Showing posts with label Prince Hall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prince Hall. Show all posts

Give me the pass of a Master Mason!!!

by Midnight Freemason Contributor
WB Darin A. Lahners


I was able to check off a few items from my masonic bucket list this past weekend.  The first item was checked off when I, at the invitation of my good friend and brother, Dustin Farris, attended a Third Degree at John C. Ellis Lodge #17 of the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge Free and Accepted Masons of the State of Illinois in Decatur, Illinois. I was pleased to meet many new brothers,  including Most Worshipful Brother Clarence W. Trotter, who was Grand Master of the MWPHGLIL from 1995 - 1997. I was also able to meet a brother I had met virtually during the pandemic, Ryan Flanigan, and one of his brothers, Adam Friend, both of whom drove from Springfield to Decatur to witness the degree.       

They had a total of six fellowcraft in waiting to get raised to the sublime degree of Master Mason that day. I will say that what I witnessed was I thought as unlikely as the Warfaring Man telling the three fellowcraft that he didn't see the ruffians attempt to book a passage into Ethiopia and that they did not turn back into the country.  In doing so, this would have then resulted in the twelve fellowcraft being judged guilty of the murder of our Grandmaster H.A. and being executed instead of the guilty party of three.

I have often wondered what the "confusion" mentioned in our ritual would actually look like.  The line has fascinated me since I saw it as a reply to the Worshipful Master for someone who is not vouched for as being a brother giving a bad pass in our ritual. Other than a dramatized version of it in the second section of the Third Degree, when there are no designs on the trestle board, I had never seen a real-world example until this degree. It was always a masonic bucket list item that I never thought I would get checked off.  Maybe I'm one of those men that Alfred, as played by Sir Michael Caine (and as some Masonic sites have him listed Brother Michael Caine), states in The Dark Knight likes to "Watch the world burn".  

The Senior Deacon brought one of the hoodwinked Fellowcraft into the lodge. The Senior Deacon is explaining the scene walking the poor, blind brother towards the First Tyrian, Jubela.  Jubela launches into his ritual, where he exclaims his delight at finding Grandmaster H.A. alone, tells H.A. since the Temple is near completion, he wishes H.A. to fulfill his promise to give him the pass of a Master Mason... thus ending the first part of his ritual by demanding: "Give me the pass of a Master Mason!!!".  The brother, having just been given the pass of a Master Mason in the first section, gave it to Jubela before the Senior Deacon could even speak his reply. 

And then it happened... Confusion.....


Past Masters React to the Pass of a Master Mason being given to Jubela 

Confusion is a misnomer. It was complete chaos.  I believe that no one else in the room had ever witnessed such an occurrence either.  The brother who was acting as the First Tyrian could not believe it.  He had to walk away, being completely flustered.  The Past Masters grumbled in a low breath. The lodge was filled with astonishment and brethren wanting to know which lodge this particular fellowcraft was from. No one knew what to do.  I was half expecting a reenactment of the scene in Raiders of the Lost Ark where the Ark is opened and faces began to melt.  The other half of me expected to see one of the Past Masters do something akin to Ricky Bobby stripping down to his underwear and racing helmet, running around the lodge yelling he was on fire.  Luckily, the Senior Deacon took control of the situation and brought the fellowcraft onto meet the second Tyrian, making sure that he knew only to repeat the words that the Senior Deacon uttered in reply.  He then was brought before the last Tyrian, and you know the rest of the story from here. 

To be fair, I felt bad for the poor brother who had done this.  It's obvious that he didn't understand what was happening fully, and that the Senior Deacon would be replying for him (and he would need to repeat what the Senior Deacon said to the First Tyrian).  For the record, this is different than what happens in the Grand Lodge of Illinois A.F. & A.M. ritual, as the Senior Deacon does all of the replying for brother at this point to the Tyrians.  I could empathize with the potential embarrassment he felt as well because I also had an embarrassing moment during the second section of the Third Degree.

I was serving as the intender for one of my brethren that came into the lodge after me at St. Joseph #970, Bro. Brian Clark. It was Brian's third degree so this must have taken place in 2012, and I was one of the twelve fellowcraft who went down on one knee while clad in white gloves and a white apron to plead with King Solomon and beg forgiveness after recanting in the horrid plot to extort the secrets of a Master Mason from our Grandmaster H. A. However when I went down to one knee, I heard (along with everyone else in the lodge room, even poor Hiram in his grave at that point) a loud ripping sound as my pants blew apart in the crotch area to the rear.  My face immediately turned beet red.  I immediately fled the lodge room as quickly as I could.  I drove home, an apron covering my exposed underwear, changed and returned to be able to greet Brian at the end of his degree.  Needless to say, Brian and I shared and continue to share a good chuckle over what happened. I can only hope that this brother can see the humor in what occurred to him. 

Yes, I split my pants...Fellow Midnight Freemason Greg Knott can confirm this.

While I realize that the third degree is a solemn and serious affair, and needs to be treated as such, life often brings unexpected levity to us.  We can either let the absurdity of life frustrate us, or we can roll with the proverbial punches. However, we have brothers that are there to help us off the mat if we get knocked down and can't get back up.  We see this literally occur during the second section of the Third Degree.  While not the ultimate lesson of the Third Degree, I do believe it is a pretty powerful one.  Now if I can see the ruffians escape unharmed just once during a Third Degree, my Third Degree Masonic bucket list will be complete.  After this past weekend, my hope is renewed.  

And I would have gotten away with it if not for that meddling wayfaring man
  

~DAL

WB Darin A. Lahners is our co-managing Editor.  He is a Past Master of St. Joseph Lodge No.970 in St. Joseph. He is also a plural member of Homer Lodge No. 199 (IL), where he is also a Past Master. He’s a member of the Scottish Rite Valley of Danville, a charter member of Illinois Royal Arch Chapter, Admiration Chapter No. 282 and is the current Secretary of the Illini High Twelve Club No. 768 in Champaign – Urbana (IL). You can reach him by email at darin.lahners@gmail.com.  

Prince Hall: An Overview in Relation to Craft and Country

by Midnight Freemason Contributor
Brother Ken 'JP' Stuczynski


*The following is a transcript of a presentation Brother Ken Stuczynski gave in February of 2021*
***

I am Brother Ken Stuczynski, hailing from the Grand Lodge of the State of New York, and I've been asked to give a presentation on Prince Hall for my Mother Lodge, West Seneca Lodge No.1111. One of my Masonic mentors, a Prince Hall Brother, gave a presentation to one of the other Lodges I belonged to. He presented the history as many others have done, and I will do that as well. But what I hope to offer is something more than researchable facts and more difficult to talk about — context.

I cannot and do not speak on behalf of my Prince Hall Brethren, and I welcome their responses and corrections. Prince Hall Masonry, being an African-American tradition of Freemasonry, is for many an unknown, a curiosity. Some of us travel the world and yet have not explored quarries of this "foreign country" in our own backyards, Lodges who sometimes even share a building with our own.

New York's Prince Hall ritual is much closer to ours than that of Pennsylvania or Ontario. In fact, they preserved many things we took out over the years. Prince Hall Masons have a reputation for diligent and precise work, and some suggest this is because they have had to prove themselves to be regular Masons, under fire for two centuries by accusations they were not.

Until recently, most of Masonry – in the US at least – considered them to be clandestine. Rationalizations of illegitimacy stem from questions of being "freeborn" and territoriality. Arguing over what "free born" meant in a time where slavery existed, and a person's origins could be questioned is ... questionable. This Landmark has been interpreted in different ways in different times and places – our Prince Hall counterparts in New York simply use the term "Free Man" – but I would suggest it boils down to the one question of a person having the legal right to enter an agreement of their own free will and accord, with no possible issues of previous "legal" obligations that may interfere, such as indentured servitude, or laws regarding the children of enslaved people.

As for territoriality, it is a courtesy to not establish Lodges in places where Lodges under another jurisdiction exist. This probably served the operative guilds well, but today, the aim is harmony or at least lack of poaching candidates and Brothers. That is why most states, provinces, and smaller counties each have a single Grand Lodge that we in New York recognize. And yet, in earlier times, Lodges in the American Colonies or on the European continent could have been chartered from England or Scotland or Ireland, and there were no boundaries. Recently, we chose to recognize more than one Grand Lodge of the same province of a Latin American country. Lebanon's Lodges, some of which are under our jurisdiction, now practice alongside Lodges that formed their own sovereignty as The Grand Lodge of Free & Accepted Masons of Lebanon. But what of Prince Hall? How and where can they exist among jurisdictions whose territories cover every land from sea to shining sea?

To answer that, we must go back to 1784. Two years before that, a man named Prince Hall and fourteen other freemen were initiated by a regimental Lodge of the Grand Lodge of Ireland, having been rejected by the Colonial Provincial Lodges. Now they wished to form their own Lodge and did so as African Lodge, the first African-American Lodge in America, but not with a Charter from an American jurisdiction. After the Revolution, English Lodges moved to join the Lodges of various states, regimental Lodges returning to England, and one Provincial Grandmaster taking his Charter with him to Canada. These dark-skinned brothers were tolerated to an extent, but these new jurisdictions would not give them a Charter. Instead, they petitioned and received one from the Premier Grand Lodge of England.

In 1808, the year after Prince Hall died, the African Grand Lodge was formed, later named in his honor. The means of constituting their Grand Lodge has been criticized, but the short of it is that by various standards judging them illegitimate, many other Grand Lodges in America would also be such. I won't bore you with the details, but this is laid out thoroughly in Joseph Walkes, Jr.'s "Black Square and Compass: 200 Years of Prince Hall Freemasonry".

Prince Hall Freemasonry is arguably America’s first Black institution. Prince Hall himself was an abolitionist. He challenged the government to stand by the principles it claimed, “a natural and unalienable right to that freedom, which the great parent of the Universe hath bestowed equally on all Mankind.” He petitioned the legislature of Massachusetts that "means be provided for the education of colored people" on the argument that they had faithfully paid taxes and were willing to do so, yet their children's lack of schooling had been an "oversight." With Prince Hall’s assistance, Belinda Royall became the first and only former enslaved person to receive monetary reparations for years of uncompensated labor. This was not an apolitical Mason, and he not any less related to the history of the Craft and our Country than our more familiar Brother, George Washington.

From here, Prince Hall Lodges grew and established new jurisdictions across the nation to accommodate those worthy and well qualified who were nonetheless rejected by other Lodges on the basis of the color of their skin. It became one of few pillars in African-American communities, as there were few if any organizations they could join. Even in higher learning, People of Color were barred from Greek Fraternities. This is also why the Nation of Islam grew into strength and not coincidentally mirrors some of the rituals and culture of Scottish Rite Freemasonry.

So we end up with two branches of Masonry in America, sharing the same ritual, the same language, the same Landmarks, the same professed values and ideals, and yet did not acknowledge each other. Albert Pike said in 1875, "I took my obligations to white men, not to Negroes. When I have to accept Negroes as brothers or leave Masonry, I shall leave it", but also said, "Prince Hall Lodge was as regular a Lodge as any Lodge created by competent authority. It had a perfect right to establish other Lodges and make itself a Mother Lodge." In his later years, it appears he recanted his prejudices, having become friends with the head of the Prince Hall Scottish Rite, which adopted his ritual.

If not apparent already, Prince Hall Freemasonry encompasses all the common Masonic Bodies, including Eastern Star, the Shrine, and the York Rite, or "Red House" as it is called, in contrast to the "Blue House" of what we call Blue Lodge. Their Shriners celebrate a unique holiday called Jubilee Day. It celebrates a Supreme Court decision made on June 3, 1929, deciding their lawful right – after a 15-year court battle – to use the name, designation, letters, emblems, and regalia as Nobles of the Mystic Shrine.

It is clear that our separate-ness is due to social and not Masonic differences. Masonic history in America is a reflection of our national journey, including its imperfections. One author describes Freemasonry as the most segregated institution in America, even more than Christian churches. Today, half of all Prince Hall Masons in America live in the seven states they are not recognized by “our” Grand Lodges. One Grand Master recently explained, "You have black Baptist churches, and you have white Baptist churches. But they both recognize each other as being Baptist. We are talking about accepting the fact that "you practice Masonry and I practice Masonry." Some Masons have formed Lodges outside their Grand Lodge, such as in Alabama, in response to not voting for recognition.

Many Prince Hall jurisdictions have no interest unless it's clearly mutual, meaning we have to take the first step. We could argue over each other's stubbornness but forget that we inherited a legacy that created the conditions for the necessity of their forming alternative Lodges.

Mainstream ... sometimes those of us not Prince Hall call ourselves the "regular Lodges," as if they are somehow not regular. But even 'mainstream' reflects an unconscious bias. Instead of equal ownership in our tradition, they are seen as a branch on "our" tree, just as White is a sort of default identity in "our" society. They are our "other" Brothers in a way we don't think of Masons from other states or countries. This is not out of unkindness but unexamined socialization and unfamiliarity. We must guard against talking about Prince Hall Masonry as a curiosity or visiting them as if we are tourists. Nothing Masonic, or Human for that matter, should be alien to us.

As New York Masons, we can now visit any Lodge under the MWPHGLNY and in many other, though not all, Prince Hall jurisdictions across America. There are other Prince Hall jurisdictions, such as Prince Hall International, that we do not currently recognize. And there are many Lodges under the name Prince Hall that are considered clandestine by everyone but themselves.

The main Prince Hall jurisdictions have already been fully recognized by England and Scotland. In America, attempts at recognition caused the Grand Lodges of other states to revoke recognition of those "mainstream" Grand Lodges who dared it. The first longstanding recognition was established in 1989 between Connecticut's Grand Lodges; relatively progressive New York, not until 2003.

In New York, there were false starts and perceived slights, with "Black and White Dinners" in the 1980s, referring to formal attire. The efforts appear to have been abandoned thereafter. But thanks to two Brothers who worked together out in the world and discovered they were each Masons, but unable to attend each other's Lodges, dialogue turned into a negotiation, and finally, a Compact was established. Most Worshipful Brother Carl J. Smith, a local Mason, signed on our jurisdiction’s behalf.

The first mutual Lodge gathering was here in Buffalo, between Ionic Lodge No.88 and Master Builder Lodge No.911, an antecedent of Ken-Ton Lodge No.1186, or which I am a recent Past Master. I know the Brothers who started this conversation personally, and I've invited them to the debut of this presentation. I will let them relate that story themselves.

The biggest setback before this was our jurisdiction's enthusiasm to form a "unity committee," meaning a merging of Grand Lodges. From the Prince Hall perspective, this was presumptuous, if not offensive. To truly understand this, we must admit that African-Americans have always been caught between the forces of segregation or assimilation. As similar as we are, to integrate risks losing identity, and perhaps more importantly, their important continuing role in the African-American community.

Our Lodges, on the whole, have become regional. This is probably due to deurbanization and the fact that most people don't work in the same place they live and may not even go to worship in their own neighborhood. This is far less true of African-American communities, being more isolated and localized. Their Lodge mergers are across much smaller distances. In Buffalo and Erie County, all Prince Hall Lodges are within the city limits, while all of our Lodges now reside in the suburbs.

But when a prospective Brother inquires about Freemasonry, do I recommend one jurisdiction over another? We shouldn't be competing, after all, but we should also not assume their desires from their color. My suggestion, and practice, is to educate them and let them decide. If they are Black and living in the suburbs, for example, they may or may not want to join a nearby Lodge of mostly old White men. I will not judge them either way for that, any more than someone would prefer to join a Lodge with a lot of people with shared interests or in his profession. But if they want a Lodge that is connected to the African-American community, Prince Hall clearly fulfills that desire. And there's no reason we cannot still be there for a Brother's degrees if they choose another jurisdiction.

Famous Prince Hall Masons include Thurgood Marshall, the first African-American to serve on the Supreme Court of the United States; Booker T. Washington; Sugar Ray Robinson; Congressman John Lewis, who was the chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee from 1963 to 1966, yet suffered many arrests and beatings as a protester. There are many more that you can look up yourself, but there are two points to be made here.

First, you will not find Presidents, astronauts, or famous generals, in such stations for the most part barred People of Color until my own lifetime. Secondly, you will find every last one of these upright men and Masons absent from many of the lists of famous Masons. Recognition and inclusion in the pride and promotion of our Craft could go a long way to fix this 'oversight.'

So, was our mission accomplished in 2003? Some of our Lodges proudly work together now and then, including a food drive during the pandemic. Two other Brothers and I were the first from our jurisdiction to march with our Prince Hall Brethren in Buffalo's Juneteenth Parade, possibly a first anywhere. Prince Hall Brothers assisted in the Middle Chamber lecture at a degree in Olean, New York. But there is so much more that could be done.

The education available between degrees in Prince Hall Lodges puts us to shame, and the knowledge is similar enough to take advantage of such classes for our own new Brothers if we are so welcomed. The participation of Prince Hall Brothers in our degree work would send a clear message to new Brothers that we mean what we say about tolerance and the universality of the Fatherhood of God.

Involvement in the community is something else we can learn from. In the suburbs, we tend to do charity at a distance, whereas there are opportunities to deal directly with those in need in urban communities. It's the difference between raising money for donations and things like having a shower facility for the homeless, as was established by St. John's Lodge No.16, the Prince Hall Mother Lodge of Buffalo. Working together can alleviate some of our common, circumstantial ignorance toward Color and poverty.

Of course, there's the hurdle that many people not of Color feel uneasy about going to certain neighborhoods. Taken for granted otherwise, we are not accustomed to being a minority at a venue or the only person who looks like us. That in itself can be challenging for some, but what better place to experience that than surrounded by Brothers?

I say our greatest challenge is our greatest opportunity. If we can have the conversations we need to within the Craft and learn to truly best work, and best agree, the profane world will have something to learn from us — something it desperately needs, whether we are willing to see it or not.

To my Prince Hall Brothers, I offer this. My inquiry into Freemasonry included the question of racial exclusion in the Craft. If I had asked this hard question before 2003, I would not have become a Mason. I wish to believe most others did not know to ask that question rather than not caring or perhaps resigning themselves to things just being the way they were. Like so many other things in our society, we don't see race as being part of Masonry, whereas you did not have a choice, and that in no small way defines you. I don't think you owe me or anyone an apology for that.

Again, I do not speak for my Lodge or my Grand Lodge, but for myself ... When I am welcomed into your quarries, I stand humbly before you, like a brother of Joseph in Egypt, willing to make amends I am able, and you see just. I accept the debt of the sin of two centuries of failure to recognize and embrace my Brothers. I will mourn but not judge you if my Love is not returned.

But many of you have returned that Love, and I hope we improve upon our common Work, together, fully and meaningfully, for the sake of bettering ourselves and the World.

~JP

Bro. Ken JP Stuczynski is a member of West Seneca Lodge No.1111 and recently served as Master of Ken-Ton Lodge No.1186. As webmaster for
NYMasons.Org he is on the Communications and Technology Committees for the Grand Lodge of the State of New York. He is also a Royal Arch Mason and 32nd Degree Scottish Rite Mason, serving his second term as Sovereign Prince of Palmoni Council in the Valley of Buffalo, NMJ. He also coordinates a Downtown Square Club monthly lunch in Buffalo, NY. He and his wife served as Patron and Matron of Pond Chapter No.853 Order of the Eastern Star and considered himself a “Masonic Feminist.”

Worshipful Brother Robert Smalls

by Midnight Freemasons Contributor
WB Darin A. Lahners 


Worshipful Brother Robert Smalls was born on April 5, 1839 in Beaufort, South Carolina to Lydia Polite, a woman who was enslaved to Henry McKee, who was most likely Robert’s father. He grew up in Beaufort, in the fields. As Robert was favored over other slaves, his mother began to worry that he might not understand the harsh realities of Slavery, especially those that work in the fields. Robert’s mothers asked for him to work in the fields and to witness the whipping of slaves at “the whipping post”. When he was 12, his mother requested that Smalls’ master send him to Charleston, South Carolina. There he was hired out as a laborer for one dollar per week, with the rest of the wage going to his mother. He worked in a hotel and as a lamplighter on the streets of Charleston, finally finding work on Charleston’s docks. He worked as a longshoreman, a rigger, a sail maker, and finally worked his way into becoming a wheelman or helmsman. As a result, he gained tremendous knowledge about Charleston harbor.

At the age of 17, Bro. Smalls married Hannah Jones, an enslaved Hotel maid. She was 22 and already had two daughters. Their first child together, Elizabeth Lydia Smalls, was born in February 1858. They had a son three years later, Robert Jr, who passed away at the age of two. Robert was determined to pay for their freedom by purchasing them outright, but at the cost of $800 dollars (roughly $22,764 in today’s currency), it would take him decades to reach that goal. He had only managed to save $100 dollars.

In April 1861, the American Civil War began with the Battle of Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor. In the fall of 1861, Bro. Smalls was assigned to work as a wheelman on the CSS Planter, a lightly armed military transport ship. The Planter’s duties were to deliver orders, troops, supplies, to survey waterways, and to lay mines. Smalls was entrusted to pilot the Planter throughout the Harbor, as well as on area rivers and along the South Carolina, Georgia and Florida coastlines. Smalls could see the line of Union ships blockading the Harbor seven miles away and began to hatch an escape plan.

On May 12, 1862, the Planter travelled 10 miles southwest to Coles Island, which was home to a confederate post that was being dismantled. The ship picked up 4 large cannon and returned to Charleston where the crew loaded 200lb of ammunition and 20 cord of firewood onto the ship. The evening of May 12, 1862, the Planter’s three confederate officers disembarked to spend the night in Charleston, leaving Bro. Smalls and the crew on board. Before the officers departed, Smalls requested permission to allow the crew’s families to visit them, which was approved provided that the families left before curfew.

When the families arrived, Smalls and the crew revealed the plan to them. Smalls had discussed the plan with his wife beforehand, to which she said: “It is a risk, dear, but you and I, and our little ones must be free. I will go, for where you die, I will die.” The other women were not informed and were frightened at executing the plan. They started to cry out of fear. The men attempted to quiet them with mixed success. At curfew, the family members returned home with the instructions to be at Southern Wharf and another wharf to be picked up for the escape attempt. Around 3am, Smalls put on a captain’s uniform and wore a straw hat similar to the captain’s and the Planter departed. After stopping to pick up his and the other crew member’s families, Smalls piloted the Planter past five confederate forts with no issue, as he gave the correct signals at checkpoints as Smalls had copied the captain’s mannerisms along with wearing his straw hat, it was enough to fool the soldiers manning the various checkpoints. Around 4:30 am, Smalls approached Fort Sumter.

The crew started to be afraid, asking Smalls to give wide berth to the Fort. Smalls told them that such behavior might raise suspicion of the soldiers manning the guns at the Fort. He piloted the ship along the normal course at a slow cruising speed, pretending as if they were just out for a leisurely cruise. When the Fort gave the challenge signal, Smalls responded with the correct hand signals. There was a long pause and Smalls started to think he’d soon be on the receiving end of a cannon barrage. However, the Fort replied back with the all-clear and the Planter continued on its way. Rather than turn east towards Morris Island, Smalls steered the ship straight towards the Union ships blockading the Harbor. Smalls ordered all the confederate flags lowered and replaced them with white bedsheets that his wife had brought with her. This raised the alarm that something was amiss, but the Planter was already outside of Cannon range.

The Planter was seen by the USS Onward, which began to ready its cannons to fire upon the Planter. Luckily, a crewmember on the USS Onward noticed the white flag of surrender flying on the Planter. The Captain of the USS Onward, John Fredrick Nickels, boarded the Planter at which point Smalls asked for a United States Flag to fly. Smalls surrendered the Planter to Nickels, exclaiming "Good morning, sir! I've brought you some of the old United States guns, sir!" Smalls escape proved especially beneficial to the union navy. Along with the artillery pieces that the Planter was hauling, the captains codebook with the signals for each check point, along with maps of the mines laid in Charleston Harbor were invaluable, as was Smalls expertise of the surrounding waters. The United States also learned that Coles Island had been abandoned by Confederate forces, which allowed the United States to capture the island

Word of Smalls escape quickly spread throughout the North via newspapers accounts. In the South, the Newspapers demanded disciplinary action for the officers who left Smalls and his crew alone aboard the ship. The U.S. Congress passed a bill awarding Smalls and his crew prize money for CSS Planter. Smalls was awarded 1500 dollars (roughly $38415 in today’s currency). Smalls was sent to Washington DC to help persuade President Lincoln and War Secretary Stanton to allow men of color to fight for the Union. Due to Smalls effort, Stanton signed an order allowing 5000 African Americans to serve the union at Port Royal, and they were organized into the 1st and 2nd South Carolina Regiments (Colored).

Smalls quickly started serving the Union Navy out of Port Royal, South Carolina and piloted many navy vessels, until he was transferred to the Army in March 1863. Smalls took part in 17 major engagements during the war. Some of his heroic actions include: He was made pilot of the ironclad USS Keokuk and took part in the attack on Fort Sumter on April 7, 1863. The Keokuk took major damage and sank the next morning. Smalls and much of the crew moved to the USS Ironside and the fleet returned to Hilton Head. On Dec. 1, 1863, Smalls was piloting the Planter on Folly Island Creek when Confederate gun batteries at Secessionville fired upon the vessel. The captain, James Nickerson, fled the pilot house for the coal bunker, but Smalls stayed at his post and piloted the ship to safety.

In May 1864, Smalls was an unofficial delegate to the Republican National Convention in Baltimore. Later that spring, he was in Philadelphia while the Planter was getting overhauled. While in Philadelphia, Smalls was in a streetcar and was ordered to give up his seat to a white passenger. Rather than ride on the open overflow platform, Smalls left the streetcar. The humiliation of Smalls, a heroic veteran, was referenced in a debate that resulted in the State legislature’s passing a bill which integrated public transport in Pennsylvania in 1867.

After the civil war, Smalls returned to Beaufort. There he became a property owner, and purchased several properties, including a two-story building to be used as a school for African-American children. He also opened a store with a Philadelphia business man, which served the needs of freedmen. He was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives in 1868, moving to the Senate in 1870 after being elected to fill a vacancy. In 1874, Smalls was elected to the United States House of Representatives, where he served from 1875 to 1879 and then from 1882 to 1887 all while being threatened by the South Carolina “Red Shirts” which was a branch of the Klu Klux Klan. His political career was centered on promoting children’s welfare, education and African-American rights. He famously said in 1895: “My race needs no special defense, for the past history of them in this country proves them to be equal of any people anywhere, all they need is an equal chance in the battle of life.”

Smalls passed away in 1915 at the age of 75 due to malaria and diabetes. In 2004, the Defense Department named a ship for Smalls. The USAV Maj. Gen. Robert Smalls is a Kuroda-class logistics support vessel operated by the U.S. Army. It is the first Army ship to be named after an African-American. Robert Smalls was a member and a Past Master of The Sons of Beaufort Lodge #36 PHA in Beaufort, South Carolina.
 

~DAL

WB Darin A. Lahners is a Past Master of and Worshipful Master of St. Joseph Lodge No.970 in St. Joseph. He is also a plural member of Ogden Lodge No. 754 (IL), and of Homer Lodge No. 199 (IL), where he is also a Past Master. He’s a member of the Scottish Rite Valley of Danville, a charter member of Illinois Royal Arch Chapter, Admiration Chapter No. 282 and is the current Secretary of the Illini High Twelve Club No. 768 in Champaign – Urbana (IL). You can reach him by email at darin.lahners@gmail.com
 
 
 

 

Masonry & The Martial Arts



by Midnight Freemason Guest Contributor

Brother David Pugh


Freemasonry and traditional Martial Arts are two of my passions and favorite subjects to practice and study. On the surface they may appear to be completely different. Freemasonry is a beautiful system of morality veiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols, while the martial arts are a system of deadly self-defense techniques.  However, it is this author’s position that they are very similar in structure, philosophy, and goals for their students. The aim of this humble paper is to present their benefits and similarities to my fellow Freemasons, with the hope of inspiring new and continued interest, study, and participation in both disciplines. Please note that for the scope of this work when the term Martial Arts is used, it is referring to traditional martial art styles like Taekwondo,Shotokan Karate, or Wing Chun Kung Fu.

Let us first examine the structure of both entities. Historically both Freemasonry and the martial arts required a screening process before letting people join their ranks and obtain their “secrets”. General Hong Hi Choi the founder of Taekwondo states “A close scrutiny is made on the mental make up as well as the background of any applicant prior to his or her admission to the gymnasium. While Freemasonry still has this practice, most modern martial arts schools especially in America will allow anyone with the financial means to join their “Dojo” and start training. Historically however, this was not the case as the martial arts were passed down within a specific family line or clan and if someone outside of that group wanted to learn they had to be “vouched for”.  

Both of these systems were also practiced in secret. "Training in karate was always conducted with the utmost secrecy in Okinawa, with no one teaching or training openly in the arts as done today. The reason for this secrecy was a matter of life and death for both the Freemason and the Martial Artist. During the time of operative masonry, the knowledge the Freemasons possessed was their trade and subsequently, how they fed their families. If cowans and eavesdroppers were allowed to gain their secret information, they could take work away from those who were duly and truly prepared. In a very real way this was a matter of life and death for the Mason and his family. In the same way, if the martial artist’s techniques or “secrets” were revealed to a hostile person, tribe, or village, they could use that information to defeat them in combat and once again, meeting the Angel of Death becomes a real possibility.

Both disciplines have a Master and Grand Master that sets the adherents to work and gives them good and wholesome instruction for their labors. They both are a progressive science with grades or degrees and in order for a student to advance they must show suitable proficiency in the proceeding level’s material. In addition part of that material involves memorizing  physical movements in a certain order which Freemasonry calls due guards & signs, and the Martial Arts call forms, kata, or poomse.

Finally  both present their information in a exoteric and esoteric format. For example the public can see a martial artist demonstrating a form or kata that may have movements that look like dancing (exoteric) but they are really deadly fighting techniques (esoteric). The true meaning is only taught to the initiated which is the esoteric knowledge. As a martial arts instructor I still teach by this traditional formula.

Freemasonry aims  to make good men better, and it’s design is to make its votaries wiser, better, and consequently happier! Our ritual teaches us that Masonry is concerned with developing the internal qualities of Man. The martial arts also have the same goal as stated in the following quote from Master Gichin Funakoshi, the founder of Shotokan Karate and often referred to as the father of modern Karate.

“Those who follow Karate-do will develop courage and fortitude. These qualities do not have to do with strong actions or with the development of strong techniques as such. Emphasis is placed on the development of the mind rather than on techniques. In a time of grave public crisis , one must have the courage, if required for the sake of justice, to face a million and one opponents.”

In addition Taekwondo has the five tenets of Courtesy, Integrity, Perseverance, Self Control, and Indomitable Spirit, which each student is charged to inculcate.  These are very similar to the four cardinal virtues of Freemasonry which are  Temperance, Fortitude, Prudence, and Justice. They do not correlate directly but there is significant overlap. For example Integrity relates to Justice, as Perseverance & Indomitable Spirit correspond with Fortitude, and Self Control with Temperance. In addition to internal development, improving one’s community is also something that both systems encourage.

As Masons we learn the following from the Volume of Sacred Law, And now abideth faith,hope, and charity,these three: but the greatest of these is charity. Grand Master Hong Hi Choi in his Taekwondo Master text stated the following regarding community service: “...by rendering their labour to the public work and to the poor villages during their leisure hours so that they may teach themselves the spirit of the public service and mutual help. Both Masons and Martial Artists as they labor to subdue their passions and improve themselves in either respective systems, should also help to  transform and build their communities. For those of us who labor in both quarries we have a double responsibility to extend our cable tow in service to others. The best example of this and the harmony between  Masonry and the Martial Arts is Shotokan Karate Lodge 9752 UGLE.
In conclusion, both Masonry and the Martial Arts are progressive sciences with similar structure and goals to develop the moral character of their votaries. As the student cultivates the internal attributes of brotherly love, relief, courtesy, integrity, perseverance, justice etc., it is hoped that these will be extended to his fellow man and the community at large. It is my hope that after reading this brief comparison, my Brothers who are not martial artist may consider taking that first step and begin training in a style of their choice. For my Brothers, who travel on both paths, may this discussion increase your interest, focus, and passion to study and train harder-- to become the best Mason and Martial Artist that you can be!

References: 
Choi,Hong HI(1965) Taekwondo The Art Of Self Defence,Los Angeles California: Masters Publication
Gichin Funakoshi(1973) Karate-Do Kyohan The Master Text, New York New York: Kodansha America
Tedeschi,Marc(2003) Taekwondo The Essential Introduction, Trumbull, CT: Weatherhill Inc
Holy Bible 1st Corinthians 13:13 KJV

Yours in Brotherly Love, Relief, and Truth

Brother David Pugh SW
Plumbline Lodge#116
Subordinate to the
Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Illinois and Its Jurisdiction

Master Instructor
Warriors Martial Arts
5th Degree Black Belt- Taekwondo (WTF)
Black Sash- Ip Man Wing Chun( under Master Sam Chan)
Certified Instructor- Jeet Kun Do Concepts (Harris International JKD Federation)  


Brother David Pugh serves as the Senior Warden of Plumbine Lodge No. 116 in Chicago,IL subordinate to the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Illinois. He is also a member of Eureka Chapter #3, Holy Royal Arch Masons, a subordinate Chapter of the Most Excellent Prince Hall Grand Chapter, Holy Royal Arch Masons. In addition Brother Pugh is a member of the Phylaxis Society and currently serves as the appointed Director of the Commission on Bogus Masonic Practices. He can be contacted at warriorstkd@gmail.com



How Good it is for Brethren to Dwell Together in Unity

by Midnight Freemason Contributor
WB Gregory J. Knott

On a recent trip to Washington DC, I had the honor of visiting Potomac Lodge No. 5.   Potomac Lodge is located in the heart of the Georgetown area of DC.  It was a fantastic night for a visit as the Entered Apprentice degree was being conducted that night.  In addition Corinthian Lodge No. 18 of the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of the District of Columbia was visiting.


The lodge room of Potomac Lodge No. 5 in Washington DC
One of the first things you notice in any visit to a DC lodge is diverse array of brethren that are in attendance.  These brethren are from all walks of life, many of whom are career military, work in government or are civilian contractors.  
Though I didn’t personally know any of the brethren, I was welcomed like a long lost friend.  We had dinner before the meeting, where the conversation was both interesting and enlightening.  
As with every lodge, Potomac Lodge has many historical artifacts in their possession.  But no other lodge in the world has the gavel that George Washington used at the laying of the cornerstone of the United States Capitol building.    The actual gavel is stored in a bank vault across the street from the lodge.
The brethren of Potomac Lodge did a fantastic job with the ritual and floor work.  Four new brethren were initiated as Entered Apprentice’s that night.  You could feel a true sense of excitement in the room as these new brothers began their Masonic journey.
It was a great pleasure to also meet the brethren of Corinthian Lodge who are some of the finest Masons I have ever met.  There seriousness in regards to the craft was obvious.


Brethren of Corinthian Lodge No. 18 MWGLPHDC who were visiting Potomac Lodge.

I encourage you to visit a lodge in DC if you ever have the opportunity.  You will find the brethren friendly and ready to welcome you.   I have found the visits so gratifying myself that I became a plural member of Naval Lodge No. 4 in 2014.  It is truly an opportunity to “Dwell together in Unity.”

~GJK

WB Gregory J. Knott is the Past Master of St. Joseph Lodge No. 970 in St. Joseph (IL) and a plural member of Ogden Lodge No. 754 (IL), Homer Lodge No. 199 (IL) and Naval Lodge No. 4 in Washington, DC. He’s a member of the Scottish Rite, the York Rite, Eastern Star and is the Charter Secretary of the Illini High Twelve Club No. 768 in Champaign-Urbana. He is also a member of ANSAR Shrine (IL) and the Eastern Illinois Council No. 356 Allied Masonic Degrees. Greg serves on the Board of Directors of The Masonic Society and is a member of the Scottish Rite Research Society and The Philathes Society. Greg is very involved in Boy Scouts—an Eagle Scout himself, he is a member of the National Association of Masonic Scouters

After All, It's 2016

by Midnight Freemason Contributor
Steven L. Harrison, 33°, FMLR

The Masonic Roundtable, a weekly discussion podcast/videocast about Freemasonry, has, in my opinion, become an important voice for our fraternity.  The show's panel consists of Jon T. Ruark, Jason Richards, Juan Sepulveda, Nick Johnson and Midnight Freemasons Editor Robert Johnson.  Each week the show covers a single topic in depth, includes some Masonic news and current events and usually provides a little fun along the way.1  The Brothers do not shy away from controversial topics and, to celebrate their 100th show, picked what might be considered the granddaddy of them all: Racism in the Craft.

Additional panel members that evening consisted of the following Brothers:

  • Matthew Botts, Past Master of Diversity Lodge 330 under the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Virginia
  • Gabriel Evans, Fidelity Lodge #10 under the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of California
  • Joe Gonzalez, Senior Grand Warden of the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Minnesota
  • Charles M. Harper, Sr., Past Master of Pleiades Lodge 478 under the Grand Lodge of Illinois and the author of a book pertinent to the subject,  Freemasonry in Black and White.

A few times during the show, a panelist would, referring to the progress or lack thereof in race relations, say something like, "Hey, after all, it's 2016."

At one point, WB Robert Johnson asked, "It's interesting that you guys have said, 'it's 2016.' I know what you mean, but are we just making an excuse for how bad things were in the past?  Why is 2016 an excuse?  It isn't."

It's a good question; and Robert is correct — it's not an excuse and shouldn't be.

Had I been on that panel I could not have stopped myself from jumping in at that point.  

I was in college during what many would call the "Civil Rights Era" — the late '60s, early '70s.  I supported the movement.  I went to rallies and events, even demonstrations; never anything violent.    Right out of college I worked for the Urban League.  Those "bad things in the past" Robert spoke of weren't in the past — They were current events.  Remember how intense news coverage was in 2015 over the events in Ferguson, Missouri?  Back then, it was just as intense and far more common; and in the wake of those events, including Dr. King's death, the local firebombing of our town's only African American store, and much more, what do you suppose they said?

"Things like this shouldn't be happening.  After all, it's 1968."

Back in those days, 2016 was "the future" just as much as today we would look at 2060 as "the future."  Had someone interviewed me about the Civil Rights Movement when I was in college what would I have said about the prognosis for "the future?"

To generalize, I would have said we would fix the problem — after all we had nearly a half century to work on it before "the future" got here.  But we didn't fix it, did we?

So we say, "after all it's 2016," to imply by now we should have fixed the problem.  Also we say it to imply we are more enlightened than those old guys that came before us.  The former is true.  In my opinion, not so much the latter.

Yes, there has been progress but not enough, as evidenced by last year's unrest.  What's more, on a personal level, last year I resigned from one of my Lodges over a racist incident.2  My Grand Lodge does not condone racism in any way,3 but it's not uncommon to hear racist remarks in our Lodges.

It's 2016, and from the perspective of someone who has been there since the Civil Rights Era, we didn't get the job done.  Let's just hope that in "the future" they still aren't saying, "Hey, after all, it's 2060."



1The full podcast and more information about the hosts is available on the Masonic Roundtable's website at http://www.themasonicroundtable.com

2Midnight Freemasons Article A Sad Thing http://www.midnightfreemasons.org/2015/01/a-sad-thing.html.


3Midnight Freemasons Article The Incident http://www.midnightfreemasons.org/2013/02/the-incident.html.

~SLH

Bro. Steve Harrison, 33°, is Past Master of Liberty Lodge #31, Liberty, Missouri. He is the editor of the Missouri Freemason magazine, author of the book Freemasonry Crosses the Mississippi, a Fellow of the Missouri Lodge of Research and also its Worshipful Master. He is a dual member of Kearney Lodge #311, St. Joseph Missouri Valley of the Scottish Rite, Liberty York Rite, Moila Shrine and a member and Past Dean of the DeMolay Legion of Honor. Brother Harrison is a regular contributor to the Midnight Freemasons blog as well as several other Masonic publications. His latest book, Freemasons: Tales From the Craft & Freemasons at Oak Island. Both are available on amazon.com.

Clandestine Reprisal

by Midnight Freemason Contributor
WB. Robert H. Johnson




Clandestine "Masonic" orgs in IL.  
I had plans. Plans of grandeur when I was elected to the East. I thought I would have speakers every week and pull tons of men back to lodge. I wanted to engage the membership and have many education nights. Alas, I was  given a different opportunity. A better opportunity. I was given a ton of degree work. A week after being installed, I was conferring my first degree ever, a 2nd, as a matter of fact.

Week after week, I was conferring degrees. It was awesome. Recently I did four 1st degrees over four weeks. I thought about doing them as a class, but we felt as a lodge it was more important for the candidate to have that special experience of an individual night, just for them. Two of my candidates, now Entered Apprentices were best friends.

These gents had known each other since their childhood years, joined the military reserves together and now, became Masons together. Now that we had four new Entered Apprentices and no immediate degree work pending, it was time to do that other thing I wanted to do: engage the new members and help them understand the degrees they had just received.

We organized an EA education night, The Entered Apprentice Academy is what we called it. We walked them through the degree, explained to them aspects of the symbology and gave them personal stories of our lives in relation to how Masonry has changed us for the better. We laughed, we had fun and we learned.

At one point the subject of Clandestine Masonry came up, and two of my EAs looked at each other and then back at me and said at the same time and laughing, "Oh we found out about that..." I looked at them puzzled. In my experience, waiting to talk to the candidates until the 3rd degree about Clandestine and Irregularity is just too late. I feel you need to tell them [the candidate] about these organizations well before they go out into the world as EAs, otherwise they risk being tainted by potential bad information or in the case I was about to hear, outright slander, hazing and vindictive social media harassment.

I have made it known that personally, I hold no ill feelings toward Clandestine or Irregular Masons, as long as it isn't the kind that gathers just to make money and has an "LLC" or an "Inc." after its name. I digress.

My EAs proceeded to tell me that one of their co-workers found out that one of them had just received his EA degree, an auspicious occasion, no question. However instead of the typical congratulatory words, this co-worker first, claimed to be a brother as well and then proceeded to interrogate my EA in a completely condescending manner. And if this wasn't enough, he did it in public, around other people, citing ritual and all the rest.

My Brother EA sat there and took it all in, the odd exchange had him on edge but he kept it together. Finally this co-worker called my Brother EA a "Clandestine" Mason. As if this wasn't enough he ridiculed the Brother on social media after finding his picture with me on our social media page the night after receiving his EA degree. He made derogatory comments and lambasted him. Again, repeatedly calling him "Clandestine" and "not a real Mason."

Through all of this, all my Brother EA asked him was, "Let me see YOUR dues card." This co-worker refused and just kept pushing the hot buttons. I give credit to my EA for subduing his passions and an urge to put this co-worker in his place. The co-worker, after being asked to show his dues card repeatedly, finally did show my EA a card. And guess what? THE CO-WORKER WAS THE CLANDESTINE MASON!

Apparently when my EA told him the lodge he was from (our lodge Waukegan 78 AF&AM Grand Lodge of Illinois), the co-worker knew of the lodge and of me. Well, I guess if a clandestine lodge and its members know who you are, maybe you're doing something right. I'm not one to get easily upset but this, Brothers, got me a little mad.

So, guess what? I have blurred the names, but here you go, the business card of the lodge which decided to be decidedly unMasonic, and egregiously improper. And if this "lodge" or its members has an issue with this, I suggest you go through the proper channels (contact my Grand Lodge),  or take the time and become a legit lodge under the Grand Lodge of Illinois or the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Illinois.

We all know what having "Inc." after your lodge name really means. And for those of you who don't it means, "We take your money and fool you into thinking we're legit."

In conclusion, let it be known that "The Most Worshipful New Jerusalem Grand Lodge AF&AM. S.R. Inc." is CLANDESTINE and NOT RECOGNIZED.

If you would like to read further about the issue of clandestine lodges, I suggest reading "Freemasonry In Black and White" or "ASpurious State of Confusion" by Bro. Charles Harper.

Enjoy the parody video below about Clandestine Masons. It isn't far from the truth. 

~RHJ 

Bro. Robert Johnson, 32° is the Managing Editor of the Midnight Freemasons blog. He is a Freemason out of the First North-East District of Illinois. He is the Master of Waukegan Lodge No. 78 and Education officer for the 1st N.E. District of Illinois. He is also a member of the York Rite bodies Royal Arch, Cryptic Council, Knights Templar, AMD, The Illinois Lodge of Research and a member of the Scottish Rite Valley of Chicago as well as a charter member of the Society of King Solomon, a charity organization run by the Grand Lodge of Illinois. Brother Johnson currently produces and hosts weekly Podcasts (internet radio programs) Whence Came You? & Masonic Radio Theatre which focus on topics relating to Freemasonry. In addition, he produces video shorts focusing on driving interest in the Fraternity and writes original Masonic papers from time to time. He is also a cohost of The Masonic Roundtable, a Masonic talk show. He is a husband and father of three. He works full time in the safety industry and is also a photographer on the side as well as an avid home brewer. He is currently working on a book of Masonic essays.