Short Talk Bulletin for: September 1978
Music on this page is: concerto for flute & harp in c by Brother Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
AS OTHERS SEE US (FREEMASONRY in the U.S.A.)
by W. Bro. Harry Carr, P.J.G.D.
W Bro. Harry Carr, Past Junior Grand Deacon of the United Grand
Lodge of England, is perhaps best known to American Masonry as the
former Secretary of Quator Coronati Lodge No 2076, and as Editor of
the Transactions. He is also known throughout the Masonic World as
an outstanding Masonic author, speaker, and as a prestigious
Prestonian lecturer We are deeply indebted to Wor Bro. Carr for
permitting us to use this portion of one of his presentation.
"Freemasonry in the U S." as a short Talk Bulletin. It is
interesting to see ourselves as others see us.
America -- fifty States and forty-nine separate Sovereign Grand
Lodges!
On my first visit, in 1960, I travelled to New York, Boston, and
Washington; then right across country to San Francisco, Fresno and
Los Angeles. It was a seven-week Masonic tour and holiday combined,
and I gave my Pres- tonian Lecture to enormous gatherings of Masons
in all those cities, covering more than 7,000 miles within the
American continent. When I returned to London, the D.C. of my
Mother Lodge said, "Harry, you must tell us all about it after
dinner; and we can give you ten minutes." Brethren, it cannot be
done in ten minutes, but if you will stay with me a little longer,
I shall try to keep you interested.
My principal equipment for the tour con- sisted of an insatiable
curiosity, and a sufficient knowledge of English Masonic practices
to en- able me to ask the right sort of questions, so that I could
make a reasonable assessment of our differences. I met and spoke to
literally hundreds of Masons from Entered Apprentices to Grand
Librarians, Grand Secretaries and Grand Masters. I saw many things
that pleased me enormously, many that horrified me; and I never
stopped asking questions!
(Grand Masters are amazingly plentiful in U.S.A., because most of
them are elected for only one year. Sad, because a good man will
only rarely see the fruits of his efforts!)
As a lecturer, it is probable that I was meeting the best types of
American Masons, men with a real love for the Craft and a serious
interest in its background. I can never forget that in Los Angeles
I addressed a large gathering of Masons in a huge Masonic centre
that they had built with their own hands, working
voluntarily in their spare time under a hired architect and with a
practical team of builders who ensured that the work was well and
truly done; and I was proud to be associated with brethren of this
calibre.
But of course the following impressions do not pretend to be a
complete survey, nor can they possibly be true of the whole Craft
in the U.S.A. I have simply tried to describe something of what I
saw, emphasizing our differences in practice, with a critical eye
for what seems strange to us, and with wholehearted praise where
praise is due. American Masons are warm, friendly folk, good hosts,
good company, and eager to be helpful; and if my words appear to
accentuate certain peculiarities, I must plead that they were
written without malicious intent, knowing full well that our
brethren overseas can find much in our own system and practices
that calls for criticism.
THE BACKGROUND
The first thing that is obvious to every English Mason who visits
the U.S.A., is that their Freemasonry is unlike ours. In the first
place, Masonry is not for father alone, but for the whole family.
For father, there are the usual three "Blue" degrees, and then all
the rest running right up to the 32ø. (the 33ø is by selection and
invitation; in fact, and hournor, rather than a degree.) For
mother, there is the Order of the Eastern Star, the Order of
Amaranth, and several others, less well known.
For boys, aged from 14 to 21, there is the Order of DeMolay, named
after Jacques de Molai, the last Grand Master of the medieval
Knights Templar. For girls, aged 13 to 20, there is an Order called
Rainbow and another called Job's Daughters; and all these are, in
a very special and peculiar sense, Masonic. This must be explained
and I shall do so in a moment.
I have called these Orders Masonic, and it is difficult for us in
England to appreciate the point. Perhaps the following illustration
may help. In A.Q.C., Vol. 75, p. 119, we recently reviewed the
sesqui-centennial History of the Grand Lodge of Louisiana, a
regular and recognized Grand Lodge which is in amicable fraternal
relationship with our own Grand Lodge of England. Chapter 20 in
this History is entitled "Bodies Identified with Masonry in
Louisiana," (my italics) and among those listed are:
The Order of the Eastern Star The Order of the Rainbow, for Girls
The Order of DeMolay.
In Eastern Star, and the majority of the others, a genuine Masonic
relationship is an essential pre-requisite for joining, so that for
Eastern Star, the lady candidate must be mother or wife, sister or
daughter of a Freemason in good standing. (For Rainbow and
DeMolay, relationship is preferable, but not essential.) There is
no suggestion that these Orders are quasi-Masonic or that they
attempt to copy Freemasonry. It is best to regard them as adjuncts
to Freemasonry; and in the U.S.A., they are so regarded: the youth
organizations as training-grounds for the future, while the women's
Orders count it a duty and a privilege to serve Freemasonry in
every possible way. All this appears very strange to us in England,
and although it may seem wrong for a Grand Officer to say so, I
like it and I believe that it works and it has obvious advantages.
In the first place, father knows where mother is on her night out,
and vice versa; and both are able to take an interest in the
children's organizations. Whether all these efforts have any marked
effect on juvenile delinquency rates in the U.S.A., would be very
hard to say, but I am firmly convinced that this "family approach"
to the Craft can do nothing but good.
A nice example of this family spirit occurred in Massachusetts
where I lectured to an assembly of some five-hundred brethren, and
over four-hundred-and-sixty of us sat down to dinner
afterwards. It was in an enormous hall, with a stage at one end, on
which the Lodge Organist was playing light music throughout the
dinner. The tables were arranged in sprigs (as in England), and
everyone except the Officers were dressed in the utmost
informality. But all the Officers were in meticulous dinner dress
and throughout the evening we were served by waitresses
immaculately dressed in white from head to foot. It was a pleasant,
unpretentious meal, and all was going splendidly when suddenly the
S.W., far away in the right-hand corner of the room, stood up and
began to dance with one of the waitresses along the gangway between
the sprigs! I was sitting at the right of the Master, and I leaned
over to him and whispered, "Worshipful Master, I thought I had seen
almost everything in the Craft, but this I have never seen. Does it
happen very often?" He turned to me with a smile and said, "I hope
it does: the lady he is dancing with is his wife. Tonight we are
being waited on by our wives, Eastern Star." And there were 460 at
dinner! (I was unable to find out if the husbands help with the
"washing-up," but probably they do not, because kitchens are highly
mechanized in the U.S.A.).
With this kind of background, the objectives in the Craft tend to
take on a rather different aspect from ours. Generally, they do not
go in strongly for the maintenance of large Masonic Institutions,
as we do. There are, indeed, many splendid institutions, but the
emphasis is mainly on the social side: parties, outings and
celebrations of one kind or another. A great deal is done by way of
homes and equipment for crippled children. Masonic 'blood banks'
are a big feature, the blood being for ultimate use by Masons and
non-Masons alike. There are some Masonic hospitals, and a number of
homes for 'senior citizens'; but nobody grows old in the U.S.A. If
they are lucky enough to live that long, they become 'senior
citizens,' and in those jurisdictions that aspire to the
maintenance of institutions, it is usually the 'senior citizens'
who get first care.
Finally, I must not omit from this description of the background of
the Craft the very obvious fact that almost everyone wears a badge,
usually a 'lapel-badge', with all sorts of Masonic symbols ranging
up to the 33ø and the so-called "High Degrees'
predominating. All this might seem to be a piece of pardonable male
vanity and in the vast majority of cases it is nothing more. But
the badges tend to become a temptation, and the Masonic visitor to
the U.S.A. will not need to look far before he realizes that they
are all too often used for business.
Of all the things likely to shock an Englishman, this, I think,
must be the most distasteful; and though I am sure that many
Brethren in the U.S.A. find these practices as objectionable as we
do, one has the impression that they have grown accustomed to them,
and that is a great pity. I have heard the situation stated in a
somewhat different form. One of my American friends told me, "I
wear the badge, to show that I'm proud of my Masonry. As long as I
wear it, I'd never do anything to disgrace it; in fact, when I do
business with a man whom I recognize to be a Brother, I always try
to give him a bigger order than I would otherwise." All this is
true, I am sure, but where is there a commercial traveller among my
friend's suppliers who could resist wearing a badge under such
conditions?
During a more recent visit to the U.S.A., at an informal Masonic
party in Providence, Rhode Island, I teased my hosts about this
custom of wearing Masonic badges for the wrong reasons, and when I
had finished talking, one of the Brethren said, "It is all very
well for you to talk about our using Masonry for business, but it
is not always like that. Quite often, we have to try to take an
order from a Roman Catholic, and then the badge is a liability--not
an asset, " I had to agree with him, but privately, Brethren, I'm
convinced that it is much easier to remove the badge than to change
your customer's religion!
LODGE MEMBERSHIP
Judging by our standards in England, where average membership is
around 80 per Lodge, American lodge memberships are extraordinar-
ily high. Consider, as an example, Washington, D.C., the capital
and the centre of government; it is virtually a city without
industry. It has about 50 lodges in all, four of them with memberships of 1,100, 1,200, 1,400, and 1,500 respectively! And these
enormous memberships are to be found in all the large cities in the
U.S.A. It is, of course, impossible to strike "average figures" as
between lodges in the small villages and those in the large towns,
because they would be misleading. But in any of the cities, one
might expect the general run of lodges to range from 400 to 800
members, with several others running into four figures.
At the time of my visit to the U.S.A., I was already Secretary of
two lodges and I was naturally puzzled as to the reasons for these
(to us) fantastic numbers. There appear to be several reasons, and
I dare not commit myself as to their order of importance. The first
two reasons are almost national characteristics: (a) The Americans
are great "joiners," they like to be in on everything. (b) They
admire big numbers and mass production. (c) Most U.S.A.
jurisdictions have curious regulations relating to what they call
single, dual or plural membership. Some Grand Lodges allow only
single membership, i.e., a Brother may belong to only one Craft
Lodge and no more. Others allow dual membership, usually permitting
their members to belong to one Lodge inside the State and one
outside. Only very few Grand Lodges permit their members the same
privileges as we enjoy here, of plural membership, i.e., of joining
as many Lodges as we please. It seems possible that, in some
indirect way, these regulations have the effect of channelling vast
numbers of Masons into a comparatively small number of Lodges, and
that leads to large memberships.
I realize that this may be faulty reasoning, but there is no doubt
as to the facts, i.e., that in many jurisdictions, if Lodge
memberships are to be kept reasonably low, there are simply not
enough Lodges to take the vast numbers of men who want to join. The
reasons are purely economic .
(d) Maintenance costs arc very high for Lodges and lodge buildings
in the U.S.A., and this leads to some curious results. In some
cities, when a new Lodge is to be founded, it is not uncommon to
find that the existing Lodges raise objections, because they regard
all future Masons in their territory as their own "reserve pool,"
which will help swell their own membership in due course, and thus
help them with their maintenance charges and their balance-sheets.
In effect, the Masons themselves are opposing the
formation of new lodges. (Sec the note 011 this subject in "Whither
Are We Traveling?", by M.W. Bro. Dwight L. Smith, P.G.M. and Grand
Secretary of the Grand Lodge of Indiana.)
But is it possible that there is still another reason for the large
numbers? I found that in many jurisdictions it is customary for the
Secretary to receive 1 1/2 dollars annually per head for every
member! (As a former Secretary of the Q. C. Lodge, with over 12,000
members, I must say that this idea appeals to me enormously!) In
certain jurisdictions the Lodge Secretaries receive a fixed
honorarium, instead. I do not for one moment suggest that
Secretaries are tempted to tout for members; I merely record the
differences in our respective practices.
Of course I was anxious to know how the American Lodges achieve
these memberships, and the opportunity came when I visited the
Grand Secretary's office in Boston, Mass. Among many interesting
papers that were given to me was their Year Book, containing all
the statistics for the preceding year, and thumbing through the
pages casually, I came to the section which summarized their Annual
Returns. There were many pages of figures but, at the very end of
the list, there were the details for the very last Lodge that was
consecrated just before the book was printed, and at the time of
this Return the Lodge was only eleven months old. At that age,
(eleven months), this infant Lodge had a membership of 174; during
the eleven months it had initiated 54 Brethren, it had passed 49,
and raised 45 brethren. Mass production in a really big way!
The Lodges usually meet once a month (for ten or eleven months in
the year) for their "stated" or regular meetings, and every week,
or fortnight, for "emergent," "special" or "work" meetings.
Attendances, I am told, are proportionately low. In a Lodge of
1,000 members, an attendance of 100 at a 'Stated' meeting would be
counted good. There might be only 20 or 30 at the "work" meetings,
and these "work" meetings are, in effect, the factories where
Masons are turned out by mass production. This may sound cynical,
but I believe it is a fair statement of the situation that exists
in the larger Masonic centres in the U.S.A.
Arising from all this, perhaps the most frequent question I have
been asked in England is "With memberships of 800 to 1,500, how can
a Mason ever become Master of a Lodge? Surely he could never live
long enough." The answer is that it is easy. All he needs to do, is
to express a desire to "go on," or to "get in line" as the
Americans say, and the path is wide open for him. It is the great
tragedy of Craft Masonry in the U.S.A. that vast numbers of those
who join simply use the Craft as a springboard to the 32ø. To be
Master of a "Blue" Lodge may be very pleasant, but it is not nearly
so important as to become a 32ø Mason and a "Shriner," with all its
attendant advantages (mainly social). As a result men become
Freemasons for the wrong reasons, and the Craft is neglected in
favour of side degrees.
Among the Grand Officers who see and deplore what is happening,
this is a source of constant anxiety, frequently expressed in
forthright statements. It is a disease the presence of which is
known and understood, but the remedy, unfortunately, is still to be
found. Talk to any American Mason for five minutes, and the chances
are that he will show you his wallet containing a whole
"concertinafull" of Dues Cards, witnessing the number of
"Masonic" organizations to which he belongs. There will seldom be
more than one (or two) Craft Lodges among them; the rest are all
side degrees, that are helping, unintentionally to sap the Craft of
its vitality!
CRAFT RITUAL
There are several different Craft rituals in use in the U.S.A.,
generally exhibiting only minor variations and, broadly speaking,
they are very similar to ours in England. Yet, in a very curious
way, the visitor who knows his ritual will find that the American
versions sound strangely old-fashioned, repetitive, and somehow
older than ours. Surprisingly, this is true; although the Americans
got their ritual from Britain, their ritual is, in fact, older than
ours, and that makes an interesting story.
As you probably know, our present ritual was virtually standardized
at the time of the union of the rival Grand Lodges, in 1813,, when
the 'Antients' and the 'Moderns' ultimately came together to form
the United Grand Lodge. For several years before that date,
committees of learned Brethren had been sitting, trying to evolve
a revised form of the ritual that would be acceptable to both
sides.
The results of their labours, very satisfying to us nowadays, did
not meet with wholehearted approval at that time. Many changes had
been made and a great deal of symbolical material had been
discarded. Indeed, it might almost be fair to say that in cleaning
up the ritual, the baby had been thrown away with the bath-water .
American Masonic workings owe their origins, unquestionably, to
England, Scotland, Ireland, but the stabilization of their ritual
was done by an American, Thomas Smith Webb, who, although he wrote
very little of it himself, may well be described as the father of
American ritual.
In 1792, Webb, a printer by trade, settled in Albany, N.Y., and
soon afterwards he made the acquaintance of John Hanmer, an English
Freemason who was a keen ritualist and apparently very
knowledgeable about the Preston system. Webb, was then barely
twenty-two years old and their mutual interests drew them together.
This was the period when the English Masonic ritual was at its
highest stage of development. Hutchinson and Calcott had published
their works; Preston was in his prime, and the 1792 edition of his
Illustrations of Masonry had just appeared. This was the 8th
edition, as popular and successful as its predecessors, and it was
almost a bible to the English Craft. Webb took the book, retained
sixty-four pages of Preston's work intact, word for word, cut out
a few minor items, and rearranged others, and published it in 1797,
under the title Freemasons' Monitor or Illustrations of
Freemasonry.Within twenty years, the ritual in England had been
altered, curtailed and polished up, (some said, almost beyond
recognition), but not so in the U.S.A.; they preserved it.
Look at some of our oldest Tracing Boards and you will find
pictures of the Scythe, Hour-glass, Beehive, Anchor, etc., which
once had their proper places as symbolic portions of our ritual.
They have disappeared from our tracing Boards and from the ritual;
but in America, they are still in use to this day, depicted on the
Boards and explained in their 'Monitors.' And so it is fair to say
that their ritual, though it came from us, is actually older than
ours, and it is not merely 'old-fashioned,' but also more
discursive, and by reason of their Lectures much more explanatory
than ours, especially of the symbolical meaning of their
procedures.
But apart from the things we have lost, their ritual material is
essentially the same as ours, and easily recognizable. Their signs
and secrets are virtually the same as ours, except that they use
the Scottish sign for the Entered Apprentices. Their second degree
is more elaborate than ours. Their third is basically the same as
ours, but because they perform the drama as if it were a play,
treating the Candidate as though he were really H.A., the result is
occasionally rather rough and frightening, especially in those
lodges that pride themselves on the realism of their
performance.
The manner in which the Americans safeguard their ritual is also
interesting. In England, our Grand Lodge views the ritual as a
'domestic matter,' i.e., a majority of the Brethren in any lodge
may decide what form of ritual shall be worked, and unless the
Lodge was guilty of some serious breach, the Grand Lodge would not
interfere. In the U.S.A., the very reverse is the case. Each Grand
Lodge prescribes the ritual that its Lodges shall work, and usually
the Grand Lodge prints and publishes the "monitorial" or
explanatory portions of the rituals too. Ten out of the forty-nine
Grand Lodges also publish the esoteric ritual, in code or cipher,
but this is forbidden in the others. Moreover, to prevent
innovations, the Grand Lodges protect their forms of working by the
appointment of officers, called Grand Lecturers, whose duty is not
to lecture, but to ensure that the groups of lodges under their
care adhere to the official workings. They do this by means of
official demonstrations, called 'Exemplifications,' and during my
first visit, I was lucky enough to see both first and second
degrees rehearsed in this way.
The exemplifications I saw in Boston required a necessary period of
adjustment to Bostonian English, but after that I would gladly give
them full marks; the work is splendid. It is proper, perhaps, to
add a little tailpiece to this chapter, which gives an insight to
the American approach to their Masonry. I am told that in several,
if not most, of the U.S.A. jurisdictions, the Grand Lecturers are
paid for their services!
RITUALS and MONITORS
Grand Lodge practices, in regard to books of the ritual, differ
from State to State. In Pennsylvania, and California, for example,
no written or printed ritual is permitted. All tuition is, as they
say, "from mouth to ear," i.e., the Officers and Candidates must
attend at rehearsals or "work-meetings" until they have memorized
their work simply by listening to it over and over again. In some
jurisdictions each officer is responsible for training his
successor, privately, not at rehearsals. The Ritual material is
usually divided up into two categories,
(I) "Monitors" which print non-secret portions of ritual and
procedure, symbolic Lectures, etc., all in plain language .
(2) The "Rituals" proper, which arc printed (in ten States) in some
sort of cipher with . . . dots . . . in the usual places.
Books, in both categories, are supposed to be rather difficult to
obtain, but one has the impression that this is merely a case of
knowing where to look. The Monitors need not concern us here, but
the Rituals are interesting. There appear to bc four different
ciphers that are mainly used. One of the most popular is a kind of
"geometrical" code, made Up of straight lines, curves, angles and
symbols, which look vary difficult but are, in fact, fairly easy to
break down.
In many jurisdictions, a two-letter code is used; usually the
first and last letters of each word, but occasionally the first two
Attars of each word. These two codes are fairly difficult to read
until one begins to have a fair knowledge of the "expected word";
but as SOON as the phrases become familiar, the two-letter codes
arc quite easy to read.
Most difficult of all is the one-letter code, in which only the
first letter of each word is used, and this is absolutely
terrifying, almost impossible to read until one has acquired a real
knowledge of the ritual.
From the Officers' point of view, all this is simply a matter of
patience and regular attendance, but for the candidates it is
another story. Here, in England, the Candidate for passing has to
learn the answers to perhaps eight or nine questions, usually
printed on cards in plain language, with perhaps one or two words
omitted. For raising he learns another seven or eight answers, and
he is through.
In the U.S.A. jurisdictions, these examinations are called
"Proficiency Tests," and they must be a really worrying experience.
For example, the E. A. passing to the F. C. has to answer about
seventy-seven questions, and recite the Obligation by heart, before
he can pass his test; the F. C. must answer some forty questions
and the Obligation from memory, and the M. M., after he has taken
his third degree, another forty or so, again with the Obligation by
heart. Then, and not until then does he become a real member of the
Lodge. Then he is allowed to sign the Register, and enjoy the
privileges of membership, including a Masonic Funeral if he wants
it.
All this would be difficult enough if the Q. & A. were printed in
plain language, but they are not. In those jurisdictions where no
printed rituals are permitted, the candidates must attend "Classes
of Instruction," usually under the care of the J. D., or S. D.,
until they have learned their work "from mouth to ear." Elsewhere,
they learn their work from the cipher books. I have a set of the
"Proficiency Tests" as used in Rhode Island, in their oneletter
code and they are simply terrifying. I have been a Preceptor for
many years, and I find them difficult to read. Heaven knows how the
candidates manage--but they do.
Here, I believe it is fair to say that American Masons, in the
course of passing their "Proficiency Tests" in all three degrees,
acquire a much wider knowledge of the ceremonies and especially of
their symbolical meaning, than our candidates get in England. Their
patience and industry are more than justified.
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