306 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
306 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.XI November, 1933 No.11
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WOMEN FREEMASONS
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by: Unknown
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The romances of the Ancient Craft include a number of stories of
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women who are said to have become Freemasons, in one or another. The
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majority are hoaxes, legends or pure fiction.
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For a woman to become a real Freemasons is as impossible as for a man
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to become a mother, a leopard to change his spots. A female duly
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elected, properly prepared, initiated and obligated, passed and
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raised, who signed the by-laws of a regularly constituted lodge would
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not be a freemason, as all which had been done with her would be
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entirely illegal, and one illegally initiated is not a Freemason.
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The Third of the Old Charges, foundation law of the Craft, states
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emphatically: <20>The persons admitted Members of a Lodge must be good
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and true Men, free-born and of mature and discreet age; no bondman,
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no women, or immoral or scandalous Men, but of good report.<2E>
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It would, however, be extraordinary if at some time, in some place,
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some woman was not illegally given a Masonic degree, or obligated as
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a Freemason. That the instances which rest on anything more reliable
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than tradition and heresay are so few is a remarkable tribute to the
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fidelity of Masons. It is a point worth noting that the number of
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even possible true instances is much less than the known number of
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exposes of Masonry written and published by foresworn brethren.
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Best known, most often quoted, and most credible of all histories of
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alleged <20>women Freemasons<6E> is that of the Honorable Elizabeth St.
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Ledger, later Mrs. Richard Aldworth, of Ireland. Even about her
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strange story has clustered a curious collection of myths and
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legends, which have required some untangling at the hands of skilled
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Masonic historians.
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According to the most reliable accounts, Arthur St. Ledger, 1st Baron
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Kilmayden and Viscount Doneraile, with his sons and a few intimate
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friends, were in the habit (as was the custom in those early days
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when Freemasonry was closing the era of Operative and opening an era
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of Sepculative Masonry), of opening a Lodge and conducting its
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ceremonies in the family mansion at Doneraile Court, County Cork,
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Ireland.
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When Elizabeth was seventeen years old, the old house underwent
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repairs, including removal and replacement of a partition between the
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library and a back room , in which the Lodge meetings were held.
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One afternoon Miss St. Ledger, in the library, heard voices. With
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perhaps pardonable feminine curiosity she listened at an opening
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between the bricks of the replaced partition. Not hearing
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sufficiently well, she removed a loose brick and obtained an
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unobstructed view and complete audition of what occurred.
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She looked and listened for some time before she realized what she
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saw and heard. There seems to be no question of her gentle breeding,
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education or high mindedness; when she understood she became terror-
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struck and fled from the room, intending forever to conceal her
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guilty knowledge.
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Her way out, however, was barred by the Lodge Tiler, her father<65>s
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butler. She screamed and fainted..
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The Tiler summoned the Master; the young woman recovered
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consciousness, and confessed to what she had discovered. The Lodge
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considered what should be done, and finally decided to have her take
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part in ceremonies similar to those she had witnessed. Accordingly,
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she was initiated and passed a Fellowcraft. At this time (1710) the
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third degree, or what the was the <20>Master<65>s Part,<2C> was not a separate
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ceremony, so that, granting the story be true. Miss St. Ledger
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received all the light her father<65>s Lodge had to give.
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Too much corroborative detail surrounds this old tale to pass it by
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as apocryphal. There is today extant in the possession of Lady
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Castletown, Upper Ossory, a painting of Miss St. Ledger in her
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Masonic Regalia. Two Jewels she wore are preserved, one in the
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possession of the family, the other held by Lodge No.1, Cork.
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Contemporary accounts credit her with acting as Master of the Lodge,
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and riding in Public Masonic processions, clad in Masonic regalia;
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these are doubtless mere inventions. It is not on record that she
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was permitted to attend any meeting of the Lodge except that in which
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she was initiated and passed.
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Nor has the Lodge been identified; yet this is not surprising, since
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the date (1710) is prior to the formation of the Irish Grand Lodge,
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and seven years before the formation of the Mother Grand Lodge in
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London. It is supposed that her father received his Masonry in
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London, and brought it home with him, in the easy custom of the olden
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time, making Masons of his friends and with them practicing the
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Speculative Art.
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It is pleasant o chronicle that every version of the story - and they
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are many - sets forth that this Irish Lady, as a girl, a wife, a
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mother and grandmother, highly valued her singular distinction, never
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took advantage of it, and venerated the Craft for all of her eighty
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years of life.
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Among the many versions of this story , one credits Miss St. Ledger
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with <20>intent<6E> to overhear by concealing herself in a clock-case in
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the Lodge Room. This seems altogether out of character; moreover, the
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clock-case<73> method of a woman<61>s getting Masonic secrets has been
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overworked.
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In a letter written in 1879 to Brother Montague Guest, the following
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passage relating to a Dorsetshire Lodge occurs:
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<EFBFBD>There was a Lodge about a hundred years ago, held in a house facing
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the Up-Lyme turnpike . . . It was in that lodge that it was said the
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woman hid herself in a clock and was in consequence made a Mason.<2E>
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The clock-case tradition finds an echo in Thackeray<61>s story of <20>My
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Grandfather<EFBFBD>s Time,<2C> which occurs in one of his papers on SNOBS,
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about . . .
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<EFBFBD>. . . my great aunt (whose portrait we still have in the family) who
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got into the clock-case at the Royal Rosicrucian Lodge at Bungay,
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Suffolk, to spy the proceedings of the Society. of which her husband
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was a member, and being frightened by the sudden whirring and
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striking eleven of the clock (just as the Deputy Master was bringing
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in the mystic Gridiron for the reception of a neophyte), rushed out
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into the midst of the Lodge assembled; and was elected by a desperate
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unanimity, Deputy Grand Mistress for life. Though that admirable and
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courageous female never subsequently breathed a word with regard to
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the secrets of the initiation, yet she inspired all our family with
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such horror regarding the mysteries of Jachin and Boaz, that none of
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our family have ever since joined the society or worn the dreadful
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Masonic insignia.
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There seems to be small doubt that Helene, Countess Hadik Barkoczy,
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born 1833, was actually <20>made a Mason<6F> in Lodge Egyenloseg, warranted
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by the Grand Orient of Hungary. The last of her race, at her
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father<EFBFBD>s death she was permitted by the Hungarian courts to take the
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place of a son, receiving his full inheritance. In this was an
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extensive Masonic library in which she became much interested. In
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1875 the Lodge mentioned admitting her!
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The Grand Orient of Hungary took immediate action on this <20>breach of
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Masonic vow, unjustifiably conferring Masonic degrees, doing that
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which degrades a Freemason and Freemasonry, and for knowingly
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violating the statues.<2E> The Deputy Master of the Lodge was expelled,
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the officers of the Lodge had their names struck from its rolls, and
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the members were suspended for various periods of time. To the honor
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of the Grand Orient be it said, its final pronouncement - apart from
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these merited punishments - was unequivocal. It Read:
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<EFBFBD>1. The Grand Orient declares the admission of the Countess Hadik
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Barkoczy to be contrary to the laws, and therefore null and void,
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forbids her admittance into any Lodge of their jurisdiction, under
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penalty of erasion of the Lodge from the rolls, and request all Grand
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Lodges to do the same.
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<EFBFBD>2 The Countess is requested to return the invalid certificate
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which she holds, within ten days, in default of which measures will
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be taken to confiscate immediately the certificate whenever produced
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at any of the Lodges.<2E>
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The Chevalier d<>Eon is a mysterious and remarkable character, but he
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was not a <20>woman<61> Freemason. It seems highly probable that this
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peculiar person (born 1728 was partially an hermaphrodite, feminine
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in appearance, if sufficiently masculine in nature to become a
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distinguished soldier and one of the best swordsmen in France. In
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spite of a pronouncement by a court of law that <20>he<68> was a woman, his
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male sex was definitely proved after his death. This is more
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remarkable, as after a masculine career of some distinction (which
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included being made a Mason in London) he voluntarily admitted that
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<EFBFBD>he<EFBFBD> was a woman, and lived as such for thirty-three years.!
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The world believed him at the time, and great was the stir caused by
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the thought that a regular Lodge had <20>made a Mason of a woman.<2E>
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Postmortem examination restored confidence; the best explanation of
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his odd life is that he was insane; the worst which may be thought of
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him as a <20>woman<61> is that he deceived the world, Masonic and profane
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alike, for many years.
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Melrose Lodge No.1 is on the roll of the Grand Lodge of Scotland,
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preserves the tradition of as woman initiate, Isabella Scoon, known
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in the vernacular as Tib Skin. The story runs that after removing
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from Newstead, the meetings were held in hired rooms for some years.
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and:
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<EFBFBD>The matron, ac true daughter of Eve, somehow obtained more light
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upon the hidden mysteries than was deemed at all expedient, and,
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after due consideration of the case, it was resolved that she must be
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regularly initiated into Freemasonry,<2C> which tradition states was
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actually done, the initiate being greatly impressed with solemnity of
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her obligation, remaining ever a true and faithful Sister among the
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Brethren, and distinguishing herself in works of charity.!
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<EFBFBD>The Lodge minutes, however, contain no record of the occurrence.<2E>
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The officers and about forty privates of the 22nd Regiment quartered
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at Newcastle, England, in 1769, being Freemasons, celebrated St.
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John<EFBFBD>s Day in Winter by attending services at St. Nicholas<61> Church.
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This publicity would appear to have excited the curiosity of the
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landlady under whose roof the Lodge was held, for in the <20>Newcastle
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Chronicle<EFBFBD> of January 6, 1770, the following advertisement was
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inserted:
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<EFBFBD>This is to acquaint the public that on Monday the first inst., being
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the Lodge (or monthly meeting night) of the Free and Accepted Masons
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of the 22nd Regiment, held at the Crown Inn, Newgate, Mrs. Bell, the
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landlady of the house, broke open a door (with a poker) that had not
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been opened for some years past, by which means she got into an
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adjacent room, made two holes through the wall and by that stratagem
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discovered the secrets of Masonry, and she, knowing herself to be the
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first woman in the world that ever found out that secret, is willing
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to make it known to all her own sex; so that any lady that is
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desirous of learning the secrets of Freemasonry by applying to that
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well learned woman Mrs. Bell (that lived fifteen years in and about
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Newgate St.) may be instructed in the Secrets of Freemasonry,<2C>
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If Mrs. Bell did actually acquire the knowledge the advertisement
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claims, it is clear that she had by no means learned the lessons
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which were apparently so deeply impressed upon the other <20>lady
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candidates.<2E> The story can only be a hoax. Probably Mrs. Bell heard
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a good deal about the doings of the Lodge held on her premises, and
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was inclined to pretend to know more than really was the case. The
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advertisement, in the spirit of those times, was doubtless intended
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to hold her up to ridicule and warn her to be more discreet.
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Recording the death, aged eighty-five, on Tuesday, May 11th, 1802, of
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Mrs. Beaton in Norwich, a newspaper notice reads:
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<EFBFBD>She was a native of Wales, and commonly called here (i.e. at
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Norwich) the <20>Freemasons<6E> from the circumstance of her having
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contrived to conceal herself in the waincotting of a lodge room,
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where she learnt that secret, the knowledge of which thousands of her
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sex have in vain attempted to arrive at - She was a singular old
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woman, and as proof of it the Secret dies with her!<21>
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Capt, J.W. Gambier, a non-Masons, in his, <20>Links in my Life on Sea
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and Land<6E>, wrote:-
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<EFBFBD>In 1861 I arrived at Chatham and met my father. We went ashore, and
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dined at the old inn by the pier at Chatham. sacred to the memory of
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Pickwick and his companions, and but for a fat old waiter . . .
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regaling us with pot-house legends . . . we should have been dull
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indeed. Amongst other anecdotes this venerable old Ganymede told us
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was how once a woman had hidden herself in a cupboard, which he
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showed us in the room, to overhear what went on at a Masonic meeting,
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but that, being discovered, by her dog scenting her out, she had been
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hauled out and then and there made a Mason with all due Masonic
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rites.<2E>
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About 1864, Lodge Tongariro, No.705 E.C., met at the Rutland Hotel,
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at Wanganui, New Zealand. Part of the premises adjoining the room
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used by the lodge had ceased to be occupied and had become somewhat
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dilapidated. The following story is told in the history of the
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Lodge: -
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<EFBFBD>The landlord, who was a member of the Lodge, had a sister living in
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the house. She was an elderly lady with a great thirst for
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knowledge, and she was determined to find out all about Freemasonry.
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Accordingly she went to this disused part of the building and
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succeeded in removing a knot from the wooden portion, and from this
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spy-hole was able to witness unobserved some portion of the
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proceedings. She did not, however, posses the gift of silence, and
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one evening while serving behind the bar, told a gentleman who was at
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that time not a member of the Craft, although he afterwards became a
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Mason and subsequently occupied the Master<65>s Chair in the Lodge. The
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good lady was especially impressed with the third degree, which she
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described as <20>very dreadful<75>. She stated she was going again that
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night, and that it was her intention to enlarge the hole in order to
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get a better view. She informed her hearer that there was not a
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great deal to see until the Lodge had been opened about an hour.
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There was to be <20>a third<72> that night, and if her friend would join
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her in about half an hour, he might take his turn at the peep-hole.
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Unfortunately for her plan, her bother, who was standing near,
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though unobserved, overheard this conversation, and when the old lady
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had climbed up to her accustomed place, he crept softly behind her,
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and taking a firm grip on her ear, conducted her without ceremony to
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her rightful place behind the bar. Unlike the Hon. Elizabeth St.
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Ledger, the lady who concealed herself in a clock-case at an Irish
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Lodge, she was not initiated into Freemasonry, so could not equal
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this famed lady.<2E>
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Loose bricks, knot-holes, clock-cases, doors pried open with pokers -
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the ladies seemed to have had but one method of <20>becoming
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Freemasons.<2E>
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A number of supposed <20>women Freemasons<6E> have received temporary
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notoriety in the United States. Probably the best authenticated (and
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that very poor) is Mrs. Catherine Babington, <20>nee<65> Sweet, who was
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born in Kentucky in 1815, married in 1834, and died in 1886.
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Brother J.P. Babington, her son, of Cleveland Lodge No.202, Shelby,
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North Carolina, after her death published a biographical sketch of
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his mother, evidently in the sincere belief that what he heard all
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his life was true, and giving a plain (if inherently improbable)
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account of this <20>lady Mason.<2E>
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According to this book, which ran into three editions, Catherine
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Sweet spent the greater part of her childhood and young womanhood
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with her Grandfather, Benjamin Ulen, who lived near where she was
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born in Kentucky. Near her Grandfather<65>s house was a two-story
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building; a school below, and a room intended as a church above.
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However, it was used by Masons as a Lodge room. Your Catherine is
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said to have concealed herself in the hollow pulpit not once, but at
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every meeting of the Lodge for more than a year, seeing all the
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degrees and learning all the work, even the most secret
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She was finally discovered by one of her six Uncles, all alleged
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members of the Lodge, and on being closely questioned - and she is
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stated to have refused to answer unless interrogated Masonically -
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she showed a more proficient knowledge of the ritual than any of them
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possessed!
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She was kept in custody for more than a month, while the Lodge
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decided that to do with her. Finally she was <20>properly prepared<65> and
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<EFBFBD>made a Mason<6F> but not a member of the Lodge.
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This estimable lady is said to have talked Masonry on every and any
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occasion even <20>instructing<6E> brethren whom she considered <20>bright<68> and
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was immensely proud of being <20>the only woman Freemason.<2E> Critical
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historians, however, look with considerable doubt on the major
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incidents of this tale. It appears that there was no regular Lodge
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near her Grandfather<65>s home at the time she was alleged to spy upon
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it (there may have been a spurious Lodge, of course) and no records
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exist that any of her Uncles were Masons.
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There seems to be no doubt that (1) Mrs. Babington lived; (2) that
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she knew at least some Masonic ritual and (3) that hundreds if not
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thousands of her neighbors and friends believed the story.
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Her knowledge of ritual can easily have come from any of a half dozen
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of the so-called exposes of Masonry (such as the Morgan booklet)
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which circulated freely enough and may still be found in libraries
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and second-hand stores. It is possible that she learned Masonic work
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from her husband (unlikely, inasmuch as he was a Past Master) and
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barely possible that she did get into some spurious Lodge and hear
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from a concealed place. If the latter is true, why were the
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particulars which her son received from her not of a place and a
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Lodge which could be identified?
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There are tales and tales and still more tales not here mentioned;
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many of the are obviously confusions between the French Rite of
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Adoptive Masonry and the genuine Ancient Craft Masonry, or have to do
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with that odd little bi-product of quasi-fraternity known as <20>Co-
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Masonry.<2E> The story of Madam Xaintrailles belongs among the former;
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she was doubtless a member of an Adoptive Lodge, but the story that
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she was later initiated into Craft Masonry at the close of the
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eighteenth century rests almost wholly upon tradition.
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Some supposedly Masonic bodies at one time or another have admitted
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women to membership - one of these in Mexico in a not far distant
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past - but their stories belong in a history of spurious Freemasonry,
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not in the chronicle of curious fiction in which only the illegal
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<EFBFBD>making<EFBFBD> of the Countess and the accidental discovery of the young
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English girl seem to have genuine claims to credibility.
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