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  • Sept. 1, 1902
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  • The Province of Hertfordshire.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Province Of Hertfordshire.

The Province of Hertfordshire .

NOT every Masonic province can lay claim to a history commencing in the mists of antiquarian legend . There are , however , two which stand out preeminently in this respect , that of Hertfordshire and York . The former can claim to have been associated , at least in legend or tradition , with the very commencement of

Freemasonry in Great Britain . The old charges record that " St . Alban loved Masons well , and cherished them right much . " How far the old charges are correct is a matter of discussion , but no doubt the legend enshrines a truth . Hertfordshire Masons , as may be supposed , embrace the view of the

conservative critics , who have a belief in the tradition . We may give the story from the various old charges as collated by an American brother , who applied the method of modern criticism to the matter : " England in all this time stood void of Masons unto St . Alban's time . And in his clays the King of England , that was a pagan , did wall the town about that is called St . Albans . In that town of

St . Albans was a worthy knight , which was chief steward to the King and had governance of the realm and also of the making of the town walls ,

and loved well Masons , and cherished them much , and made their pay right good , and gave them a charter of the King and

his council for to hold a general council , and thereat he was himself , and helped to make Masons and gave them charges . "

It is permissible to believe that the original Masons were brought over early in the eighth century from the continent by King Off a on his return from Rome .

They may have been Nismian Masons , descended from Greek colonists , who brought with them the knowledge of their craft . These were employed either

in fortifying Yerulam or in building the first Cathedral of St . Albans to the memory of the Martyr . They probably had their craft

organization and trade secrets , which were only communicated to Masons

after due trial and examination . And to secure their freedom to hold assemblies , or lodges as we should now call them , and administer the jurisdiction of their trade ' s union , they obtained a charter from the King , incorporating them and giving them the protection and authority needed . Troublous times succeeded , and Masonry fell into

abeyance , and the members of the Craft seem to have dispersed , though still retaining knowledge of their art and copies of the charges , until they were called together at York in the tenth century under Athelstan , and reinstated in their ancient privileges . If this be an approximately

accurate account of the state of Freemasonry in Hertfordshire in the eighth century , ( he light of the Order , after shining with great brilliance at first , only plunged the intervening centuries into greater darkness than ever . No doubt In-eemasons were employed at the building of the present Abbey in the eleventh century , for their wellrecognised marks are found in the building , but how much

liHO . F . SUMXKR KNYVETT , I'AST GRAND DKACON , DKl'UTY PROVINCIAL GRAND MASTKR .

of speculative as well as operative Masonry entered into their ceremonies on the occasion of their meeting in lodge or guild we cannot even conjecture . When in the eighteenth century the light of Masonry was again set burning in the county , no longer under the auspices of operative , but purely speculative Masonry , it burned feebly and fitfully , and finally

again collapsed for nearly half a century , to recommence early in the nineteenth century with a stronger and ever increasing flame . A lodge was founded on the scene of the former exploits at St . Albans . In the year 1739 a warrant was issued from

the Grand Lodge of the Moderns , as they were styled by the rival Society of the Ancients , to consecrate a lodge at the Red Rampant Lyon , No . 181 , for the practice of speculative Masonry . In the following year it was moved to the Woolpack Inn , but whether the removal of this delicate shoot thus early in its career interfered with its proper development , or some other untoward circumstance intervened , we cannot

discover . It was erased from the books of Grand Lodge in 1755 as " not having attended at any Quarterly Communication , or even met for several

years . " Twelve years afterwards an attempt was made to resuscitate the Order in the same town , when the

Lodge of St . Amphibalus , No . 412 , was founded . We will not conjecture from the fact of its being held in a private house

that the cause of the extinction of its predecessor was attributable to the fact of its being held where refreshment was easily

obtainable , even though we bear in mind Hogarth's engraving of "Night , " in which the Senior Warden of a London lodge is

being conducted home by the Tyler , evidently exhausted and overcome by the labours of the evening .

This lodge was moved to London Colney , three miles from its former home , and took its transplanting even less kindly

than the former , for it died two years afterwards . No further attempt was made to establish a lodge of Freemasons under the shadow of the noble pile their ancestors had erected until 18 39 , to which we shall refer later . The year before the Lodge of St . Amphibalus was erased , the Lodge of Harmony , No . 491 , was consecrated at the White Horse , Baldock , but

the condition of things in Hertfordshire at this time was evidently unfavourable to Masonry , for after eleven years of struggle it succumbed , and was erased in 1787 . We have now no means of knowing if the failure of Masonic venture in this suburban county caused any perturbation in

the minds of the Masonic authorities , and whether Francis , Earl of Moira , the then acting Grand Master , or Bro . Rowland Hill , his Deputy , determined on a new plan of campaign to capture this refractory province ; but a singular and unique appointment was made in 1797 , when Bro . W . Forsteen was appointed Provincial Grand Master of Hertfordshire . A more desolate position can scarcely be Masonically imagined .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1902-09-01, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01091902/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Hertfordshire. Article 2
Consecration of the Somersetshire Lodge, No. 2925. Article 7
Consecration of the Tamesis Lod ge, No. 29 26. Article 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Th e Irregular Officers. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Installation of the Provincial Grand Master of Essex. Article 14
The Scottish Masonic Club, Edinburgh. Article 14
Dedication of a New Masonic Hall at Oswestry. Article 16
Provincial Grand Lodge of Bucks. Article 17
Presentation to Bro. Brazier. Article 17
Rising Star Lodge, Bloemfontein. Article 17
History of the Emulation Lodge of Improvement, No. 256.——(Continued). Article 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Province Of Hertfordshire.

The Province of Hertfordshire .

NOT every Masonic province can lay claim to a history commencing in the mists of antiquarian legend . There are , however , two which stand out preeminently in this respect , that of Hertfordshire and York . The former can claim to have been associated , at least in legend or tradition , with the very commencement of

Freemasonry in Great Britain . The old charges record that " St . Alban loved Masons well , and cherished them right much . " How far the old charges are correct is a matter of discussion , but no doubt the legend enshrines a truth . Hertfordshire Masons , as may be supposed , embrace the view of the

conservative critics , who have a belief in the tradition . We may give the story from the various old charges as collated by an American brother , who applied the method of modern criticism to the matter : " England in all this time stood void of Masons unto St . Alban's time . And in his clays the King of England , that was a pagan , did wall the town about that is called St . Albans . In that town of

St . Albans was a worthy knight , which was chief steward to the King and had governance of the realm and also of the making of the town walls ,

and loved well Masons , and cherished them much , and made their pay right good , and gave them a charter of the King and

his council for to hold a general council , and thereat he was himself , and helped to make Masons and gave them charges . "

It is permissible to believe that the original Masons were brought over early in the eighth century from the continent by King Off a on his return from Rome .

They may have been Nismian Masons , descended from Greek colonists , who brought with them the knowledge of their craft . These were employed either

in fortifying Yerulam or in building the first Cathedral of St . Albans to the memory of the Martyr . They probably had their craft

organization and trade secrets , which were only communicated to Masons

after due trial and examination . And to secure their freedom to hold assemblies , or lodges as we should now call them , and administer the jurisdiction of their trade ' s union , they obtained a charter from the King , incorporating them and giving them the protection and authority needed . Troublous times succeeded , and Masonry fell into

abeyance , and the members of the Craft seem to have dispersed , though still retaining knowledge of their art and copies of the charges , until they were called together at York in the tenth century under Athelstan , and reinstated in their ancient privileges . If this be an approximately

accurate account of the state of Freemasonry in Hertfordshire in the eighth century , ( he light of the Order , after shining with great brilliance at first , only plunged the intervening centuries into greater darkness than ever . No doubt In-eemasons were employed at the building of the present Abbey in the eleventh century , for their wellrecognised marks are found in the building , but how much

liHO . F . SUMXKR KNYVETT , I'AST GRAND DKACON , DKl'UTY PROVINCIAL GRAND MASTKR .

of speculative as well as operative Masonry entered into their ceremonies on the occasion of their meeting in lodge or guild we cannot even conjecture . When in the eighteenth century the light of Masonry was again set burning in the county , no longer under the auspices of operative , but purely speculative Masonry , it burned feebly and fitfully , and finally

again collapsed for nearly half a century , to recommence early in the nineteenth century with a stronger and ever increasing flame . A lodge was founded on the scene of the former exploits at St . Albans . In the year 1739 a warrant was issued from

the Grand Lodge of the Moderns , as they were styled by the rival Society of the Ancients , to consecrate a lodge at the Red Rampant Lyon , No . 181 , for the practice of speculative Masonry . In the following year it was moved to the Woolpack Inn , but whether the removal of this delicate shoot thus early in its career interfered with its proper development , or some other untoward circumstance intervened , we cannot

discover . It was erased from the books of Grand Lodge in 1755 as " not having attended at any Quarterly Communication , or even met for several

years . " Twelve years afterwards an attempt was made to resuscitate the Order in the same town , when the

Lodge of St . Amphibalus , No . 412 , was founded . We will not conjecture from the fact of its being held in a private house

that the cause of the extinction of its predecessor was attributable to the fact of its being held where refreshment was easily

obtainable , even though we bear in mind Hogarth's engraving of "Night , " in which the Senior Warden of a London lodge is

being conducted home by the Tyler , evidently exhausted and overcome by the labours of the evening .

This lodge was moved to London Colney , three miles from its former home , and took its transplanting even less kindly

than the former , for it died two years afterwards . No further attempt was made to establish a lodge of Freemasons under the shadow of the noble pile their ancestors had erected until 18 39 , to which we shall refer later . The year before the Lodge of St . Amphibalus was erased , the Lodge of Harmony , No . 491 , was consecrated at the White Horse , Baldock , but

the condition of things in Hertfordshire at this time was evidently unfavourable to Masonry , for after eleven years of struggle it succumbed , and was erased in 1787 . We have now no means of knowing if the failure of Masonic venture in this suburban county caused any perturbation in

the minds of the Masonic authorities , and whether Francis , Earl of Moira , the then acting Grand Master , or Bro . Rowland Hill , his Deputy , determined on a new plan of campaign to capture this refractory province ; but a singular and unique appointment was made in 1797 , when Bro . W . Forsteen was appointed Provincial Grand Master of Hertfordshire . A more desolate position can scarcely be Masonically imagined .

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