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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1881
  • Page 22
  • A PRE-HISTORIC BROTHER.
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1881: Page 22

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Page 22

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

A Pre-Historic Brother.

A PRE-HISTORIC BROTHER .

BY BBO . T . B . WHITEHEAD . THE question so ably and fully opened out by " Masonic Student " in the columns of The Freemason as to the pre-revival character of Freemasonry is of the deepest and Avidest interest , and every scraj > of information bearing on the Craft in the seventeenth century should be carefully preserved . Some time ago Bro . the Hon . W . T . Orcle-Powlettof Wensley Halltold me that he

, , had discovered in the churchyard at Wensley a monumental slab recording the death of a Freemason in 1689 . At my request he very kindly made a rubbing of the stone , a task of some difficulty , as the slab is leaning forward at a considerable angle , and the surface is much honeycombed by the weather . From this rubbing I have made a reduced sketch , which it may be worth your while to produce in the pages of the Magazine . The measurements of the stone are about two

feet six inches by two feet , ancl it is a curious circumstance that it faces west , or in an opposite direction to the rest of the stones . The reason for the interment of the dead with their faces to the east is well known . May not the western position in this case have reference to the direction in Avhich the Master Mason is supposed to go in search of that Avhich was lost ? The entry of the interment of Bro . Bowes occurs in the parish register , ancl the date on

the stone coincides Avith it . The North Riding of Yorkshire has long been a very old seat of Masonry , and at Richmond exists the Lennox Lodge , one of the oldest on the roll . Several lodges were , during the eighteenth century , from time to time Avarranted by the Grand Lodge of All England , ancl worked at North Riding centres , and it is not improbable that BoAvesif not made at Yorkwas made bYork

, , y Masons . The legend on the stone , " George Bowes , Free Mason , " is exceedingly curious , because it would seem to point to the fact either that the man was best known in his character of a "Freemason , " or that the singularl y terse inscription was placed on the stone at his own request . In either case it would imply that Bowes was a prominent man in the Soo ] ec 3 r , ancl something more than an operative mason .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1881-12-01, Page 22” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121881/page/22/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
FREEMASONRY IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY: WARRINGTON, 1646. Article 1
APPENDIX. Article 14
DRIFTING AWAY. Article 16
Untitled Article 17
A BIT OF OLD LONDON. Article 19
A PRE-HISTORIC BROTHER. Article 22
HISTORY OF THE AIREDALE LODGE, No. 387, Article 23
THIRLMERE LAKE. Article 27
COME, FORTH MY LOVE ! Article 29
A MEMORABLE YEAR IN ENGLISH MASONRY. Article 30
GOING HOME: Article 33
AFTER ALL; Article 34
MASONIC RECITATION, Article 39
"GLEANINGS FROM THE BLUE." Article 40
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 44
THE FREEMASONS' APRON. Article 46
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Pre-Historic Brother.

A PRE-HISTORIC BROTHER .

BY BBO . T . B . WHITEHEAD . THE question so ably and fully opened out by " Masonic Student " in the columns of The Freemason as to the pre-revival character of Freemasonry is of the deepest and Avidest interest , and every scraj > of information bearing on the Craft in the seventeenth century should be carefully preserved . Some time ago Bro . the Hon . W . T . Orcle-Powlettof Wensley Halltold me that he

, , had discovered in the churchyard at Wensley a monumental slab recording the death of a Freemason in 1689 . At my request he very kindly made a rubbing of the stone , a task of some difficulty , as the slab is leaning forward at a considerable angle , and the surface is much honeycombed by the weather . From this rubbing I have made a reduced sketch , which it may be worth your while to produce in the pages of the Magazine . The measurements of the stone are about two

feet six inches by two feet , ancl it is a curious circumstance that it faces west , or in an opposite direction to the rest of the stones . The reason for the interment of the dead with their faces to the east is well known . May not the western position in this case have reference to the direction in Avhich the Master Mason is supposed to go in search of that Avhich was lost ? The entry of the interment of Bro . Bowes occurs in the parish register , ancl the date on

the stone coincides Avith it . The North Riding of Yorkshire has long been a very old seat of Masonry , and at Richmond exists the Lennox Lodge , one of the oldest on the roll . Several lodges were , during the eighteenth century , from time to time Avarranted by the Grand Lodge of All England , ancl worked at North Riding centres , and it is not improbable that BoAvesif not made at Yorkwas made bYork

, , y Masons . The legend on the stone , " George Bowes , Free Mason , " is exceedingly curious , because it would seem to point to the fact either that the man was best known in his character of a "Freemason , " or that the singularl y terse inscription was placed on the stone at his own request . In either case it would imply that Bowes was a prominent man in the Soo ] ec 3 r , ancl something more than an operative mason .

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