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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1879
  • Page 11
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The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1879: Page 11

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    Article FREEMASONRY IN KELSO. ← Page 4 of 6 →
Page 11

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

Freemasonry In Kelso.

of assisting at various public ceremonials , Masonic ancl otherwise , there is nothing recorded in the minutes of more than local interest ; the meetings were not held very regularly , and sometimes only twice a year—on St . Andrew ' s and St . John ' s anniversaries . The ceremonies of initiation , passing , and raising , were crude in the extreme , and were frequently accompanied by such rough samples of practical joking as almost endangered the limbs of the candidates , and certainly altogether terrified them . I believe that this

tomfoolery and burlesque of our beautiful service was actually believed by the initiates to be part of the ceremonies of Freemasonry ! It is no wonder that our Craft gets into disrepute when such disgraceful scenes are transacted or tolerated in a loclge ; these , combined with the orgies sometimes held after the loclge is closed , and supposed by many to be inseparable from Masonry , have proved to us a bye-word , a reproach , and a stumbling-block . To the

honour of the loclge and the credit of the Craft there arose a champion in our midst , one who had been initiated with the usual rough accompaniments and in the crudest manner—Bro . James Steel , than whom there is not a more respected or keener Mason in the Borders . He it . was who , being then a very young Mason , and seeing a candidate grossly ill-used during the ceremony of initiation , put his veto upon such a course of proceeding , ancl , by his

determination ancl example , gradually weeded out the abuses that had for so long disgraced the meetings of this particular loclge in Kelso . We return now to continue the history of the old lodge , from the date last mentioned , 1819 , to the close of the year 1831 . The meetings were regularly held , ancl there are several records of 2 mblic ceremonies , but there are no minutes for the year 1832 , ancl no meeting was held till St . Andrew ' s Day , 1838 , when we notice that the R . W . M . " in the course of the evening' alluded

to the dreadful calamity of cholera which had prevented the loclge from meeting at any period during the year 1832 , and , with much feeling and propriety , remarked he believed that all over Scotland it was a year lost in the annals of Masonry . " St . John ' s Day was held this year , but from that clay to the 26 th of December , 1843 , no meetings are recorded . The scourge of cholera above referred to no doubt had a good deal to do with the discontinuance of the meetings ; but there is also no doubt that the great political wave which swept

over the country during the Reform agitation had also a very detrimental effect upon the attendance of the brethren . Politics and Freemasonry are ever kept apart ; but during this period , when party feeling was so strong on the Borders that even life-long friendships were sacrificed to political partizanship , we cannot feel surprised at its being then felt even b y the brotherhood . An attempt was made to revive the interest in the lodge in 1843 and a meeting

, was appointed for January , 1844 , to initiate members ; but no candidates appeared . So the second and third degrees were given to those brethren who had not already been passed and raised . For St . John the Baptist ' s Day , 1844 , there is a minute , but no business is mentioned , and this appears to have been the last meeting of the old loclge until the event detailed below . As the history of the two lodges are converging , I must now return to

Tweed loclge . In January , 1869 , a proposal was made to remove the meetings of that lodge from the Cross Keys Hotel , but the matter was then abandoned . A year or two after it was proposed that Tweed lodge should try and get the name and number of the old lodge ; but this matter also fell throu gh . It was discovered that the goods belonging to the Loclge of Kelso were in the possession of a widow in the townand that they could be got for a small sum

, , which was accordingl y given for them , and an endeavour made to revive the old lodge ; but it was unsuccessful . It was not until the month of April , 1878 , that Grand Lodge sanctioned the resuscitation of the ancient lodge , upon payment of arrears , ancl it was decided by a very large majority of the members of Tweed , convened for the purpose , to amalgamate the two lodges , and at the same time to secure a place of meeting apart from a public-house or

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-08-01, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 7 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081879/page/11/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
OLD ANTIQUITY. Article 1
IN MEMORIAM: Article 7
FREEMASONRY IN KELSO. Article 8
SARAH BERNHARDT. Article 13
TRYING TO CHANGE A SOVEREIGN. Article 14
SINGULAR CEREMONY IN MAKING ALNWICK FREEMEN. Article 24
ACROSTIC. Article 25
BEATRICE. Article 26
HISTORICAL LUCUBRATIONS. Article 28
VIXEN.* Article 30
AN OLD MASONIC CHAIR AND ITS HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS. Article 31
A HUNDRED YEARS FROM NOW. Article 33
A HUNDRED YEARS FROM NOW. Article 35
ON OLD ENGLISH BIBLES. Article 36
MY INITIATION INTO THE ABYSSINIAN MYSTERIES. Article 41
THE BUDDING SPRING. Article 43
THE DIDOT SALE. Article 44
THE POWER OF SONG. Article 47
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 48
THE FANCY FAIR. Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasonry In Kelso.

of assisting at various public ceremonials , Masonic ancl otherwise , there is nothing recorded in the minutes of more than local interest ; the meetings were not held very regularly , and sometimes only twice a year—on St . Andrew ' s and St . John ' s anniversaries . The ceremonies of initiation , passing , and raising , were crude in the extreme , and were frequently accompanied by such rough samples of practical joking as almost endangered the limbs of the candidates , and certainly altogether terrified them . I believe that this

tomfoolery and burlesque of our beautiful service was actually believed by the initiates to be part of the ceremonies of Freemasonry ! It is no wonder that our Craft gets into disrepute when such disgraceful scenes are transacted or tolerated in a loclge ; these , combined with the orgies sometimes held after the loclge is closed , and supposed by many to be inseparable from Masonry , have proved to us a bye-word , a reproach , and a stumbling-block . To the

honour of the loclge and the credit of the Craft there arose a champion in our midst , one who had been initiated with the usual rough accompaniments and in the crudest manner—Bro . James Steel , than whom there is not a more respected or keener Mason in the Borders . He it . was who , being then a very young Mason , and seeing a candidate grossly ill-used during the ceremony of initiation , put his veto upon such a course of proceeding , ancl , by his

determination ancl example , gradually weeded out the abuses that had for so long disgraced the meetings of this particular loclge in Kelso . We return now to continue the history of the old lodge , from the date last mentioned , 1819 , to the close of the year 1831 . The meetings were regularly held , ancl there are several records of 2 mblic ceremonies , but there are no minutes for the year 1832 , ancl no meeting was held till St . Andrew ' s Day , 1838 , when we notice that the R . W . M . " in the course of the evening' alluded

to the dreadful calamity of cholera which had prevented the loclge from meeting at any period during the year 1832 , and , with much feeling and propriety , remarked he believed that all over Scotland it was a year lost in the annals of Masonry . " St . John ' s Day was held this year , but from that clay to the 26 th of December , 1843 , no meetings are recorded . The scourge of cholera above referred to no doubt had a good deal to do with the discontinuance of the meetings ; but there is also no doubt that the great political wave which swept

over the country during the Reform agitation had also a very detrimental effect upon the attendance of the brethren . Politics and Freemasonry are ever kept apart ; but during this period , when party feeling was so strong on the Borders that even life-long friendships were sacrificed to political partizanship , we cannot feel surprised at its being then felt even b y the brotherhood . An attempt was made to revive the interest in the lodge in 1843 and a meeting

, was appointed for January , 1844 , to initiate members ; but no candidates appeared . So the second and third degrees were given to those brethren who had not already been passed and raised . For St . John the Baptist ' s Day , 1844 , there is a minute , but no business is mentioned , and this appears to have been the last meeting of the old loclge until the event detailed below . As the history of the two lodges are converging , I must now return to

Tweed loclge . In January , 1869 , a proposal was made to remove the meetings of that lodge from the Cross Keys Hotel , but the matter was then abandoned . A year or two after it was proposed that Tweed lodge should try and get the name and number of the old lodge ; but this matter also fell throu gh . It was discovered that the goods belonging to the Loclge of Kelso were in the possession of a widow in the townand that they could be got for a small sum

, , which was accordingl y given for them , and an endeavour made to revive the old lodge ; but it was unsuccessful . It was not until the month of April , 1878 , that Grand Lodge sanctioned the resuscitation of the ancient lodge , upon payment of arrears , ancl it was decided by a very large majority of the members of Tweed , convened for the purpose , to amalgamate the two lodges , and at the same time to secure a place of meeting apart from a public-house or

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