Sunday, March 30, 2025

‘France’s Museums Night to include the GOF’

    
Sortir à Paris

Speaking of the Grand Orient (see post below), France’s 21st annual Museums Night will include the Musée de la Franc-Maçonnerie, located inside the GOF’s headquarters. That’s Saturday, May 17. If you’re in town, the address is 16 rue Cadet 75009 Paris 9.

Throughout Paris and beyond, Museums Night is an occasion of free admission to enjoy the exhibits, events, and other programs in all kinds of museums. From Sortir à Paris:


Sortir à Paris

Nuit des Musées 2025 is back for a 21st edition full of surprises, in Paris and across Europe. Art lovers can’t wait to take advantage of this exceptional free night-time event, during which museums invite us to enjoy different activities every year. New installations, prestigious guest artists, as well as guided tours, evening strolls, concerts, shows, and children’s activities bring the museums to life for an evening, or perhaps a night.

The Musée de la Franc-Maçonnerie is taking part in the 21st Nuit des Musées on Saturday, May 17, giving you the chance to discover the influence of Freemasonry on the evolution of society! Are you ready for this cultural nocturne?

For Museums Night, we’re off to discover the Museum of Freemasonry, which is opening its doors to us free of charge. This unusual museum lifts the veil on the intriguing history of this organization, initiated in 1778 by Benjamin Franklin. Thousands of documents testify to the role played by lodges in the history of the Republic, particularly in the choice of its values: tolerance, secularism and solidarity.

More than two centuries of history are presented in 400 square meters. Ritual decorations and objects belonging to lodges and Masons are on display, as are seals, jewels, medals, manuscripts, engravings, and architectural books. Numerous photographs shed light on the daily lives of Freemasons.

Sortir à Paris

The date is set for this 21st edition of the Nuit des Musées, you can enjoy a nocturnal tour of the museum, discovering the Masonic temples. It’s also an opportunity to discover this unusual museum from a different angle, at night, to leave the mystery even deeper. Discover the program in detail!


Don’t ask me about that Benjamin Franklin part. Maybe that’s a question for your tour guide.
     

Saturday, March 29, 2025

‘Forces Occultes propaganda film’

    
The movie’s advertisement poster.

Say what you will about France’s nazi collaborators, but they really made an effort to slander Freemasonry in the movies.

Director Jean Mamy (employing the nom de guerre Paul Riche) was executed by firing squad on this date in 1949 at age 46 for his pro-nazi labors. His final directorial work in a pretty short film career is the 53-minute Forces Occultes from 1943, a story of a French politician in the Chamber of Deputies of the Third Republic. M. Pierre Avenel (Maurice Rémy) is a young idealist who identifies with the ethics professed by the Grand Orient of France and allows himself to be steered into the membership of a lodge, ignoring the warnings of his wife (Gisèle Parry) who says Masonry is only for mediocrities and social climbers. (It is said Mamy had been a Mason in a Grand Orient lodge during the thirties.)



The hero of the film is the naive and sincere deputy Avenel, who made the mistake of accepting the Freemasons’ invitation to join them. When he discovers that the Freemasons were involved in all the misfortunes that France experienced in the pre-war period—the Popular Front, the Stavisky scandal, in association with the Jews or with Anglo-Saxon finance—he decides to break the oath that requires him to keep the secrets of the order under penalty of a terrible death and to denounce the criminal actions. His “brothers” then decide to eliminate him. He miraculously survives this assassination attempt, but when he wakes up in his hospital bed, it is too late; the anti-France conspirators have plunged the country into the tragedy of war against Germany, despite the unpreparedness of the French armies. 



Naturally, I’ve never visited a Grand Orient lodge and cannot speak to how its rituals work, but I am familiar with French Rite EA° work, thanks to several lodges in our Tenth Manhattan District, and can say what is depicted in this film is very similar to what I’ve seen in l’Union Française and Garibaldi lodges. Regalia, chamber of reflection, circumambulation, and more are spot on, in my estimation. It’s not in tribute, of course; this is nazi propaganda to discredit the fraternity and its ideals Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité—also the motto of France itself.

Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose. See the film here:


     

Friday, March 28, 2025

‘Arcana Veritas is open for submissions’

    
Grand Lodge of Scotland

You have until May 31 to submit your work for consideration in the 2025 Arcana Veritas Distinction Awards. The Grand Lodge of Scotland’s exaltation of scholarship will culminate at the November 26 award ceremony at Freemasons’ Hall in Edinburgh.

Work is solicited for the three categories: Masonic History Book, Masonic Philosophy and Symbolism Book, and Masonic White Papers.

Entry rules are here. Judging methodology here. Submit your work electronically here.


The Grand Lodge willed AVDA into existence at its Annual Communication in November 2023, so don’t feel inadequate if you hadn’t heard of this previously. The first honorees, from last November, are obscure scribes David Harrison (History Book), Antony Richard Baker (Philosophy and Symbolism Book), and Stewart Clelland (White Papers).

Grand Lodge of Scotland

No, I’m not going to try for this! I’m a few deep levels south of this caliber. Brethren who didn’t win last year include Ric Berman (his Prestonian Lecture!), Christopher Earnshaw, and Julian Rees. Don’t let that deter you though. Contest judges are yet to be named, but I’m confident they’ll be noble and petrifying.

Read all about it here.
     

Thursday, March 27, 2025

‘The inauguration tradition continues’

    
Re-Enactment
of Brother George Washington’s
First Presidential Inauguration
on 236th Anniversary

Wednesday, April 30 at 11:45 a.m.
Federal Hall
26 Wall Street
New York City


This bronze of George Washington was erected in 1882 near where he was sworn in.

New York Freemasonry commemorates the momentous day when Brother George Washington was sworn in as the first President of the United States in 1789, bringing to life the unprecedented federal office of an elected Chief Executive as established by the U.S. Constitution two years earlier.

With his hands upon the altar bible of St. John’s Lodge, brought to City Hall for the inauguration by Bro. Jacob Morton, Master of the Lodge, Bro. Washington was sworn by Bro. Robert R. Livingston, Chancellor of New York and Grand Master of the Grand Lodge. After taking the oath of office, Washington bowed, kissed the holy book, and, initiating a tradition followed by many of his successors into the twenty-first century, appended to that oath a phrase known to all Freemasons: “So help me God.”

The famous Bible. Washington placed his hands on Genesis 49-50.

The Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the State of New York recreates this civil ceremony each year. While the first City Hall is long gone, today’s Federal Hall stands on that site, and we invite everyone to experience this historically correct re-enactment of forty-five minutes.

The Grand Lodge of New York sponsors this commemoration through its George Washington Inaugural Reenactment Committee, under the chairmanship of R.W. Teodulo Henriquez, R.W. Martin Kanter, and R.W. J. Scott Nagel.

The Most Worshipful Steven Adam Rubin, Grand Master of Masons in the State of New York, with a retinue of Grand Lodge Officers, will be in attendance. The Color Guard will be provided by Sons of the Revolution of New York and The Knickerbocker Greys.

Masonic Lodges, individual Masons, families, and friends are invited to our hospitality room for refreshments afterward. Please make reservations by writing R.W. Nagel here.

Detail from a Currier & Ives piece.

Read more about that day that changed the world, and that rhetorical flourish added to the oath of office, here.
     

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

‘The Fama in the Reading Room’

    

The Reading Room, the live video facet of Craftsmen Online’s suite of content, will open April 30 to examine one of the Rosicrucian Manifestos. Illustrious Jake will lead the discussion of the Fama Fraternitatis.

The reading material is here and spans pages 1-15.


What is the Fama? Printed in Germany in 1614, Fama Fraternitatis is the first of what would be three founding documents of the Rosicrucian movement. I regard that school of thought as “classical Rosicrucianism,” thanks to the galaxy of self-described Rosicrucian movements that materialized during the past 150 or so years. Of Christopher McIntosh’s fairly recent English translation of the Fama, his publisher says:


“The seminal document known as the Fama Fraternitatis (the Proclamation of the Fraternity) burst like a firework over Europe in the early seventeenth century, igniting the imagination of many with its story of the German seeker Christian Rosenkreuz, his journey through the Middle East in search of wisdom, and his creation of the esoteric Rosicrucian Fraternity.”


What is that fraternity? Primarily, a brotherhood to cure the sick, as in following the example set by Jesus of Nazareth, for the dawn of a new age.

Usually, I am chagrined when a Masonic book club delves into material outside the fraternity—as though there isn’t enough literature on Freemasonry—but I know Cliff will lead an enlightening discussion of this text. Join in here on Wednesday, April 30 at 7 p.m.
     

Monday, March 24, 2025

‘National Cocktail Day!’

     

It’s National Cocktail Day here in the United States. I thought I’d suggest several libations for your celebrations.


The Masonic Temple

Specialty at The Pitcher Inn, in the Town of Warren, Vermont.

Recipe

1 1/2 ounce Bombay Dry Gin
3/4 oz. Cointreau
1/2 oz. fresh lime juice
fresh grapefruit juice

Fill Old Fashioned glass with ice, combine first four ingredients, top off with grapefruit juice. Shake in a cocktail shaker until metal begins to frost. Coat rim with sugar, pour in cocktail, and garnish with a lime.



I can’t prove this is named for our 1922-24 Grand Master, but who cares?

Recipe

2 oz. Gin
1/2 oz. Grand Marnier
2 tsp. Lemon Juice

Shake with ice and strain into a sour glass. Garnish with a lemon twist.


Grand Master’s Blend, a “Pennsylvania Craft Straight Bourbon Whiskey,” is produced by Hidden Still Spirits in Hershey.


Chandeleur Island Brewing Company. (Not a cocktail, obviously, but one cannot subsist on mixed drinks alone.)


The following are from the 1947 edition of Trader Vic’s Bartender’s Guide—my most recent copy from when drinking was a cultural pursuit. Some of their ingredients are unfamiliar, so do the best you can!















Vivat!
     

Sunday, March 23, 2025

‘Hudson Valley Masonicon tickets on sale’

    
Click to enlarge.

Tickets to the third annual Hudson Valley Masonicon* went on sale just minutes ago. Click here.

Ten amazing speakers! (And me.) Festive Board, cocktail hour, food trucks.


Saturday, June 7 at 9 a.m.
Hoffman Lodge 412
9 Courtland Street
Middletown, New York

Speakers

Rashied Bey
Erik Geerhern
George Kaiser
John Konrad
Pasqual Leo
Magpie Mason
John Pasqualechio
Michael Profera
Piers Vaughan
Kyle Williams

Keynote Speaker
Chris Winnicki


*They’re using a few different spellings.
     

Saturday, March 22, 2025

‘Grand Lodge’s tartan design contest’

    

Balloting will close at the end of the month in Grand Lodge’s tartan design contest. Submitted for your approval are fifteen patterns, the most popular of which will become our official plaid for crafting into kilts and maybe—I dunno—neckwear, flat caps, scarves, and the like. Also will be registered with the Scottish Register of Tartans!

My personal preferences in plaid favor the subdued colors, but I’m not going to lie to you: a lot of those things look the same to me.

Voting is open only to New York Masons, and ballot integrity is protected. Click here.
     

Monday, March 17, 2025

‘Lodge to mark Civil War’s start’

    

Virginia-based Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 will travel outside the Commonwealth for its meeting next month to mark the start of the U.S. Civil War where the shooting started. From Worshipful Master Creig Lee Lovelace:


We will convene our meeting in historic Charleston, South Carolina on April 12, where the War Between the States began 164 years ago on that very date in that very place. I hope you can make it down.

Many of you requested we ‘get out of Virginia,’ and I told you we indeed would stretch our legs a little. We will head to Tennessee this summer and in the fall we’ll head back to Richmond, Virginia. But on April 11, we will tour the Hunley museum and see the Confederacy’s secret weapon that authorities hoped would break the blockade. After two failed tests, Gen. Beauregard was ready to shelve the thing as it was more dangerous than the enemy. After some arm twisting by Lt. George Dixon (a Brother from Alabama), Beauregard agreed to one more chance. The attack on February 17, 1864 made history, and yet the Hunley was lost again until 1995. In 2000, it was raised and the final crew was buried in 2004. Come see the technological marvel that was the Hunley.

Saturday we will meet at Solomon’s Lodge 1. Come see an amazing complex, the Charleston County Masonic Association Center, and see the history of the various lodges. Afterward, we will see Fort Sumter and Fort Johnson. Come see where the war began.


Itinerary

Lodging:
11 Ashley Pointe Drive

Friday, April 11

2-3:30 – tour Hunley Museum
1250 Supply Street
4-5 – Hunley Grave Site
St. Lawrence Cemetery
60 Huguenin Avenue

6:30 – dinner at Home Team BBQ
1205 Ashley River Road

Saturday, April 12

Solomon’s Lodge 1
Charleston County Masonic
Association Center
1285 Orange Grove Road

8-10 – coffee & donuts
10-12:30 – meeting
12:30-1:15 – lunch at S&S Cafeterias
1104 Sam Rittenberg Blvd.
2:45-5 – tour
340 Concord Street
5:30-6:15 – tour
Fort Johnson Road

Dinner at seven
1734 Sam Rittenberg Blvd.
     

Saturday, March 15, 2025

‘Wear your apron on the inside’

    
“Finally, Brethren, be ye all of one mind; live in peace, and may the God of love and peace delight to dwell with and bless you!”

 

The Harris Charge, delivered at the close of the lodge

Congratulations to Columbia Lodge 1190 on hosting this morning’s enlightening and energizing Zoom meeting for a discussion of the meaning of “egregore.” Worshipful Master Les Joynes welcomed RW Bro. Christophe Lobry-Boulanger, Grand Sword Bearer of our Grand Lodge and a Past Master of France La Clémente Amitié Cosmopolite Lodge 410 in the Tenth Manhattan District, who discussed “Unveiling the Egregore: Exploring the Collective Consciousness in Freemasonry.” Columbia 1190 meets on Saturdays, so the timing of these monthly sessions isn’t odd.

This term “egregore” Christophe described is “a mostly Western European concept.” And, yes, I hear it seldomly in our Anglo-American Masonic tradition. When it is employed, it’s not used effectively—is meant synonymously with ambiance or character of a lodge. I think to the minds of most Masons here, egregore is a term that rightly belongs to other paths, such as Theosophy and Martinism, and yet we speak of it incessantly, albeit indirectly, in our lodges. What makes you a Mason? Your obligations. The oaths are what you promise the GAOTU, but those obligations are vows to your brethren.

Christophe Lobry-Boulanger
Christophe led us to a deeper meaning. Egregore has a “mystic sense,” he explained, because it is a non-physical entity, a “group mind” as like Rousseau’s political thought of the “general will” or “collective will” among people. (My ears perked up when he spoke of ways to achieve it, saying education is a “binding and bonding element.”)

Egregore is a French word, but it originates in the Greek egrḗgoros, meaning to be awake or to be a watcher. Christophe referred us to the Book of Enoch for further understanding, but I leave that to you.

The point is, the Masonic egregore is born in our shared virtue and morality. When he says “wear your apron on the inside,” he means the ritual garment we wear outside the suit jacket is just a symbol, and that it should point to what’s in your heart. When we all are of one mind that way, we have the Masonic egregore.

The brethren’s comments at the end of the 75-minute meeting were fitting and stimulating. If your lodge isn’t having conversations like this, speak up. Do something. Even reach out to brethren from other lodges, if necessary, who can discuss the meaning of Masonry.

     

‘French Rite EA° on Tuesday’

     
If you like Garibaldi Lodge’s EA°—that French Rite First Degree rendered in Italian—then you’ll love the original as conferred by l’Union Française Lodge 17, in French, and in the far more intimate setting of the French Doric Room. So be there at six o’clock Tuesday evening.

No one will be admitted once the degree begins at 6:45. Be prepared to work your way into a tiled Masonic lodge room.

The ritual often is said to be Scottish Rite, and while it is similar to the A&ASR First Degree, it in fact is older than that—for example having been worked by this lodge since 1797. It features the alchemical and Rosicrucian symbolism that sets it apart from the Preston-Webb-Cross work known to the rest of us in New York.

The only question I have is will the Empire State Building be lit in the blue, white, and red of France’s Tricolour? We’ll see.

The Worshipful Master is V∴W∴ Bro. Ziad, who you also might know as our Tiler in The American Lodge of Research. My cable tow will not allow me to be present, but you should go!
     

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

‘All aboard! Ionic Railroad Degree’

    
Ionic Lodge 31 in Delaware will host its Railroad Degree this spring. The brethren ride the Wilmington & Western Railroad to a secluded area in the Brandywine Valley woods along Red Clay Creek for a Master Mason Degree. A great way to enjoy a Saturday. This time it’ll be May 3.

Still just $40 per person, but these always sell out, so don’t procrastinate. A succulent lunch will be served. Dress casual because you’ll be in the woods. Bring a folding chair.

Click here for tickets. Click here for a look at the 2022 degree.
     

Saturday, March 8, 2025

‘…but it’s a good tired’

    
Today was one of those four Saturdays per year when I have a research lodge meeting in the a.m. and an AMD meeting in the p.m. Both are far from home, but I can make it work because they are in some proximity to each other, although it does make for a long day.

At New Jersey Lodge of Masonic Research and Education 1786, we had a full agenda planned, but had to keep our poor Worshipful Master’s much anticipated paper on ice until June because we ran out of time. Much of the meeting was devoted to business, which sounds lame, but it was important stuff, so I’ll call it strategic planning. Among the key items were the lodge’s support of the John Skene Masonic Conference in August and a 2026 event that—if it comes together—will unite three grand jurisdictions in an exploration of early U.S. history during the nation’s semiquincentennial celebration.


The one presentation from the lectern for which we did have time was Senior Deacon Glenn’s review of his recent visit to Rosslyn Chapel. He snapped plenty of photos there and augmented his visual delivery with information from authors who have delved into the enchanting site’s past. (I’m afraid my own belief in a Masonic connection to Rosslyn is more like Bro. Lightfoote’s. IYKYK.)

Bro. Glenn shows us Rosslyn Chapel.

David, our new Treasurer, pulled double duty as our Organist. LORE hasn’t heard an Organist during a meeting since the late Tom Thornton was around—but I don’t recall Tom playing Pachelbel!

Do not adjust your monitor. That’s the matzoh ball in Bro. David’s soup!

The lodge has been searching for a post-meeting luncheon spot, and I think we found a winner at a local restaurant. Everyone seemed pretty happy there, and conversation was varied and lasted into the mid afternoon.

Then I had time to kill. Sometimes I am able to go to the movies before the AMD meeting, but it’s hard to find a movie made for adults who prefer coherent stories and human actors. I took a nap in the promising pre-spring sun, having forgotten to bring a pipe and pouch.

Then it was time for J. William Gronning Council 83 of Allied Masonic Degrees. I arrived a little early and got settled; skipped supper thanks to the lunch; and enjoyed the program for the evening: the Ark and Dove Degree. Expertly conferred! Not one ritualist needed a prompt through the whole thing!

A long day. Bedways is rightways now. Time for some spatchka.
     

Friday, March 7, 2025

‘Collectanea is coming!’

    

Okay, settle down out there.

I have it on good authority (Grand Registrar Rick told me) that the editions of Collectanea we’ve been waiting for are coming soon.

The other day, I was figuring out if I still owed 2025 dues to anyone, and found I hadn’t yet paid the Grand College of Rites. I then realized I don’t recall reading the 2024 Collectanea, so I checked my Collectanea bookshelf, and spotted the displeasing cavity where last year’s book would be. (There’s a row of the books, an amusing bookend, then a gilded framed 8x10 photo of Reese.) Then I noticed the 2023 was absent!—making Volume 25, Part 1 on the Bristol Degrees from 2022 the GCR’s most recent publication. But R.I. Patton assures me both the 2023 and 2024 are coming soon.

What is the Grand College of Rites? Click here. Join here.

Fellows, pay yer dues here. I just did.
     

Tuesday, March 4, 2025

‘Hillsdale’s FREE philosophy course’

    

Hillsdale College offers a 14-part Introduction to Western Philosophy free of charge. This isn’t anything new, but click here if you’re interested. From the publicity:


Explore the great ideas and philosophers of the West.  

Philosophy—a word that means “love of wisdom”—teaches us to move beyond the prevailing opinions of our age and gain a deeper understanding of reality.

A good education in philosophy provides the joy of answering fundamental questions that give meaning and direction to our lives. It also serves as a bulwark against ideas that are destructive to human life and freedom.

“Introduction to Western Philosophy” is a 14-lecture online course that invites you to explore the works of the most important philosophers of the West, including Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Descartes, and Nietzsche, as they wrestle with the fundamental questions that all human beings are called to answer. 

Enrollment in this course gives you free access to lectures by Professor of Philosophy Nathan Schlueter, lecture study guides, readings, and quizzes to aid you in the examination of Western philosophy from its birth in ancient Greece through C.S. Lewis’s efforts to combat the postmodern rejection of reason and truth.

Enroll in this free online course from Hillsdale College and begin the pursuit of knowledge about human nature and the best way of life today!

Taught by: Larry P. Arnn, President of Hillsdale College, Professor of History and Politics

Nathan W. Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion


Click here to get started.

If you are unfamiliar with Hillsdale, it is one of the very few independent liberal arts colleges in America—independent as in not accepting any money from any layer of government. In its own words:


Hillsdale College was founded in 1844 with a mission to provide “all who wish to learn” the education necessary to preserve the civil and religious liberties of America. The founders of Hillsdale College understood, like the founders of our great nation, that free government requires independent, virtuous, and knowledgeable citizens.

In 2011 Hillsdale launched its online courses program to extend this mission and to teach the core subjects of a Hillsdale education free of charge. Since that time, more than 4.2 million Americans have partnered with us in this effort. 
     

Sunday, March 2, 2025

‘Blue Ridge to host its first OV of the DDGM’

    

The Grand Lodge of Virginia now has six(!) research lodges, the newest is Blue Ridge 1738 located in Blacksburg. On Saturday the 15th, the brethren there will welcome RW Jason Curtis Trenary, on the occasion of his first Official Visit as District Deputy Grand Master. (Virginia has a DDGM for its research lodges.)

The lodge meets at 3730 Prices Fork Road, home of Hunter’s Lodge 156, and the gavel will sound at 10 a.m.
     

Saturday, March 1, 2025

‘Wanted: handsome Prophets for Azim’

    
March already?

Azim, The Handsomest Grotto in the Realm™, will host its Spring Ceremonial next Saturday, so if you think you’re handsome enough to join us, this would be the day. From the publicity:


Help us bring some new Prophets to the Realm as we celebrate National Grotto Day.

Azim National Grotto Day
of the Universe
Saturday, March 8 at 5 p.m.
Advance Masonic Temple
21-14 30th Avenue
Astoria, New York


Initiation covers one seat to the greatest ceremonial in the Realm, your fez, your first year’s dues, and your first Enchanted Lantern (including an Enchanted Lantern pin and certificate to be mailed from Supreme Council). The Initiation normally costs $175 and the Enchanted Lantern is $50, so this is a great opportunity for new Prophets to the Realm.


For a petition, click here. For Prophets to RSVP, click here. See you there.
     

Thursday, February 20, 2025

‘Passing Timothy Ridicule’

    
From Masonry Dissected, printed London, 1730.

Last night was the occasion of the first meeting of The American Lodge of Research since our October Stated Communication, and while it didn’t feel like four months apart, it was great to see everyone again.

This time we met jointly with Dunwoodie Lodge 863 in New Rochelle. It is tradition at The ALR to exercise our prerogative to travel about the state to hold joint communications with lodges that don’t mind having us over. We try to do it once annually, but the previous visit was in December 2022 to West Point Lodge 877.

The program last night was not research papers, but something quirky. We traveled through time and space to 1730s London to learn about the Craft rituals worked then and there. You probably know I’m talking about Masonry Dissected, the ritual exposure compiled by one Samuel Prichard. The book is what gives us our first look at a Third Degree, so it is historically very important. While it is not the first ritual exposure, it is the first to include the obligations, making it sexier than the competition. If you don’t know it, find it online and marvel at how different, yet also how similar, these early ritual renderings are to ours today. There’s no floor work—that may be found in ritual exposures from later in the eighteenth century—but the spoken content of the lectures appears in detail. We trust its accuracy because of the very successful sales of the book as proven by the number of times it was printed, meaning it was Masons themselves buying it up for use in learning their ritual.

So you’re wondering about the title of this edition of The Magpie Mason. Near the end of the Fellow-Craft’s Degree lecture, the Master of the lodge asks the candidate’s name, to which “Timothy Ridicule” is the printed reply. During the degree, the candidate, naturally, would say his own name, but Prichard is said to have been a disgruntled former Mason, so I’ll guess Timothy Ridicule is some shade thrown at the ancient accepted Order. (I’ve been using it for dinner reservations for twenty years.)

My thanks to Worshipful Master Shawn and the brethren for welcoming us to give this presentation. And special kudos to Dunwoodie’s Brother Senior Deacon for being the 1730 Worshipful Master and posing the questions of the lecture to me. And thanks also to The ALR’s officers and members for journeying out to Westchester!

The degrees back then were very brief, compared to what we today know. No lengthy orations of any kind. Those would take shape several decades later thanks to William Preston and other writers. Lectures in the eighteenth century were interactive in a question-and-answer format led by the Master of the lodge. Just like our modern Opening/Closing, which once were part of degree work. When your Master is installed and that ritual charges him to present a lecture at every meeting, he is not being told to elucidate in a monolog on any particular subject. He is, historically anyway, promising to lead the lodge in this Q&A-style recapitulation of a degree.

I have edited, modernized spelling, etc., but here is the “Fellow-Craft’s Degree”:


Q. Are you a Fellow Craft?
A. I am.

Q. Why was you made a Fellow Craft?
A. For the sake of the letter G.

Q. What does that G denote?
A. Geometry, or the fifth Science.

Q. Did you ever travel?
A: Yes, east and west.

Q. Did you ever work?
A. Yes, in the building of the Temple.

Q. Where did you receive your wages?
A. In the Middle Chamber.

Q. How came you to the Middle Chamber?
A. Through the Porch.

Q. When you came through the Porch, what did you see?
A. Two great Pillars.

Q. What are they called?
A. J. B., that is J****n and B**z.

Q. How high are they?
A. Eighteen Cubits.

Q. How much in circumference?
A. Twelve cubits.

Q. What were they adorned with?
A. Two chapiters.

Q. How high were the chapiters?
A. Five cubits.

Q. What were they adorned with?
A. Network and pomegranates.

Q. How came you to the Middle Chamber?
A. By a winding pair of stairs.

Q. How many?
A. Seven or more.

Q. Why seven or more?
A. Because seven or more make a just and perfect lodge.

Q. When you came to the door of the Middle Chamber, who did you see?
A. A Warden.

Q. What did he demand of you?
A. Three things.

Q. What were they?
A. A sign, token, and a word.

Q. How high was the door of the Middle Chamber?
A. So high that a cowan could not reach to stick a pin in.

Q. When you came to the middle, what did you see?
A. The resemblance of the letter G.

Q. What did that G denote?
A. One that’s greater than you.

Q. Who’s greater than I, that am a Free and Accepted Mason, the Master of a lodge?
A. The Grand Architect and Contriver of the Universe, or he that was taken up to the top of the pinnacle of the Holy Temple.

Q. Can you repeat the letter G?
A. I’ll do my endeavor.

The repeating the Letter G

In the midst of Solomon’s Temple there stands a G. A letter for all to read and see;
But few there be that understand what means the letter G.

Q. My friend, if you pretend to be of this fraternity,
You can forthwith and rightly tell what means that letter G.
A. By sciences are brought to light bodies of various kinds,
Which do appear to perfect sight, but none but males shall know my mind.

Q. The Right shall.
A. If Worshipful.

Q. Both Right and Worshipful I am,
To hail you I have command,
That you forthwith let me know,
As I you may understand.
A. By letters four, and science five,
This G aright does stand,
In a due art and proportion;
You have your answer, friend.

N.B. Four letters are B**z; Fifth science Geometry.

Q. My friend, you answer well,
If right and free principles you discover,
I’ll change your name from Friend,
And henceforth call you Brother.
A. The sciences are well composed of noble structure’s verse, a point, a line, and an outside; but a solid is the last.

Q. God’s good greeting be to this our happy meeting.
A. And all the Right Worshipful Brothers and Fellows.

Q. Of the Right Worshipful and Holy Lodge of St. John’s.
A. From whence I came.

Q. Greet you, greet you, greet you thrice heartily well, craving your name.
A. Timothy Ridicule.

Q. Welcome, Brother, by the grace of God.

N.B. The reason why they denominate themselves of the Holy Lodge of St. John’s is because he was the forerunner of our Savior and laid the first parallel line to the Gospel. Others do assert that our Savior Himself was accepted a Freemason whilst He was in the flesh, but how ridiculous and profane it seems, I leave to the judicious reader to consider.

The End of the Fellow Craft’s Part.


Dunwoodie meets in the Masonic Care New Rochelle campus, formerly the College of New Rochelle. Hard to believe it has been more than five years since the fraternity acquired the property, but all is not well in New Rochelle. The local politicians oppose the remaking of the campus into assisted living space—despite a number of residences for senior citizens existing in town already. I wonder what’s really on their minds.

Bro. Erich, The ALR’s Junior Deacon, and I arrived a few hours early and promptly explored some of the campus. It is frozen in time—deserted and with the abandoned accoutrements of student living evident everywhere. Beautiful stone architecture though. Castle-like Gothic style. I didn’t take any photos because the overcast day, frigid temps, and lifeless campus made a depressing scene. But while walking around and in and out of various buildings, we bumped into Past Grand Master Bill Sardone, a loyal booster of The ALR, who showed off the several spaces occupied by the Masonic Model Railroading Club.


It’s all in the early stages, but a few set-ups are working, with multiple trains running amid functioning scenery, like a Sinclair service station and pumping oil derricks. The club has accumulated more trains than it likely will be able to run, thanks to donations from around the country, but there is so much space on the campus I hope they can assemble it all in harmonious electric cycle one day soon. Send an email here to get involved.

The ALR will be back at Masonic Hall for its March 31 Stated Communication when we’ll welcome Bro. Chris Ruli, author of Brother Lafayette, to discuss the Marquis’ return visit to America in 1824-25. Also, the aforementioned Bro. Erich will tell us about Alexis de Toqueville’s thoughts on Freemasonry as gleaned from his historic tour of the United States in 1831-32.

That’s a fifth Monday. A lodge of Master Masons tiles at seven.