Origins Of Freemasonry
there Is Little Doubt That In The 15th Century Craftsmen Had Real Grievances With Merchants, Who Hired Their Services, And The Local Town Councils. With Differing Success They Formed Associations Of Their Own Which Sometimes Appeared To Be So Menacing That Laws Were Passed Restricting Their Activities. Notwithstanding These Laws, By 1475, The Masons And Wrights Of Edinburgh Were Strong Enough To Secure A 'seal Of Cause' Or Charter From The City Of
in 1583, William Schaw Was Appointed By King James Vi As Master Of The Work And Warden General With The Commission Of Re-organising The Masonic Craft. In 1598, He Issued The First Of The Now Famous Schaw Statutes Which Set Out The Duties Of All Members To The Lodge And To The Public. It Also Imposed Penalties For Unsatisfactory Work And Inadequate Safety During Work. More Importantly, For Freemasons Today, Schaw Drew Up A Second Statute In 1599. The Importance Of This Document Lies In The Fact That It Makes The First, Veiled, Reference To The Existence Of Esoteric Knowledge Within The Craft Of Stone Masonry. It Also Reveals That The Mother Lodge Of
it Is Also Why The Earliest Known Masonic Records Date From This Time. It Can Safely Be Said, Therefore, That William Schaw Was The Founding Father Of Modern Freemasonry. In The Late 16th And Early 17th Centuries Important Men, Who Were Not Masons To Trade, Were Admitted To Scottish Lodges. Exactly Why Such Men Were Attracted To Scottish Freemasonry Is Not Known. It May Have Been Simple Curiosity. In Any Event Their Social Position Gave Lodges An Element Of Legitimacy And Status. Others Joined As Literacy And Education Spread Throughout The Country Which Assisted Lodges To Maintain Funds. It Is Often Said That Sir Robert Moray Was The First Known Non-operative Member Of A Lodge. Whilst Important, (he Was The First To Be Recorded As Being Initiated On English Soil) His Initiation, In 1641, Was Not The First Initiation Of A Non-stonemason Into A Lodge. Others Who Preceded Him Probably Include: William Schaw Himself, And His Assistant, James Boswell Of Auchinleck. They Are Believed To Have Been Initiated In 1598.
in 1634, William, Lord Alexander, His Brother, Anthony Alexander And Sir Alexander Strachen Of
from Schaw To The Early 18th Century, Masonry Underwent A Change. Schaw Had Legislated For Operative Masons But By The Early 18th Century Freemasonry Was Being Led, Mainly, By The New Non-operative Masons And It Was This Group Which Was To Develop And Expand Within The Lodges. It Seems That Only The Degrees Of Entered Apprentice And Fellow Craft Were Worked In
the Earliest Known Record Of The Degree Of Master Mason, Being Conferred In A Lodge, Is To Be Found In The Minutes, Dated
the Mark Degree Is Recorded As Early As
the Ceremony Of Installed Master Is Of Recent Origin Being Introduced In 1858 And In 1872 Revised To The Form Used Today.
in 1717, The Grand Lodge Of England Was Formed And Three Years Later The Grand Lodge Of Ireland. In 1735, Four Scottish Lodges Discussed The Possibility Of Forming A Grand Lodge Of Scotland. On The 30th November Of The Following Year Representatives From Thirty Three Lodges Met In
from 1736, Grand Lodge Chartered A Steady Stream Of Lodges And Even In 1745, The Year 'bonnie Prince Charlie' Attempted To Regain The Throne Of His Ancestors, Five Charters Were Issued Despite The Unsettled Conditions.
in 1747, Grand Lodge Issued The First Charter To An Overseas Lodge Situated In
mother Kilwinning, An Old And Independent Lodge, Along With The Lodges It Had Chartered And Which Were Still Operating, Returned To Grand Lodge Following The 1807 Agreement. The Numbering Of Lodges Was First Undertaken In 1737, It Was Revised In 1771, 1816, 1822 And Finally In 1826 After The Admission Of The Mother Kilwinning Lodges, And These Are The Numbers Used Today. A Few Independent Lodges Joining Up Since Have Had A Number Inserted Without Altering The Basic Number Of The Other Lodges. The Last Being In 1891 When The Lodge Of Melrose St John Joined The Grand Lodge Of Scotland And Was Numbered As 12
membership And The Number Of Lodges Increased In The 19th And Early 20th Centuries, Especially During Or After War Or Unsettled Times. The Increase In The Number Of Lodges Placed A Heavy Supervisory Role On Grand Lodge. Geographical Groupings Of Lodges Were Made And Provincial Grand Lodges Formed In Scotland And District Grand Lodges Overseas To Supervise All The Lodges In Their Immediate Area.
following The Granting Of Independence To Countries Such As Egypt, The United States Of America, Canada, And Australia, The Lodges In These Areas Formed Grand Lodges Of Their Own And Were Joined By Many Scottish Lodges Already Established In Those Countries.
from 1598, Benevolence Was The Responsibility Of Local Lodges But In 1846 Grand Lodge Established The Fund Of Scottish Masonic Benevolence, Primarily For Scottish Freemasons And Their Dependants. Heavy Demands On The Fund, Due To The Recession In 1875, Led To The Establishment Of The General Annuity Fund In 1888. This Was Boosted By The Proceeds Of The Grand Bazaar Of 1891 Amounting To