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  • Aug. 4, 1877
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  • NO. 79 AND THE OLD LODGE LISTS.
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No. 79 And The Old Lodge Lists.

In my last paper I called the Enwliuson list a 1733 list , but upon further consideration I feel satisfied that it was mainly copied from a 1732 list , and tho few Lodges added to it rp to 2 b ' th July 1733 , wero obtained from tho Graud Secretary about tho last-named date ,

for if he bad had before him a complete 1733 list , he would not have stopped where he did , but would have added tho five remaining podges , which complete the list for 1733 . It is , therefore , possible that No . 79 may have been blank even in tho 1732 list , but it was certainly so on 26 th July 1733 .

I havo already stated that Rawlinson was an LL . D . and a F . E . S ., but , strange to say , tho name of Dr . Richard Rawlinson is not to be found either in the " EncyclopaediaBritannica , " in "Chambers ' , " nor in Charles Knight ' s " English Encyclopaedia . " I found out , however , something about him at last in Alibone ' s " Dictionary of Authors . "

Thoro is quite a lengthy paragraph in that work about R . Rawlinson , but it is not a biography ; it consists of numerous hints , from which a biographer might collect materials for his purpose . Two facts must be noticed here , viz ., Dr . Rawlinson died in 1759 , and " Tho Sale of Richards's Collection of Books , MSS ., etc ., employed fifty-eight days . " So saysAlibono .

Bro . Rawliuson's Masonic zeal may bo judged from his having been a member of several Lodges , from his collection of a number of Masonic curiosities , and from the pains ho took in compiling his Lodge list upon an entirely novel plan , as I shall presently show . Hence I have a right to assume that a man of that peculiar tasto ancl method would never havo stopped short with his list in tho middle of

the year , if he had had the complete 1733 list before him ; tho probability therefore is that he copied the main part from a 1732 list , and obtained the numbers of tho several Lodges constituted in 1733 from tho Grand Secretary . As wc aro indebted to tho Rev . Bro . J . S . Sidebotham for tho little information about Rawliuson ' s Masonry , aud about his Masonic curiosities still preserved at Oxford , I shall quote lis own words about Bro . Rawliuson's Lodge list , as follows : —

" The list of recognised Lodges existing at that timo may not be uninteresting . Bro . Rawlinson evidently intended to make it a complete list of every member of the Craft , and he has devoted at least an entire page to every Lodgo ; most of these are , however , blank , ancl , as in all pages which contain tho list of members of the liod j ^ e , his own name appears , we may infer that he only completed the lists of the Lodges to which he himself belonged . "

I trust that the few hints indicated about a distinguished and learned brother will induce some Masonic scholar to collect and combine all tho materials aud facts about Dr . Rawlinson , so that Masons may know something more about him . I am sure the brother who would do that would enhance the value of a Masonic paper far more , aud would confer a greater service to tho Craft , than all those who

till our magazines with accounts of Ancient Mysteries , Rosicrucianism , Templarism , and what not ; all whioh has about as much to do with Masonry as the man in the moon . I must here only add , should Alibono ' s Dictionary be not readily obtaiuablo in England , for it is a Philadelphia publicatiou , tho desired information will probably bo found in Watt's " Bibliotheca Britannica . " Ancl now I must

resume the Lodgo lists . Bro . Hughan found in the Lodge list appended to Smith ' s Pocket Companion , 1728 , a London Lodge , inserted ancl attached to No . 79 . I at first supposed that the Lodges may have been renumbered in 1738 , and that No . SO took the rank of 79 , or if any other blanks existed then hig her up on the list , some other Lodges lower down were pushed up to No . 79 . I have , however , now before me a Smith ' s

Pocket Companion of 1738 , but tho Lodgo list appended thereto was printed in 1737 . Between No . 2 and No . 120 fifteen numbers are blank ; and tho Lodges numbered 78 ancl 80 are precisely the same Lodges as those of tho earlier lists , so that there could have been no pushing up or tho renumbering of Lodges that year ; and between Nos . 78 ancl 80 , the following is inserted : " 79 , Two Angels and a Crown , Little St . Martin ' s Lane , 2 nd and 4 th Friday . "

I said that tho Lodge list was printed in 1737 ; but as the last Lodge on tho list is dated 20 th April 1737 , the ma n part of that list must have been copied from a 173 G list , and tho few Lodges that were constituted in 1737 , the editor must have obtained from the Grand Secretary . The question now to bo decided is , where did that

Lodge como from that assumed No . 79 in 173 b' or 37 ? Had it been a Lodge of tho Ancients , I would have supposed that they sold the old No . 79 to a new Lodge ; but the Grand Lodge of England never sold the rank or precedency of its defunct Lodges ; why then , did the Lodge that was held in 1736 , at tho Two Angels and the Crown , assume the number of a Lodge that was constituted iu 1731 ?

To this question one rational answer only can bo given , viz ., that the very identical No . 79 Lodge that was constituted in 1731 , after a dormancy of several years , was revised , ancl tho Grand Lodge allowed it to retain its original No . 79 . I am awaro , however , that the following law was enacted by the Grand Lodge , 24 th February 1735 ,

viz . — " If any Lodge within the Bills of Mortality shall ceaso to meet regularly during twelve mouths successive , its name aud place shall be erased or blotted out of the Grand Lodge Book and engraved list , and if they petition to be again inserted and owned as a regular Lodge , it must loso its former rank and precedency , and submit to a new Constitution . "

The seeming obstacle to my theory may , however , be removed under the following suppositions : —First , tho brethren of No . 79 may have petitioned tho Grand Lodge at that very meeting , when the above law was passed ; as there was no law then existing against their resumption of their old number , they wore allowed to resume it , and this very discussion may have suggested the necessity of a law to prevent other dormant Lodges from claiming their old rank , when they require to go to work again . And , second , supposing oven the petition for the restoration of its

No. 79 And The Old Lodge Lists.

old rank was made subsequent to tho passage of the above law , ifc may have been argued iu behalf of the petitioners , that a law cannot be made to retract for past offences ; hence the 1735 law camid only bo applied to Lodges that should siu thereafter , and not to those who had sinned before . In law term , it is called an v- post facto law , and furthermore , as several other Lodges had then ceased to

meet regularly , it was only good policy to reinstate No . 7 9 , so as to induce the other defaulters to do tho like . One or tho other of tho abovo suppositions may account for the restoration of the original Lodge . My theory is further strengthened fjy Dr . Anderson ' s list in his Constitution , 1738 , who added to tho Lodgo , that held its meetings at tho Two Angels , & c , " 1731 . "

It , then , my theory is admitted , it is not impossible that tho Graud Lodgo of England's record may establish it as a fact . I am awaro that the records of that period aro very meagre , aud the restoration of a Lodge may have been omitted from its minutes , but yot , something may bo found iu tho record about No . 79 . I havo therefore begged my ever obliging friend , the Grand Secretary of England ,

to search tho record from 21 th February 1735 to 1737 . I would make another suggestion still ; the chance is very faint ; but if we fail in ono direction , wo may find it in another . I perceive that three Lodges , constituted iu 1731 , are still in existence , and who knows whether ono of tho Lodges may not bo tho identical one that was originally No . 79 ? The Masters of those Lodges

ought therefore to bo questioned ; wo might learn something from tho exact date of a charter , or from tho successive change of tho numbers marked on tho margin . This inquiry , if it should bo deemed necessary , I am sure our Bro . Hughan , to whom tho fraternity is so greatly indebted for his manifold researches iu tho Masonic field of inquiry , would readily do for me .

Tho lndicrnous controversy about Masonic Mothership is mainly duo to a local pride among Americans . Each ono is pulled up with the notion , not only that America is the greatest country in tho world , but also that his State is tho greatest in tho country , and his city is , or will bo , the most important city iu tho State ; thus , in tho Masonic Magazine , Vol . II ., page 5 , Bro . MacCalla confesses that

he was tho moro pleased to acknowledge his former opinion about Boston being the Mother , & c , to have been wrong , because he was a Philadelphian , and ho went on to prove that Philadelphia was tho true Mother . Had ho proved his theory , I should not only havo supported him from a feeling of principle , but I would have been entitled to some applause as tho investigator of that inqm ' ry . But

on perusing his great article , I saw at ouco that there was moro assumption than proof , and I frankly pointed out by letter to him of his short . comings , ancl subsequently remonstrated in the press against his baseless conclusions . But strange to say , his notion spread liko wildfire . Dr . Mackey congratulated him , and only regretted thab the discovery came too late for his enshrining Mother Philadelphia

in his Encyclopaedia of ' Buncombe ., and tho other literati also congratu . lated . But when Bro . Hughan ' s No . 79 discovery reached here , Philadelphia became rank mad with excitement . True , onr Bro . Hughan qualified tho joyful tidings with an admission that tho Hoop Lodgo is not nampd in any so far known English Lodge list . But as ho expressed a hope that an earlier English list may yet ba

discovered , that may corroborate with tho Dublin 1735 list , the mere hope of Bro . Hughan was accepted as an accomplished fact , aud all united in singing Hosanna to No . 79 , tho new discovered Mother of American Masonry , ancl they have been singing so ever since . Bro . P . G . M . Nickerson , in the New England Freemason , endeavoured to recall these deluded ones to some degree of reason , bnt ho was only

jeered , and sneered , and laughed at for his pains . At last , earlier Lodge lists came to light , and assuming even that Bro . Hervey will be unable to throw any light on the history of No . 79 , yot these Lodgo lists by themselves havo settled tho vexed question . And should anyone still persist that the Lodge at the Hoop in Philadel phia was the No . 79 , then , let him explain why No . 79 is blank ou

Rawlinson s list , compiled 2 bth July 1733 ? why it is blank on Pine ' s list of 1731 ? why it is blank on all other English lists ? and last , and not least , why was a new Loudon Lodgo in 1736-7 the recipient of No . 79 ? I frankly confess that the streets of Philadelphia are more regular than that of auy city in tho world , that her system of numbering

houses is the most perfect system in tho world , that her Exhibition in 187 G was the largest in the world , that her Masonic Tempio is the finest aud grandest in tho world . When I visited Philadel phia I was most handsomely received by R . W . Bro . Thomson G . S . and P . G . M ., likewise Bro . MacCalla and other distinguished Philadelphia brethren , for which I am very grateful . 1 shall therefore say all I

can in behalf of Philadelphia , ancl I confess that in many respects Boston is far behind Philadelphia ; but nevertheless historic facts should never be perverted through per & onal preferences or prejudices , aud tho facts I laid before you aud your readers must convince any one that Philadelphi > cannot claim American Masonic Mothershi p from a legal standpoint .

And now thau my labour is completed , I cannot help sayin ^ to myself that , if the Irish brother in 1735 had known that his guesswork would occasion so much popping up , aud so much popping down , that it would give mo so much trouble to col ato ami compare till thoso Lodge lists ancl dates , and to ponder and discriminate between the old and new style , and in this hot season , too , with the

thermometer ranging about f ! 0 cleg . Fahrenheit , besides the trouble I havo to give you , and Bro . Hervey , and Bro . Hughan , aud perhaps to the three Woisliipful Masters ot the Lodges constituted in 1731 , besides the el ceteras too numerous to mention ; I say again if that brother had known all that , I am suro he would uovr r have been

guilty of giving " a local habitation and a name " to Ad . V : . And , in conclusion , I hope aud trust that this will bo a warning and a lesson to all present and future Masonic book makers , aud that they will take due notice thereof ancl govern themselves accordingly . So mote it be .

Bpstpu , UiS ., SPfch Jiii j 1977 i

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1877-08-04, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_04081877/page/7/.
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CREDIBILITY OF EARLY AMERICAN MASONIC HISTORY. Article 1
MASONIC PORTRAITS. (No. 44.) Article 2
FESTIVAL OF THE MARK MASTERS' BENEVOLENT FUND. Article 4
A TRIP TO CANTERBURY Article 5
CONSECRATION OF THE ROTHESAY LODGE, No. 1687. Article 5
PERIODICAL LITERATURE Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
NO. 79 AND THE OLD LODGE LISTS. Article 6
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OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 8
Old Warrants. Article 9
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE, SOUTH WALES (WESTERN DIVISION.) Article 10
TALBOT LODGE, No. 1323, SWANSEA Article 11
THE SURREY MASONIC HALL Article 11
WOODBRIDGE GRAMMAR SCHOOL. Article 11
NOTICE.—BACK NUMBERS. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
NOTICES OF MEETINGS Article 12
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST Article 14
MASONIC CONSERVATISM Article 14
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

No. 79 And The Old Lodge Lists.

In my last paper I called the Enwliuson list a 1733 list , but upon further consideration I feel satisfied that it was mainly copied from a 1732 list , and tho few Lodges added to it rp to 2 b ' th July 1733 , wero obtained from tho Graud Secretary about tho last-named date ,

for if he bad had before him a complete 1733 list , he would not have stopped where he did , but would have added tho five remaining podges , which complete the list for 1733 . It is , therefore , possible that No . 79 may have been blank even in tho 1732 list , but it was certainly so on 26 th July 1733 .

I havo already stated that Rawlinson was an LL . D . and a F . E . S ., but , strange to say , tho name of Dr . Richard Rawlinson is not to be found either in the " EncyclopaediaBritannica , " in "Chambers ' , " nor in Charles Knight ' s " English Encyclopaedia . " I found out , however , something about him at last in Alibone ' s " Dictionary of Authors . "

Thoro is quite a lengthy paragraph in that work about R . Rawlinson , but it is not a biography ; it consists of numerous hints , from which a biographer might collect materials for his purpose . Two facts must be noticed here , viz ., Dr . Rawlinson died in 1759 , and " Tho Sale of Richards's Collection of Books , MSS ., etc ., employed fifty-eight days . " So saysAlibono .

Bro . Rawliuson's Masonic zeal may bo judged from his having been a member of several Lodges , from his collection of a number of Masonic curiosities , and from the pains ho took in compiling his Lodge list upon an entirely novel plan , as I shall presently show . Hence I have a right to assume that a man of that peculiar tasto ancl method would never havo stopped short with his list in tho middle of

the year , if he had had the complete 1733 list before him ; tho probability therefore is that he copied the main part from a 1732 list , and obtained the numbers of tho several Lodges constituted in 1733 from tho Grand Secretary . As wc aro indebted to tho Rev . Bro . J . S . Sidebotham for tho little information about Rawliuson ' s Masonry , aud about his Masonic curiosities still preserved at Oxford , I shall quote lis own words about Bro . Rawliuson's Lodge list , as follows : —

" The list of recognised Lodges existing at that timo may not be uninteresting . Bro . Rawlinson evidently intended to make it a complete list of every member of the Craft , and he has devoted at least an entire page to every Lodgo ; most of these are , however , blank , ancl , as in all pages which contain tho list of members of the liod j ^ e , his own name appears , we may infer that he only completed the lists of the Lodges to which he himself belonged . "

I trust that the few hints indicated about a distinguished and learned brother will induce some Masonic scholar to collect and combine all tho materials aud facts about Dr . Rawlinson , so that Masons may know something more about him . I am sure the brother who would do that would enhance the value of a Masonic paper far more , aud would confer a greater service to tho Craft , than all those who

till our magazines with accounts of Ancient Mysteries , Rosicrucianism , Templarism , and what not ; all whioh has about as much to do with Masonry as the man in the moon . I must here only add , should Alibono ' s Dictionary be not readily obtaiuablo in England , for it is a Philadelphia publicatiou , tho desired information will probably bo found in Watt's " Bibliotheca Britannica . " Ancl now I must

resume the Lodgo lists . Bro . Hughan found in the Lodge list appended to Smith ' s Pocket Companion , 1728 , a London Lodge , inserted ancl attached to No . 79 . I at first supposed that the Lodges may have been renumbered in 1738 , and that No . SO took the rank of 79 , or if any other blanks existed then hig her up on the list , some other Lodges lower down were pushed up to No . 79 . I have , however , now before me a Smith ' s

Pocket Companion of 1738 , but tho Lodgo list appended thereto was printed in 1737 . Between No . 2 and No . 120 fifteen numbers are blank ; and tho Lodges numbered 78 ancl 80 are precisely the same Lodges as those of tho earlier lists , so that there could have been no pushing up or tho renumbering of Lodges that year ; and between Nos . 78 ancl 80 , the following is inserted : " 79 , Two Angels and a Crown , Little St . Martin ' s Lane , 2 nd and 4 th Friday . "

I said that tho Lodge list was printed in 1737 ; but as the last Lodge on tho list is dated 20 th April 1737 , the ma n part of that list must have been copied from a 173 G list , and tho few Lodges that were constituted in 1737 , the editor must have obtained from the Grand Secretary . The question now to bo decided is , where did that

Lodge como from that assumed No . 79 in 173 b' or 37 ? Had it been a Lodge of tho Ancients , I would have supposed that they sold the old No . 79 to a new Lodge ; but the Grand Lodge of England never sold the rank or precedency of its defunct Lodges ; why then , did the Lodge that was held in 1736 , at tho Two Angels and the Crown , assume the number of a Lodge that was constituted iu 1731 ?

To this question one rational answer only can bo given , viz ., that the very identical No . 79 Lodge that was constituted in 1731 , after a dormancy of several years , was revised , ancl tho Grand Lodge allowed it to retain its original No . 79 . I am awaro , however , that the following law was enacted by the Grand Lodge , 24 th February 1735 ,

viz . — " If any Lodge within the Bills of Mortality shall ceaso to meet regularly during twelve mouths successive , its name aud place shall be erased or blotted out of the Grand Lodge Book and engraved list , and if they petition to be again inserted and owned as a regular Lodge , it must loso its former rank and precedency , and submit to a new Constitution . "

The seeming obstacle to my theory may , however , be removed under the following suppositions : —First , tho brethren of No . 79 may have petitioned tho Grand Lodge at that very meeting , when the above law was passed ; as there was no law then existing against their resumption of their old number , they wore allowed to resume it , and this very discussion may have suggested the necessity of a law to prevent other dormant Lodges from claiming their old rank , when they require to go to work again . And , second , supposing oven the petition for the restoration of its

No. 79 And The Old Lodge Lists.

old rank was made subsequent to tho passage of the above law , ifc may have been argued iu behalf of the petitioners , that a law cannot be made to retract for past offences ; hence the 1735 law camid only bo applied to Lodges that should siu thereafter , and not to those who had sinned before . In law term , it is called an v- post facto law , and furthermore , as several other Lodges had then ceased to

meet regularly , it was only good policy to reinstate No . 7 9 , so as to induce the other defaulters to do tho like . One or tho other of tho abovo suppositions may account for the restoration of the original Lodge . My theory is further strengthened fjy Dr . Anderson ' s list in his Constitution , 1738 , who added to tho Lodgo , that held its meetings at tho Two Angels , & c , " 1731 . "

It , then , my theory is admitted , it is not impossible that tho Graud Lodgo of England's record may establish it as a fact . I am awaro that the records of that period aro very meagre , aud the restoration of a Lodge may have been omitted from its minutes , but yot , something may bo found iu tho record about No . 79 . I havo therefore begged my ever obliging friend , the Grand Secretary of England ,

to search tho record from 21 th February 1735 to 1737 . I would make another suggestion still ; the chance is very faint ; but if we fail in ono direction , wo may find it in another . I perceive that three Lodges , constituted iu 1731 , are still in existence , and who knows whether ono of tho Lodges may not bo tho identical one that was originally No . 79 ? The Masters of those Lodges

ought therefore to bo questioned ; wo might learn something from tho exact date of a charter , or from tho successive change of tho numbers marked on tho margin . This inquiry , if it should bo deemed necessary , I am sure our Bro . Hughan , to whom tho fraternity is so greatly indebted for his manifold researches iu tho Masonic field of inquiry , would readily do for me .

Tho lndicrnous controversy about Masonic Mothership is mainly duo to a local pride among Americans . Each ono is pulled up with the notion , not only that America is the greatest country in tho world , but also that his State is tho greatest in tho country , and his city is , or will bo , the most important city iu tho State ; thus , in tho Masonic Magazine , Vol . II ., page 5 , Bro . MacCalla confesses that

he was tho moro pleased to acknowledge his former opinion about Boston being the Mother , & c , to have been wrong , because he was a Philadelphian , and ho went on to prove that Philadelphia was tho true Mother . Had ho proved his theory , I should not only havo supported him from a feeling of principle , but I would have been entitled to some applause as tho investigator of that inqm ' ry . But

on perusing his great article , I saw at ouco that there was moro assumption than proof , and I frankly pointed out by letter to him of his short . comings , ancl subsequently remonstrated in the press against his baseless conclusions . But strange to say , his notion spread liko wildfire . Dr . Mackey congratulated him , and only regretted thab the discovery came too late for his enshrining Mother Philadelphia

in his Encyclopaedia of ' Buncombe ., and tho other literati also congratu . lated . But when Bro . Hughan ' s No . 79 discovery reached here , Philadelphia became rank mad with excitement . True , onr Bro . Hughan qualified tho joyful tidings with an admission that tho Hoop Lodgo is not nampd in any so far known English Lodge list . But as ho expressed a hope that an earlier English list may yet ba

discovered , that may corroborate with tho Dublin 1735 list , the mere hope of Bro . Hughan was accepted as an accomplished fact , aud all united in singing Hosanna to No . 79 , tho new discovered Mother of American Masonry , ancl they have been singing so ever since . Bro . P . G . M . Nickerson , in the New England Freemason , endeavoured to recall these deluded ones to some degree of reason , bnt ho was only

jeered , and sneered , and laughed at for his pains . At last , earlier Lodge lists came to light , and assuming even that Bro . Hervey will be unable to throw any light on the history of No . 79 , yot these Lodgo lists by themselves havo settled tho vexed question . And should anyone still persist that the Lodge at the Hoop in Philadel phia was the No . 79 , then , let him explain why No . 79 is blank ou

Rawlinson s list , compiled 2 bth July 1733 ? why it is blank on Pine ' s list of 1731 ? why it is blank on all other English lists ? and last , and not least , why was a new Loudon Lodgo in 1736-7 the recipient of No . 79 ? I frankly confess that the streets of Philadelphia are more regular than that of auy city in tho world , that her system of numbering

houses is the most perfect system in tho world , that her Exhibition in 187 G was the largest in the world , that her Masonic Tempio is the finest aud grandest in tho world . When I visited Philadel phia I was most handsomely received by R . W . Bro . Thomson G . S . and P . G . M ., likewise Bro . MacCalla and other distinguished Philadelphia brethren , for which I am very grateful . 1 shall therefore say all I

can in behalf of Philadelphia , ancl I confess that in many respects Boston is far behind Philadelphia ; but nevertheless historic facts should never be perverted through per & onal preferences or prejudices , aud tho facts I laid before you aud your readers must convince any one that Philadelphi > cannot claim American Masonic Mothershi p from a legal standpoint .

And now thau my labour is completed , I cannot help sayin ^ to myself that , if the Irish brother in 1735 had known that his guesswork would occasion so much popping up , aud so much popping down , that it would give mo so much trouble to col ato ami compare till thoso Lodge lists ancl dates , and to ponder and discriminate between the old and new style , and in this hot season , too , with the

thermometer ranging about f ! 0 cleg . Fahrenheit , besides the trouble I havo to give you , and Bro . Hervey , and Bro . Hughan , aud perhaps to the three Woisliipful Masters ot the Lodges constituted in 1731 , besides the el ceteras too numerous to mention ; I say again if that brother had known all that , I am suro he would uovr r have been

guilty of giving " a local habitation and a name " to Ad . V : . And , in conclusion , I hope aud trust that this will bo a warning and a lesson to all present and future Masonic book makers , aud that they will take due notice thereof ancl govern themselves accordingly . So mote it be .

Bpstpu , UiS ., SPfch Jiii j 1977 i

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