175 lines
9.9 KiB
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175 lines
9.9 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.III July, 1925 No.7
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THE GUNS OF 75
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by: Unknown
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One hundred and fifty years ago! (from 1925) The Battle of Lexington
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was fought on April 19,1775; the Battle of Bunker Hill on June 17.
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What emotions, what echoes, what old historic memories stir in our
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hearts as we remember those days and dates. When Lafayette held in
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his hand the musket which fired the first shot of the American
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Revolution, he exclaimed: "This is the alarm gun of liberty!"
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To England the war was an episode; to is it is an epic.
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Time does not tarnish those events, nor distance dim the glory of
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days that tried the stuff of which men are made. All that America
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means, all that it has become, had its beginning at Lexington and
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Bunker Hill. It meant a new nation, built upon a new basis, with a
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new relation of Church and State, a new opportunity for mankind - the
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opening of a new era.
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An oft-told story, taught us from our earliest years, it throbs like
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a drum-beat in our blood, like the echo of the foot-steps of God in
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time. Emerson said truly that the farmers who stood at Concord
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Bridge fired "A Shot Heard Round The World." Its flash divided the
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records of man into before and after, and its echoes will never die
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while men love liberty and value the rights of man. It was the first
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act in a drama of history, but, somehow, it reads like a record of
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our Family Bible.
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For history, in its great meaning, is more than a series of events.
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It is an unfolding of ideas, the fulfillment of a Divine purpose in
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time. Events do not stand alone. They are linked together by a
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thread of cause and effect, a law of seedtime and harvest. What went
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before explains what followed after. If we are to know the meaning
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of the events we remember today, we must go back of the immediate
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inciting causes to the facts and forces that lay behind. History is
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philosophy teaching by example; it is theology acted out.
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Our sturdy forefathers who emigrated first to Holland, and then to
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America, bore with them the seeds of liberty. Those seeds nourished
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by the wise tolerance of the Dutch, they planted in the fresh soil of
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the New World. They sought the New World in search of liberty of
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conscience and freedom of worship. Let us never forget that our
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independence was first religious, then political. Our democracy had
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a spiritual foundation, our republic a sacred origin. Having
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breathed the air of religious liberty, by a sure logic our fathers
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finally demanded the same liberty in political affairs. They would
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gladly help pay debts incurred partly in their behalf; but they
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refused to be taxed to that end, unless they were allowed to have a
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voice in shaping the policy of state. It was the old, high British
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ideal, forgotten by the motherland and defended by its sons.
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The reigning King did not understand the Colonists. They were a long
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distance from the homeland, and no longer under the mystic spell
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which waits upon royalty. But they were loyal and law-abiding. As
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Franklin said, they were ruled "At the Sole Expense of Pen and Ink;"
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but they could not be coerced. One irritating act after another
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provoked anger, and, at last, alienation, until men in America began
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to hate the land which formerly they had loved. The Boston Tea
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Party, planned in old St. Andrew's Lodge, and carried out by Masons
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masked as Mohawk Indian, was the last straw. the tension tightened,
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until finally the tie of allegiance was broken and resentment flamed
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into revolt.
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Early in 1775, news arrived that Parliament, in spite of the
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pleadings of Pitt, Burke, and Fox; had rejected the petition of the
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first Continental Congress, declaring that "Rebellion Existed in
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America." It did, though it might have been averted, like nearly
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every war in history. On the night of April 18, troops were sent by
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General Gage to seize the powder stored by the Sons of Liberty at
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Concord, and to arrest as "Traitors" John Hancock and Samuel Adams,
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who had taken refuge with Parson James Clark at Lexington. They set
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out secretly, as they thought, not knowing how alert and watchful the
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patriots were, and how well organized.
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Lanterns hung out in the tower of the old North Church flashed the
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signal far and wide, and Paul Revere and William Dawes rode through
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the night ahead of the troops led by Major Pitcairn, rousing the
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people and giving the alarm. When the British column reached
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Lexington they found a little company of" Minute-Men" drawn up on the
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village green, under command of Captain Parker, who had given the
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order: "Stand Your Ground, Don't Fire Unless Fired Upon. But If They
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Mean To Have War, Let it Start Here." Major Pitcairn ordered the
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"Rebels" to disperse, and they refused to move. A shot was fired,
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apparently without his order, then a volley, and a number of minute
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men were killed and wounded. With a shout the British marched off to
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Concord, took what military stores they found, rifled some houses,
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and encountered a company of farmers.
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Again the Colonists, under Major Butrick and Captain Davis, were
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ordered not to fire unless fired upon. In double file they crossed
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the bridge and waited, the young fifers playing the "White Cockade."
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When within a few yards of the bridge, a shot fired by the British
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wounded one of their number, a volley followed and two were killed.
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Then the minute men were ordered to fire - the first fired gun of the
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American Revolution - and the British began to retreat. As Emerson
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said in his Concord Hymn, April 19, 1836:
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By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
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Their flag to April breeze unfurled,
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Here once the embattled farmers stood,
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And fired the shot heard 'round the world.
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By this time the whole countryside was aflame with anger and
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excitement. Men and boys came running, singly and in bands, and from
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behind hedges, trees, and stone walls along the road to Boston;
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pouring shot into the retreating British ranks, following them all
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the way until they were safe under the protection of their guns.
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Thus, without previous design, the war began, destined to change the
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history of the world. Small events, born of human blunder, become
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great by virtue of the idea and influences back of them, and initiate
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vast movements. The fight on the village green and by the bridge was
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hardly more than a skirmish, but it used by a Power other than human
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to institute the greatest republic on earth.
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The battle of Lexington shut the British up in Boston, then almost an
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island linked with the mainland by a narrow strip of sand beach. To
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the north lay the peninsula of Charlestown, on which were two hills,
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Breed's Hill and Bunker Hill. To the south Dorchester Heights
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overlooked the city. The American Army grew rapidly, as men flocked
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in from all directions - ill-prepared in all save courage. On June
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17 they began busily to fortify Bunker Hill, and the British
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attacked. Twice the Redcoats stormed up the hill only to be turned
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back. When they made their third desperate charge they won, because
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the Americans had used all the powder they had, and were forced to
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flee, leaving Warren, Grand Master of Masons, dead on the hill. Lack
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of preparedness lost the battle - a lesson never to be forgotten by
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those who are wise!
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Yes. it is an old story, my brethren, as familiar to us as the
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alphabet; but it is a story that makes our hearts beat fast, in which
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our gentle Craft had an honorable part of which we have a right to be
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proud. It is the simple truth to say that our ancient Fraternity -
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faithful, wise and heroic - presided in the birth-hour of our
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Republic, as it guards its sanctity today. There are those who would
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belittle its influence, but the facts stand. It was not an accident
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that Washington and most of his Generals were members of the Craft.
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The story of the War of the Revolution might have been very different
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had not its leaders been bound together by the tie which Masonry
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knows how to weave between men, making them brothers.
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What followed we know as we know our family history. The genius of
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Washington, the dark days of Valley forge, the crossing of the
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Delaware, the coming of Lafayette, the final scene at Yorktown, the
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Constitution, the far-flung Republic - it is a story and a tradition
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bequeathed to us in the mystic continuities of inheritance. America
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was born - the last great hope of humanity - created by the Will of
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God and heroism of man, dedicated to the service of peace on earth
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and good will to men. As in its origin, so in its history, our
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Republic is a Fraternal symposium, in which many races are being
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built together into one community - an enterprise the full meaning of
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which we do not yet realize.
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If we celebrate our beginnings at Lexington, Bunker Hill and
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Yorktown, we do so with no ill will toward the motherland against
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which our fathers fought, wresting their liberties from an obstinate
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King and a truckling Parliament. Since then, in the greatest of all
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wars, Americans have fought side by side with Britons in an hour of
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common peril and high resolve, for the same principle for which our
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fathers fired "The Shot Heard Round The World!" The old feud long
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since gave place to friendship, to deepen and maintain that which is
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the first duty of thoughtful men on both sides of the sea.
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Yet, we do affirm the uniqueness of America, and we are bound by ties
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of blood, history and Fraternity to keep our Republic true to its
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high tradition of liberty under law. Today, remembering the brave
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days of old, when men poured out their blood that their sons might be
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free, we give thanks to God for our country, reverently invoking His
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Blessing upon its many races united in brotherhood, upon its
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unconstrained religious life, upon its passion for education, its
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cities shining in the sunlight. its countless homes, its pacific
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spirit, and its promise of a future greater than its past.
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