Transition Part 2/2
Transition Part 2/2
Transition Part 2/2
History of Freemasonry
by H.L. HAYWOOD
That it began, in the prosperous times of the guilds, by the admission of clerics, mathematicians and others especially
interested in the craft has already appeared. Its expansion in later days is disclosed by the few fugitive records and minutes
that have been preserved. Of these the minutes of Scottish lodges are oldest and it is of importance to notice that the oldest
Scottish minutes record the practice as a matter of course. Murray Lyon in his History of the Lodge of Edinburgh remarks
that in 1598, William Schaw, who in all probability was a non-operative, was described as Master of the Work and Warden
of the Masons. That lodge was then made up in the main of operatives, and the Scotch Constitutions prepared by Schaw
were obviously intended for the government of operatives. Furthermore, it is indicated that Schaw's own predecessor was
a nobleman; the wardenship over Masons in Aberdeen, Banff and Kincardine was held by another non-operative, the Laird
of Udaught. From these accounts it appears that distinguished patrons not only were accepted as members of the Craft but
also that they were chosen for administrative posts of the highest importance.
These outsiders were sometimes known as "Gentlemen Masons," sometimes as "Theoretical Masons," sometimes as
"Geomatic Masons," and sometimes by other titles. In July of 1634 the Lodge of Edinburgh admitted as Fellowcrafts three
gentlemen, Lord Alexander, Viscount Canada, his brother, Sir Anthony Alexander, and Sir Alexander Strachan.
Subsequent records indicate that these afterwards assisted at the "making" of other Masons. In 1637 David Ramsay, a
gentleman of the Privy Chamber, was admitted and in the following year admission was granted to Henry Alexander, son
of the Earl of Stirling. In 1640 General Alexander Hamilton was accepted and in 1667 Sir Patrick Hume received the same
honor. In 1670 the Right Honorable William Murray and two members of the Bar, Walter Pringle and Sir John Harper
were admitted.
In England the same custom was followed by some of the lodges, if not by all. An obscure note in the records of the
Mason's Company of London suggests that it may have been a practice of that body for a considerable length of time,
although the matter is by no means certain. That organization was incorporated in the years 1410-1411 and received a coat
of arms in 1472 or 1473, but records of the city show that as an unincorporated guild it was in existence as early as the year
1356, when rules were formed for its guidance. In 1530 its name was changed to "The Company of Freemasons."
Associated with it was an organization known as "The Accepcon," or "The Acception," which, met in the same hall and
seems to have been subordinate to the Company. Edward Conder in his Hole Crafte and Fellowship of Masons remarks
that an account book of The Acception shows that in 1619 payments made by newly made Masons were paid into the funds
of the Company, and that in case of deficits in banquet expenses of The Acception, the money to meet them was paid out of
the Company's treasury. If this is correct it indicates: (1) that The Acception collected money from newly made Masons; (2)
that it gave banquets to newly made Masons; (3) that its financial affairs were strictly supervised by the Mason's Company.
Now the Mason's Company was an operative organization, and surely there is nothing far-fetched in supposing - especially
in view of the significant title of the subordinate body - that The Acception was made up of a group of non-operative, or
honorary, members. Moreover, that hypothesis is strongly ported by the testimony of the first distinguished non- operative
known to have been accepted by an operative English lodge. This was none other than Elias Ashmole, one of the most
eminent of the scientists, philosophers and antiquarians of his day. Ashmole was a man of prodigious energy and catholic
interests. He appears to have dipped into most of the activities of the strenuous times which he lived. He was born in 1617
at Lichfield and was educated for the practice of law. When the Great Rebellion came along, he took up arms, with the of
Captain. He was a student of botany, chemistry and what passed for physics in those times, with a string leaning toward
occultism and especially the cults of alchemy and astrology. He was an inveterate collector of curious objects of
antiquarian interest, and his collection is preserved at Oxford University, where is known as the Ashmolean Museum. He
was a Fellow of the Royal Society, received the degree of Doctor of Medicine and was made a Windsor Herald. His diary
was published in 1717 and from it certain important extracts relating to Freemasonry have been culled. The following entry
appeared in the diary for 1646: Oct. 16th - 4:30 p.m. - I was made a Free Mason a Warrington in Lancashire, with Coll:
Henry Mainwaring of Kanincham in Cheshire. The names of those that were of the Lodge; Mr. Rich Penket Warden Jr.,
James Collier, Mr. Rich Sankey, Henry Littler, John Ellam, Rich; Ellam and Hugh Brewer." In the diary for March, 1682,
or thirty-six years later, appeared the following entry: 10th - About 5 p.m. I recd. a Sumons to appe. at a Lodge to be held
the next day at Mason's Hall London. 11th - Accordingly I went, and about Noone were admitted into the Fellowship of
Free Masons.
Sr. William Wilson Knight, Capt. Rich; Borthwick, M Will: Woodman, Mr. Win. Grey, Mr. Samuel Taylour, and Mr.
William Wise. I was the Senior Fellow among them (it being 35 years since I was admitted). There were present beside my
se the Fellows after named. Mr. Tho: Wise Mr of the Masons Company this present yeare. Mr Thomas Shorthose, Mr.
Thomas Shadbolt Waindsford Esqr., Mr. Nich: Young, Mr. John Shorthose Mr. William Hamon, Mr. John Thompson, and
Mr. Will Stanton. Wee all dyned at the halfe moone Taverne in Cheapside at a Noble Dinner, prepaired at the Charge of the
New accepted Masons." In endeavoring to arrive at a conclusion as to whether the acceptance of non-operatives was a
general practice the operative bodies, it is important by way of recapitulation to bear certain dates in mind. It is clear that
at the time to which the oldest Scottish minutes can be traced) a non-operative was a Master of the Work and Warden of
the lodge at Edinburgh and that his predecessor also had been a non- operative. It is clear also that non-operatives were
made Masons in various Scottish lodges down to the beginning of the of the first Grand Lodge. It is furthermore clear at
the London Company had a subordinate society known as The Acception in 1619; and that sixty-three years later, non-
operatives were made Masons in the halI of that Company with its Master in attendance. But the custom was not confined
to London and Edinburgh. Ashmole was made a Mason in Lancashire. And there is additional testimony to the same
effect, this time from a non- Mason who was not friendly to the institution. In his Natural History of a Staffordshire (1686)
Dr. Robert Plot wrote: To these add the Customs relating to the County, whereof they have one, of admitting Men into the
Society of Freemasons, that in the moorelands of this County seems to be of greater request, than anywhere else, though I
find the Custom spread more or less all over the Nation; for here I found persons of the most eminent quality, that did not
disdain to be of this Fellowship. Nor indeed need they, were it of that Antiquity and honor, that is pretended in a large
parchment volum they have amongst them, containing the History and Rules of the craft of masonry.
Into which Society when they are admitted, they call a meeting (or Lodg as they term it in some places), which must
consist of at lest 5 or 6 of the Ancients of the Order, when the candidats present with gloves, and so likewise to their wives,
and entertain with a collation according to the Custom of the place: This ended, they proceed to the admission of them,
which chiefly consists in the communication of certain secret signes, whereby they are known to one another all over the
Nation, by which means they have maintenance whither ever they travel: for if any man appear though altoger unknown
that can show any of these signes to a Fellow of the Society, whom they otherwise call an accepted mason, he is obliged
promptly to come to him, from what company or place soever he be in, nay, tho' from the top of a Steeple (what hazard or
inconvenience soever he run) to know his pleasure and assist him; viz., if he want work he is bound to find him some; or if
he cannot doe that, to give him mony or otherwise support him till work can be had; which is one of their Articles. The
society of which Dr. Plot was writing was undoubtedly an association of operative masons, but it was one to which
"persons of the most eminent quality" did not disdain to belong. Ashmole was certainly eminent, as was also his friend and
father-in-law, Sir William Dugdale, who was likewise an antiquarian, and Sir Christopher Wren, the architect. That
Dugdale was a Mason is not established, but he undoubtedly had intimate knowledge of the institution and is known to
have discussed its practices and origin. Whether Wren was accepted into the fraternity is a subject of much debate, Robert
Freke Gould having strongly supported the negative. But John Aubrey, antiquarian and author, left a memorandum saying
Sir Christopher was "adopted a brother" at a convention of Masons at St. Paul's Church on May 18, 1691. The Postboy, a
London publication, in a contemporaneous account of his death described him as "that worthy Freemason." F. De P.
Castells in an essay in the Transactions of the Author's Lodge records an excerpt from the minutes of the Lodge of
Antiquity, dated June 3, 1723, which says: "The set of Mahogany Candlesticks presented to this Lodge by its worthy old
Master, Sir Christopher Wren, ordered to be carefully deposited in a wooden case lin'd with cloth to be Immediately
purchased for the purpose." That at the two Bacons, Roger and Sir Francis, were Masons has long been a legend both
believed and disputed, although there is no reliable evidence either way. A discussion of this question belongs properly to
the obscure and troublesome problem of the Rosicrucians and kindred occult societies. Much more has been said about it
than can be proved, and in the present work it can be noticed only in passing. There can be little doubt that during the
Middle Ages more than one society was devoted to the pursuit of studies which were forbidden by Church and State.
Kabbalism, astrology, alchemy, and various mystical philosophies were ticklish things to deal with in an age which
believed in witchcraft and sorcery and which, in a heated moment, was likely to lay hold upon a sorcerer and burn him to
death. Now and then men engaged in these occult concerns united themselves for the purpose of carrying on
correspondence and transmitting their discoveries. They were the scientists of their day, and to their labors may be traced
the beginnings of modern chemistry, physics and astronomy. Of all the associations into which the Alchemistical
Philosophers or Hermetic Philosophers, as they are variously called, formed themselves, the most considerable appears to
have been the Rosicrucian. Whether that body was more than a shadow organization is far from certain, but, at any rate, it
afforded a cover sufficient for the purpose and many learned men called themselves Rosicrucians in their books and other
writings. The supposition that a considerable number of them also became Freemasons is only supposition. There are
survivals in the modem Masonic ritual which strongly suggest hermetic influence, and not a few students have believed
that it is through this channel some of the Fraternity's oldest cult survivals ought to be traced. Albert Pike was inclined to
suspect that Ashmole became interested in Freemasonry because he was particularly concerned with hermetic philosophy
and believed that the secrets of the society would throw light upon his hobby. Others have hinted that Ashmole's
acceptance in itself forged a connecting link between Freemasonry and Rosicrucianism.
It is entirely possible that more than one distinguished Englishman who dabbled in occultism dabbled also in
Freemasonry. Indeed, it would be rather curious if, after making the acquaintance of the one, they had not investigated the
other. Men in an age of mental tyranny searching for a medium through which they might be able to find liberty for
philosophical thought and the safe interchange of ideas might well hope to find it behind the tyled door of a Masonic lodge.
It is reasonably certain that many scholars who entered the Fraternity in the eighteenth century did so for the freedom
they expected to find there. But the whole matter is so befogged in doubt, uncertainty, hypothesis and speculation that it
scarcely belongs to the realm of Masonic history, strictly so called. At all events, the structure of Operative Masonry had
altered by imperceptible stages between the days of Richard II and those of James II. At the time of the Revolution of
1688, the camel which had got its nose through a flap of the tent in 1390 had managed to get almost its whole body inside.
In other words, the non-operatives were rapidly driving the operatives into a small corner of what had once been their own
domicile. But the tent itself was still. a good one, offering refuge to new purposes in need of just such shelter. The final
stage of transition was to take place in the thirty odd years which intervened between the time when Dr. Plot wrote the
spirited paragraphs recently quoted and the beginning of the Grand Lodge era in 1717. By then the operative art itself had
become little more than a memory. The old lodges were collections of individuals who met occasionally because they had
been in the habit of meeting. Their rosters contained the names of many who had never earned blisters to their hands by
wielding setting maul or chisel. Many had already closed their doors for the last time. The Old Manuscripts were still
treasured, but they had become too worn and too precious to be handled except upon occasions of state. Such
craftsmanship as was actually performed was but a shadow of that which had once given vitality to the brotherhood. Tools
and implements of architecture were still employed, but more as symbols for the inculcation of moral lessons than as
instruments of labor. Now and then, on some St. John's day, there might be a banquet and assembly of a given lodge, but
as a going concern the institution was moribund. Thus the curtain of history falls, at the end of an act, upon a scene of
deterioration and decay, only to rise again upon a new scene - this time of health and prosperity.