by Midnight Freemason Contributor
R.W.B. Michael H. Shirley
Athenaeum Club's South Library |
Nostalgia is a word we use to color what one borrows
from half remembered yesterdays and unfulfilled tomorrows.
--J. Allan Lind
Indianapolis Masonic Temple |
I’ve been a student of Victorian British history since I first read Sherlock Holmes when I was twelve, and, while I’ve done serious scholarly work on it, including a doctoral dissertation on mid-Victorian radical journalism, one of my less serious interests is the British Gentleman’s club. They always seemed to me to be like a cross between a library with comfortable chairs, a good tobacconist, and a less seedy faculty lounge furnished with old wood, marble, and servants. There were clubs for every interest: the Reform, the Conservative, and the Carleton Clubs for politicians, the Army and Navy Club for members of the armed forces, The Athenaeum Club for artist, writers, and scientists, the Oxford and Cambridge University Club for members of those universities, and more. They usually offered the amenities that a gentleman might seek when socializing: fine dining, reading rooms, smoking rooms, and a bar. Most of them were in the same neighborhood in London, informally called “Clubland,” which made it easy for a gentleman who belonged to several clubs to choose where to spend time according to his mood. They were such a well-known feature of elite life that P.G. Wodehouse set several scenes in them for his creation Bertie Wooster to make observations about life among the chinless idiots of the upper class, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle created the Diogenes Club for the misanthropes of Sherlock Holmes’s world.
Athenaeum Club Library |
These were elite institutions for those who could pay the hefty subscription fee and other costs associated with yearly membership. Socialization with others of similar social standing and interests was their reason for being. They existed as a refuge from the world, where men of like minds and congenial dispositions could dine, converse, read, and drink, and generally just be themselves. Andrew Robert Buxton Cavendish, the 11th Duke of Devonshire, said, “You can, to a very considerable extent, judge a man’s tastes, possibly even his character, by the club to which he belongs.” The company a man keeps, it seems, says something about his character, and in that, at least, clubs resembled Masonic lodges in their desire to admit only those men who met internal as well as external qualifications.
Athenaeum Club |
The club buildings themselves, especially the ones built in the 19th century, were usually grand affairs, with glorious interiors. The Athenaeum Club’s South Library in particular is worth the membership fees by itself, and the thought of spending a day in the library, with dinner and cigars to follow, makes me a trifle giddy. Buildings like these are architecture done right, for the right purposes, and follow a tradition of beautifully arranged structures with which Masons ought to be fully in sympathy.
Reform Club Room |
Masonic Temples and the Grand Lodge buildings erected at the beginning of the 20th century are very much in that tradition. The Indianapolis Freemasons' Hall, to name just one, is a glorious example of that kind of Masonic architecture, and would look quite at home among London’s clubs. It’s also unusual in being still in use as a thriving Masonic building. If you pay any attention to Masonic news these days, you'll soon discover that many lodges and appendant bodies are divesting themselves of the great buildings they erected in the halcyon days of the fraternity, as being too expensive to maintain. There’s much sadness at these losses, and I’m entirely in sympathy with that feeling. I look at the London Clubs and the Grand Masonic Temples with a nostalgic wistfulness, for they are no longer the norm. But it’s a mistake to view them as being the same kind of thing. A London Club’s building was essentially its reason for being, which was to provide a place of refuge and conviviality. A Masonic Lodge is a different thing entirely. A lodge is not a building, but is a certain number of Masons duly assembled, with a charter empowering them to work. Freemasonry is not found in buildings, no matter how humble or grand or beloved.
Reform Club |
Where there is enough population to make these buildings economically viable, and a board of directors exists with enough vision to move with the times, a grand Masonic Temple can survive, and even thrive, as the Indianapolis Freemasons’ Hall demonstrates. But both of those conditions are necessary; neither is sufficient. That’s not to say that a seemingly hopeless state of affairs can’t be turned around, but Masons work based on real knowledge, rather than nostalgia, and a hard analysis of whether a building can and should be saved can’t be rejected in favor of sentimental inertia.
The Reform Club Building |
If we can save our historic buildings, we should at least try. If a lodge or lodges occupy a beautiful physical building, that is truly wonderful, and they should be good stewards of that heritage. But we need to recognize that buildings are not essential to our Craft. Our Temples are not to be found in Clubland. They are visible in our actions, glorified in our Work, and majestic in our hearts.
~MHS
R.W.B. Michael H. Shirley serves the Grand Lodge of Illinois, A.F. & A.M, as Leadership Development Chairman and Assistant Area Deputy Grand Master of the Eastern Area. A Certified Lodge Instructor, he is a Past Master and Life Member of Tuscola Lodge No. 332 and a plural member of Island City Lodge No. 330, F & AM, in Minocqua, Wisconsin. He currently serves the Valley of Danville, AASR, as Most Wise Master of the George E. Burow Chapter of Rose Croix; he is also a member of the Illinois Lodge of Research, the York Rite, Eastern Illinois Council No. 356 Allied Masonic Degrees, Eastern Star, Illini High Twelve, and the Tall Cedars of Lebanon. The author of several articles on British history, he teaches at Eastern Illinois University.You can contact him at: m.h.shirley@gmail.com