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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1877
  • Page 5
  • LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE UF OHIO.
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The Masonic Magazine, Feb. 1, 1877: Page 5

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    Article LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE UF OHIO. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 5

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

Letter Of Bro. W. J. Hughan, Of England, To The Grand Lodge Uf Ohio.

1701 , and Avhich is to be found in the Voice of Masonry , Chicago , and the Freemason , London ) , never joined the Grand Lodge , ancl finally collapsed , while others accepted warrants and still exist , of which some of the following extracts furnish

examples . Then again there is the history of the old lodge at York to be considered , with records or MS . constitutions from the

sixteenth and seventeenth centurieS j and which constituted itself a Grand Lodge in 1725 , but died out about 1790 , not before , hoAvever , forming other lodges in England ( but nowhere else ) , Avhich children , IIOAVever , also expired during the last century , no representative UOAV being alive .

All these instances prove tbat Freemasonry was worked in lodges before the period of Grand Lodges ; that they were mainly for operative purposes , though not always , for the Aberdeen Lodge in 1670 had more speculative or non-operative

members than operatives , ancl an old lodge at Haughfoot , Scotland ( extinct ) , Avas , so far as Ave knoAV , not operative at all when there were no Grand Lodges , and also afterward . The following extracts also serve to

shoAV the spread of Freemasonry through the medium of the Grand Lodge of England , which really gave the impetus to the progress of the Craft throughout the world .

and the towns and cities mentioned generally saw the light of Modern Masonry for the first time as narrated : St . James Evening Post , September 7 , 1734 . — " We hear from Paris that a lodge of Free and Accepted Masons was lately

held there at Her Grace the Duchess of Portsmouth ' s house , where His Grace the Duke of Richmond , assisted by another English nobleman of distinction there , President Montesquieu , Brigadier Churchill , Ed . YongeEsq . Registrar of the Most

, , Honourable Order of the Bath , ancl Walter Strickland , Esq ., admitted several persons of distinction into that most Ancient and Honourable Society . " September 2 Q , 1735 . —" They write from Paris that His Grace the Duke of

Richmond and the Rev . Dr . Desaguliers , formerl y Grand Master of the Ancient and Honourable Society of Free aud Accepted Masons , ancl noAv authorized by the present Grand Master ( under his hand and seal

ancl the seal of the Order ) , having called a lodge at the Hotel Bussy , in the Rue Bnssy , His Excellency the Earl of Waldegrave , His Majesty ' s ambassador to the French King , the Right Honourable the President Montesquieu , the Marquis do

Lomurea , Lord Dursley , son to the Earl of Berkley , the Hon . Mr . Fitz-Williams , Messieurs Knight , father and son , Dr . Hickman , and several other persons , both French and English Avere present , and the folloAving noblemen ancl gentlemen Avere

admitted to the Order ; namely , His Grace the Duke of Kingston , the Honourable the Count de St . Florentin , Secretary of State to his Most Christian Majesty , the Right Honourable the Lord CheAV ton , son to Earl Waldegrave , Mr . PelhamMr .

, Armiger , Mr . Colton , and Mr . Clement , after Avhich the new brethren gave a handsome entertainment to all the company . " The origin of Freemasonry in France has yet to be Avritten . The statements current for years that a lodge ancl

Provincial Grand Lodge Avere started in Paris under authority of the Grand Lodge of England requires to be authenticated , and so far we have evidence only of the

constitution of a lodge iu that city , noted m tlie foregoing , Avhich , according to the constitution of 1738 , occurred under the Grand Mastership of Viscount Montagu . The list of lodges by Pine , published A . D . 1734 , states that the lodge held at " an Louis d'Argentdans laRue cleBoucherie a Paris , "

, was warranted 3 d April , 1732 . This is the earliest lodge that is mentioned in any authorized publication of tlie Grand Lodge of England . In the list of " Deputations beyond the sea , " inserted in the Constitutions 173 Sprior to the Parisian Lodge ,

, , Ave find the following : Gibraltar , 172 G—7 Madrid , 1727—28 ; East Indies , 1728—9 , Lower Saxony and New Jersey , America , 1729—30 ; The Hague and Russia , 1732 . Doubtless , Freemasonry in France will yet receive the attention it deserves , and as a

contribution toward the accumulation of historical facts we continue the extracts from old neAvspapers . May 12 , 1737 . — "By a private letter from Paris AVO are assured that the Order of Freemasonsestablished long since in

, England , has become lately so much in vogue in Paris , there being great striving to be admitted even at the expemo of ten 2 D 2

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-02-01, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01021877/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
SONNET. Article 3
LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE UF OHIO. Article 4
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES AND MODERN FREEMASONRY; THEIR ANALOGIES CONSIDERED. Article 7
LINES TO THE CRAFT. Article 11
OLD LONDON. Article 12
ON READING. Article 13
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 15
ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL. Article 17
CHURCH GARDENS. Article 19
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 21
THE BYZANTINE AND TURKISH EMPIRES. Article 24
GERARD MONTAGU: Article 26
BURMAH.* Article 28
THE MASONIC ANGEL. Article 30
A LEGEND. Article 32
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 33
" BLIND." Article 35
THE BRAKEMAN'S STORY. Article 35
A LAY OF MODERN DURHAM. Article 37
MEMBERSHIP OF LODGES IN ENGLAND AND IRELAND. Article 38
A CIGAR SCIENTIFICALLY DISSECTED. Article 40
NOTES BY FATHER FOY ON HIS SECOND LECTURE. Article 42
LINDISFARNE ABBEY. Article 46
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE WIDOWED SISTERS. Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Letter Of Bro. W. J. Hughan, Of England, To The Grand Lodge Uf Ohio.

1701 , and Avhich is to be found in the Voice of Masonry , Chicago , and the Freemason , London ) , never joined the Grand Lodge , ancl finally collapsed , while others accepted warrants and still exist , of which some of the following extracts furnish

examples . Then again there is the history of the old lodge at York to be considered , with records or MS . constitutions from the

sixteenth and seventeenth centurieS j and which constituted itself a Grand Lodge in 1725 , but died out about 1790 , not before , hoAvever , forming other lodges in England ( but nowhere else ) , Avhich children , IIOAVever , also expired during the last century , no representative UOAV being alive .

All these instances prove tbat Freemasonry was worked in lodges before the period of Grand Lodges ; that they were mainly for operative purposes , though not always , for the Aberdeen Lodge in 1670 had more speculative or non-operative

members than operatives , ancl an old lodge at Haughfoot , Scotland ( extinct ) , Avas , so far as Ave knoAV , not operative at all when there were no Grand Lodges , and also afterward . The following extracts also serve to

shoAV the spread of Freemasonry through the medium of the Grand Lodge of England , which really gave the impetus to the progress of the Craft throughout the world .

and the towns and cities mentioned generally saw the light of Modern Masonry for the first time as narrated : St . James Evening Post , September 7 , 1734 . — " We hear from Paris that a lodge of Free and Accepted Masons was lately

held there at Her Grace the Duchess of Portsmouth ' s house , where His Grace the Duke of Richmond , assisted by another English nobleman of distinction there , President Montesquieu , Brigadier Churchill , Ed . YongeEsq . Registrar of the Most

, , Honourable Order of the Bath , ancl Walter Strickland , Esq ., admitted several persons of distinction into that most Ancient and Honourable Society . " September 2 Q , 1735 . —" They write from Paris that His Grace the Duke of

Richmond and the Rev . Dr . Desaguliers , formerl y Grand Master of the Ancient and Honourable Society of Free aud Accepted Masons , ancl noAv authorized by the present Grand Master ( under his hand and seal

ancl the seal of the Order ) , having called a lodge at the Hotel Bussy , in the Rue Bnssy , His Excellency the Earl of Waldegrave , His Majesty ' s ambassador to the French King , the Right Honourable the President Montesquieu , the Marquis do

Lomurea , Lord Dursley , son to the Earl of Berkley , the Hon . Mr . Fitz-Williams , Messieurs Knight , father and son , Dr . Hickman , and several other persons , both French and English Avere present , and the folloAving noblemen ancl gentlemen Avere

admitted to the Order ; namely , His Grace the Duke of Kingston , the Honourable the Count de St . Florentin , Secretary of State to his Most Christian Majesty , the Right Honourable the Lord CheAV ton , son to Earl Waldegrave , Mr . PelhamMr .

, Armiger , Mr . Colton , and Mr . Clement , after Avhich the new brethren gave a handsome entertainment to all the company . " The origin of Freemasonry in France has yet to be Avritten . The statements current for years that a lodge ancl

Provincial Grand Lodge Avere started in Paris under authority of the Grand Lodge of England requires to be authenticated , and so far we have evidence only of the

constitution of a lodge iu that city , noted m tlie foregoing , Avhich , according to the constitution of 1738 , occurred under the Grand Mastership of Viscount Montagu . The list of lodges by Pine , published A . D . 1734 , states that the lodge held at " an Louis d'Argentdans laRue cleBoucherie a Paris , "

, was warranted 3 d April , 1732 . This is the earliest lodge that is mentioned in any authorized publication of tlie Grand Lodge of England . In the list of " Deputations beyond the sea , " inserted in the Constitutions 173 Sprior to the Parisian Lodge ,

, , Ave find the following : Gibraltar , 172 G—7 Madrid , 1727—28 ; East Indies , 1728—9 , Lower Saxony and New Jersey , America , 1729—30 ; The Hague and Russia , 1732 . Doubtless , Freemasonry in France will yet receive the attention it deserves , and as a

contribution toward the accumulation of historical facts we continue the extracts from old neAvspapers . May 12 , 1737 . — "By a private letter from Paris AVO are assured that the Order of Freemasonsestablished long since in

, England , has become lately so much in vogue in Paris , there being great striving to be admitted even at the expemo of ten 2 D 2

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