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  • May 1, 1881
  • Page 13
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1881: Page 13

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    Article MASONIC RESEARCH. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 13

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Research.

well as active , since the present High Council of America was founded by fratres admitted by us at York ; and this evening we have received into our M % % $ £ C $ $ . £ £ 4 . a distinguished brother , who contemplates the establishment of the order on the shores of the Mediterranean , and under his sway I feel sure that it cannot fail to flourish in that classic locality , where a grand field of work awaits its investigations .

We now number in our ranks thirty-three members , many of them Masons of high reputation , ancl who have shown for years an active and , what is better still , an intelligent interest in Masonic subjects in their respective districts . It is this intelligent side of Masonry which especially needs cultivation , and it is for the encouragement of progress in this direction that this society of ours was formed and now exists .

Fratres , I need not tell you , for you know it right well , that the mere perfection of ritual , the mere swelling out of a big charity list , or the mere faculty of making after-dinner speeches , or all three arts combined , do not constitute a Masonic scholar . Bright working is good , charitable efforts are excellent , and as we must eat to live , we may as well eat ancl live sociably ancl pleasantly , but a Mason may have wrought wonders in these things , ancl yet

not have mastered the greatest delight which Freemasonry can afford , ancl that is the mine of intellectual wealth which its hidden history conceals from all but the diligent student . It is diligence in Masonic study which I am so anxious that this college should encourage to the utmost of its power . All Masonic students of the present day are not members of our Order , but our Frater Hughan , who may be regarded as the historian , par excellence , of York

Masonry , is one of our brightest ornaments . Bro . R . F . Gould , as most of you know , has made Masonic history a subject of close study for years , and his published results are of inestimable value to all Masonic students . Bro . the Rev . A . F . A . Woodford bas for the major portion of his life devoted himself to Masonic research , ancl even now admits that he stands merely on the threshold of knowledge as regards the history of our mystic art . As yet so little is known concerning its origin and its history , that Masonry may yet be said to be practically , and in these respects , a sealed book .

I believe that the members of this college might do much towards the efforts now being made to elucidate the real history of Freemasonry , by everkeeping in mind their duty as members of the Order , ancl never permitting an opportunity to pass by disregarded of stimulating research in others as well as investigating themselves all available sources of Masonic knowledge . In York itself I think we may consider the mines of Masonic research pretty well exhaustedyet even this is bno means certainfor our

Fratei-, y , Todd can tell you how , only a short time since , he ancl I unearthed an old minute book amongst the possessions of the York Lodge , which had escaped the vigilant , eyes of Bros . Woodford , Cowling , Hughan , ancl others , but which carried back the records of the Royal Arch in York several years earlier than had been previously known . It is known that in 1779 a minute book of the old Grand Lodge of all England at York ( then known as the Lodge at York )

was in existence , containing records of meetings held in 1705 . This book is now missing , but who can tell that it may not yet be discovered in some unexpected quarter ? From time to time other minute books ancl Masonic relics have come to light in ways not to be anticipated , ancl I need harll y say that the discovery of the minute book alluded to might be a most valuable aid in clearing up the great mystery as to that period known as " the revival " of

1 / 17 . Yorkshire offers a peculiarly favourable field for Masonic investigation , for some of the oldest recorded lodges were wont to be held in this cit y and in other Yorkshire towns . Onl y very few of their records remain to us , and probably most of them have been lost and destroyed ; but it is quite possible that some may still exist , stored away amongst old disused papers when those odges stopped ivorking , and waiting in some lumber-room to be brought once 2 K

“The Masonic Magazine: 1881-05-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051881/page/13/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
A CURIOUS MASONIC TRACT. Article 1
List of the Regular Lodges in England according to their seniority, year of erection, and time of meeting. Article 9
MASONIC RESEARCH. Article 12
SONG. Article 14
THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY AND CRITICISM. Article 16
OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES. Article 17
A MASON'S STORY. Article 21
FURNESS ABBEY. Article 24
THE SECRET AT LAST. Article 26
CONSERVATION OF MASONRY. Article 28
AFTER ALL. Article 29
CHAPTER X. Article 32
HISTORY OF THE AIREDALE LODGE, No. 387, Article 37
APPENDIX. Article 40
THE PHILOSOPHY AND WORK OF PYTHAGORAS. Article 43
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Research.

well as active , since the present High Council of America was founded by fratres admitted by us at York ; and this evening we have received into our M % % $ £ C $ $ . £ £ 4 . a distinguished brother , who contemplates the establishment of the order on the shores of the Mediterranean , and under his sway I feel sure that it cannot fail to flourish in that classic locality , where a grand field of work awaits its investigations .

We now number in our ranks thirty-three members , many of them Masons of high reputation , ancl who have shown for years an active and , what is better still , an intelligent interest in Masonic subjects in their respective districts . It is this intelligent side of Masonry which especially needs cultivation , and it is for the encouragement of progress in this direction that this society of ours was formed and now exists .

Fratres , I need not tell you , for you know it right well , that the mere perfection of ritual , the mere swelling out of a big charity list , or the mere faculty of making after-dinner speeches , or all three arts combined , do not constitute a Masonic scholar . Bright working is good , charitable efforts are excellent , and as we must eat to live , we may as well eat ancl live sociably ancl pleasantly , but a Mason may have wrought wonders in these things , ancl yet

not have mastered the greatest delight which Freemasonry can afford , ancl that is the mine of intellectual wealth which its hidden history conceals from all but the diligent student . It is diligence in Masonic study which I am so anxious that this college should encourage to the utmost of its power . All Masonic students of the present day are not members of our Order , but our Frater Hughan , who may be regarded as the historian , par excellence , of York

Masonry , is one of our brightest ornaments . Bro . R . F . Gould , as most of you know , has made Masonic history a subject of close study for years , and his published results are of inestimable value to all Masonic students . Bro . the Rev . A . F . A . Woodford bas for the major portion of his life devoted himself to Masonic research , ancl even now admits that he stands merely on the threshold of knowledge as regards the history of our mystic art . As yet so little is known concerning its origin and its history , that Masonry may yet be said to be practically , and in these respects , a sealed book .

I believe that the members of this college might do much towards the efforts now being made to elucidate the real history of Freemasonry , by everkeeping in mind their duty as members of the Order , ancl never permitting an opportunity to pass by disregarded of stimulating research in others as well as investigating themselves all available sources of Masonic knowledge . In York itself I think we may consider the mines of Masonic research pretty well exhaustedyet even this is bno means certainfor our

Fratei-, y , Todd can tell you how , only a short time since , he ancl I unearthed an old minute book amongst the possessions of the York Lodge , which had escaped the vigilant , eyes of Bros . Woodford , Cowling , Hughan , ancl others , but which carried back the records of the Royal Arch in York several years earlier than had been previously known . It is known that in 1779 a minute book of the old Grand Lodge of all England at York ( then known as the Lodge at York )

was in existence , containing records of meetings held in 1705 . This book is now missing , but who can tell that it may not yet be discovered in some unexpected quarter ? From time to time other minute books ancl Masonic relics have come to light in ways not to be anticipated , ancl I need harll y say that the discovery of the minute book alluded to might be a most valuable aid in clearing up the great mystery as to that period known as " the revival " of

1 / 17 . Yorkshire offers a peculiarly favourable field for Masonic investigation , for some of the oldest recorded lodges were wont to be held in this cit y and in other Yorkshire towns . Onl y very few of their records remain to us , and probably most of them have been lost and destroyed ; but it is quite possible that some may still exist , stored away amongst old disused papers when those odges stopped ivorking , and waiting in some lumber-room to be brought once 2 K

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