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  • Aug. 1, 1905
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  • A Short History of the Lodge of Emulation, No. 21.
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A Short History Of The Lodge Of Emulation, No. 21.

A Short History of the Lodge of Emulation , No . 21 .

( By HEXKY SADLER , Sub-Librarian to the Grand Lodge of England ) .

THE history of a Freemasons' Loclge dating back to the year 1723 would , in my opinion , be incomplete unless accompanied by a sketch of Speculative Masonry in London at the period of its birth . I propose , therefore , as an introduction to my present undertaking to outline , as briefly as compatible with a clear understanding of the subject , the

acknowledged and reliable evidence appertaining to the early stages in the career of the '' Mother Grand Lodge of the World . " This I deem necessary in view of the large and ever increasing number of the members of our Order who , whilst not coming properly under the heading of Masonic

Students , show an appreciative interest in the doings of the Craft in bygone clays as evinced by the desire , growing stronger every year , to see in print and thereby preserved from extinction the records of their own particular lodges . It is pretty generally known that in the year 1717 certain

old lodges , more or less of an operative character , held a meeting in London and agreed to establish what was at lirst intended by its promoters , merely to be a Grand Loclge for the cities of London and Westminster , but which grew so rapidly that it became not only the Grand Loclge of England , but in a comparatively short space of time had extended its branches and influence to many distant parts of the globe .

Previous to this period there was no recognised head of symbolical Masonry , the lodges therefore acted quite independently of each other , acknowledging no higher Masonic authority than the master for the time being ; no doubt when a lodge grew too large for the comfort of its members , or a difference of opinion arose amongst them , and the

requisite number could be got together , they would remove to another house and set up a lodge on their own account , without troubling themselves about Warrants of Constitution , consecrating officers , or indeed any of the grand ceremonials considered so essential at the opening of a new lodge in the

present clay . In many of the lodges there was no regular subscription , each member contributing a small sum towards the expenses of the evening , with something in addition for the benefit of the sick and distressed ; this , with a small entrance fee , and the lines inflicted on brethren for trivial

offences such as omitting to bring their aprons , or the Loclge Jewel , or using " swear words , " constituted the only source of income .

It is most unfortunate and will ever be regretted that we should have no written record of the formation or establishing of the first Grand Lodge of Freemasons , nor of the subsequent transactions of that august body prior to the 24 th June , 1723 , when the written records of the Grand Lodge begin . So far as I have been able to learn , Dr . James Anderson

, a Presbyterian Minister , with antiquarian proclivities , the compiler of the lirst Book of the Constitutions for the purely speculative fraternity , published in 1723 , was the first to put in print an account of the formation of the Grand Lodge and the names of the Grand Officers who were appointedtogether

, with its proceedings during the lirst twenty-one years of its existence . But this was not done until he compiled a second and more elaborate edition of his book in 1738 . I am of opinion that Anderson wrote the early portion of his history , either " from information received , " or from notes of the

proceedings probably taken on loose sheets of paper that were not deemed worthy of preservation after he had copied ( hem , for , to the best of my knowledge and belief , he was not a Mason in 1717 .

According to Dr . Anderson , four lodges , whose places of meeting he mentions , took part in forming the Grand Loclge . One of these died out about 1725 , and the others are now represented by the Lodge of Antiquity , No . 2 , the Royal Somerset House and Inverness Loclge , No . 4 , and the Fortitude and Old Cumberland Lodge , No . 12 . The

early history of these lodges having been most ably and exhaustively dealt with by Robert F . Gould in a work entitled The Four Old Lodges , which is available in the usual channels , I need not dwell further on their history . Although Anderson does not state positively that the four he mentions were the only lodges in London when the Grand Loclge was formed ,

that is the impression left on the mind of the general reader . Strange to say an author of a later period boldly stales that si . v lodges took part in the formation of the Grand Lodge . * Whether there were four or six lodges that took part in establishing the Grand Lodge , is not , in my opinion , a matter

of vital importance , but considering all the circumstances , something more reliable than a bare statement is required to satisfy me that these were the only lodges in London at the time . The engraved official list of lodges for 1723 gives the signs of 51 houses at which lodges were supposed to be

meeting at the date of publication , all of them being situated in the metropolis with the exception of two . It is scarcely feasible that exclusive of the four or six of 171 / all these should have been entirely new lodges ; doubtless some of

Till- ; MASTER'S CIIAIU OF THE LOIU 1 K OF FMFLATION , No . 21 AND liOX OF WOUKINd TOOLS . Pt-i'neiileil I ,, / Sir I ' ltli / ll'U-e lie Eel / fief , P . AM , them were , but I think it highly probable that several were in existence prior to the formation of the ( hand Loclge , and on finding that Institution patronized by persons of wealth * The Com / Jctc Free Miison , tie Mnllu I'tuuis for l . ovcrs of Scads , published aiionviiiouslv about 17 ( 14 .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1905-08-01, Page 17” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01081905/page/17/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Some Notes on Freemasonry in Austraiasia .– –(Continued). Article 2
Provincial Grand Lodge of Essex. Article 5
Provincial Grand Lodge of Shropshire. Article 6
Provincial Grand Lodge of Surrey. Article 7
Installation Meeting of the Sanctuary Lodge, No. 3051. Article 9
Untitled Article 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Grand Lodge and the Grand Master. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 14
The Grand Lodge of France. Article 15
A Short History of the Lodge of Emulation, No. 21. Article 17
Untitled Ad 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Short History Of The Lodge Of Emulation, No. 21.

A Short History of the Lodge of Emulation , No . 21 .

( By HEXKY SADLER , Sub-Librarian to the Grand Lodge of England ) .

THE history of a Freemasons' Loclge dating back to the year 1723 would , in my opinion , be incomplete unless accompanied by a sketch of Speculative Masonry in London at the period of its birth . I propose , therefore , as an introduction to my present undertaking to outline , as briefly as compatible with a clear understanding of the subject , the

acknowledged and reliable evidence appertaining to the early stages in the career of the '' Mother Grand Lodge of the World . " This I deem necessary in view of the large and ever increasing number of the members of our Order who , whilst not coming properly under the heading of Masonic

Students , show an appreciative interest in the doings of the Craft in bygone clays as evinced by the desire , growing stronger every year , to see in print and thereby preserved from extinction the records of their own particular lodges . It is pretty generally known that in the year 1717 certain

old lodges , more or less of an operative character , held a meeting in London and agreed to establish what was at lirst intended by its promoters , merely to be a Grand Loclge for the cities of London and Westminster , but which grew so rapidly that it became not only the Grand Loclge of England , but in a comparatively short space of time had extended its branches and influence to many distant parts of the globe .

Previous to this period there was no recognised head of symbolical Masonry , the lodges therefore acted quite independently of each other , acknowledging no higher Masonic authority than the master for the time being ; no doubt when a lodge grew too large for the comfort of its members , or a difference of opinion arose amongst them , and the

requisite number could be got together , they would remove to another house and set up a lodge on their own account , without troubling themselves about Warrants of Constitution , consecrating officers , or indeed any of the grand ceremonials considered so essential at the opening of a new lodge in the

present clay . In many of the lodges there was no regular subscription , each member contributing a small sum towards the expenses of the evening , with something in addition for the benefit of the sick and distressed ; this , with a small entrance fee , and the lines inflicted on brethren for trivial

offences such as omitting to bring their aprons , or the Loclge Jewel , or using " swear words , " constituted the only source of income .

It is most unfortunate and will ever be regretted that we should have no written record of the formation or establishing of the first Grand Lodge of Freemasons , nor of the subsequent transactions of that august body prior to the 24 th June , 1723 , when the written records of the Grand Lodge begin . So far as I have been able to learn , Dr . James Anderson

, a Presbyterian Minister , with antiquarian proclivities , the compiler of the lirst Book of the Constitutions for the purely speculative fraternity , published in 1723 , was the first to put in print an account of the formation of the Grand Lodge and the names of the Grand Officers who were appointedtogether

, with its proceedings during the lirst twenty-one years of its existence . But this was not done until he compiled a second and more elaborate edition of his book in 1738 . I am of opinion that Anderson wrote the early portion of his history , either " from information received , " or from notes of the

proceedings probably taken on loose sheets of paper that were not deemed worthy of preservation after he had copied ( hem , for , to the best of my knowledge and belief , he was not a Mason in 1717 .

According to Dr . Anderson , four lodges , whose places of meeting he mentions , took part in forming the Grand Loclge . One of these died out about 1725 , and the others are now represented by the Lodge of Antiquity , No . 2 , the Royal Somerset House and Inverness Loclge , No . 4 , and the Fortitude and Old Cumberland Lodge , No . 12 . The

early history of these lodges having been most ably and exhaustively dealt with by Robert F . Gould in a work entitled The Four Old Lodges , which is available in the usual channels , I need not dwell further on their history . Although Anderson does not state positively that the four he mentions were the only lodges in London when the Grand Loclge was formed ,

that is the impression left on the mind of the general reader . Strange to say an author of a later period boldly stales that si . v lodges took part in the formation of the Grand Lodge . * Whether there were four or six lodges that took part in establishing the Grand Lodge , is not , in my opinion , a matter

of vital importance , but considering all the circumstances , something more reliable than a bare statement is required to satisfy me that these were the only lodges in London at the time . The engraved official list of lodges for 1723 gives the signs of 51 houses at which lodges were supposed to be

meeting at the date of publication , all of them being situated in the metropolis with the exception of two . It is scarcely feasible that exclusive of the four or six of 171 / all these should have been entirely new lodges ; doubtless some of

Till- ; MASTER'S CIIAIU OF THE LOIU 1 K OF FMFLATION , No . 21 AND liOX OF WOUKINd TOOLS . Pt-i'neiileil I ,, / Sir I ' ltli / ll'U-e lie Eel / fief , P . AM , them were , but I think it highly probable that several were in existence prior to the formation of the ( hand Loclge , and on finding that Institution patronized by persons of wealth * The Com / Jctc Free Miison , tie Mnllu I'tuuis for l . ovcrs of Scads , published aiionviiiouslv about 17 ( 14 .

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