Thursday, December 27, 2012

Submitted by the Secretary, RWB Wesley F Revels


Annual Newsletter, Vol.166 - Issue One.
On Tuesday September 15th 2012, the 167th year of St. Joseph Lodge No.78’s Charter, the elected and appointed officers were installed for the Masonic Year 2012-2013. Pictured are left front row:  WB Marion H Boydston,Tiler;  RWB Larry R Crawford, Lodge Education Officer; Br D Brian Carroll, Marshall; Br Mark G Crabtree, Junior Deacon; Br Timothy Cordonnier,Chaplain;  Second row left: RWB Dennis A Bonjour, Senior Deacon; WB Carl C Jennings,Treasurer; Br Ryan S Gerster,Junior Warden; WB LeRoy H Maxwell III,Worshipful Master and Br Nighram M Johnson,Senior Warden. 
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"The History Of Freemasonry"
Its Legends and Traditions, Its Chronological History.
By ALbert Gallatin Mackey, MD., 33' Originally Published By The Masonic History Company
New York and London 1906
CHAPTER V, The Halliwell Poem,
the oldest Masonic document and legend
There is one manuscript which differs so much from all the others in its form and in its contents as to afford the strongest internal evidence that it is derived from a source, entirely different from that which gave origin to the other and later documents.  I allude to what is known to Masonic antiquaries as the Halliwell MS.
As this is admitted to be the oldest Masonic document extant, and as some very important conclusions in respect to the early history of the Craft are about to be deduced from it, a complete account of it cannot be described, only an introduction.
This work was first published in 1840 by Mr. James Orchard Halliwell, pictured at left, under the title of “A Poem on the Constitutions of Masonry,” from the original manuscript in the King’s Library of the British Museum.  Mr. Halliwell, who subsequently adopted the name of Phillips, is not a member of the Brotherhood, and Woodford appropriately remarks that “it is somewhat curious that to Grandidier and Halliwell, both non-Masons, Freemasonry owes the impetus given at separate epochs to the study of its archaeology and history by non-Masons.
Hallliwell says that the manuscript formally belonged to Charles Theyer, a well-known collector of the 17th century. It is undoubtedly the oldest Masonic MS, Extant.  Messrs. Bond and Egerton of the British Museum consider its date to be about the middle of the 15th century.  Floss, thinks that it was written between the years 1427 and 1445.  Dr Oliver maintains that it is a transcript of the Book of Constitutions adopted by the General Assembly, held in the year 926, at the City of York.  Halliwell himself places the date of the MS At 1390.  Woodford, concurs in this option.  I am inclined to think that this is the true date of its transcription.
The manuscript is in rhymed verse, and consists of 794 lines.  At the head of the poem is the inscription: “Hic incipiund constituciones artis gemetrie secundum Euclydem.”  The language is more archaic than that of Wycliffe’s version of the Bible, which is written toward the end of the 14th century, but approaches very nearly to that of the Chronicles of Robert of Gloucester, the date of which was at the beginning of the same century.  Therefore, if we admit that the date of 1390, attributed by Halliwell and Woodford to the transcription in the British Museum, is correct, we may, I think, judging by the language, safely assign to the original the date of about 1300.  Further back than this, philology will not permit us to go.
The manuscript contains the history of the origin of geometry, or Masonry, and the story of Euclid at length, much like that which is in the “Legend of the Craft,” and an introduction of Masonry into England.  From the narrative of the establishment of Masonry in Egypt by Euclid, the poem passes immediately to the time when the “craft com ynto Englond.”   
Here the legendary story of King Athelstan, pictured at left, and the Assembly called by him is given, with this variation from the common Legend, that there is no mention of the city of York, where the Assembly is said to have been held, nor of Prince Edwin, who summoned it.    After an interpolation, to be referred to hereafter, the poem proceeds under the title of “Ars quatuor coronatorum”, “The Art of the Four Crowned Ones,” a title never applied to Masonry in the later and purely English manuscripts.  We have first an invocation to God and the Virgin, and then the Legend of the Four Crowned Martyrs and being of German origin, and peculiar to the German Steinmetzen or Stone Masons of the Middle Ages, it’s introduction is an evidence of the origin of the document and must be regarded as proof of the identity of the German and English Stone Masons, and of their having one common parentage!
With the manuscript including the later introduction of Masonry into England called The Legend of the Craft, and The Art of the Four Crowned Ones, it can be deduced that the copyist of the manuscript now known as the Halliwell Poem had two manuscripts before him, and he transcribed sometimes from one and sometimes from the other, apparently with but little judgment, or, rather, he copied the whole of one and then interpolated it with extracts from both without congruity of subjects.
As to the origin of the manuscript with regard to its philosophic and religious preference,  there is no doubt that the German “Four Crowned Martyrs” is of Roman Catholic origin and the “Legend of the Craft” is of the Reformed “Kirk” or Church.  It can be noticed that no where in the Legend of the Craft is there a reference to Germany as a country in which Masonry existed.  On the contrary, the Masonry of England is supposed to have been described of the Order originating in Scotland.
Hence we may rationally conclude that the “Legend of the Craft” was modified by influence of the French Masons, who, as history informs us, were brought over into England at an early period.  In this respect, authentic history and the Legend coincide, and the one corroborates the other.  What follows is a portion  of the Halliwell Poem also known as the Regius Manuscript.

“Whoever will both well read and look  He may find written in old book  Of great lords and also ladies, That had many children together, certainly; And had no income to keep them with,  Neither in town nor field nor enclosed wood;  A council together they could them take, To ordain for these children's sake, How they might best lead their life without great disease, care and strife; And most for the multitude that was coming of their children after great clerks, to teach them then good works;  And pray we them, for our Lord's sake.  To our children some work to make,  That they might get their living thereby, both well and honestly full securely in that time of good geometry this honest Craft of good masonry was ordained in this manner.


Counterfeited of these clerks together, At these Lord’s prayers they counterfeited geometry, and gave it the name of Masonry, for the most honest Craft of all.  These Lord’s children thereto did fall to learn of him the craft of geometry, the which he made full curiously. Through fathers' prayers and mothers' also, this honest craft he put them to.  He learned best, and was of honesty,  And passed his fellows in curiosity, If  in that craft he did him pass,  He should have more worship than the less, This great clerk's name was Euclid,  His name it spread full wonder wide.”….