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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • May 1, 1880
  • Page 27
  • THE MASONIC HALL ON FILBERT STREET, NEAR EIGHTH, PHILADELPHIA:
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1880: Page 27

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Page 27

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

The Masonic Hall On Filbert Street, Near Eighth, Philadelphia:

THE MASONIC HALL ON FILBERT STREET , NEAR EIGHTH , PHILADELPHIA :

THE SECOND IN PENNSYLVANIA AND THE OLDEST IN THE UNITED STATES . A Paper read before the Rosicrucian Society of Philadelphia , on Friday , January ' 60 th , 1880 , BY FRATER CHARLES E . MEYER , IX ° .

EART H to earth , dust to dust , are terms we hear as oft as we are called to follow to the grave the remains of some loved one . Such is human life . What man has made , must decay . The stateliest edifices erected b 3 man ' s ingenuity are but lessons to man that eternity is not on this earth . What the accumulations of ages have covered with dust of hundreds and thousands of

years , ancl have hidden from the eyes of man for centuries , will in the future be brought to light , and men will wonder at the wisdom , skill , ancl handicraft of the prehistoric man . Daily we read of the unearthing of some ancient cit y or monument , of which no books now in existence speak . And is it not wonderful that the earth is a better preserver than man ? Such were our thoughts in the summer of 1878 as wein company with

, , three other members ( Fraters Sutter , Packer , and Muckle ) of our college , were shown the past wonders of the old cit y of York , England . We were impressed with peculiar feelings of our insignificance as we visited the ruins of the old Hospitinm , the ruins ( wonderful for their size ) of fct . Mary ' s Abbey , with the curious Masons' marks , the old Refectory , containing a large number of relics dug from the very ground over which we had passed . A spot which

we believe was once covered with water , which by the changes wrought b y means of internal fire became earth , and was now rendered habitable b y the air we breathe , and warmed by the light of the sun . We shall never forget , at the Refectory , standing before that single tress of woman ' s hair which had been exhumed only a few short months before . There stood the stone sarcophagus in which the body was entombedno one knows how many hundreds

, years ago ; ancl when it was opened , there , in plaster , was moulded the form of its occupant , —but of the occupant nothing was left except dust , ancl this tress of jet-black hair , perfectly dressed , like unto the fashion of to-day , with all the toilet and hair-dressing appliances of the present time , thus showing that centuries ago the same habits ancl customs prevailed as now .

Thoughts such as these bring us of the present to think of the present . From this old city of York , Masonry was promulgated over the wide , wide world . From it sprang the four Grand Lodges of England—1717 , the Grand Lodge of England ; 1725 , the Grand Lodge of ALL England ; 1753 , the Grand Lodge of England , according to the old Constitutions , or " Seceders ; " aud 1779 , the Grand Lodge of England south of the Trent—the first and third of

which introduced into this country the two Systems known as "Ancient" and " Modern . " Philadelphia may well claim to be the " Premier " or " Mother " City of Freemasonry in America , both "Modern" ancl "Ancient . " In 1730 , Daniel Coxe introduced in Philadelphia that which was afterwards known as "Modern" Masonry , working under the Grand Loclge of England of 1717 . The several Lodges ( three ) met in Philadelphia for a number of years regularly , and about the year 1754 were in the zenith of their glory .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-05-01, Page 27” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051880/page/27/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE RECORDS OF AN ANCIENT LODGE. Article 1
THE SOCIETY OF THE ROSE CROIX.* Article 6
WHAT MORE CAN I SAY ? * Article 12
THE TREVOR FAMILY;* Article 13
HONEST WEALTH. Article 18
FRENCH MASONRY.—THE SANCTUARY OF MEMPHIS. Article 19
LIFE OF THE PRINCE CONSORT. Article 22
SUPERSTITIONS AND CUSTOMS CONNECTED WITH JUDAS ISCARIOT. Article 23
OUT OF TUNE. Article 26
THE MASONIC HALL ON FILBERT STREET, NEAR EIGHTH, PHILADELPHIA: Article 27
LITTLE CLARA'S GRAVE. Article 32
THE ROD IN AND OUT OF SCHOOL. Article 33
HOW ADULTERATION GOES ON. Article 36
WHITSUNTIDE CUSTOMS. Article 38
MASONIC AND GENERAL ARCHAEOLOGIA. Article 41
LITTLE BRITAIN. Article 43
Untitled Article 45
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Page 27

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

The Masonic Hall On Filbert Street, Near Eighth, Philadelphia:

THE MASONIC HALL ON FILBERT STREET , NEAR EIGHTH , PHILADELPHIA :

THE SECOND IN PENNSYLVANIA AND THE OLDEST IN THE UNITED STATES . A Paper read before the Rosicrucian Society of Philadelphia , on Friday , January ' 60 th , 1880 , BY FRATER CHARLES E . MEYER , IX ° .

EART H to earth , dust to dust , are terms we hear as oft as we are called to follow to the grave the remains of some loved one . Such is human life . What man has made , must decay . The stateliest edifices erected b 3 man ' s ingenuity are but lessons to man that eternity is not on this earth . What the accumulations of ages have covered with dust of hundreds and thousands of

years , ancl have hidden from the eyes of man for centuries , will in the future be brought to light , and men will wonder at the wisdom , skill , ancl handicraft of the prehistoric man . Daily we read of the unearthing of some ancient cit y or monument , of which no books now in existence speak . And is it not wonderful that the earth is a better preserver than man ? Such were our thoughts in the summer of 1878 as wein company with

, , three other members ( Fraters Sutter , Packer , and Muckle ) of our college , were shown the past wonders of the old cit y of York , England . We were impressed with peculiar feelings of our insignificance as we visited the ruins of the old Hospitinm , the ruins ( wonderful for their size ) of fct . Mary ' s Abbey , with the curious Masons' marks , the old Refectory , containing a large number of relics dug from the very ground over which we had passed . A spot which

we believe was once covered with water , which by the changes wrought b y means of internal fire became earth , and was now rendered habitable b y the air we breathe , and warmed by the light of the sun . We shall never forget , at the Refectory , standing before that single tress of woman ' s hair which had been exhumed only a few short months before . There stood the stone sarcophagus in which the body was entombedno one knows how many hundreds

, years ago ; ancl when it was opened , there , in plaster , was moulded the form of its occupant , —but of the occupant nothing was left except dust , ancl this tress of jet-black hair , perfectly dressed , like unto the fashion of to-day , with all the toilet and hair-dressing appliances of the present time , thus showing that centuries ago the same habits ancl customs prevailed as now .

Thoughts such as these bring us of the present to think of the present . From this old city of York , Masonry was promulgated over the wide , wide world . From it sprang the four Grand Lodges of England—1717 , the Grand Lodge of England ; 1725 , the Grand Lodge of ALL England ; 1753 , the Grand Lodge of England , according to the old Constitutions , or " Seceders ; " aud 1779 , the Grand Lodge of England south of the Trent—the first and third of

which introduced into this country the two Systems known as "Ancient" and " Modern . " Philadelphia may well claim to be the " Premier " or " Mother " City of Freemasonry in America , both "Modern" ancl "Ancient . " In 1730 , Daniel Coxe introduced in Philadelphia that which was afterwards known as "Modern" Masonry , working under the Grand Loclge of England of 1717 . The several Lodges ( three ) met in Philadelphia for a number of years regularly , and about the year 1754 were in the zenith of their glory .

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