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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • May 1, 1881
  • Page 17
  • OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES.
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1881: Page 17

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    Article THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY AND CRITICISM. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 17

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The Present Position Of Masonic History And Criticism.

Dr . Plot , in 1667 and 1686 ; at London in 1682 ; in Masons' Hill , at York , in 1690 . I admit that at York the evidence so far only connects us with a " guild legend , " but still the fact of a lodge being at York in 1690 is , if I remember rightly , also mentioned in the York records . Of course it is only a casual entry , and must be taken " quantum valet . " The evidence of the "AntiquitMS . " is a little more than thathoweverof a mere "guild legend "

y , , . The "colophon" is very peculiar : "William Bray , Freeman of London and Freemason , written by Robert Padgett , Clearke to the Worshi ppful Society of the Free Masons of the City of London , in the second yeare of the E . aigne of our most gracious Sovereign Lord King James the Second of England , & c , Annogue Domini 1686 . " A search in the record of the " Masons' Company" Londoncourteousl

, , y made by the officials , produces no evidence of any of the facts mentioned b y Ashmole in 1682 , or of the names of "Bray" or "Padgett" in 1686 . The only fact which tallies with Ashmole is that the master of the Company in 1682 , mentioned by Ashmole , was the actual master of the Company in 1682 ; but no other statement tallies . . Hence we must come to the conclusion , unlessindeedthe search has not been a careful one or a true onethat there

, , , was existing before 1700 a society of Freemasons in England with a ceremonial of its own ; and if the " Sloane MS ., " whose verbiage and archaism , as I said before , a most competent judge of MSS . once fixed at 1640 , represents such work ancl ceremonial in any shape or sense , the continuity and identit y of the two " bodies " before and after 1700 are , I think , established beyond cavil or contradiction . But here I stop to-day .

Old Records Of The Lodge Of Peebles.

OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES .

COMPILED BY BRO . ROBERT SANDERSON , P . G . SEC . PEEBLES AND SELKIRK ( s . C . ) ( Continued from page 244 ) . Peebles , March 17 th , 1787 . At a meeting of the Lodge this day , James Turnbull was admitted apprentice , and it was also agreed that George Donaldson , * an apprentice , for consideration of the Lod '

having presented ge with a very fine clothfor covering the Master ' s chair , should be past fellow-craft and raised to master , which was accordingly done at a meeting held on the last Friday of March . Under March 23 is the following minute : —William Lindsay to be entered apprentice to-morrow evening ; and follows , eodem die , William Moffat , one of the Burrow ( Burgh ) officers , admitted apprentice .

No other meeting is recorded till December 20 th , 1787—When the Conimitie mete , and agreed to have a diner on St . John ' s Day , and the secretary to write cards to all the regular members to attend sd . day at eleven o ' clock forenoon . Peebles , December 27 th , 1787 . Which clay being the anniversary of St . John the Evangelist , the Lod ge mete . There were 20 members present who paid their clues . Bro . John Robertson , Newcastle , was elected R . W . Master , and John Hislop continued Deputy Master .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1881-05-01, Page 17” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051881/page/17/.
  • 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.

The Present Position Of Masonic History And Criticism.

Dr . Plot , in 1667 and 1686 ; at London in 1682 ; in Masons' Hill , at York , in 1690 . I admit that at York the evidence so far only connects us with a " guild legend , " but still the fact of a lodge being at York in 1690 is , if I remember rightly , also mentioned in the York records . Of course it is only a casual entry , and must be taken " quantum valet . " The evidence of the "AntiquitMS . " is a little more than thathoweverof a mere "guild legend "

y , , . The "colophon" is very peculiar : "William Bray , Freeman of London and Freemason , written by Robert Padgett , Clearke to the Worshi ppful Society of the Free Masons of the City of London , in the second yeare of the E . aigne of our most gracious Sovereign Lord King James the Second of England , & c , Annogue Domini 1686 . " A search in the record of the " Masons' Company" Londoncourteousl

, , y made by the officials , produces no evidence of any of the facts mentioned b y Ashmole in 1682 , or of the names of "Bray" or "Padgett" in 1686 . The only fact which tallies with Ashmole is that the master of the Company in 1682 , mentioned by Ashmole , was the actual master of the Company in 1682 ; but no other statement tallies . . Hence we must come to the conclusion , unlessindeedthe search has not been a careful one or a true onethat there

, , , was existing before 1700 a society of Freemasons in England with a ceremonial of its own ; and if the " Sloane MS ., " whose verbiage and archaism , as I said before , a most competent judge of MSS . once fixed at 1640 , represents such work ancl ceremonial in any shape or sense , the continuity and identit y of the two " bodies " before and after 1700 are , I think , established beyond cavil or contradiction . But here I stop to-day .

Old Records Of The Lodge Of Peebles.

OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES .

COMPILED BY BRO . ROBERT SANDERSON , P . G . SEC . PEEBLES AND SELKIRK ( s . C . ) ( Continued from page 244 ) . Peebles , March 17 th , 1787 . At a meeting of the Lodge this day , James Turnbull was admitted apprentice , and it was also agreed that George Donaldson , * an apprentice , for consideration of the Lod '

having presented ge with a very fine clothfor covering the Master ' s chair , should be past fellow-craft and raised to master , which was accordingly done at a meeting held on the last Friday of March . Under March 23 is the following minute : —William Lindsay to be entered apprentice to-morrow evening ; and follows , eodem die , William Moffat , one of the Burrow ( Burgh ) officers , admitted apprentice .

No other meeting is recorded till December 20 th , 1787—When the Conimitie mete , and agreed to have a diner on St . John ' s Day , and the secretary to write cards to all the regular members to attend sd . day at eleven o ' clock forenoon . Peebles , December 27 th , 1787 . Which clay being the anniversary of St . John the Evangelist , the Lod ge mete . There were 20 members present who paid their clues . Bro . John Robertson , Newcastle , was elected R . W . Master , and John Hislop continued Deputy Master .

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