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Summer 2008
Issue 45

Letter from the Editor
Grand Lodge News
News and Views
On The Level
International News
Beyond the Craft
Perambulating the Lodge
Masonic Dining and Celebration
Interview: The Grand Chancellor
The Orator
Walking the Way of Saint James
Abd el-Kader: Algerian Nationalist and Freemason
Province of Cambridgeshire Library & Museum
Brother Lightfoote's Journal
Review: Committed to the Flames
Review: The Mythology of Secret Societies
Review: The Dawn of Astrology
Letters to the Editor
Internet
Library & Museum of Freemasonry
Grand Lodge Quarterly Communication
Convocation of Supreme Grand Chapter
RMBI
Masonic Samaritan Fund
Grand Charity
RMTGB
Canon Richard Tydeman: Looking unto the Rock
Copyright 1997-2008
Grand Lodge Publications Ltd
Designed and Maintained by: Cyberpoint Limited

FREEMASONRY TODAY





The Province of Cambridgeshire Masonic Library and Museum
Our visit to The Province of Cambridgeshire Masonic Library and Museum was opportune and historic. Rodney J Wolverson the Provincial Grand Master formally launched the new Museum with a personal presentation handed to the Chairman of the Library and Museum, Jack D Cole. In 1980 the Council Management decided to form a Library and Museum. A considerable collection ...





The Potters' Art
There was a sense of excitement as we walked through the doors of the Kent Museum of Freemasonry in the very heart of Canterbury. Applications to the Heritage Lottery Fund for a grant of £250,000 have received positive responses and the Museum trust, under the Chairmanship of Assistant Provincial Grand Master Charles Boxer and Secretary Roger O’Brien, are intent on preparing themselves. On our visit to the Museum we decided ...





Early Masonic Jewels
The Worcester Masonic Museum is famed throughout the masonic world for its outstanding collection of the medals and jewels belonging to the Craft and beyond. In August 1884, George Taylor, an enthusiastic Freemason and numismatist of Kidderminster, sold his collection at cost to the Museum, following an exhibition at the Guildhall in Worcester. This was to become the nucleus of the Museum collection. Just 7 years later in 1891, together with the ...





Launching a Museum in Essex
As reported in the last issue of Freemasonry Today the Provincial Grand Master, John Webb, officially opened the Essex Masonic Library and Museum last autumn. The progress that has been made just eight months later when I visited, is quite astounding. A range of collectables are displayed in captioned trays and shelves in an attractive and well-furnished room. A section is dedicated to the library and the atmosphere is that of a fully-fledged ...






Sussex Masonic Centre
The City of Brighton, the masonic capital of the Province of Sussex, is dominated by the stupendous Royal Pavilion. There is a strong masonic connection in this context, which starts with HRH The Prince of Wales (1762-1830 and, from 1820, King George IV), who was initiated into Freemasonry in 1787 and served as ...





Guarding Cornwall's Masonic History
We were in the Province of Cornwall at the south-eastern end of St Ives bay, six miles from Penzance, to visit Hayle, a town with a rich industrial heritage, coming into importance in the mid eighteenth century as did Freemasonry itself in the area. I could not avoid thinking how tough such a journey would have been in the mid-1700s when contact with Grand Lodge in London was accomplished on horseback or in uncomfortable coaches ...





333 Banbury Road, Oxford
It was only a matter of time before Oxfordshire, which traces its masonic roots to 1795 and is so closely associated with the world of academia, should also have its own centre for masonic education and study. But it took a while: that aspiration, first articulated in 1954, was finally fulfilled in 1990 when The Province of Oxfordshire Library and Museum was launched initially by the efforts of John Jones and Peter Laurence, and then of Stuart ...





The Treasures of Freemasons' Hall London
As a preamble to an article that will do justice to the amazing content of our Library and Museum of Freemasonry, I spoke with Mark Dennis, Curator since October 1999. I asked him to direct me to the various paintings and statues in the Grand Lodge building outside the L-shaped perimeter of the Museum and Library itself. The result is a wonderful array of important paintings and several sculptures, which many of us will have walked passed in corridors or sat beneath in the rooms ...





Bath and the 'Lost' Furniture
It was at a chance encounter late last year with the Assistant Grand Master, David Williamson, that the extraordinary Masonic Hall – the converted Theatre Royal - in Old Orchard Street, Bath, was pointed out to me. Bath is a University City and David Williamson’s interest is in the contacts between University students throughout the country and local masonic authorities. The Masonic Hall at Bath will certainly make an exceptional venue ...






Specialists in Freemasonry
One perennial legend associated with Irish Freemasonry is that of Mrs Elizabeth (Richard) Aldworth neé St Leger, ‘The Lady Freemason’. While very little of her story can be confirmed by solid documentation there is certainly evidence, according to the Grand Lodge of Ireland, of masonic activity relating to her story: she was ...






Enjoying Irish Freemasonry
Of the dozen or more trips the Editor of Freemasonry Today and I have enjoyed photographing and writing this series of articles on masonic museums, our visit to Dublin will certainly remain the most outstanding of our travels. In organising the visit with Rebecca Hayes, the Archivist and Morgan J McCreadie ...





After the Flames
It was as a guest of one of the Lodges in the Province of Derbyshire that I first met H.W. (Bert) Marks in 1992. He had just been formally appointed Librarian of the Province and his enthusiasm and warm sense of humour were as apparent then as they are today. In just a few months Bert retires, giving up what has been a labour of love for some two decades and he was rightly awarded the Provincial Grand Master’s certificate of Merit ...






The Earliest Days
Once more Michael Baigent and I made our way to the Grand Lodge of Scotland in George Street, Edinburgh; we were delighted at the opportunity to return. Librarian, Robert Cooper, received us in his study on the second floor with his usual warmth and big smile ...






Robbie Burns' Maul and All
Edinburgh is a beautiful City and Grand Lodge is situated in its heart. The bus I took to get to the George Street address let me down at the stop named Freemasons’ Hall; festive decorations around the Street had one of the Christmas trees highlighted Grand Lodge of Scotland. This overt approach to freemasonry ...





Masonic History at "The Knole"
Entering from the north, it is not easy to immediately appreciate the size and beauty of the one time Victorian gentlemen’s residence, The Knole, now the Freemasons Hall in Boscombe, Bournemouth. After its completion in 1873 for Edmund Christie, the imposing Mansion was inhabited by a number of famous people including Sir Henry Page Croft, the first MP for Bournemouth. In 1957 it was purchased by the combined effort of the two Masonic centres ...





Preserving Our Heritage
Following on so many visits to the Museums and Libraries in our Provinces whilst writing these articles for Freemasonry Today, I felt on friendly and familiar ground when I joined twenty-four librarians and curators at the Masonic Library & Museum Group’s bi-annual meeting in Leicester. As I entered Freemasons’ Hall on the main London Road, at about 11.00 am, I could sense a buzz of excitement and anticipation ...





A Most Public Museum
A Museum and Library for the masonic Province of Warwickshire was first created in 1908. It enjoyed a period of prosperity but when war broke out in 1939, the entire collection had to be housed in protective boxes which were then stored in the Congregational Church School in Manchester. It was not until the current purpose-built premises in Stirling Road, Edgbaston, Birmingham, were finally opened in 1971 that the collection of books and artefacts ...





Unique Finds in Manchester
Our visit to the Manchester Masonic Hall was sandwiched, so to speak, between a delightful attendance at the rededication ceremony of the newly discovered masonic painted floor cloth hosted by Beneficent Lodge at Macclesfield, Cheshire, and Michael Baigent’s address next evening to the Manchester Lodge for Masonic Research. The evening’s ceremony in Macclesfield was conducted by the quintessential Provincial Grand Master ...





The Eaton Lodge Masonic Museum
Early Masonic history of the Provinces is often lost in the emphasis given to London when the origins of organised Freemasonry are discussed. Four London Lodges formed the Premier Grand Lodge on 24 June 1717 but Freemasonry already existed in various Provinces. It was in Warrington, on the border of Cheshire and Lancashire, that Elias Ashmole was made a Freemason in 1646, and Cheshire boasts the first Provincial Grand Master ...





Berkshire Masonic Library and Museum
I was not surprised to come across Robin White at the Bloomsbury Auction of Rare Masonic and Occult books in April. He is well known as a dynamic masonic librarian and the Province of Berkshire must consider themselves fortunate to have him at the helm of their Library and Museum of Freemasonry. His dynamism was manifest at its best during the Auction. He secured several lots after fierce bidding ...





Raised from Adversity
Our visit to the Jersey Masonic Library and Museum, the fifth of the joint trips Michael Baigent and I have undertaken, was to prove enjoyable and instructive. The Channel Islands have a unique history, not least because they were the only part of British Territory occupied by the Germans in the Second World War ...





Snuff and Silver
It is always a delight to meet up with old friends. I had not seen Peter Marks, now Chairman of the Dorset Masonic Museum and Library, for the best part of 10 years. He reminded me that we had last met at the wonderful surroundings of the Masonic Hall in St Hélier, Jersey. Since then there have been interesting developments. Situated almost exactly half way between Poole and Bournemouth, and a walking distance from ...





The Worcester Masonic Museum
From the moment I saw John Hart’s warm, smiling face waiting to welcome me at Worcester station, I could tell the Worcester Museum of Freemasonry was in good hands. John is an enthusiastic, knowledgeable and very proud curator. He was appointed just four years ago. The thirty-year ‘reign’ of his predecessor, Tommy Grounsell, had been exceedingly fruitful. The Museum collection became well known ...





Canterbury's Masonic Heritage
The Kent Masonic Library and Museum is situated in the heart of beautiful Canterbury, just a few hundred yards west of the magnificent cathedral. The building is surrounded by other custodians of the city’s legacy: the Buffs Museum to the north, the Heritage Museum and Canterbury Tales Exhibit to the south – all within easy reach along ancient alleyways ...




Masonic Treasures in Leicester
Through Masonic artefacts, the whole spectrum of the history of Freemasonry is opened to us. Even a brief visit to any one of our many Masonic museums will transport us through centuries of our craft. The Leicester masonic Library and Museum is situated on the first floor of the conveniently placed Masonic Hall just a five-minute walk from Leicester station. The whole building has an ambiance of friendliness and when you enter a sense of serenity and calm descends. The first striking exhibit is a three-tier glass case along the left wall entitled ...




The Constitutions of the Freemasons
Our Constitutions are a natural evolution of the ancient charges of the operative Freemasons. These ancient or old charges and regulations, as they are referred to, are far from being exclusive to freemasonry. Many of the London Guilds, the medieval equivalent of the modern Trade Unions, had ancient charges to guide the moral comportment of their members. By 1987 a total of some 128 such documents had been discovered or identified. They are all true rarities and museum pieces. They are often in the form of 6 foot, or longer, parchment rolls, some 9 inches in width ...




Masonic Tattoos
In 1849, the body of an unknown man was found drowned in San Francisco Bay. The only available signs for his identification were the emblems of an Entered Apprentice tattooed on his left arm and the emblems of a Fellow Craft on his right arm. On his left breast were the Lights of Masonry and over his heart was the pot of incense. Other tattoos of masonic symbols found elsewhere on his body were the beehive, the sword and heart, the all-seeing eye, the hourglass, sun, moon, stars and comet, the three steps, together with a weeping virgin and Father Time ...




Masonic Newspapers, Periodicals, and Journals
The earliest records we have of Masonic activities in the 18th Century, are to be found in newspaper reports of the day. Many of these were purely news items: the installation of the new Grand Master, Masonic persecutions in Russia and Portugal, George Washington laying the Corner stone for the Capitol building. Freemasonry itself made good use of the media, with official and private announcements and various advertisements. It served Grand Lodge’s purpose for the general public to be informed in the Weekly Journal or British Gazetteer, for instance, of the admission ...



  Yasha Beresiner
© Grand Lodge Publications Ltd 1997-2008