making such an investigation we should first consider the meaning of the term "land­ Inark" independent of its connection with Free­ masonry, and then consider its Masonic applica­ tion. The best source of information about the -meaning of words is to be found in the' una- 3 - -~ -.:-- --_ .. --. ::~ THE LANDMARKS OF FREEMASONRY bridged dictionaries, and I have therefore con­ . suIted the four best known and recognized Eng­ lish authorities as to the meaning of the word "landmar k." I found that all four agree in holding that a landmark is: 1. A fixed object serving as a boundary mark to a tract -of land. 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 1. Masonic Law, Tradition, and Policy
    CHAPTER 1. MASONIC LAW, TRADITION, AND POLICY LANDMARKS AND CERTAIN LAWS OF FREEMASONRY Constitutional Provisions It being well known that for any concept, precept, or principle of Freemasonry to be recognized as being a Landmark, the same must be possessed of two principal attributes, namely, Antiquity, and Universality, the following definitions of those terms are hereby adopted: “Antiquity: Those beliefs and those practices which were fixed at the time when Freemasonry emerged from its prehistoric era into the period of recorded Masonic history.” “Universality: A suggested Landmark has universality when it is one of the practices, principles, or beliefs which Masons everywhere accept, believe, and practice and without which there would be no Freemasonry.” (Art. XIII, Sec. 1) The Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Florida hereby recognizes, as being Landmarks of Freemasonry the Following: (a) A belief in the existence of one ever living and true God. (b) A belief in the immortality of the human soul and a resurrection thereof to a Future Life. (c) The Volume of the Sacred Law, open upon the altar, is an indispensable furnishing of every regular Lodge while at labor. (d) The Legend of the Third Degree. (e) Secrecy, which includes: The necessary words, signs, and tokens, whereby one Mason may know another to be such, in darkness as in light; that every regular Lodge must be Tyled while at labor; that every visitor seeking admission to the Lodge must be examined and prove himself a Mason, unless duly and properly avouched for; those other matters which cannot be written in any language.
    [Show full text]
  • Malta, the Knights, and Freemasonry1
    Ritual, Secrecy, and Civil Society - Volume 2 - Issue 1 - Spring 2014 Malta, the Knights, and Freemasonry1 Pierre Mollier2 ormed in London in 1717, over sub- and medium towns in the kingdoms, the sequent decades modern Freemason- Lodges exchanged “assurances of friend- ry spread throughout the whole of ship,” welcomed travelling Brothers, cor- Feighteenth-century Europe, so quickly and responded, and cultivated invisible but successfully that it still astonishes histori- very real connections throughout Europe. ans. Its integration and dynamism in Malta, Many young knights were therefore initiat- a hub of cultural exchange at the heart of ed during their period of training in Malta the Mediterranean, is therefore not really (their “caravans”). Once they returned to surprising, especially given that the young the continent, they practiced Masonry, thus aristocrats who dominated the Order of contributing to the “Universal Republic of Saint John (which had many French mem- Freemasons,” in the words of Pierre-Yves bers) were open to the spirit of their time Beaurepaire. and particularly to Enlightenment thought. Despite Lodges being condemned by the I. Freemasonry in Malta Pope in 1738, they had many ecclesiastical members in all Catholic countries. The in- A/ The First Stones (1730–circa 1750) terest of research attempting to improve our understanding of the relationships between alta appears as one of the first ter- Masonry and the Knights of Malta lies not ritories in which modern Free- in an apparent paradox (which actually ex- masonry established itself, after isted not in the eighteenth century), but in MGreat Britain, the Netherlands, and France. the study of the superposition of two net- In fact, the first account of the existence of works of sociability, each of which, in its a Lodge on the island dates back to 1730.
    [Show full text]
  • A Guide to a Mason's Actions Grand Lodge F.&A.M. of Pennsylvania
    A Guide to a Mason’s Actions Grand Lodge F.&A.M. of Pennsylvania A Guide to a Mason’s Actions Grand Lodge F.&A.M. of Pennsylvania by William A. Carpenter Right Worshipful Grand Master Copyright 1985, 2019 by the Right Worshipful Grand Lodge of Free & Accepted Masons of Pennsylvania All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the Right Worshipful Grand Lodge of Free & Accepted Masons of Pennsylvania. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 85-62079 Printed in the United States of America Reprint November 1995 Edited and updated 2019 DEDICATED TO Dorothy (Wally) Roberts Carpenter My First Wife and A Masonic Widow Par Excellence Contents Title page Copyright page Contents Dedication Foreword 1 Preface 2-5 Chapter I Masonic Manners 6-22 Ahiman Rezon 8-10 … to govern ourselves accordingly 11-18 What Do Masonic Manners Mean to Masons? 20-23 Chapter II Glossary 24-61 Chapter III Masonic Symbols 62-81 Appendix What is the Grand Lodge? 82-89 Bibliography 90 Illustrations Frontispiece of the 1783 edition of the Ahiman Rezon 6 Point Within a Circle 19 A.S.K. 24 Trestle Board 62 Approved and authorized by the Right Worshipful Grand Master Original Foreword I am flattered to have been asked to write the foreword to this volume authored To My by the Right Worshipful Grand Master, Brother William A. Carpenter, because Brethren in I know it represents his legacy to the Craft in Pennsylvania.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Answers to Commonly Asked Questions on Freemasonry
    Answers to commonly asked questions on Freemasonry Hiram Abif--is the story true? When did he live? If by true is meant "factual", the answer is no. If by "true" is meant "containing a great truth" then the answer is yes; it is true as is the story of Santa Claus which tells a truth to children in words they can understand. The Legend of Hiram as told in the Master Mason degree is one of the oldest legends in the world but Freemasonry's legend is peculiarly her own. The three who encountered Hiram at the gates of the Temple are themselves symbols of error, evil, and sin; and the story as a whole is of the ultimate weakness of such forces against the power of the Great Architect. The word Abif is translated both "his father" and "my father" with "father" used in these senses as a patriarch, a teacher, a source of wisdom, and not as the actual father of a family. "Hiram, my father" is thus a title of honor and respect. (See Quest Book No. 5) [Some say that "avihu," meaning "my father is he," and rendered in Masonic usage as Abif or Abiff, was the Hebrew equivalent of "jr.," meaning that "Hiram Abif" was the son of a man also named Hiram.] When did Santa Claus start to manufacture Christmas toys? Myth and legend are alike silent on early Masonic dates. As the Temple was begun by Solomon in the fourth year of his reign, legend, if there was such, would have to place the death later.
    [Show full text]