This month's STB was extracted from a paper delivered to
the United Masters Lodge #167, a research Lodge in
Auckland, New Zealand It was written by Bro P.J. Adrian,
who at the time was Junior Deacon of the Lodge.
Editor
TYLERS OPERATIVE
AND SPECULATIVE
by Bro. P~J. Adrian
Origin of The Word Tyler
Various dictionaries indicate that the
spelling "Tyler" is simply an older form of
the more modern "Tiler". Freemasonry
with its leaning towards antiquity has
merely adopted the older spelling. The
word "tile" is derived from the Latin
"Tegula" and became in Old English
"Tigule". The word "hele" as used in our
obligations is derived from the word
"helan" in Old English with the meaning
"to cover", and led to the common use of
the word "helyer", for a tradesman who
thatched with reeds, heled with tiles or
daubed with plaster to cover in a dwelling
or other building. In London Ordinances
of 1382 we find the word "Tylere", from the
Bristol Ordinances of 1450 - "tyler" and
in 1475 - "tiler". Workers at the St. Mary
Redcliff Church between 1509 and 1534
were described as tilars, tilers or tylers. In
1753 a list of London Companies contained
that of the "Tylours".
The Early Tylers
The more permanent building materials
such as bricks and tiles were introduced by
the Romans during their occupation of Britain but after their departure the ancient
Britains went back to building with wood
and covering with thatch and straw. The
population grew, houses were built closer
together and the inevitable happened. After
a number of devastating fires in 1077 and
again in 1087 and 1161 in London and many
more in other towns and villages, a London Ordinance was issued in 1212, requiring that in the future no roofs be covered
with the inflammable materials such as
straw and reeds but only with tiles, lead,
shingles or plastered straw.
This was obviously a great boost for the
tilers' trade, which was further enhanced
when in 1362 an uncommonly heavy storm
flattened many houses throughout Britain
and unroofed many more. The tilers' profiteering was quickly stopped by a Royal
Order prohibiting the tilers from charging
more for their labour and materials than
they had done before the disaster. They
were not to charge more than 6 pence per
day for their labour and not more than 7
shillings per 1000 plain tiles.
A mere 20 years later, on 10 May 1382,
another Proclamation settled the wages
of a tiler at 12 pence per day, a rate of
inflation of 100% in 20 years which is one
we have not had the luxury of for many
years.
It is not certain when the Guild of
Operative Tilers was formed but it is likely
to have been in the period around 1212
when tiles and slate were used in preference
to straw and reeds. In 1461 another
Ordinance decreed: "That the tilers of the
City shall henceforth be reputed as
labourers and shall not be incorporated nor
deemed to constitute an Art or Society".
In 1468, however, the tilers requested that
"The Fellowship of the Craft of Tilers be
re-instated" as indeed they were and their
status as an Incorporated Society was
redeemed. The Tilers' Guilds continued for
many years and much of their activity is
recorded. One of the last was at the coronation of Queen Victoria on the 28th June
1838: "Four Masonic Lodges, all members
wearing regalia, took part in a procession.
They were followed by various trade guild
representatives, amongst which were the
tilers and the stone-masons, each man with
an emblematic apron."
The Tyler's Place in Freemasonry
Skilled workers have guarded their trade
secrets through the centuries and the use of
a member of their own group as a sentry
to keep out intruders was an established
custom in medieval times. That they were
not always successful is evident and
industrial espionage is today almost a
respected occupation. These sentries are
referred to in various Masonic documents
as Outerguards, Junior Entered Apprentices, doorkeepers, guarders and janitors.
After the word "Tyler" first appeared in
print, these various other titles continued
in use for many years thereafter.
So, when did the word first appear in
print? Dr. James Anderson in describing
the formation of the first Grand Lodge in
1717, in the second Book of Constitutions
which was issued in 1738, wrote: "Sayer,
Grand Master, 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 Tyler."
So there it is . . . but why was it not in
the first edition of the Book of Constitutions, which was issued in 1723? There is
no record that indicates that Dr. Anderson
took part in or even attended the 1717 formation of Grand Lodge and it is therefore
likely that the good Doctor (of Divinity)
quotes Grand Master Sayer from notes
taken by someone else. It might well be that
the title had come into use subsequent to
the formation of Grand Lodge and that Dr.
Anderson in recording an event that took
place 21 years earlier might well have used
the word in current use rather than the
actual word used by our first Grand Master.
We shall never know.
In the By-Laws of a Lodge, probably
written towards the end of 1732, appear 16
rules, the ninth one of which reads: "That
the Master or Secretary do give notice by
letter to all members of the time of election or any other emergency that at any
time shall happen. Also that the Tyler do
require from every Brother, as soon as the
Lodge is closed his apron. Also that the
Tyler admit no visitor into the Lodgeroom
except there be some present who can vouch
for his being a regular Brother."
We have already seen that the word was
not used in the first edition of the Book of
Constitutions. In Old Regulation XXXIII
we read: "Another Brother, who must be
a fellowcraft should be appointed to look
after the door of Grand Lodge but shall be
no member of it. "The same regulation in
the 1738 second edition reads: "Another
Brother and Master Mason should be
appointed Tyler, to look after the door, but
he must be no member of the Grand Lodge.
In the same second edition is this interesting paragraph; "In ancient times the
Master, Wardens and Fellows on St. John's
Day met, either in a Monastery or on the
top of the highest Hill near them, by peep
of Day and having there chosen their new
Grand Officers they descended walking in
due form to the place of the Feast, either
a Monastery or the House of an Eminent
Mason, or some large House of Entertainment as they thought best tyled."
Before dismissing Dr. Anderson as having misquoted our first Grand Master it
needs to be remembered that the second
Grand Master George Payne, elected in
1718, was a member of the committee
formed to issue the third edition of the
Book of Constitutions, that the relevant
paragraph was the same in that edition and
that George Payne was present at the formation of Grand Lodge. But how good was
his memory for words actually used in 1717
when the third edition came out in 1756,
nearly 40 years later?
The Tyler's Sword
The trowel now seen as a working tool
or symbol, was used differently in the early
days of Masonry. From the minutes of a
Lodge in Carmarthen we learn that they
paid for "5 trowels and mending 12
others". From some versions of the old
catechism we learn that the Junior Entered
Apprentice was armed with a "Sharp
Instrument" which was a pointed trowel.
Bernard Jones suggests that the sentence
in the Charge after Initiation: "that in every
age monarchs themselves have been promoters of the art; have not thought it
derogatory to their dignity to exchange the
sceptre for the trowel" refers to the practice of the most recent initiate, the Junior
Entered Apprentice being armed with the
trowel as the means of keeping out all
cowans and intruders. So the earlier use of
the trowel may have been transferred to the
sword .
The Tyler's Dress
First impressions being considered as
very important, Tylers in days gone by were
decked out in colorful clothes. The Grand
Tyler in 1736 wore a red waistcoat under a
dark blue coat trimmed with gold lace. A
Tyler's coat in the possession of the Eaton
Lodge No. 533 E.C. is of black serge, lined,
faced and edged with red while the collar,
cape and cuffs are edged with light blue
flannel. How proud they must have been,
these Tylers of old. Dressed in their blue
and red coats with yellow trousers and
cocked hats going around delivering the
notice papers to all the Brethren. Everyone
must have known them as being
Freemasons. There was no secrecy about
being a Freemason. They walked in processions in all their regalia, carrying their
swords.
A beautiful illustration of the wearing of
regalia in public is the well known painting
of Brother Hogarth "Night". Thomas
Johnson, who was Grand Tyler in 1784, had
a business card which had various Masonic
emblems on the front as well as his name
and that he was "Tyler to the Honourable
Society of Free and Accepted Masons." On
the reverse it stated where he lived and
where letters or messages for him could be
left, which he undertook to duly answer.
The Tylers (of Old) Duties
Unlike the Tyler of today who keeps off
all cowans and intruders and sees that the
candidates are properly prepared, the Tyler
of old had in many Lodges the job of
"Drawing the Lodge"; the delivery of the
summonses, now better known as the
notice paper and was also often in charge
of the various assets of the Lodge.
The drawing of the Lodge stems from the
days when the speculative Masons were
meeting in taverns. The rooms available in
those inns were usually pretty sparsely furnished and with bare floorboards. On a
clear space in front of the Master's pedestal
the Tyler would draw with chalk and charcoal a rectangle and therein various
Masonic emblems, such as the Pillars, the
Tesselated Pavement, the various Working
Tools and many others. The Tyler was also
paid for the delivery of the summonses. In
the second half of the 18th century the
delivery of a note in an envelope by the
postal service would cost 4 pence, where the
Tyler was usually paid about 12 pence for
delivering all the summonses, so obviously
a good moneysaver for the Lodge.
Tylers Today
Bernard Jones in his Freemasons' Guide
and Compendium writes "The officer
responsible for the preparation of the candidate is the Tyler, who should be an
experienced craftsman well able to ensure,
both by his knowledge and personality, that
the candidate enters upon his preparation
in the right spirit." Although today the
preparation is usually done by a steward or
one of the deacons, it is still the Tyler's job
to actually see that the preparation is properly carried out. And, as noted earlier, the
Tyler is also responsible for ensuring that
each Brother will enter the Lodgeroom pro-
perly "clothed" and to admit only properly
vouched for Brethren!
The written history of Tylers does not go
beyond 1732 but from various Lodge
Minutes and reports we have been able to
form a reasonably good picture of the
duties of Tylers and how they appeared to
the outside world. No more important
injunction can be given the Tyler than the
advice of Brother Bernard Jones, who
wrote that " the Tyler should be an
experienced craftsman, well able to ensure
that the candidate enters upon his preparation in the right spirit"
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