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  • March 21, 1885
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  • THE UNRECORDED YEARS OF THE CRAFT.
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    Article FROM THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, 17TH MARCH 1885. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article THE UNRECORDED YEARS OF THE CRAFT. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE UNRECORDED YEARS OF THE CRAFT. Page 1 of 1
Page 3

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

From The Daily Telegraph, 17th March 1885.

t through the degrees of the Craffc and emerged a full Freemason . " Permit me to add thafc no less than four of tho softer aex have been initiated into the mysteries of Freemasonry . These wero the Hon . Mrs . Aldworth , in Lodge 44 , about 1735 , whom you mention ; Mrs . Beaton , a native of Norfolk ; a certain landlady of a Devonshire hotel : and Madame de Xaintrailles , in France .

We may add thafc reference is made to " Women in Freemasonry " in the " Occasional Papers , " which may be had of our publisher , price 1 / . —[ ED . F . C ]

The Unrecorded Years Of The Craft.

THE UNRECORDED YEARS OF THE CRAFT .

WHEN we consider that from the beginning the established policy of Freemasonry has been to commit to "writing as little as possible concerning the actual life of the Craffc , and when we remember that the art of printing is a modern invention , only some four centuries old , it is not matter for surprise that we know so little of the history of the Masonic Fraternity , not only in the primitive times , but even in the Middle Ages ,

comparatively near to our own era . Indeed , it is remarkable that we have so many manuscript Constitutions and Old Charges preserved as are now in the possession of old Lodges , or of public or private libraries , when we recall the fact that at the so-called " Revival" in England , in A . D . 1717 , the policy was to destroy rather than to

preserve the old records of the Craft . Notwithstanding all this , though year by year the past is becoming more remote , the possibility of recovering some of these documents , long hidden away or lost , is improving . Old

muniment chests and old garrets , when compelled to give up their possessions , sometimes present records of

the greatest value . Thus are old Minute Books and MS . Constitutions discovered , and little by little our vista is extended into the centuries anterior to those now regarded as historic . Yet what we are now absolutely certain of is inadequate to the demands of an enlightened curiosity . We crave a knowledge of the details of Lodge life when Sir Robert Moray was made a Mason at Newcastle , England , in A . D . 1641 ; when Elias Ashmole was initiated afc Warrington , in Lancashire , in 1646 ; when Randle Holme

was a member of tbe Chester Lodge , in 1665 ; and generally prior to 1686 , at which date , according to Aubrey ' s "Naturall Historie of Wiltshire , " then just completed , " the Fraternity of Free-Masons" * * *

" have Several ! Lodges in severall Counties " [ oi England ] , Then , prior to that , how gratifying it would be to know something at least concerning fche inner history of the Lodges of the Cathedral-builders in Great Britain and on

the continent of Europe ; the particulars of their connection with the monasteries , the transmission of their art to them from the prior building corporations and guilds , and their derivation , in turn , from Byzantium and the

Orient . Then what would we nofc give to penetrate to the arcana of Lodge life in Palestine in King Solomon ' s era , and in Egypt in the Mysteries of Osiris ? How we should like to learn of the stimulus given by all of these

instrumentalities to the impulses of genius among the

elder Craftsmen , which resulted m the triumphs of

architecture in ancient ana mediaeval times . How we should delight to v . erify legend , and change it into history . The poet Longfellow was right : —

" The legend , I feel , is a part Of the hunger and thirst of the heart . " Now , we have only the paucity of a few attested facts , while , if the past were unfolded to us , we should see as we are seen and know as we are known . Will this ever be ?

We have faith to believe that it will—measurably , at least . The delving , antiquarian , archaeological spirit is actnatino * nofc a few prominent , able , and laborious Brethren , and their efforts have already revealed many interesting facts

in the past , and have stimulated Freemasons everywhere to be on the qui vive for the discovery of other ancient records . There is a growing demand for information concerning that long period which now includes the

unrecorded years of the Craft , and all analogies justify us in expecting thafc the demand will be gratified , and light gradually be shed upon these dark ages . A few years ago

the histories of Nineveh , Babylon , and Egypt were almost closed books to us , but since the labours of Layard , Bunsen , Wilkinson , Mariette , Lenormanfc , and Rawlinson have

uncovered the ruins and discovered the relics of those

The Unrecorded Years Of The Craft.

mighty empires , we have come to feel almost familiarly acquainted with their peoples , who flourished millennials ago . So it may he in Freemasonry . The events of the past are irrevocable , bufc evidence concerning them is not

irrecoverable . Even in the case of a mystic fraternity like that of the Freemasons , sufficient disjecta membra of its once complete records may yet be found , out of which may

be reconstructed a satisfactory sketch of its continuous career , and of fche early manners and customs of the Craft . The last twenty years have been marked by remarkable discoveries in this respect , which justify us in anticipating

a continuous succession of fortunate " findd . " Indeed , we have only just set out upon the quest . Nofc only is the literature of Freemasonry a rapidly growing one , bufc nofc a few of fche Brethren who are engaged in the labour of

diffusing light to the Craft are gifted with rare ability . They are patient , laborious workers , critical scholars , bold and fortunate discoverers , and actuated , withal , by tho most loyal affection for our ancient and honourable

Fraternity . We wish them " God speed " in their labour of love . " More light" is the earnest cry of earnest Craftsmen , and more light is dawning , year by year , We

can bear the full effulgence of the sun of truth . We crave to know all of the pasfc . Little by little this knowledge shall be ours , until the unrecorded years of the Craffc are crowded off the pages of Masonic history . —Keystone .

Several installation meeting reports are unavoidably held over .

The ceremony of installation will be rehearsed at the Joppa Lodge of Instruction , Champion Hotel , Aldersgate

Street , on Tuesday next , 24 th instanfc , by . Brother A . v * . Dodson P . M . The Lodge will be opened at seven o ' clock precisely . Brethren are invited to attend .

The following Dinners were held at the ] Freemasons ' Tavern during the week ending 21 sfc March : — Monday—Grand Masters' Lodge , British Lodge . Tuesday—Benevolent Society of St . Patrick , Cadogan Lodge , Salisbury Lodge . Wednesday—Grand Stewards' Lodge , Oak Lodge , Buckingham and

Chandos Lodge . Thursday—Home for Little Boys , St . Mary's Lodge , Globe Lodge . Friday—Jordan Lodge , London and Suburban Railway Officials , King's College Hospital Clerks and Dressers . Saturday —Highland Society .

An International Exhibition of French Cookery , " Concours Culinaire Artistique , " will be held on the 22 nd and 23 rd of April , afc Willis ' s Rooms . Exhibitions of this character have been held in Paris , New York

Vienna , and Berlin , but never before m England . Prizes , consisting of medals and diplomas , will be presented . A committee , consisting of Bros . M . Ponard President , Bohers , E . Devien Secretary , Alliberfc , Lecomte , Mandiu , Penet , & c , has been formed .

The ordinary half-yearly meeting of the Crystal Palace District Gas Company was appointed to be held on Friday , the 20 th instanfc ( yesterday ) , at the Albion Tavern , Aldersgate-street , for the reception of the Report , the confirmation of the Balance-Sheet by the auditors , the election of a new auditor in the place of Bro . James Glaisher

P . G . D . resigned , the declaration of a dividend , and the transaction of other business . We learn from the Report , which is of a satisfactory character , thafc the Directors have resolved on reducing the price of gas to 2 a lOd per 1000 cubic feet from and after the date of the Lady Day accounts , and that the following are the rates

of dividend which it had been resolved to propose for declaration , namely : —6 per cent , on the Preference Stock ; 7 per cent , on the Ordinary 7 per Cent , Stock ; 10 per cent , on the Ordinary 10 per Cent . Stock j and 7 per cent , on the New Ordinary 7 per Cent .

Shares . These Dividends , which will be payable less income tax , will absord over £ 11 , 938 out of the balance of neb profits for the half-year—over 19 , 704 . We note further that Bro . Glaisher has succeeded the late Bro . Sir Erasmus Wilson on the Board of

Directors , hence his resignation of tho Auditorsbip , and that Messrs , R . J . S . Beeton and Charles Beeton are candidates respectively for the latter office . We may also mention—and we do so with pleasure

—that one of the Board's recommendations is thafc a substantial addition be made to the salary of the Secretary , Bro . Magnus Ohren P . G . A . D . C ., whose valuable services to the Company are evidently appreciated as they deserve .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1885-03-21, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_21031885/page/3/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CHRISTIANITY AND FREEMASONRY. Article 1
INITIATION OF PRINCE ALBERT VICTOR OF WALES. Article 2
FROM THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, 17TH MARCH 1885. Article 2
THE UNRECORDED YEARS OF THE CRAFT. Article 3
INSTALLATION MEETINGS, &c. Article 4
LODGE OF TRANQUILLITY, No. 185. Article 4
PORTSMOUTH LODGE, No. 487. Article 4
ERME LODGE, No. 1091. Article 4
JORDAN LODGE, No. 1402 Article 4
THE GREAT CITY LODGE, No. 1426. Article 5
HONOR OAK LODGE. No. 1986. Article 5
ABBEY LODGE, No. 2030. Article 5
LODGE LA FRANCE, No. 2060. Article 6
ECCLESTON LODGE, No. 1624. Article 6
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CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
THE QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION Article 9
THE THEATRES. Article 10
THE EMPIRE. Article 10
GAIETY. Article 10
PRINCESS'S. Article 10
COURT. Article 10
CONSECRATION OF THE MONTAGUE GUEST CHAPTER, No. 1900. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
REVIEWS. Article 13
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

From The Daily Telegraph, 17th March 1885.

t through the degrees of the Craffc and emerged a full Freemason . " Permit me to add thafc no less than four of tho softer aex have been initiated into the mysteries of Freemasonry . These wero the Hon . Mrs . Aldworth , in Lodge 44 , about 1735 , whom you mention ; Mrs . Beaton , a native of Norfolk ; a certain landlady of a Devonshire hotel : and Madame de Xaintrailles , in France .

We may add thafc reference is made to " Women in Freemasonry " in the " Occasional Papers , " which may be had of our publisher , price 1 / . —[ ED . F . C ]

The Unrecorded Years Of The Craft.

THE UNRECORDED YEARS OF THE CRAFT .

WHEN we consider that from the beginning the established policy of Freemasonry has been to commit to "writing as little as possible concerning the actual life of the Craffc , and when we remember that the art of printing is a modern invention , only some four centuries old , it is not matter for surprise that we know so little of the history of the Masonic Fraternity , not only in the primitive times , but even in the Middle Ages ,

comparatively near to our own era . Indeed , it is remarkable that we have so many manuscript Constitutions and Old Charges preserved as are now in the possession of old Lodges , or of public or private libraries , when we recall the fact that at the so-called " Revival" in England , in A . D . 1717 , the policy was to destroy rather than to

preserve the old records of the Craft . Notwithstanding all this , though year by year the past is becoming more remote , the possibility of recovering some of these documents , long hidden away or lost , is improving . Old

muniment chests and old garrets , when compelled to give up their possessions , sometimes present records of

the greatest value . Thus are old Minute Books and MS . Constitutions discovered , and little by little our vista is extended into the centuries anterior to those now regarded as historic . Yet what we are now absolutely certain of is inadequate to the demands of an enlightened curiosity . We crave a knowledge of the details of Lodge life when Sir Robert Moray was made a Mason at Newcastle , England , in A . D . 1641 ; when Elias Ashmole was initiated afc Warrington , in Lancashire , in 1646 ; when Randle Holme

was a member of tbe Chester Lodge , in 1665 ; and generally prior to 1686 , at which date , according to Aubrey ' s "Naturall Historie of Wiltshire , " then just completed , " the Fraternity of Free-Masons" * * *

" have Several ! Lodges in severall Counties " [ oi England ] , Then , prior to that , how gratifying it would be to know something at least concerning fche inner history of the Lodges of the Cathedral-builders in Great Britain and on

the continent of Europe ; the particulars of their connection with the monasteries , the transmission of their art to them from the prior building corporations and guilds , and their derivation , in turn , from Byzantium and the

Orient . Then what would we nofc give to penetrate to the arcana of Lodge life in Palestine in King Solomon ' s era , and in Egypt in the Mysteries of Osiris ? How we should like to learn of the stimulus given by all of these

instrumentalities to the impulses of genius among the

elder Craftsmen , which resulted m the triumphs of

architecture in ancient ana mediaeval times . How we should delight to v . erify legend , and change it into history . The poet Longfellow was right : —

" The legend , I feel , is a part Of the hunger and thirst of the heart . " Now , we have only the paucity of a few attested facts , while , if the past were unfolded to us , we should see as we are seen and know as we are known . Will this ever be ?

We have faith to believe that it will—measurably , at least . The delving , antiquarian , archaeological spirit is actnatino * nofc a few prominent , able , and laborious Brethren , and their efforts have already revealed many interesting facts

in the past , and have stimulated Freemasons everywhere to be on the qui vive for the discovery of other ancient records . There is a growing demand for information concerning that long period which now includes the

unrecorded years of the Craft , and all analogies justify us in expecting thafc the demand will be gratified , and light gradually be shed upon these dark ages . A few years ago

the histories of Nineveh , Babylon , and Egypt were almost closed books to us , but since the labours of Layard , Bunsen , Wilkinson , Mariette , Lenormanfc , and Rawlinson have

uncovered the ruins and discovered the relics of those

The Unrecorded Years Of The Craft.

mighty empires , we have come to feel almost familiarly acquainted with their peoples , who flourished millennials ago . So it may he in Freemasonry . The events of the past are irrevocable , bufc evidence concerning them is not

irrecoverable . Even in the case of a mystic fraternity like that of the Freemasons , sufficient disjecta membra of its once complete records may yet be found , out of which may

be reconstructed a satisfactory sketch of its continuous career , and of fche early manners and customs of the Craft . The last twenty years have been marked by remarkable discoveries in this respect , which justify us in anticipating

a continuous succession of fortunate " findd . " Indeed , we have only just set out upon the quest . Nofc only is the literature of Freemasonry a rapidly growing one , bufc nofc a few of fche Brethren who are engaged in the labour of

diffusing light to the Craft are gifted with rare ability . They are patient , laborious workers , critical scholars , bold and fortunate discoverers , and actuated , withal , by tho most loyal affection for our ancient and honourable

Fraternity . We wish them " God speed " in their labour of love . " More light" is the earnest cry of earnest Craftsmen , and more light is dawning , year by year , We

can bear the full effulgence of the sun of truth . We crave to know all of the pasfc . Little by little this knowledge shall be ours , until the unrecorded years of the Craffc are crowded off the pages of Masonic history . —Keystone .

Several installation meeting reports are unavoidably held over .

The ceremony of installation will be rehearsed at the Joppa Lodge of Instruction , Champion Hotel , Aldersgate

Street , on Tuesday next , 24 th instanfc , by . Brother A . v * . Dodson P . M . The Lodge will be opened at seven o ' clock precisely . Brethren are invited to attend .

The following Dinners were held at the ] Freemasons ' Tavern during the week ending 21 sfc March : — Monday—Grand Masters' Lodge , British Lodge . Tuesday—Benevolent Society of St . Patrick , Cadogan Lodge , Salisbury Lodge . Wednesday—Grand Stewards' Lodge , Oak Lodge , Buckingham and

Chandos Lodge . Thursday—Home for Little Boys , St . Mary's Lodge , Globe Lodge . Friday—Jordan Lodge , London and Suburban Railway Officials , King's College Hospital Clerks and Dressers . Saturday —Highland Society .

An International Exhibition of French Cookery , " Concours Culinaire Artistique , " will be held on the 22 nd and 23 rd of April , afc Willis ' s Rooms . Exhibitions of this character have been held in Paris , New York

Vienna , and Berlin , but never before m England . Prizes , consisting of medals and diplomas , will be presented . A committee , consisting of Bros . M . Ponard President , Bohers , E . Devien Secretary , Alliberfc , Lecomte , Mandiu , Penet , & c , has been formed .

The ordinary half-yearly meeting of the Crystal Palace District Gas Company was appointed to be held on Friday , the 20 th instanfc ( yesterday ) , at the Albion Tavern , Aldersgate-street , for the reception of the Report , the confirmation of the Balance-Sheet by the auditors , the election of a new auditor in the place of Bro . James Glaisher

P . G . D . resigned , the declaration of a dividend , and the transaction of other business . We learn from the Report , which is of a satisfactory character , thafc the Directors have resolved on reducing the price of gas to 2 a lOd per 1000 cubic feet from and after the date of the Lady Day accounts , and that the following are the rates

of dividend which it had been resolved to propose for declaration , namely : —6 per cent , on the Preference Stock ; 7 per cent , on the Ordinary 7 per Cent , Stock ; 10 per cent , on the Ordinary 10 per Cent . Stock j and 7 per cent , on the New Ordinary 7 per Cent .

Shares . These Dividends , which will be payable less income tax , will absord over £ 11 , 938 out of the balance of neb profits for the half-year—over 19 , 704 . We note further that Bro . Glaisher has succeeded the late Bro . Sir Erasmus Wilson on the Board of

Directors , hence his resignation of tho Auditorsbip , and that Messrs , R . J . S . Beeton and Charles Beeton are candidates respectively for the latter office . We may also mention—and we do so with pleasure

—that one of the Board's recommendations is thafc a substantial addition be made to the salary of the Secretary , Bro . Magnus Ohren P . G . A . D . C ., whose valuable services to the Company are evidently appreciated as they deserve .

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