FREEMASONRY TODAY

Coloured wood engraving of the French Declaration of the Rights of Man, 1789.
Musee de la Revolution Francaise, Vizille, France/The Bridgeman Art Library.
Thomas Paine, Freemason?
David Harrison Looks at a Political Radical
Thomas Paine is celebrated today as an eighteenth century revolutionary, radical
and republican, who wrote countless controversial but ground breaking
pamphlets, such as Common Sense and The Age of Reason. He also wrote the
enigmatic Origins of Free-masonry, published posthumously as part ritual exposé and
part Masonic history. His interests in Freemasonry were obvious, and the fact that some
of his supporters and associates, such as Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, James
Monroe, Lafayette, Nicolas de Bonneville and Richard Price, were Freemasons, has led
some historians, such as Margaret Jacob, to believe Paine was also a mason.
Certainly during the nineteenth
century, masonic historians such as
R.F. Gould and A.F.A. Woodford went
to painstaking lengths to distance
Paine from the Craft, his very
association to Freemasonry causing
embarrassment and shame, with Gould
even stating that Paine wasn’t the
author of the exposé. Woodford
dismissed Paine’s involvement with
Freemasonry, declaring that his exposé
had no value, and contemptuously
stated that Freemasonry was no way
honoured with Paine’s connection, not
wanting the Craft to be associated with
such a political radical. Ironically, all
of the attention that Paine received
from masonic historians was seen as
proof in some circles.
Paine’s colourful life began in
Thetford in 1737. He was set to follow
his Quaker father as a corset-maker,
but he was never at rest and constantly
sought knowledge. His first wife died
in childbirth, and Paine drifted into
teaching and finally worked in excise.
He married for a second time, though
he and his wife were to separate as
Paine’s interest in politics developed.
His first foray into the political arena
was to petition Parliament on behalf of
his fellow excisemen for better
working conditions, an adventure
which led him to the London coffeehouses
and to a meeting with
Freemason Benjamin Franklin, who
was visiting London at the time.
Paine’s lobbying was ignored and he
lost his job, so in 1774, on invitation
from Franklin himself, he left for the
American colonies.
The Move to North America
Paine settled into Philadelphia and
with an introduction from Franklin, he
became the editor of the Pennsylvania
Magazine, quickly becoming a man of
letters, embracing the spirit of reform
in America and spearheading the antislavery
movement. Indeed, Franklin
was constantly name-dropped into his
writings, Paine using him as a seal of
approval. It was his use of ‘common’
language, so easily understood by the
America people, which made his
pamphlet Common Sense so successful
during the American Revolution,
gaining Paine the admiration and
support of another Freemason, George
Washington.
Paine’s writing skills and
friendship with Franklin and
Washington enabled him to stay at the
forefront of the political action and he
was made secretary to Congress’
Committee for Foreign Affairs from
1777-79. After Paine left this position,
he continued to be active in foreign
affairs, and letters from Paine to
Washington reveal a personal
friendship at this time, Washington
arranging a hefty salary for Paine.
Despite this, Paine was not happy at
the way the Revolution was going with
the political power being shared by the
landowning elite, and he began to
make enemies.
The French Revolution
In 1787, Paine returned to England,
where he once again entered into
political debate, joining radical clubs
in London with William Blake (no
stranger to Freemasonry himself) and
promoted his invention of an iron
bridge. When the French Revolution
erupted in 1789, Paine saw an
opportunity to start again and wrote
The Rights of Man in response to
Edmund Burke’s rebuke of the
Revolution. Burke had written in
answer to Freemason Richard Price’s
sermon on the Revolution, and Paine
defended Price, confirming the natural
rights of man against the tyranny of
Kings, supporting the ideas of the
Enlightenment made popular in France
by Voltaire.
On the advice of Blake Paine fled
for France, and with the help of friends
like Freemason, the Marquis de
Lafayette, he entered the political
arena, assisting in forging the new
French Constitution.
However, events soon turned sour
with the Terror, and as an Englishman
who spoke no French, he began to
attract suspicion and gained enemies
after pleading for the life of King
Louis. He was imprisoned and only
released by the intervention of another
Freemason, James Monroe in 1793.
Paine stayed in France living for a time
with Monroe and another Freemason
Nicolas de Bonneville, where he
completed his most controversial work
to date: The Age of Reason.
Paine supported the spiritual
approach known as Deism – a belief
system which derives the existence of
God based on Reason as apposed to
sacred scripture, and in The Age of
Reason, Paine refers to God in a
scientific sense as a Creator of a
mechanized Universe. Disillusioned,
he finally departed to the USA in 1802
with the help of Thomas Jefferson,
who had also moved in a masonic
milieu, although actual proof of his
membership has never been found.
Paine died seven years later.
Utopia and Freemasonry
Paine sought a Utopian vision for
the world, embracing the recognizable
essence of Freemasonry, promoting
ideals such as democracy, education,
morality, religious toleration, and the
fashionable Newtonian natural
philosophy, Paine shared Newton’s
views: that the existence of God was to
be found in Nature.
Indeed, in part one of his Age of
Reason, a number of chapters are
dedicated to the Newtonian system of
the Universe, in a fashion which is
very similar to the presentation of the
Craft ritual, giving an almost poetical
description of the Earth and five other
planets rotating around the Sun,
explaining how gravity orders the
harmony of the Solar system.
His Origins of Free-Masonry,
which was regarded after his death as a
missing chapter belonging to the
unpublished third part of the Age of
Reason, presented a description of the
masonic ritual along with his theory
that Freemasonry was a form of Sun
worship. Curiously, the essay fits in
with his work in the Age of Reason,
and as a whole it follows a mystical
Newtonian theme of a modern ordered
universe that complements God as
being revealed in Nature and Reason.
The work certainly echoes masonic
themes with Paine using ancient
knowledge by Euclid to support his
views on the Newtonian universe and
discussions on the Biblical cubit, a
measurement used in the construction
of Solomon’s Temple.
Paine did however make a lasting
contribution to Freemasonry, his
Origins of Free-Masonry being
influential for Carlile’s Manual of
Freemasonry, Carlile quoting Paine
when writing his thoughts on the
Craft’s history. A number of lodges in
the USA were also named after Paine,
and when he died many lodges
throughout America honoured him.
If Paine did enter into Freemasonry,
it would have been during the period of
the American Revolution, his life being
at the epicentre of the social elite at
that time, his closeness to Franklin,
Washington, Lafayette and Monroe
suggesting that he was undoubtedly
aware of their Masonic membership.
Paine was certainly attracted to clubs
and societies throughout his life, such
as the White Hart Club which Paine
attended when he was an exciseman in
Lewes. He was a founding member of
the first Anti-Slavery Society in
America and he was involved in the
society of Theophilanthropists and
Philosophical Society, where he
discussed the Newtonian universe and
Euclid’s geometry.
Paine was unquestionably informed
by the ethos of Freemasonry, an ethos
that influenced his writings and
inspired his vision of a just and fairer
society, an aspiration wholly in accord
with Freemasonry today as much as in
the later eighteenth century.
What was dangerously
revolutionary and radical then, is much
applauded now.
Issue 46, Autumn 2008
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