A Complete List of Papers & Authors in AQC, 1886

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Complete List of Papers & Authors in AQC, 1886 A COMPLETE LIST OF PAPERS PUBLISHED IN ARS QUATUOR CORONATORUM 1 – 1886-8 Author On Some Old Scottish Masonic Customs R.F. Gould The Steinmetz Theory Critically Examined G.W. Speth On an Early Version of the Hiramic Legend Hayter Lewis Freemasonry and Hermeticism Woodford On the Orientation of Temples Warren Connecting Links between Ancient and Modern Freemasonry Hughan The Religion of Freemasonry Illuminated by the Kabbalah W.W. Westcott The Quatuor Coronati – Arundel MS A.F.A. Woodford English Freemasonry before the Era of Grand Lodges (1717) R.F. Gould The Apostle St Paul, a Mason Tendler The Threefold Division of Temples Simpson Indian Relics Spainhour Unrecognised Lodges & Degrees of Freemasonry Yarker before & after 1717 Shall I be a Mason? Tempels Effigy of a Reputed GM of Freemasons in Winchester Cathedral Jacobs Legends of the Compagnonnage – Part I Rylands Two New Versions of the Old Charges (Wilson, Phillipps, Stanley) G.W. Speth Scottish Freemasonry before the Era of Grand Lodges G.W. Speth The Roman Legend of the Quattro Incoronati Russell Forbes Classification of the Old Charges of the British Masons Begemann Masters’ Lodges Lane The Quatuor Coronati Abroad G.W. Speth Scottish Freemasonry in the Present Era Macbean Relations between Grand Lodges of England & Sweden Kupferschmidt in the Last Century 2 – 1889 The Worship of Death Simpson Legends of the Compagnonnage – Part II Rylands The Foundation of Modern Freemasonry G.W. Speth Freemasonry in Rotterdam 120 Years Ago Vaillant The Origin of Freemasonry Cramer The Grand Lodge at York Whytehead Free and Freemason Schnitger Hogarth’s Picture ‘Night’ Rylands 3 – 1890 On the Antiquity of Masonic Symbolism R.F. Gould Evidence of Steinmetz Esoterics Schnitger A Masonic Chart of 1789 G.W. Speth The Masonic Character of the Roman Villa at Moreton Crease Masonry and Masons’ Marks Hayter Lewis Masons’ Marks Related to Secret Magical Alphabets & Numerals Westcott Masons’ Marks Schnitger The Mummers or Guisers Simpson 1 | P a g e The Mosaics at Morton Forbes Freemasonry in Holland Crowe Grand Lodge of Hungary de Malczovich Brahminical Initiation Simpson A Masonic Curriculum G.W. Speth Freemasonry in America MacCalla The Craft in Canada Robertson The Forgotten Rival of Freemasonry: Noble Order of Bucks Rylands Naymus Graecus Papworth Formation of the Grand Lodge of Scotland Macbean 4 – 1891 Druses of Syria & their Relation to Freemasonry Haskett Smith Sketch of Earlier History of Masonry in Austria & Hungary I de Malczovich Freemasonry in Holland Dieperink The Swastika Murray-Aynsley Character of the Roman Villa at Morton S.T. Klein Masonic Landmarks among the Hindus Minos Unidentified or Missing MSS W.J. Hughan A Curious Masonic Apron Clark Critical Examination Alban & Athelstan Legends: Howard History & Relationship Notes on the Svastika Pratt A Masonic Built City (Rome) Forbes Masonic Musicians Barrett The Old Lodge at Lincoln Dixon Curious Hand-painted Masonic Apron Green Remarks on the William Watson MS Begemann Masonic Celebrities – No.3 Albert Pike R.F. Gould Freemasonry in Holland Vaillant The Legend of Sethos Richardson Church of St Bartholomew the Great Bywater Notes on Cobham Church Bywater Naymus Grecus Identified Howard English Royal Arch Masonry, 1744-65 W.J. Hughan Freemasonry in Holland Crowe The Yezids Yarker An Early Home of Masonry Vernon 5 – 1892 Brahminical Initiation – the Noose Symbol Simpson Sketch of Earlier History of Masonry in Austria & Hungary II de Malczovich Who Was Naymus of the Greeks? Forbes Brahminical Initiation Yarker Freemasonry in Holland Dieperink Masonic Clothing Crowe Remarks on the Craft Legend of the Old British Masons Begemann The Masonic Genius of Robert Burns Richardson Notes on History of Lodge of the Marches, Ludlow Salwey The Tau or Cross Murray-Aynsley 2 | P a g e Freemasonry in Reference to the Laws of the Realm Fooks Masonic Celebrities – No.4 Thomas Manningham R.F. Gould A Last Word on Freemasonry in Holland Vaillant The Proper Names of Masonic Tradition Ball Gavin Wilson, a Forgotten Masonic Worthy Anon Early History of the High Degrees in the Netherlands Oortman-Gerlings Netherlands Freemasonry in Court Dieperink Date of Origin of the Grand Lodge of the “Ancients,” 1751 Lane The Masonic Apron Rylands Freemasonry in Prussia G.H.W. Speth The Assembly R.F. Gould 6 – 1893 William Mattieu Williams Ward Richardson The Tabernacle Malden On the Symbolism of the Tabernacle W.W. Westcott Lord Byron GM Whymper Evidential Value of the Regius, Cooke & Watson MSS Howard The Nismesian Theory and French Legend Yarker Dumfries Kilwinning Ms No 4 Lane The Grand Lodge of the Schismatics or Ancients R.F. Gould Some Hammer-Legends Murray-Aynsley Sikh Initiation Simpson Sketch of Earlier History of Masonry in Austria & Hungary III de Malczovich The Tau as a Keystone Whymper Henry Josiah Whymper (Obituary) Hughan Les Chevaliers des Cinq Epees Vaillant Henry Josiah Whymper (Obituary) Gould Tracing Board in Modern Oriental & Medieval Operative Masonry Purdon Clarke The Ancient Stirling Lodge Hughan Freemasonry in Mexico R.F. Gould Dr Robert Plot R.F. Gould, Bergemann Remarks on Purdon Clarke’s Paper on the Tracing Board Rylands Rev William Stukeley MD R.F. Gould St. Gabriel’s Canterbury Bywater Masonic Clothing Crowe Consecration of a Parsee Priest Simpson Francis George Irwin (Obituary) R.F. Gould The Assembly Bergemann The Assembly G.W. Speth Old Charges of British Freemasons, Classification W.J Hughan Attempt to Ascertain Age of Freemasonry from Internal Evidence Dore 7- 1894 From Labour to Refreshment in the Olden Time Vernon Further Lights on Sikh Initiation Murray-Aynsley Sketch of Earlier History of Masonry in Austria & Hungary IV de Malczovich Continental Lodge Jewels and Medals Crowe Rosicrucians: History, Aims & Connection with Freemasonry W.W. Westcott The Masters Lodge at Exeter Hughan 3 | P a g e Freemasonry in Mexico II R.F. Gould The True Text of the Book of Constitutions Upton Chinese Secret Societies Copley, Moyle Notes in reference to HAB Yarker The Two Saints John Legend Norton Random Courses of Scottish Masonry McIntyre, North William Kelly G.W. Speth The Medical Profession and Freemasonry R.F. Gould The Goose and Gridiron Daily Graphic Quid Hic Agis Ella? Installation Address Ball The Ancient Caledonian Society Mackenzie 8 – 1895 The Arch and Temple in Dundee Lindsay The Hon Miss St Leger and Freemasonry Conder Freemasonry in Portugal G.W. Speth Some Notes on Old Cumberland Lodges Lamouby English Masonic Certificates Riley The Lambton Lodge Medal Hughan Notes on Irish Freemasonry I Chetwode Crawley Freemasonry in Brixham, Devon, 1781-1840 Crowe A Greek Menu Chetwode Crawley Notes on Irish Freemasonry II Chetwode Crawley Notes on Some Masonic Symbols Rylands Notes on Irish Freemasonry III Chetwode Crawley Masonic Celebrities No. VI – Duke of Wharton (History of Gormogons) R.F. Gould 9 – 1896 Notes on Irish Freemasonry IV Chetwode Crawley The Ancient Aryan Temple Pulney Andy Masons Company London & Lodge of Accepted Masons Connected Conder German Freemasonry in the Present Era Greiner The Ordeal of the Poker Chetwode Crawley Bibliography of the Old Charges Hughan The Law of Dakheil & Other Curious Customs of the Bedowin S.T. Klein Benedict Biscop & Introduction of Freemasons into England Conder A Curious Tablet Kupferschmidt Sketch of Earlier History of Masonry in Austria & Hungary V de Malczovich Notes on German Freemasonry I – Absalom, the Premier Lodge Wiebe A Curious Historical Error Barlow A Glimpse of Early Freemasonry in Germany Kupferschmidt 10 – 1897 Sir Benjamin Ward Richardson R.F. Gould Free and Freemasonry: A Tentative Enquiry G.W. Speth The Letter G J. Cockburn The Shakespeare Lodge No. 426: Foundation & Furniture Bainey Antiquity Lodge at Mons, Belgium Jottrand Notes on “A Curious Historical Error” Chetwode Crawley, Berry 4 | P a g e Masonic Symbolism as Found in the “Rationale of Durandus” Horsley Freemasonry in Mexico III R.F. Gould A Masonic Contract of AD 1378 Hughan A Russian Masonic Anecdote G.W. Speth An Old Lodge and its Refreshment Bills Cheesman Kirkwall Kilwinning Lodge No. 38 and its Remarkable Scroll Craven, Speth The Great Symbol S.T. Klein The Three Degrees of Freemasonry (Oldest MM Ceremony) Hughan Notes on “Free and Freemason” Several Masonic Celebrities No. VII – Josiah H Drummond R.F. Gould How Frederick the Great Became a Freemason Cerf Masonic Medals Shackles 11 – 1898 The Masonic MSS in the Bodleian Library Chetwode Crawley Hidden Mysteries S.T. Klein The Two Degrees Theory Speth The Symbolic Card for Christmas 1897 S.T. Klein The Order of the Temple Yarker Freemasonry in Greece Philon Robert Samber Armitage Batty Langley on Geometry Lovegrove King Charles II at the Royal Exchange London in 1667 Conder The Last Gavel Stroke of Frederick the Great G.W. Speth Notes on Sussex Masonry Rylands The John T Thorp MS Hughan 12 – 1899 Thomas Hayter Lewis Purdon Clarke The English Lodge at Bordeaux G.W. Speth Notes on Sussex Masonry Wilman Masons’ Marks at Wetheral Hopper, Holme Another New List of Lodges AD 1732 Lane Intimations of Immortality Horsley The Secret Tribal Societies of West Africa Marriott Leicester Masonry, Part I - 1103-1327 G.W. Speth Address on the History of Exeter Shorte Address on the History of Exeter Cathedral Edmonds Address on the Dartmoor Stone Monuments Worth The Remarkable Vane of Exeter Cathedral Lovegrove Seventeenth Century Descriptions of Solomon’s Temple Johnston Rabbi Jacob Jehudah Leon Chetwode Crawley Remarks on the Establishment of the Grand Lodge of Ireland Begemann A Danish Freemasons’ Lodge Unknown in Denmark Lange William Simpson WM 1888-9 Macbean Vestigia Quatuor Coronatorum Purdon, Clarke Inaugural Address Whytehead 5 | P a g e 13 – 1900 The York Grand Lodge Hughan Schott’s Model of Solomon’s Temple Rylands The Chichester Stone Forbes Symbolism of the Square Rylands The Third Masonic District in New York Allen Hindoo Temples Cooper Oakley A Sketch of Norwegian Masonic History Lange Masonic Celebrities No.
Recommended publications
  • Gould's History of Freemasonry
    GOULD'S HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY THROUGHOUT THE WORLD VOLUME III From a photograph by Underwood and Underwood . King Gustav of Sweden . From the painting by Bernhard Osterman . .o .o.o.o.o .o .o .o .o .o .o .o .o .o.o 0 0 0 Eas 0 xxo~ m~N o En o SNOS S,2i3[~I8I2iDS S3ZU 0 ,XHJ o ~y<~~ v o +5 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 III 3I~1Ifl 0 ZOn o Eys, 0 0 v v v 4 o~ 0 a ////~I1\`\ •O E 7S, 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ey; 0 v Gl"HOm 9H~L .Lf10HO110UH,L o E-r, v0 0 0 v 0 v IN A 0 s vw a 4 N 0 0 0 40 v E-1 0 A S vs 0 I( I H S~QZ~109 a $ u eee.e.e.e.eee .e.e.ae.a.e.e.e.e.e.e .ese.e.e.e.e.eeeeee <~ .eee0 .e.e.e.eee.e.e.e.e.oee.e .e. v Z/~~Z/~~S?/~~SZ/~~SZ/n~SZ/ti~5?/~~SZh~SZ/~15Z/~~S?h\SZ/,~5?h~S~/n~S?/\5?/~\SZ/n~S?h~S~/n~SZ/n~SZln~?!~~ W` ,~` W~ W~ W~ W` W` W` W` ~W w.! W~ W` i~W rW W` W~ W` wy y uy J1 COPYRIGHT, 1936, BY CHARLES SCRIBNER ' S SONS PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OP AMERICA ww •o •o •o ww •oww•o•ow•wo•o w•o •aoww •o•o •o•o•o•o•o •wo •o •owwwww•ow•o www•o• 0 I ° GOULD'S HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY THROUGHOUT THE WORLD REVISED BY DUDLEY WRIGHT EDITOR OF THE MASONIC NEWS THIS EDITION IN SIX VOLUMES EMBRACES NOT ONLY AN Q Q INVESTIGATION OF RECORDS OF THE ORGANIZATIONS OF THE FRATERNITY IN ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, IRELAND, THE BRITISH COLONIES, EUROPE, ASIA, AFRICA AND SOUTH AMERICA, BUT INCLUDES ADDITIONAL MATERIAL ESPE- CIALLY PREPARED ON EUROPE, ASIA, AND AFRICA, ALSO o b CONTRIBUTIONS BY DISTINGUISHED MEMBERS OF THE FRATERNITY COVERING EACH OF THE o FORTY-EIGHT STATES, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA AND THE POSSESSIONS OF THE b o UNITED STATES 4 4 THE PROVINCES OF CANADA AND THE 4 COUNTRIES OF LATIN AMERICA b UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF 0 MELVIN M.
    [Show full text]
  • Purchase Grant Fund Awards 2010/11
    PURCHASE GRANT FUND AWARDS 2010/11 Aberystwyth University, School of Art Collections • Magdalene Odundo Vessel, 2009 Terracotta; h 49 cm £10,200 • Claire Curneen Mother and Child , 2009 Terracotta with gold lustre; 53 x 18 x 10 cm £500 Acton Scott, Shropshire Museum Service • Pair of chestnut baskets, c.1785-90 £2,291 Caughley porcelain; w 29.5 cm • Radish dish, c.1790-95 Caughley porcelain; w 31 cm £305 • Late Iron Age torc from Telford Gold silver alloy; two fragments l 8.9 cm and 7.4 cm £750 • Hawking vervel from Worfield, 16-17th century Silver; 0.9 cm diameter £250 Ashby de la Zouch Museum • Portrait of a member of the Hastings family, probably Henry Hastings, Baron Loughborough, 1650 Oil on canvas; 73 x 58.3 cm £2,115 Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire County Museum • Pair of Bronze Age torcs from Ellesborough Gold; l 35 and 22 cm £1,000 • Bronze Age penannular lock ring from Edlesborough Gold; 1.9 cm diameter £250 Barnard Castle, The Bowes Museum • Keith Vaughan Design for the tapestry Adam commissioned by the Edinburgh Weavers, 1957 Collage , gouache, crayon and pencil; 108 x 59.6 cm £7,000 • Beaker, c.1730 Meissen porcelain; h 5.9 cm £2,400 • George Hindmarsh Serving plate owned by George Bowes of Gibside, 1742 Silver; 37 cm diameter £1,792 Bath and North East Somerset Heritage Services • Gillian Ayres Sun Up , 1960 Oil on canvas; 122 x 91.5 cm £12,000 Bedford, Cecil Higgins Art Gallery • Manuscript for the book A General Guide to the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Spring and Easter 1923 by Edward Bawden, 1923 £10,000 • Dora Carrington Bedford Market , 1911 Watercolour; 43 x 67 cm £5,544 Birmingham Central Library • Archive of the photographer, John Blakemore, 1960-2010 £35,000 • Francis Bedford Suite of three albums of photographs of a ..Tour of the East.
    [Show full text]
  • Harashim Issue 70 1
    Harashim issue 70 1 Australian New Zealand Masonic Research Council March 2016 Issue 70 ISSN 1328-2735 HARASHIM Change! When will it be accepted? Editor As a teacher, my department spent many dollars on programs to get staff to understand that ‘times they were a changing”. The swiftest changes were and are, in technology, which is chang- ing at an exponential rate. John F Kennedy said “Change is the law of life. And those who look only to the past or present are cer- tain to miss the future”. So where do we as Freemasons sit? Many will say that we are still wallowing in the last century, Is this true? Is this why our num- bers are falling? Are these facts being ignored? Is the saying Inside this issue “She’ll be right” a sign of apathy? Did not this saying when used The Dead ANZAC Masons ........... 2 by our forefathers mean “we will make it right” we will surely Masonic Knowledge ................... 2 make it right. Presidents Column...................... 4 Freemasonry is being faced with the fact of aging members, una- Tour Feedback, Jaccard .............. 5 ble or unwilling to cope with change. Many are fading away and Behind our Ritual ........................ 6 our numbers decrease. Various Jurisdictions are working hard to Book Review ............................... 7 arrest the decline. We face the same problem in our Research Intro Kidd Collection ................... 8 Lodges. Should we diversify? If so how and into what? Is there a Book Revie .................................. 11 need for us to become more involved in education? St Patrick's Day ........................... 12 Readers, collectively there is an enormous amount of wisdom and Thomas Dunckerley ...................
    [Show full text]
  • The Architecture of Joseph Michael Gandy (1771-1843) and Sir John Soane (1753-1837): an Exploration Into the Masonic and Occult Imagination of the Late Enlightenment
    University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2003 The Architecture of Joseph Michael Gandy (1771-1843) and Sir John Soane (1753-1837): An Exploration Into the Masonic and Occult Imagination of the Late Enlightenment Terrance Gerard Galvin University of Pennsylvania Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the Architecture Commons, European History Commons, Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons, and the Theory and Criticism Commons Recommended Citation Galvin, Terrance Gerard, "The Architecture of Joseph Michael Gandy (1771-1843) and Sir John Soane (1753-1837): An Exploration Into the Masonic and Occult Imagination of the Late Enlightenment" (2003). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 996. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/996 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/996 For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Architecture of Joseph Michael Gandy (1771-1843) and Sir John Soane (1753-1837): An Exploration Into the Masonic and Occult Imagination of the Late Enlightenment Abstract In examining select works of English architects Joseph Michael Gandy and Sir John Soane, this dissertation is intended to bring to light several important parallels between architectural theory and freemasonry during the late Enlightenment. Both architects developed architectural theories regarding the universal origins of architecture in an attempt to establish order as well as transcend the emerging historicism of the early nineteenth century. There are strong parallels between Soane's use of architectural narrative and his discussion of architectural 'model' in relation to Gandy's understanding of 'trans-historical' architecture. The primary textual sources discussed in this thesis include Soane's Lectures on Architecture, delivered at the Royal Academy from 1809 to 1836, and Gandy's unpublished treatise entitled the Art, Philosophy, and Science of Architecture, circa 1826.
    [Show full text]
  • Bianca De Divitiis, 'Plans, Elevations and Perspective Views of Pitzhanger Manor-House', the Georgian Group Journal, Vol. Xi
    Bianca de Divitiis, ‘Plans, elevations and perspective views of Pitzhanger Manor-House’, The Georgian Group Journal, Vol. XIV, 2004, pp. 55–74 TEXT © THE AUTHORS 2004 PLANS, ELEVATIONS AND PERSPECTIVE VIEWS OF PITZHANGER MANOR-HOUS E BIANCA DE DIVITIIS t the beginning of John Soane published the mock ruins which Soane had built in the garden APlans, Elevations and Perspective Views of between and . Pitzhanger Manor House, and of the Ruins of an Dance’s wing was the only part of the property edifice of Roman Architecture … in a letter to a friend acquired by Soane in which he decided not to . Formed of eight pages of text and twelve demolish or modify, not only because in his judgement illustrations, this was a work on the suburban villa in it deserved to be kept in comparison with the rest of Ealing which he had designed and built for himself the building which lacked ‘symmetry and character’, and his family between and . Thirty years but also because it was a testimonial to the beginning had therefore passed since Soane had designed of his career, as it was the first project on which he Pitzhanger, and over twenty since he had sold the had worked when, as a boy of fifteen, he had first villa in to a General Cameron. His reasons for assisted his master (Fig. ). publishing a work on Pitzhanger and the way in As early as , only two years after the new which he described it are the subject of this article. house had been completed, and possibly encouraged The title of the work would imply that Soane was by the need to carry out some alterations and publishing materials produced in .
    [Show full text]
  • The Many Panics of 1837 People, Politics, and the Creation of a Transatlantic Financial Crisis
    The Many Panics of 1837 People, Politics, and the Creation of a Transatlantic Financial Crisis In the spring of 1837, people panicked as financial and economic uncer- tainty spread within and between New York, New Orleans, and London. Although the period of panic would dramatically influence political, cultural, and social history, those who panicked sought to erase from history their experiences of one of America’s worst early financial crises. The Many Panics of 1837 reconstructs the period between March and May 1837 in order to make arguments about the national boundaries of history, the role of information in the economy, the personal and local nature of national and international events, the origins and dissemination of economic ideas, and most importantly, what actually happened in 1837. This riveting transatlantic cultural history, based on archival research on two continents, reveals how people transformed their experiences of financial crisis into the “Panic of 1837,” a single event that would serve as a turning point in American history and an early inspiration for business cycle theory. Jessica M. Lepler is an assistant professor of history at the University of New Hampshire. The Society of American Historians awarded her Brandeis University doctoral dissertation, “1837: Anatomy of a Panic,” the 2008 Allan Nevins Prize. She has been the recipient of a Hench Post-Dissertation Fellowship from the American Antiquarian Society, a Dissertation Fellowship from the Library Company of Philadelphia’s Program in Early American Economy and Society, a John E. Rovensky Dissertation Fellowship in Business History, and a Jacob K. Javits Fellowship from the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • PART 3 the Employed Men
    THE MOUNTRAVERS PLANTATION COMMUNITY - INTRODUCTION P a g e | 1044 PART 3 The employed men Chapter 3 Biographies of managers, 1734-1807 Father and son, James and Joseph Browne, 1734-1761 James Browne was the longest-serving manager on Mountravers but a lack of documents meant that relatively few details about his plantation management could be established. Today, the Brownes are best known for their plantation in the parish of St James Windward which was later called Eden and then Eden Browne. The setting of a tale about a death by duel, the old Browne’s estate is now one of the tourist attractions in Nevis. ◄► ▼◄► James Browne may well have come from an old, established Nevis family: in the 1670s there were eight Brownes on the island, including a ‘free Negro’ called John Brown.1 By the early 1700s the number had increased to eleven, mostly through the arrival in 1685 of several Monmouth rebels transported for Governor Stapleton. It appears that James was born in 1710 and the son of James Browne, a member of the Nevis Council.2 James Browne junior studied at Trinity College, Oxford, and was said to have joined the Inner Temple at the age of 16.3 However, he did not follow a legal career but in 1734 was installed as manager on John Frederick Pinney’s plantation. His appointment was a family affair: Jeremiah Browne, who almost certainly was an uncle of James’s,4 was John Frederick Pinney’s guardian, while 1 Oliver, VL Caribbeana Vol 3 Nevis Census 1677/8 2 UKNA, CO 186/1 3 Oliver, VL History of Antigua Vol 1 p76; also http://www.innertemple.org.uk/archive/ 4 The man Mary Pinney had appointed as her son’s guardian, Jeremiah Browne, was a wealthy landowner.
    [Show full text]
  • Masonic Home Journal
    Masonic Home Journal The Oldest Continuously Published Masonic Newspaper In The United States LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY 40299 December 2019 136th Year of Publication Number 3 Page 2 Masonic Home Journal December 2019 Grand Master’s Message Greetings Brothers: I, along with the Grand Lodge Officers performed the 100th Masonic Anniver- sary Ceremony for Stone Lodge No. 890 and the 150th Masonic Anniversary Ceremony for Phelps Lodge No. 482. It was celebrated by many Brothers, family members, and friends. We congratulate these lodges on reaching this point of longevity and were honored to have taken part in these historic events. A bright future for all of our lodges will be assured with high moral standards and Masonic teachings. Veterans Day was on November 11, 2019. A day we set aside to honor our Veterans and to remember the sacrifices of those who fought in all our nation’s wars, to celebrate the contributions of all Veterans of Military service and en- sure that an appreciation of the values they fought for will live on in all Ameri- cans. I had the opportunity to attend the 12th Annual Appreciation Day at the Danville National Guard Armory. We, the Masons of Kentucky, are proud to help sponsor this event. It is my hope that each of you had the opportunity to spend time with family Geary F. Laird Grand Master 2019-2020 and friends over the Thanksgiving Holiday. We have so much for which to be grateful—the many blessings we enjoy with our families, our friends and with our extended Masonic family, our freedoms and the food we have to eat.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Freemasons from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia Jump To: Navigation , Search
    List of Freemasons From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation , search Part of a series on Masonic youth organizations Freemasonry DeMolay • A.J.E.F. • Job's Daughters International Order of the Rainbow for Girls Core articles Views of Masonry Freemasonry • Grand Lodge • Masonic • Lodge • Anti-Masonry • Anti-Masonic Party • Masonic Lodge Officers • Grand Master • Prince Hall Anti-Freemason Exhibition • Freemasonry • Regular Masonic jurisdictions • Opposition to Freemasonry within • Christianity • Continental Freemasonry Suppression of Freemasonry • History Masonic conspiracy theories • History of Freemasonry • Liberté chérie • Papal ban of Freemasonry • Taxil hoax • Masonic manuscripts • People and places Masonic bodies Masonic Temple • James Anderson • Masonic Albert Mackey • Albert Pike • Prince Hall • Masonic bodies • York Rite • Order of Mark Master John the Evangelist • John the Baptist • Masons • Holy Royal Arch • Royal Arch Masonry • William Schaw • Elizabeth Aldworth • List of Cryptic Masonry • Knights Templar • Red Cross of Freemasons • Lodge Mother Kilwinning • Constantine • Freemasons' Hall, London • House of the Temple • Scottish Rite • Knight Kadosh • The Shrine • Royal Solomon's Temple • Detroit Masonic Temple • List of Order of Jesters • Tall Cedars of Lebanon • The Grotto • Masonic buildings Societas Rosicruciana • Grand College of Rites • Other related articles Swedish Rite • Order of St. Thomas of Acon • Royal Great Architect of the Universe • Square and Compasses Order of Scotland • Order of Knight Masons • Research • Pigpen cipher • Lodge • Corks Eye of Providence • Hiram Abiff • Masonic groups for women Sprig of Acacia • Masonic Landmarks • Women and Freemasonry • Order of the Amaranth • Pike's Morals and Dogma • Propaganda Due • Dermott's Order of the Eastern Star • Co-Freemasonry • DeMolay • Ahiman Rezon • A.J.E.F.
    [Show full text]
  • Heredom, Volumes 1–26, 1992–2018 Prepared by S
    Combined Index Heredom, Volumes 1–26, 1992–2018 Prepared by S. Brent Morris, 33°, G\C\ Numbers 29°. See Kt of St Andrew Sprengseysen (1788) 9:259 1°. See Entered Apprentice Degree 30°. See Kt Kadosh Abi, Abif, Abiff. See Hiram Abif. 2°. See Fellow Craft Degree 31°. See Inspector Inquisitor Abiathar, priest of Israel 25:448, 450, 3°. See Master Mason Degree 32°. See Master of the Royal Secret 456 4°. See Secret Master Degree 33°. See Inspector General, 33° Abiram (Abhiram, Abyram), password, 5°. See Perfect Master Degree (Sacred 43°, Sup Coun. See Forty-third Degree, Elect of Pérignan 2:93 Fire, NMJ) Sup Coun Abiram (Abhiram, Abyram, Akirop), 6°. See Confidential Secretary Degree assassin of Hiram Abif 1:69; (Master of the Brazen Serpent, A 72–74; 2:90, 92, 95n5; 3:38, 43, 45; NMJ) A and G, letters, interlaced 3:29, 33, 36; 4:113, 118; 6:153, 164; 25:492; 26:230, 7°. See Provost and Judge Degree 26:251 232. See also “Masonic Assassina- 8°. See Intendant of the Building Degree “A’ The Airts The Wind Can Blaw, Of,” tion of Akirop” (David and Solomon, NMJ) R. Burns 26:62 assassination of by Joabert 12:58, 60 9°. See Élu of the Nine Degree (Master Aachen Cathedral, Eye of Providence killed in cave under burning bush of the Temple, NMJ) 20:187 3:40 10,000 Famous Freemasons, W. Denslow AAONMS. See Shriners meaning and variations of name (1957) 23:115 Aaron (brother of Moses) 1:79n; 2:95n5; 3:46; 4:119 10°.
    [Show full text]
  • Thomas Dunckerley, His Life, Labours, and Letters, Including Some Masonic
    Dear Reader, This book was referenced in one of the 185 issues of 'The Builder' Magazine which was published between January 1915 and May 1930. To celebrate the centennial of this publication, the Pictoumasons website presents a complete set of indexed issues of the magazine. As far as the editor was able to, books which were suggested to the reader have been searched for on the internet and included in 'The Builder' library.' This is a book that was preserved for generations on library shelves before it was carefully scanned by one of several organizations as part of a project to make the world's books discoverable online. Wherever possible, the source and original scanner identification has been retained. Only blank pages have been removed and this header- page added. The original book has survived long enough for the copyright to expire and the book to enter the public domain. A public domain book is one that was never subject to copyright or whose legal copyright term has expired. Whether a book is in the public domain may vary country to country. Public domain books belong to the public and 'pictoumasons' makes no claim of ownership to any of the books in this library; we are merely their custodians. Often, marks, notations and other marginalia present in the original volume will appear in these files – a reminder of this book's long journey from the publisher to a library and finally to you. Since you are reading this book now, you can probably also keep a copy of it on your computer, so we ask you to Keep it legal.
    [Show full text]
  • 119-Fvl-1881-06-18-001-Single
    CONTENTS. good grammar are insulted, and in which all Masonic teaching and all Masonic good feeling are ignored and put on one side altogether. We do not speak L EADERS 273 j Masonic Notes and Queries 277 without book, f or Masonic History and Historians 274 Royal Masonic Institution for Boys 277 " " wc have seen similar productions, which , in our opinion Thc American Vast. Master's Degree 274 : New South Wales 277 if the subject was " worth the candle," might bring the writer before the Unjustifiable Fears 274 i R EPORTS OF M ASONIC M EETINGS — Public Installations 275 j Craft Masonry 277 ?' Board of General Purposes. " Ceaseless attacks on the living and reflec- Wasting Time 275 j Instrnction 270 The Masonic 1-csUval of 1S09 275 1 Royal Arch 270 tions on the dead are not the proper methods of exhibiting the true princi ples CurtRF.sroxnEN'ci:— ;' New /caiand 279 of Freemasonry, of endearing it to its friends, or recommending it to its Increase of Louies 276 ! Tasmania 2S0 Correct Terminology 276 Masonic Tidings 2S1 foes. We always make allowances for personal idiosyncrasies or temporary Masonic Directory ^-A Query 27 6 J General Tidings 2Sr Reviews .' 276 1 Lodge Meetings for Next Week 2S2 excitement , but we think that we have " had enough of it " in the metropolis, and trust that we may not have to allude to these nonsensical proceedings again, as, like some contagious disorders, they are " infectious," and may OUR esteemed confrere, Bro. G RIMAUX , in the " Monde Maconnique " for spread far and do much evil.
    [Show full text]