Albert G. Mackey
The Masonic Law
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Table of contents
Preface.
Introduction.
Book First The Law of Grand Lodges.
Chapter I. Historical Sketch.
Chapter II. Of the Mode of Organizing Grand Lodges.
Chapter III. Of the Members of a Grand Lodge.
Chapter IV. Of the Officers of a Grand Lodge.
Chapter V. Of the Powers and Prerogatives of a Grand Lodge.
Book Second Laws of Subordinate Lodges.
Chapter I. Of the Nature and Organization of Subordinate Lodges.
Chapter II. Of Lodges under Dispensation.
Chapter III. Of Lodges Working under a Warrant of Constitution.
Chapter IV. Of the Officers of a Subordinate Lodge.
Chapter V. Of Rules of Order.
Book Third. The Law of Individuals.
Chapter I. Of the Qualifications of Candidates.
Chapter II. Of the Rights of Entered Apprentices.
Chapter III. Of the Rights of Fellow Crafts.
Chapter IV. Of the Rights of Master Masons.
Chapter V. Of the Rights of Past Masters.
Chapter VI. Of Affiliation.
Chapter VII. Of Demitting.
Chapter VIII. Of Unaffiliated Masons.
Book Fourth. Of Masonic Crimes and Punishments.
Chapter I. Of What Are Masonic Crimes.
Chapter II. Of Masonic Punishments.
Chapter III. Of Masonic Trials.
Chapter IV. Of the Penal Jurisdiction of a Lodge.
Chapter V. Of Appeals.
Chapter VI. Of Restoration.
Footnotes
Preface.
In presenting to the fraternity a work on the
Principles of Masonic Law, it is due to those for whom it is
intended, that something should be said of the design with which it
has been written, and of the plan on which it has been composed. It
is not pretended to present to the craft an encyclopedia of
jurisprudence, in which every question that can possibly arise, in
the transactions of a Lodge, is decided with an especial reference
to its particular circumstances. Were the accomplishment of such an
herculean task possible, except after years of intense and
unremitting labor, the unwieldy size of the book produced, and the
heterogeneous nature of its contents, so far from inviting, would
rather tend to distract attention, and the object of communicating
a knowledge of the Principles of Masonic Law, would be lost in the
tedious collation of precedents, arranged without scientific
system, and enunciated without explanation.
When I first contemplated the composition of a work on this
subject, a distinguished friend and Brother, whose opinion I much
respect, and with whose advice I am always anxious to comply,
unless for the most satisfactory reasons, suggested the expediency
of collecting the decisions of all Grand Masters, Grand Lodges, and
other masonic authorities upon every subject of Masonic Law, and of
presenting them, without commentary, to the fraternity.
But a brief examination of this method, led me to perceive
that I would be thus constructing simply a digest of decrees, many
of which would probably be the results of inexperience, of
prejudice, or of erroneous views of the masonic system, and from
which the authors themselves have, in repeated instances,
subsequently receded—for Grand Masters and Grand Lodges, although
entitled to great respect, are not infallible—and I could not,
conscientiously, have consented to assist, without any qualifying
remark, in the extension and perpetuation of edicts and opinions,
which, however high the authority from which they emanated, I did
not believe to be in accordance with the principles of Masonic
jurisprudence.
Another inconvenience which would have attended the adoption
of such a method is, that the decisions of different Grand Lodges
and Grand Masters are sometimes entirely contradictory on the same
points of Masonic Law. The decree of one jurisdiction, on any
particular question, will often be found at variance with that of
another, while a third will differ from both. The consultor of a
work, embracing within its pages such distracting judgments,
unexplained by commentary, would be in doubt as to which decision
he should adopt, so that coming to the inspection with the desire
of solving a legal question, he would be constrained to close the
volume, in utter despair of extracting truth or information from so
confused a mass of contradictions.
This plan I therefore at once abandoned. But knowing that the
jurisprudence of Masonry is founded, like all legal science, on
abstract principles, which govern and control its entire system, I
deemed it to be a better course to present these principles to my
readers in an elementary and methodical treatise, and to develop
from them those necessary deductions which reason and common sense
would justify.
Hence it is that I have presumed to call this work "The
Principles of Masonic Law." It is not a code of enactments, nor a
collection of statutes, nor yet a digest of opinions; but simply an
elementary treatise, intended to enable every one who consults it,
with competent judgment, and ordinary intelligence, to trace for
himself the bearings of the law upon any question which he seeks to
investigate, and to form, for himself, a correct opinion upon the
merits of any particular case.
Blackstone, whose method of teaching I have endeavored,
although I confess "ab longo inter-vallo," to pursue, in speaking
of what an academical expounder of the law should do, says:
"He should consider his course as a general map of the law,
marking out the shape of the country, its connections, and
boundaries, its greater divisions, and principal cities; it is not
his business to describe minutely the subordinate limits, or to fix
the longitude and latitude of every inconsiderable hamlet."
Such has been the rule that has governed me in the
compilation of this work. But in delineating this "general map" of
the Masonic Law, I have sought, if I may continue the metaphor, so
to define boundaries, and to describe countries, as to give the
inspector no difficulty in "locating" (to use an Americanism) any
subordinate point. I have treated, it is true, of principles, but I
have not altogether lost sight of cases.
There are certain fundamental laws of the Institution,
concerning which there never has been any dispute, and which have
come down to us with all the sanctions of antiquity, and universal
acceptation. In announcing these, I have not always thought it
necessary to defend their justice, or to assign a reason for their
enactment.
The weight of unanimous authority has, in these instances,
been deemed sufficient to entitle them to respect, and to
obedience.
But on all other questions, where authority is divided, or
where doubts of the correctness of my decision might arise, I have
endeavored, by a course of argument as satisfactory as I could
command, to assign a reason for my opinions, and to defend and
enforce my views, by a reference to the general principles of
jurisprudence, and the peculiar character of the masonic system. I
ask, and should receive no deference to my own unsupported
theories—as a man, I am, of course, fallible—and may often have
decided erroneously. But I do claim for my arguments all the weight
and influence of which they may be deemed worthy, after an
attentive and unprejudiced examination. To those who may at first
be ready—because I do not agree with all their preconceived
opinions—to doubt or deny my conclusions, I would say, in the
language of Themistocles, "Strike, but hear me."
Whatever may be the verdict passed upon my labors by my
Brethren, I trust that some clemency will be extended to the errors
into which I may have fallen, for the sake of the object which I
have had in view: that, namely, of presenting to the Craft an
elementary work, that might enable every Mason to know his rights,
and to learn his duties.
The intention was, undoubtedly, a good one. How it has been
executed, it is not for me, but for the masonic public to
determine.
Introduction.
The Authorities for Masonic Law.
The laws which govern the institution of Freemasonry are of
two kinds, unwritten and written, and may in a manner be compared
with the "lex non scripta," or common law, and the "lex scripta,"
or statute law of English and American jurists.
The "lex non scripta," or unwritten law of Freemasonry is
derived from the traditions, usages and customs of the fraternity
as they have existed from the remotest antiquity, and as they are
universally admitted by the general consent of the members of the
Order. In fact, we may apply to these unwritten laws of Masonry the
definition given by Blackstone of the "leges non scriptæ" of the
English constitution—that "their original institution and authority
are not set down in writing, as acts of parliament are, but they
receive their binding power, and the force of laws, by long and
immemorial usage and by their universal reception throughout the
kingdom." When, in the course of this work, I refer to these
unwritten laws as authority upon any point, I shall do so under the
appropriate designation of "ancient usage."
The "lex scripta," or written law of Masonry, is derived from
a variety of sources, and was framed at different periods. The
following documents I deem of sufficient authority to substantiate
any principle, or to determine any disputed question in masonic
law.
1. The "Ancient Masonic charges, from a manuscript of the
Lodge of Antiquity," and said to have been written in the reign of
James II.1
2. The regulations adopted at the General Assembly held in
1663, of which the Earl of St. Albans was Grand Master.2
3. The interrogatories propounded to the Master of a lodge at
the time of his installation, and which, from their universal
adoption, without alteration, by the whole fraternity, are
undoubtedly to be considered as a part of the fundamental law of
Masonry.
4. "The Charges of a Freemason, extracted from the Ancient
Records of Lodges beyond sea, and of those in England, Scotland,
and Ireland, for the use of the Lodges in London," printed in the
first edition of the Book of Constitutions, and to be found from p.
49 to p. 56 of that work.3
5. The thirty-nine "General Regulations," adopted "at the
annual assembly and feast held at Stationers' hall on St. John the
Baptist's day, 1721," and which were published in the first edition
of the Book of Constitutions, p. 58 to p.
6. The subsequent regulations adopted at various annual
communications by the Grand Lodge of England, up to the year 1769,
and published in different editions of the Book of Constitutions.
These, although not of such paramount importance and universal
acceptation as the Old Charges and the Thirty-nine Regulations,
are, nevertheless, of great value as the means of settling many
disputed questions, by showing what was the law and usage of the
fraternity at the times in which they were adopted.
Soon after the publication of the edition of 1769 of the Book
of Constitutions, the Grand Lodges of America began to separate
from their English parent and to organize independent
jurisdictions. From that period, the regulations adopted by the
Grand Lodge of England ceased to have any binding efficacy over the
craft in this country, while the laws passed by the American Grand
Lodges lost the character of general regulations, and were invested
only with local authority in their several jurisdictions.
Before concluding this introductory section, it may be deemed
necessary that something should be said of the "Ancient Landmarks
of the Order," to which reference is so often made.
Various definitions have been given of the landmarks. Some
suppose them to be constituted of all the rules and regulations
which were in existence anterior to the revival of Masonry in 1717,
and which were confirmed and adopted by the Grand Lodge of England
at that time. Others, more stringent in their definition, restrict
them to the modes of recognition in use among the fraternity. I am
disposed to adopt a middle course, and to define the Landmarks of
Masonry to be, all those usages and customs of the craft—whether
ritual or legislative—whether they relate to forms and ceremonies,
or to the organization of the society—which have existed from time
immemorial, and the alteration or abolition of which would
materially affect the distinctive character of the institution or
destroy its identity. Thus, for example, among the legislative
landmarks, I would enumerate the office of Grand Master as the
presiding officer over the craft, and among the ritual landmarks,
the legend of the third degree. But the laws, enacted from time to
time by Grand Lodges for their local government, no matter how old
they may be, do not constitute landmarks, and may, at any time, be
altered or expunged, since the 39th regulation declares expressly
that "every annual Grand Lodge has an inherent power and authority
to make new regulations or to alter these (viz., the thirty-nine
articles) for the real benefit of this ancient fraternity, provided
always that the old landmarks be carefully preserved."
Book First The Law of Grand Lodges.
It is proposed in this Book,
first to present the reader with a brief historical sketch of the
rise and progress of the system of Grand Lodges; and then to
explain, in the subsequent sections, the mode in which such bodies
are originally organized, who constitute their officers and
members, and what are their acknowledged prerogatives.
Chapter I. Historical Sketch.
Grand Lodges under their present organization,
are, in respect to the antiquity of the Order, of a comparatively
modern date. We hear of no such bodies in the earlier ages of the
institution. Tradition informs us, that originally it was governed
by the despotic authority of a few chiefs. At the building of the
temple, we have reason to believe that King Solomon exercised an
unlimited and irresponsible control over the craft, although a
tradition (not, however, of undoubted authority) says that he was
assisted in his government by the counsel of twelve
superintendants, selected from the twelve tribes of Israel. But we
know too little, from authentic materials, of the precise system
adopted at that remote period, to enable us to make any historical
deductions on the subject.
The first historical notice that we have of the formation of
a supreme controlling body of the fraternity, is in the "Gothic
Constitutions"4 which assert that, in the year 287, St. Alban, the
protomartyr of England, who was a zealous patron of the craft,
obtained from Carausius, the British Emperor, "a charter for the
Masons to hold a general council, and gave it the name of
assembly." The record further states, that St. Alban attended the
meeting and assisted in making Masons, giving them "good charges
and regulations." We know not, however, whether this assembly ever
met again; and if it did, for how many years it continued to exist.
The subsequent history of Freemasonry is entirely silent on the
subject.
The next general assemblage of the craft, of which the
records of Freemasonry inform us, was that convened in 926, at the
city of York, in England, by Prince Edwin, the brother of King
Athelstane, and the grandson of Alfred the Great. This, we say, was
the next general assemblage, because the Ashmole manuscript, which
was destroyed at the revival of Freemasonry in 1717, is said to
have stated that, at that time, the Prince obtained from his
brother, the king, a permission for the craft "to hold a yearly
communication and a general assembly." The fact that such a power
of meeting was then granted, is conclusive that it did not before
exist: and would seem to prove that the assemblies of the craft,
authorised by the charter of Carausius, had long since ceased to be
held. This yearly communication did not, however, constitute, at
least in the sense we now understand it, a Grand Lodge. The name
given to it was that of the "General Assembly of Masons." It was
not restricted, as now, to the Masters and Wardens of the
subordinate lodges, acting in the capacity of delegates or
representatives, but was composed, as Preston has observed, of as
many of the fraternity at large as, being within a convenient
distance, could attend once or twice a year, under the auspices of
one general head, who was elected and installed at one of these
meetings, and who, for the time being, received homage as the
governor of the whole body. Any Brethren who were competent to
discharge the duty, were allowed, by the regulations of the Order,
to open and hold lodges at their discretion, at such times and
places as were most convenient to them, and without the necessity
of what we now call a Warrant of Constitution, and then and there
to initiate members into the Order.5 To the General Assembly,
however, all the craft, without distinction, were permitted to
repair; each Mason present was entitled to take part in the
deliberations, and the rules and regulations enacted were the
result of the votes of the whole body. The General Assembly was, in
fact, precisely similar to those political congregations which, in
our modern phraseology, we term "mass meetings."
These annual mass meetings or General Assemblies continued to
be held, for many centuries after their first establishment, at the
city of York, and were, during all that period, the supreme
judicatory of the fraternity. There are frequent references to the
annual assemblies of Freemasons in public documents. The preamble
to an act passed in 1425, during the reign of Henry VI., just five
centuries after the meeting at York, states that, "by the yearly
congregations and confederacies made by the Masons in their general
assemblies, the good course and effect of the statute of laborers
were openly violated and broken." This act which forbade such
meetings, was, however, never put in force; for an old record,
quoted in the Book of Constitutions, speaks of the Brotherhood
having frequented this "mutual assembly," in 1434, in the reign of
the same king. We have another record of the General Assembly,
which was held in York on the 27th December, 1561, when Queen
Elizabeth, who was suspicious of their secrecy, sent an armed force
to dissolve the meeting. A copy is still preserved of the
regulations which were adopted by a similar assembly held in 1663,
on the festival of St. John the Evangelist; and in these
regulations it is declared that the private lodges shall give an
account of all their acceptations made during the year to the
General Assembly. Another regulation, however, adopted at the same
time, still more explicitly acknowledges the existence of a General
Assembly as the governing body of the fraternity. It is there
provided, "that for the future, the said fraternity of Freemasons
shall be regulated and governed by one Grand Master and as many
Wardens as the said society shall think fit to appoint at every
Annual General Assembly."
And thus the interests of the institution continued, until
the beginning of the eighteenth century, or for nearly eight
hundred years, to be entrusted to those General Assemblies of the
fraternity, who, without distinction of rank or office, annually
met at York to legislate for the government of the craft.
But in 1717, a new organization of the governing head was
adopted, which gave birth to the establishment of a Grand Lodge, in
the form in which these bodies now exist. So important a period in
the history of Masonry demands our special attention.
After the death, in 1702, of King William, who was himself a
Mason, and a great patron of the craft, the institution began to
languish, the lodges decreased in number, and the General Assembly
was entirely neglected for many years. A few old lodges continued,
it is true, to meet regularly, but they consisted of only a few
members.
At length, on the accession of George I., the Masons of
London and its vicinity determined to revive the annual
communications of the society. There were at that time only four
lodges in the south of England, and the members of these, with
several old Brethren, met in February, 1717, at the Apple Tree
Tavern, in Charles street, Covent Garden, and organized by putting
the oldest Master Mason, who was the Master of a lodge, in the
chair; they then constituted themselves into what Anderson calls,
"a Grand Lodge pro tempore;" resolved to hold the annual assembly
and feast, and then to choose a Grand Master.
Accordingly, on the 24th of June, 1717, the assembly and
feast were held; and the oldest Master of a lodge being in the
chair, a list of candidates was presented, out of which Mr. Anthony
Sayer was elected Grand Master, and Capt. Joseph Elliott and Mr.
Jacob Lamball, Grand Wardens.
The Grand Master then commanded the Masters and Wardens of
lodges to meet the Grand Officers every quarter, in communication,
at the place he should appoint in his summons sent by the Tiler.
This was, then, undoubtedly, the commencement of that
organization of the Masters and Wardens of lodges into a Grand
Lodge, which has ever since continued to exist.
The fraternity at large, however, still continued to claim
the right of being present at the annual assembly; and, in fact, at
that meeting, their punctual attendance at the next annual assembly
and feast was recommended.
At the same meeting, it was resolved "that the privilege of
assembling as Masons, which had been hitherto unlimited, should be
vested in certain lodges or assemblies of Masons convened in
certain places; and that every lodge to be hereafter convened,
except the four old lodges at this time existing, should be legally
authorized to act by a warrant from the Grand Master for the time
being, granted to certain individuals by petition, with the consent
and approbation of the Grand Lodge in communication; and that,
without such warrant, no lodge should be hereafter deemed regular
or constitutional."
In consequence of this regulation, several new lodges
received Warrants of Constitution, and their Masters and Wardens
were ordered to attend the communications of the Grand Lodge. The
Brethren at large vested all their privileges in the four old
lodges, in trust that they would never suffer the old charges and
landmarks to be infringed; and the old lodges, in return, agreed
that the Masters and Wardens of every new lodge that might be
constituted, should be permitted to share with them all the
privileges of the Grand Lodge, except precedence of rank. The
Brethren, says Preston, considered their further attendance at the
meetings of the society unnecessary after these regulations were
adopted; and therefore trusted implicitly to their Masters and
Wardens for the government of the craft; and thenceforward the
Grand Lodge has been composed of all the Masters and Wardens of the
subordinate lodges which constitute the jurisdiction.
The ancient right of the craft, however, to take a part in
the proceedings of the Grand Lodge or Annual Assembly, was fully
acknowledged by a new regulation, adopted about the same time, in
which it is declared that all alterations of the Constitutions must
be proposed and agreed to, at the third quarterly communication
preceding the annual feast, and be offered also to the perusal of
all the Brethren before dinner, even of the youngest Entered
Apprentice6
This regulation has, however, (I know not by what right,)
become obsolete, and the Annual Assembly of Masons has long ceased
to be held; the Grand Lodges having, since the beginning of the
eighteenth century, assumed the form and organization which they
still preserve, as strictly representative bodies.
Chapter II. Of the Mode of Organizing Grand Lodges.
The topic to be discussed in this section is,
the answer to the question, How shall a Grand Lodge be established
in any state or country where such a body has not previously
existed, but where there are subordinate lodges working under
Warrants derived from Grand Lodges in other states? In answering
this question, it seems proper that I should advert to the course
pursued by the original Grand Lodge of England, at its
establishment in 1717, as from that body nearly all the Grand
Lodges of the York rite now in existence derive their authority,
either directly or indirectly, and the mode of its organization
has, therefore, universally been admitted to have been regular and
legitimate.
In the first place, it is essentially requisite that the
active existence of subordinate lodges in a state should precede
the formation of a Grand Lodge; for the former are the only
legitimate sources of the latter. A mass meeting of Masons cannot
assemble and organize a Grand Lodge. A certain number of lodges,
holding legal warrants from a Grand Lodge or from different Grand
Lodges, must meet by their representatives and proceed to the
formation of a Grand Lodge. When that process has been
accomplished, the subordinate lodges return the warrants, under
which they had theretofore worked, to the Grand Lodges from which
they had originally received them, and take new ones from the body
which they have formed.
That a mass meeting of the fraternity of any state is
incompetent to organize a Grand Lodge has been definitively
settled—not only by general usage, but by the express action of the
Grand Lodges of the United States which refused to recognize, in
1842, the Grand Lodge of Michigan which had been thus irregularly
established in the preceding year. That unrecognized body was then
dissolved by the Brethren of Michigan, who proceeded to establish
four subordinate lodges under Warrants granted by the Grand Lodge
of New York. These four lodges subsequently met in convention and
organized the present Grand Lodge of Michigan in a regular manner.
It seems, however, to have been settled in the case of
Vermont, that where a Grand Lodge has been dormant for many years,
and all of its subordinates extinct, yet if any of the Grand
Officers, last elected, survive and are present, they may revive
the Grand Lodge and proceed constitutionally to the exercise of its
prerogatives.
The next inquiry is, as to the number of lodges required to
organize a new Grand Lodge. Dalcho says that five lodges are
necessary; and in this opinion he is supported by the Ahiman Rezon
of Pennsylvania, published in 1783 by William Smith, D.D., at that
time the Grand Secretary of that jurisdiction, and also by some
other authorities. But no such regulation is to be found in the
Book of Constitutions, which is now admitted to contain the
fundamental law of the institution. Indeed, its adoption would have
been a condemnation of the legality of the Mother Grand Lodge of
England, which was formed in 1717 by the union of only four lodges.
The rule, however, is to be found in the Ahiman Rezon of Laurence
Dermott, which was adopted by the "Grand Lodge of Ancient
Freemasons," that seceded from the lawful Grand Lodge in 1738. But
as that body was undoubtedly, under our present views of masonic
law, schismatic and illegal, its regulations have never been
considered by masonic writers as being possessed of any authority.
In the absence of any written law upon the subject, we are
compelled to look to precedent for authority; and, although the
Grand Lodges in the United States have seldom been established with
a representation of less than four lodges, the fact that that of
Texas was organized in 1837 by the representatives of only three
lodges, and that the Grand Lodge thus instituted was at once
recognized as legal and regular by all its sister Grand Lodges,
seems to settle the question that three subordinates are sufficient
to institute a Grand Lodge.
Three lodges, therefore, in any territory where a Grand Lodge
does not already exist, may unite in convention and organize a
Grand Lodge. It will then be necessary, that these lodges should
surrender the warrants under which they had been previously
working, and take out new warrants from the Grand Lodge which they
have constituted; and, from that time forth, all masonic authority
is vested in the Grand Lodge thus formed.
The Grand Lodge having been thus constituted, the next
inquiries that suggest themselves are as to its members and its
officers, each of which questions will occupy a distinct
discussion.
Chapter III. Of the Members of a Grand Lodge.
It is an indisputable fact that the "General
Assembly" which met at York in 926 was composed of all the members
of the fraternity who chose to repair to it; and it is equally
certain that, at the first Grand Lodge, held in 1717, after the
revival of Masonry, all the craft who were present exercised the
right of membership in voting for Grand Officers,7 and must,
therefore, have been considered members of the Grand Lodge. The
right does not, however, appear to have been afterwards claimed. At
this very assembly, the Grand Master who had been elected, summoned
only the Master and Wardens of the lodges to meet him in the
quarterly communications; and Preston distinctly states, that soon
after, the Brethren of the four old lodges, which had constituted
the Grand Lodge, considered their attendance on the future
communications of the society unnecessary, and therefore concurred
with the lodges which had been subsequently warranted in delegating
the power of representation to their Masters and Wardens, "resting
satisfied that no measure of importance would be adopted without
their approbation."
Any doubts upon the subject were, however, soon put at rest
by the enactment of a positive law. In 1721, thirty-nine articles
for the future government of the craft were approved and confirmed,
the twelfth of which was in the following words:
"The Grand Lodge consists of, and is formed by, the Masters
and Wardens of all the regular particular lodges upon record, with
the Grand Master at their head, and his Deputy on his left hand,
and the Grand Wardens in their proper places."
From time to time, the number of these constituents of a
Grand Lodge were increased by the extension of the qualifications
for membership. Thus, in 1724, Past Grand Masters, and in 1725,
Past Deputy Grand Masters, were admitted as members of the Grand
Lodge. Finally it was decreed that the Grand Lodge should consist
of the four present and all past grand officers; the Grand
Treasurer, Secretary, and Sword-Bearer; the Master, Wardens, and
nine assistants of the Grand Stewards' lodge, and the Masters and
Wardens of all the regular lodges.
Past Masters were not at first admitted as members of the
Grand Lodge. There is no recognition of them in the old
Constitutions. Walworth thinks it must have been after 1772 that
they were introduced.8 I have extended my researches to some years
beyond that period, without any success in finding their
recognition as members under the Constitution of England. It is
true that, in 1772, Dermott prefixed a note to his edition of the
Ahiman Rezon, in which he asserts that "Past Masters of warranted
lodges on record are allowed this privilege (of membership) whilst
they continue to be members of any regular lodge." And it is,
doubtless, on this imperfect authority, that the Grand Lodges of
America began at so early a period to admit their Past Masters to
seats in the Grand Lodge. In the authorized Book of Constitutions,
we find no such provision. Indeed, Preston records that in 1808, at
the laying of the foundation-stone of the Covent Garden Theatre, by
the Prince of Wales, as Grand Master, "the Grand Lodge was opened
by Charles Marsh, Esq., attended by the Masters and Wardens of all
the regular lodges;" and, throughout the description of the
ceremonies, no notice is taken of Past Masters as forming any part
of the Grand Lodge. The first notice that we have been enabled to
obtain of Past Masters, as forming any part of the Grand Lodge of
England, is in the "Articles of Union between the two Grand Lodges
of England," adopted in 1813, which declare that the Grand Lodge
shall consist of the Grand and Past Grand Officers, of the actual
Masters and Wardens of all the warranted lodges, and of the "Past
Masters of Lodges who have regularly served and passed the chair
before the day of Union, and who continued, without secession,
regular contributing members of a warranted lodge." But it is
provided, that after the decease of all these ancient Past Masters,
the representation of every lodge shall consist of its Master and
Wardens, and one Past Master only. There is, I presume, no doubt
that, from 1772, Past Masters had held a seat in the Athol Grand
Lodge of Ancient Masons, and that they did not in the original
Grand Lodge, is, I believe, a fact equally indisputable. By the
present constitutions of the United Grand Lodge of England, Past
Masters are members of the Grand Lodge, while they continue
subscribing members of a private lodge. In some of the Grand Lodges
of the United States, Past Masters have been permitted to retain
their membership, while in others, they have been disfranchised.
On the whole, the result of this inquiry seems to be, that
Past Masters have no inherent right, derived from the ancient
landmarks, to a seat in the Grand Lodge; but as every Grand Lodge
has the power, within certain limits, to make regulations for its
own government, it may or may not admit them to membership,
according to its own notion of expediency.
Some of the Grand Lodges have not only disfranchised Past
Masters but Wardens also, and restricted membership only to acting
Masters. This innovation has arisen from the fact that the payment
of mileage and expenses to three representative would entail a
heavy burden on the revenue of the Grand Lodge. The reason may have
been imperative; but in the practice, pecuniary expediency has been
made to override an ancient usage.
In determining, then, who are the constitutional members of a
Grand Lodge, deriving their membership from inherent right, I
should say that they are the Masters and Wardens of all regular
lodges in the jurisdiction, with the Grand Officers chosen by them.
All others, who by local regulations are made members, are so only
by courtesy, and not by prescription or ancient law.
Chapter IV. Of the Officers of a Grand Lodge.