UNIVERSITY
OF PITTSBURGH
LIBRARY
Dar. Rm.
THIS BOOK PRESENTED BY
James Barr Haines IV
,, V • V ■
A*. ,..1;
:■ :;£<\i
^* >-^ ''
s>^ .
Knights Templar.
I V,n
c^^
V5
^
^
t
^
■ '^yic^r f u'j.j ff //ff "/ ///(■ c'a//iiHta///i ■ l/^f ///////// ///i>if.)
■ If <///// /r //■///'/// //fr-jr // '//'.jc ///■> //nu/ r<i///i' y/z/V////'
' / 1 I ' y \ ////fjit
<
/{/toof ////////' ff/////'rf '/.J /// /////^ r/ f yi '//'// 1//.)
■)/('/// />/ ' yi ///f////y ' Jr /////fnf't f.) a /r/r ////'/' 'r'y'
>/'/'/
M.
/>/// ///<f //{U'hy/ '^''^'^
)
/ j/')ht/.///'// / //
(r//{/ off/'f/i f/f /uf^' /(/'//(' -J ( .(' .- J 'uf /in ( ^o/n //uuii/r'ii/
n/ 'y/>n//to^f/'(.'i'rfr//ff 'f //d ff-j -j/zc// //'r eo7??/mf^ff
///.)//(''/')('</ {f'tf'ff/n/ //</■ ■ j/r/'C 7
hi //■.vf/r/w//)' win'tffi/' \VP hfivr
heren/ito sei our hnnrts tiiiff
rnnst'd tJif sf/// nfoftrZo/iinur/u/e?)
to hr atfi.rcil /Jii.y f//n-
of A/J./Hfl
A.()7 A()EJ'
Er
J.',-,
HISTORY
OF THE
Knights Templar
STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA.
PREPARED AND ARRANGED FROM ORIGINAL PAPERS.
''Magna est Veritas et prcevalebit."
ALFEED CEEIGH, LL.D.: K. T. 33°.,
Historiographer of Knights Templar of Pennsylvania; Past Provincial
Deputy Grand Commander of Canada; Author of "Masonry and
Anti-Masonry,"' "History of Knighthood," Ac, &c.
SECOND SERIES.
PHILADELPHIA :
J. B. lippincott" & CO.
1868.
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by
ALFRED CREIGH, LL.D.,
In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Western
District of Pennsylvania.
lippincott's press,
PHILADBLPHIA.
TO
tnint M^httB ^ommmxt^trVf Mo. 4,
OP
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR OF PHILADELPHIA,
WHO MAINTAINED HER FIDUCIARY TRUST
A8 THE REPRESENTATIVE OF THE IMMORTAL DEAD AND THE PRESENT LIVING,
BY PRESERVING THE RECORDS OF THE GRAND ENCAMPMENTS
OF
]VIAY 12, irsT,
AND
FEBRXJ^f^IiY IS, 1814,
AND THEREBY ACOUIRING A DEATHLESS IMMORTALITY:
ALSO TO
SIR WILLIAM HENRY ALLEN, LLD.,
Past Grand Commander of the R. E. Gratid Commandery of Pennsylvania,
IN WHOM ARE CENTRED ALL THOSE QUALITIES OF HEART AND MIND WHICH
ADORN THE CHARACTER OF A FREE AND ACCEPTED
MASON AND CHRISTIAN KNIGHT,
AND THROUGH WHOSE INSTRUMENTALITY
THE WRITTEN AND PRINTED MEMORIALS OF TEMPLARISM
HAVE BEEN COLLECTED, ARRANGED, AND GIVEN TO THE TEMPLAR WORLD
BY THE APPOINTMENT OF AN HISTORIOGRAPHER,
THIS VOLUME
|a J^ralerttHlIg aitb (fourtconslg gebicateb
AS A TOKEN OF BROTHERLY LOVE AND DEBT OP GRATITUDE.
Alfred Creigh.
Washington, Pa., Dec. 27, 1867.
CONTENTS.
PAGE
Dedication 7
Preface 17
Inteoduction 19
CHAPTER I.
ANNUAL ADDRESSES.
Sir W. W. Wilson's address, June 14, 1854 23
Action of the Grand Comraandery on the address 30
Sir W. W. Wilson's address, June 12, 1855 32
Action of the Grand Commandery on the address 39
Report of Special Committee on the Cardinal Virtues of a
Knight Templar 41
SirChas. E. Bluraenthal's address, June 10, 1856 49
Action of the Grand Commandery on the address 63
Vote of thanks to P. G. Commander Sir Chas. E. Blumenthal. 63
Report and Resolutions of a Special Committee on the address. 64
Rejiort on the Illegal Association of Knights Templar in Phil-
adelphia, with correspondence 74
Report on the Legality of the Philadelphia Encampments 89
Organization of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar
under the R. W. Grand Lodge of Penna 94
Address of Sir W. W. Wilson, June 22, 1857 96
Address of Sir Benj. Parke, June 22, 1857 108
Action of the Grand Commandery on the address 110
Vote of thanks to P. G. Commander Sir W. W. Wilson 112
Address of Sir Benjamin Parke to M. E. Sir W. B. Hubbard,
June, 1858 113
Address of Sir W. B. Hubbard, M. E. Grand Master, June, 1858. 114
Address of Sir Benjamin Parke, June 22, 1858 124
11
12 CONTENTS.
PAGE
Address of Sir A. Jordan Swartz 143
Address of Sir John L. Gore 144
Action of the Grand Commandery on the addresses 146
Decisions of R. E. Sir Benjamin Parke, G. C 149
Vote of thanks to P. G. Commander Sir Benjamin Parke 155
Address of Sir A. Jordan Swartz, June 22, 1859 155
Address of Sir Chr. Fr. Knapp 159
Action of the Grand Commandery on the addresses 161
Vote of thanks to P. G. Commander Sir A. Jordan Swartz 162
Resolutions on the death of P. G. Commander Sir R. Sterling
Wilson 163
Address of Sir William Henry Allen, LL.D., June 22, 1860... 165
Action of the Grand Commandery on the address 173
Vote of thanks to P. G. Commander Sir William Henry
Allen, LL.D 174
Address of Sir Christian Frederic Knapp, June 11, 1861 175
Action of the Grand Commandery on the address 181
Vote of thanks to P. G. Commander Sir Christian Fr. Knapp. 182
Address of Sir John A. Wright, June, 1862 182
Report of Sir C. F. Knapp, Grand Lecturer, June 15, 1862 184
Action of the Grand Commandery on address and report 186
Vote of thanks to P. G. Commander Sir John A. Wright 187
Address of Sir Edmund H. Turner, June 9, 1863 187
Report of Sir C. F. Knapp, Grand Lecturer 194
Action of Grand Commandery on address and report 195
Vote of thanks to P. G. Commander Sir Edmund H. Turner... 196
Address of Sir H. Stanley Goodwin, June 13, 1864 197
Action of the Grand Commandery on the address 204
Address of Sir H. Stanley Goodwin, June 15, 1865 205
Action of the Grand Commandery on the address 208
Vote of thanks to P. G. Commander Sir H. Stanley Goodwin.. 209
Address of Sir W. H. Strickland, June 12, 1866 210
Action of the Grand Commandery on the address 221
Vote of thanks to P. G. Commander Sir Wm. H. Strickland... 223
Address of Sir Robert Pitcairn, .June 12, 1867 223
Address of Sir J. L. Hutchinson, June 12, 1867 234
Address of Sir John Vallerchamp, June 12, 1867 236
Action of the Grand Commandery on the addresses 237
Vote of thanks to P. G. Commander Sir Robert Pitcairn 239
CONTENTS. 13
PAGE
Address of Sir Jeremiah L. Hutchinson, September 26, 1867... 240
Action of the Grand Commandery on the address 246
CHAPTER 11.
REPORTS OF COMMITTEES ON FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE AND ON
COSTUME AND JEWELS.
First Eeport, made June 22, 1857, by Rev. Sir O. H. Tiffany,
Chairman 248
Second Report, made June 22, 1858, by Sir W. H. Allen, LL. D.,
Chairman 253
Third Report, made June 22, 1859, by Sir R. A. Lamberton,
Chairman 268
Fourth Report, made June 22, 1860, by Hon. James Lindsey,
Chairman 286
Fifth Report, made June 11, 1861, by Sir E. H. Turner, Chair-
man 306
Sixth Report, made June 10, 1862, by Sir W. H. Strickland,
Chairman 316
Seventh Report, made June 9, 1863, by Sir Isaac Whittier,
Chairman 324
Eighth Report, made June 13, 1864, by Sir James H. Hopkins,
Chairman ; 328
Ninth Report, made June 13, 1865, by Sir James H. Hopkins,
Chairman 349
Tenth Report, made June 12, 1866, by Sir James H. Hopkins,
Chairman 378
Eleventh Report, made June 12, 1867, by Sir James H. Hop-
kins, Chairman 404
Report on Costume and Jewels, by Sir Alfred Creigh, Chair-
man 441
CHAPTER III.
PUBLIC ADDRESSES.
Installation Ceremonies of the Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania, held in Reading, June 22, 1860 464
Address of Sir Wm. H. Allen, LL.D., Grand Commander,
• June 22, 1860 464
2
14 CONTENTS.
PAGF
Address of Sir Wra. H. Strickland, D. G. Commander, to Gen.
U. S. Grant, June 14, 1865 472
Address of Sir James H. Hopkins, Grand S. Warden, June 14,
18Go 473
Address of Kev. Sir K. H. Pattison, D.D., June 13, 1867 483
CHAPTER IV.
VIRGINIA AND PENNSYLVANIA.
Circular of M. E. Sir B. B. French, G. M., on the Rebellion,
April 18,1861 491
Reply of R. E. Sir E. H. Gill, G. C. of Virginia, April 27,
1861 492
Letter of E. Sir John Dove, G. R., May 1, 1861 493
Correspondence referred to a Select Committee 493
Resolutions of Sir H. Hawman referred to the same Committee 493
Report of Select Committee through Sir Alfred Creigh 494
Action on the Report 498
Address of R. E. Sir E. H. Gill, G. C. of Virginia, 1866 499
CHAPTER V.
Claim of Pennsylvania as being the first Grand Encampment
in America 501
First report of E. Sir Alfred Creigh, Historiographer, on this
subject, made June, 1866 504
Second report of E. Sir Alfred Creigh, Historiographer, June,
1867 515
Extract from the address of Sir W. J. B. McLeod Moore, Prov.
G. Com. of Canada, August 14, 1867 534
Report and Circular on the Templar work, read Sept. 26, 1867. 535
CHAPTER VI.
Constitution of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar
of the United States, Sept., 1865 543
Burial Service of Knights Templar 556
Ceremonies and Charges upon Constituting and Dedicating a ^
Commandery, and Installing its Officers 565
CONTENTS. 15
CHAPTER VII.
OFFICERS ELECTED AND MEMBERS KNIGHTED.
PAGE
Grand Officers, June 12, 1867 574
Pittsburg Commandery, No. 1, Officers and Members 575
Philadelphia Com mandery, No. 2, " " 577
Jacques de Molay Commandery, No. 3, " " 579
St. John's Commandery, No. 4, " " 580
Hubbard Commandery, No. 5, " " 581
St. Omer's Commandery, No. 7, " " 582
St. John's Commandery, No. 8, " " 583, 617
De Molay Commandery, No. 9, " " 584
Mountain Commandery, No. 10, " " 585
Parke Commandery, No. 11, " " 586
Crusade Commandery, No. 12, " " 587
Columbia Commandery, No. 13, " " 589
Palestine Commandery, No. 14, " " 591
Jerusalem Commandery, No. 15, " " 592
Northern Commandery, No. 16, " " 593
Cceur de Lion Commandery, No. 17, " " 594
Kedron Commandery, No. 18, " " 595
Hugh de Pay ens Commandery, No. 19, " " 596
Allen Commandery, No. 20, " " 597
York Commandery, No. 21, " " 599
Baldwin II. Commandery, No. 22, " " 600
Packer Commandery, No. 23, " " 601
Hermit Commandery, No. 24, " " ^ 603
Northwestern Commandery, No. 25, " " 605
Lewistown Commandery, No. 26, " " 608
Great Bend Commandery, No. 27, " " 609, 617
Tyagaghton Commandery, No. 28, " " 611
Kadosh Commandery, No. 29, " " 612
Mount Olivet Commandery, No. 30, " " 613
Costume of a Knight Templar, with engravings 619
PREFACE.
The remaining records of the Grand Encampment of
1797, and those of the Pennsylvania Grand Encampment
of 1814, together with the names of the officers (both
Grand and Subordinate), and members elected and knighted,
to May 1, 1866, of the Grand Commandery of 1854, have
been published in the First Series, embracing a period
of sixty-nine years.
The Second Series is a continuation of the history of
Knighthood in Pennsylvania, published at the request of
the Grand Commandery. It embraces subjects not treated
of in the First Series, although each volume is distinct
and forms a separate history ; united, the two compose a
full, perfect, complete and entire history of Knighthood in
this State. We have so endeavored to collect, prepare and
arrange this Second Series as to make it unique in its
character, full in its details, systematic in its arrangement,
concise in its statements, yet perfect in its history. Our
work is now completed, our labor of love is over; and the
reward we crave is the approbation and good-will of all
true and courteous Knights, ever bearing in mind the
noble sentiment of Past Grand Commander Sir Benjamin
2 * "17
1 8 PREFACE.
Parke, when in his annual address he declared that "when
the history of Knighthood in the United States should be
written, Pennsylvania Knighthood, like Pennsylvania
Masonry, will stand the grandest, the firmest, if not the
LOFTIEST, column in the Union."
Alfred Creigh.
Ellendale Villa, Washington, Pa.,
Sept. 10, 1867
LA, Washington, Pa., i
, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70. J
INTRODUCTION.
ORGANIZATION OF THE GRAND COMMANDERY OF PENNSYLVANIA.
Prior to the 12tli day of April, 1854, the Knights Tem-
plar of Pennsylvania were governed by Subordinate En-
campments, their Charters emanating respectively either
from the General Grand Encampment of the United States,
or existing by authority of the K. W. Grand Lodge of
Pennsylvania. The State was considered open territory,
no Grand Encampment having existed since June, 1824,
although St. John's, No. 4 (of Philadelphia), preserved her
organization.
Under the General Grand Encampment, there existed by
Charter, Pittsburg Encampment, No. 1 ; Jacques De Molay
(of Washington), No. 2; and St. Omer's (of Uniontown,
but now of Brownsville), No. 3 ; and under Dispensation,
Hubbard Commandery of Waynesburg.
Under the P. W. Grand Lodge, there were St. John's
Encampment, No. 4, deriving her Charter from the Grand
Encampment of 1814, Philadelphia Encampment, No. 5,
Union Encampment (of Philadelphia), No. 6, and De
Molay (of Reading), No. 7.
The difficulties arose on a question of jurisdiction, the
former claiming that the General Grand Encampment of
the United States took possession of the State of Pennsyl-
vania as early as 1826, when it organized Holy and Un-
divided Trinity Encampment at Harrisburg, November 22,
19
20 INTrvODUCTION.
1826 (Ser. I., p. 116), while the latter believed that the
R. W. Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania is the source of all
Masonic authority within her geographical limits. Those
Encampments acting under authority of the R. W. Grand
Lodge were sustained by the following facts : that until of
very late years Templar Encampments were held under
Blue Lodge warrants. In Ireland, although the Grand
Encampment w^as formed about 1818, yet several Encamp-
ments continued to work under their old Lodge warrants.
This was the case also in Scotland, Canada, etc. etc. All
Encampments thus constituted in Europe were considered
legal. Hence arose the difficulties between the Templars
of Pennsylvania.
Thus believing, those under the General Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States applied to the M. E. Sir Wm.
B. Hubbard, General Grand Master, who issued a War-
rant authorizing the formation of a Grand Encampment
of Pennsylvania (Ser. I., p. 77). Under this authority a
Convention assembled at Brownsville, Fayette county, on
the 12th day of April, 1854, A. O. 736, A. O. E. P. 57, and
organized the present Grand Commandery of the State of
Pennsylvania, subordinate to the Grand Encampment of
the United States (Ser. I., p. 127). In the organization
of this Grand Encampment, the Convention which orga-
nized it was governed by Article 2 of the Constitution of
the General Grand Encampment, Avhich reads thus : " When-
ever there shall be three or more Subordinate Chartered
Commanderies instituted or holden under this Constitution
in any one State, District, or Territory, in which a Grand
Encampment has not been heretofore formed, a Grand
Commandery may be formed, after obtaining the approval
of the Grand Master or the Grand Encampment. Its
jurisdiction shall be the territorial limits in which it is
holden."
INTEODUCTIOX. 21
On the other hand, the Subordinate Encampments recog-
nizing the authority of the Grand Lodge met in Philadel-
phia in Convention by Delegates on May 10, 1854, A. O.
736, A. O. E. P. 57, and organized a Grand Encampment.
After the adoption of a Constitution and the election and in-
stallation of Grand Officers, the Grand Recorder, Sir Jere-
miah L. Hutchinson, was instructed to inform the R. AY.
Grand Lodge that the Penissylvania Grand Encamp-
ment OF Knights Templak and the appendant Orders
was regularly organized (Ser. I., p. 118).
Two rival and powerful bodies thus existing, battling for
the same great principles, the principles of charity and hos-
pitality, for the accomplishment of which Knights Tem-
plars are solemnly pledged to protect and defend innocent
maidens, destitute widows, helpless orphans, and the Chris-
tian religion, — these rival Grand Encampments unfurl
their respective banners ; a war ensues, not, however, a war
of sanguinary strife, of jealous anxieties, of implacable
hatred, of uncompromising hostility, but one in which the
thinking principles, the intellectual powers are brought into
requisition. The question is calmly reviewed by both
Grand Encampments, and the amount of good considered
which could be accomplished by a union in acts of charity
and pure beneficence. Committees of Conference are ap-
pointed by both bodies (Ser. I., pp. 131-135), and after a
mutual exchange of opinions, reconciliation follows, past
feelings are all obliterated, forgiveness and oblivion are
stamped upon the heart of every Templar, the supremacy
of the General Grand Encampment of Knights Tem^^lar
of the United States is acknowledged (Ser. I., p. 135), and
the Knights of Pennsylvania meet around the sacred Delta,
and give the praise to the founder of the Christian religion
— Immanuel, God with us.
The union was officially proclaimed by R. E. Sir W. W.
22 INTRODUCTION.
Wilson, Grand Commander of the Grand Commandery, on
the 1st of June, 1857, and subsequently by the M. E. Sir
Wm. B. Hubbard, Grand Master of the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States, in these words: By virtue of the
high powers in me vested, I do hereby make known the
fact, that no disunion amongst worthy Templars exists in
Pennsylvania ; but that all the Subordinate Commanderies
and all the members thereof are in courteous, fraternal, and
knightly fellowship with each other, and all in common
owing allegiance to the Grand Encampment of the
United States of America.
The serried ranks of Christian chivalry occupying the
vast area within the United States have the same faith,
and are all under the same solemn vows of allegiance and
fealty. " Non nobis, Domine, non nobis, sed nomine tua da
gloriam !"
Knights Templar.
CHAPTER I.
Annual Address delivered by the JR. E. Sir Wm. W.
Wilson, Grcmd Commander of the Grand Command-
ery of Pennsylvania, at its First Annual Conclave,
held iti the City of Pittsburg, June 14, 1854.
Assembled on this, our first Anniversary, we greet
you witii emotions of gratitude and hope. Grateful to
tiie King of kings and Lord of lords for the preserved
life and continued health of all who, at our last Con-
clave, were engaged in the noble and generous enterprise
of erecting an Asylum, whose Pillars are Charity, Jus-
tice and Mercy, and whose foundations are Truth, we
rejoice with you in the success of this enterprise — that
upon broad and liberal foundations we have erected an
Asylum ample enough to accommodate all present, as
well as future Knights, who may be deemed worthy of
tht high honor. Our doors are open alone to true and
regular Sir Knights, and to worthy Pilgrims who may
hereafter seek to enter. AV^ithin the extended jurisdic-
tion assigned to our command by the General Grand
Encampment of the United States of America, we hope,
with flattering prospects of success, soon to enlist many
23
24 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
excellent Companions, distinguished for Virtue, Intelli-
g-euce and Brotherly Love.
Our noble Keystone State, having taken rank in that
imposing line of Christian Knighthood, composed of
eleven State Grand Encampments and thirty-six
Subordinates, yet under the direction of one General
Grand Encampment, let us with generous emulation,
seek to advance in Wisdom, Strength and Beauty;
maintain a character of unsullied honor; pursue with
unwearied zeal every laudable undertaking, and practice
the sublime tenets of our Order.
For the flattering approval of our work, and recogni-
tion of our organization, and receiving and ranking
among us that illustrious host which he commands, we
return to our General Grand Master (Hubbard) our
most cordial thanks. We also observe with much
pleasure the kind and courteous acknowledgment of
our organization by the Sir Knights of the Empire
State, who at their last Conclave publicly extended to
us a cheering welcome to the Grand Asylum. Honor
to that noble band of Knights, who, under command of
the illustrious De Witt Clinton and his successors, with-
stood unmoved the assaults of bitter enemies from with-
out, through long years of persecution, and who, when
subsequently called upon to survey, beneath them, the
fair and beautiful fields and the princely temples of
Masonic creation, blighted and wellnigh laid waste by
internal feuds, rushed to the rescue. To the Sir
Knights, more than to any or all other agencies, does
the Masonic Institution in New York owe its preserva-
tion and now rapidly recovering strength and beauty.
Plereafter, should danger from without threaten the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 25
peace, and perhaps the existence of our General Grand
Asylum, should the combined forces of tlie Prince of
darkness roll fiercely against our State institutions,
doubtless Pennsylvania will be found in the same ex-
alted position in the Templar Arch which she now
proudly sustains in the political confederacy. May we
not pledge, in behalf of ourselves and our successors,
that this Asylum, just erected, shall be preserved intact
and inviolable to the latest generation ? But may it
please our Grand Commander to continue our enjoy-
ment, the peaceful relations we sustain to each other and
to all without in every land.
At the present time universal peace and prosperity
mark our Order throughout the whole world. Espe-
cially within this, our own happy land, the mission of
our blessed Immanuel seems wellniii^h fulfilled. The
verdure of truth, long crushed, now spreads besides all
waters. The sentinel's gladsome note of " alFs well"
leaps from hill to mountain, and over every plain and
valley. Justice, brotherly love and charity, now en-
twine and display their rich flowers and fruits upon ten
thousand columns and arches. Yet, Sir Knights, let us
not too fondly or too securely trust in present attain-
ments and appearances, or indulge too confidingly in
the pleasures of hope. The lovely scene which we have
just spread before you may, in one short year, be co-
vered with ruin. The rumbling noise of war and dis-
cord, of slaughter and carnage, of garments rolled in
blood, breaks over the ancient inheritance of the Tem-
plars, and falls upon our ears with foreboding evils ;
nay, the elements of discord and destruction within our
own fair heritage is struggling for relief.
3 B
26 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Let US, therefore, stand in the whole armor, our loins
girt with truth, having on the breast-plate of righteous-
ness, the shield of faith and the helmet of salvation ;
and whilst, with one hand, we grasp the mystic sword
of j ustice, fortitude and mercy, let us with the other,
imbued with faith, hope and charity, grasp the mystic
trowel and widely diffuse the cement of brotherly love
and friendship.
Sir Knights, I trust we are now assembled with a
determined zeal to advance the best interests of Tem-
plarism in this State, and to the best of our ability, witli
fidelity, discharge every duty. It is unnecessary for me
to detain you by enunciating all the items of business
which should occupy your attention. The perfecting of
our Constitution, adopting Rules and Regulations, pre-
paration of suitable forms, etc., will necessarily occupy a
portion of your attention.
Permit me, however, to request your attention and
present action on one or two subjects of vital interest.
We have recently been advised of an irregular organiza-
tion in the eastern part of our State, claiming similar
titles, authority and jurisdiction as ourselves; but with
which we can have no intercourse or affiliation, as their
elementary bodies were in 1850, by our General Grand
Encampment, declared irregular upon grounds which
we believe to be wholly just and clear. I would recom-
mend that a committee be raised to prepare a report,
and submit it at our next Annual Conclave, setting
forth concisely the ancient and modern usage of our
Order in granting Charters and conferring Orders, the
general and acknowledged source of authority and con-
trol in Europe and this continent, rules of intercourse.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 27
etc., etc. ; also the historic and true relations of our
Order to that of Masonry. Besides the satisfaction this
report would give to many Sir Knights, who have not
the means of thorough investigation, it woidd be of
important advantage to many Companions, preventing
them from falling into irregular bodies when seeking
admission into the Orders of Knighthood.
I would also beg leave to suggest the propriety of
raising a committee, to report at next Annual Meeting,
whose duty shall be to educe and concisely state those
cardinal virtues, maxims, teachings and duties which
belong to our institution, and which are required to be
practised by all true Templars.
Another subject of great importance to our Order, as
well as to the Masonic brotherhood in general, demands
our special attention. We refer to the modern and
much-abused privilege of publishing in Masonic period-
icals and weekly newspapers much that is prejudicial
to both institutions. Not only do we see spread before
the public eye detailed statements of our general pro-
ceedings, often exhibiting much infirmity and violations
of those principles of harmony, brotherly love and
charity which our institutions inculcate and require us
to practice in all our relations to each other and to the
world, but w^e often see information detailed and lan-
guage used w^hich should be confined strictly within the
walls of the Lodge. If the Sir Knights and Brethren
desire to become intelligent and accomplished in the
history, jurisprudence and teachings of our Order, they
can, in accordance with ancient usage, better obtain it
within the body of a well-ordered Asylum or Lodge,
and in intercourse with those established lights and
28 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPJ^AR.
well-informed brethren which, indeed, are the only
legitimate sources of information. The facilities which
these papers afford to restless and ambitious members in
spreading their complaints, discoveries and names before
the public are temptations and evils which should be
corrected or wholly suppressed. Our attention to these
abuses has recently and more particularly been directed
by an unauthorized puWication and discussion of pro-
ceedings connected with this Grand Encampment. We
believe the interests of our institution within this juris-
diction have been much prejudiced thereby. Such un-
official publication is contrary to the established usages
of our Order ; and by virtue of the high powers invested
in us, all publications and correspondence by regular
Sir Knights, relative to our Order, within this jurisdic-
tion, is hereafter positively forbidden. We would there-
fore recommend the reference of this whole subject to a
committee, to report at our next Conclave as to the
abuses complained of, and the proper remedies to correct
this rapidly-increasing evil.
Finally, Sir Knights, permit me to urge upon one
and all to maintain and practice an intelligent, ardent
zeal in advancing the interests of Knighthood, espe-
cially within this jurisdiction. Let us seek from the
highest and best authorities only an enlarged and tho-
rough knowledge of our institution ; its origin, history,
principles and capacity for conferring those present and
lasting benefits which it promises, and which it has for
centuries conferred upon its members, upon society and
the world ; and especially seek to obtain possession of
that unwritten knowledge which can only be had by a
long-continued association and intercourse within the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 29
Asylum, and there mingling with its leading officers and
most distinguished Masters.
The splendor of our institution, internally and exter-
nally, has wrapt in admiration the great and good of
many generations. During more than seven centuries
it has enrolled the most distinguished men of every
nation, from emperors and kings, princes and nobles,
down to the virtuous and humble peasant. It now en-
rolls the highest and most exalted talent in divinity, in
literature, in all professional life, the statesman, the
military chieftain and the philosopher. Whilst, there-
fore, we should be justly proud of the past and present,
let us not cease to exercise vigilance in protecting it
from improper approaches from without. Let us within
cultivate those virtues and hopes which it teaches, and
by faith so let our light shine that our Father in heaven
may be glorified.
True, the gorgeous wealtli and immense possessions
of our ancestors, which indeed but attracted the envy
and persecution of kings and popes, and led to the mas-
sacre of its members and confiscation of its estates, have
passed away. But instead thereof we possess the more
true wealth and unfading possessions in that knowledge
and those teachings imparted within our Asylums which
pass not away. The florid cheek soon roughens with
manhood, and manhood rapidly passes away; let us
therefore make diligent preparation for the Grand
Asylum above, trusting now and evermore in the merits
of the blessed Immanuel. Let us continue to cultivate
truth and practise brotherly love and charity, and all
the virtues enjoined by our Order. These only will
follow us, and, if possible, will mellow the light and
3*
30 ITLSTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
make more fragrant the atmosphere of a blessed immor-
tality in the presence of the Grand Commander of the
Universe.
Proceedings on the Address, Reports of Committees and action
of the Grand Commandery.
The address of the Grand Commander was referred to
Sir J. W. Hailman, Sir J. B. Musser, and Sir J. L. Bugh,
to arrange it under proper heads and refer it to the appro-
priate committees. After consultation, the committee ap-
pointed submitted the following report :
It is with great pleasure we learn that this Grand
Encampment has received the flattering approval of our
General Grand Master, the M. E. Sir W. B. Hubbard, as
well as a courteous and kind welcome to the ranks of the
State Grand Encampments from the Grand Encampment
of the State of New York.
We are also advised by the address of the R. E. Grand
Commander that great prosperity, with all its strengthen-
ing influences, attends our illustrious Order in every land,
and especially within the bounds of our own free and happy
country. To us who are now numbered among the list of
State Grand Encampments this is especially gratifying, and
it is to be hoped that by a zealous and Knightly bearing
in our intercourse with them, we may still further promote
the sublime princij)les of our Order. But we are also
warned — and we trust the admonition will have its due
weight — that we should not securely rest in our present
attainments and carelessly pursue the pathway of truth.
No Sir Knight can become eminent in his profession unless
he grasps determinedly his sword, and clad in the armor
of truth boldly steps forward to do battle with all that
would obstruct the pathway or progress of those Christian
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 31
principles and that pure benevolence which characterize
our noble Order.
The address is full of good advice and contains many
valuable suggestions which serve to exhibit the deep in-
terest our R. E. Grand Master (Wilson) feels in the good
work of Christian Knighthood.
Your committee recommend the adoption of the follow-
ing resolution :
Resolved, 1. That so much of the Grand Encampment
address as relates to the government of this Grand Encamp-
ment and its subordinates be referred to the Committee on
Constitution, Rules and Regulations.
2. That so much thereof as relates to the irregular orga-
nization of Encampments and the appendant Orders in
Pennsylvania, and the usages, ancient and modern, in
granting Charters, conferring the Orders of Knighthood,
etc., etc., be referred to the Committee on Land-marks and
the Principles of the Order.
3. That so much of said address as refers to the cardinal
virtues, maxims, teachings and duties of the Order be
referred to the Committee on Constitution, Rules and
Regulations.
The report was accepted and unanimously adopted.
The committee under the first and third resolutions con-
sisted of Sir John Bierer, Rev. Sir Noble Gillespie, and Sir
Chr. E. Blumenthal.
The committee under the second resolution consisted of
Sir J. B. Musser, Sir J. W. Hailman and Sir William
Wolf, to report at the next annual Conclave.
32 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Annual Address delivered by the R. E. Sir W. W. Wilson,
Grand Commander of the Grand Commandery of Pennsyl-
vania, at its Second Annual Conclave, held in the City of
Pittsburg, June, 1855.
Templars: With mingled emotions of gratitude and
of pleasure we greet you. We have come up to our
Grand Asylum, at our Second Annual Conclave, from
our Avidely-scattered homes, from the enjoyment of many
valued blessings ; we have entered her gates with thanks-
giving, her courts with praise. Although, since our
last meeting, the pestilence hath walked in darkness and
wasted at noon-day, yet not one of our members hath
fallen. With but one exception, the same protecting
care of our God hath visited our subordinate Encamp-
ment members. Life, health and j3rosperity have in a
remarkable degree followed us all ; but, alas! the excep-
tion referred to demands a passing tribute. We pause
to drop our tears upon the yet fresh grave of the
lamented McKinley — the acacia is yet green, the rich
mould of his manly form is not yet returned to dust.
Nature hath not yet brought her verdant mantle close
enough to conceal the clods of the valley which press
the bosom of our brother, and whilst we thus linger,
memory runs rapidly along the pathway of his useful
life, at every step beholding the rich fruits and cluster-
ing joys which followed his footsteps as he went about
continually doing good. Truly may we say. Death,
fond of a shining mark, aiiaed his shaft at the brightest,
most useful, and, may I not with pleasure add, the most
matured and heaven-prepared member of our Order.
In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, just as he was
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 33
retiring from a religious festival, with the love of Im-
manuel glowing in the heart, and His name yet linger-
ing on his lips, this accomplished Freemason, this
warm-hearted friend, this true Christian Knight, was
called off from his earthly labors to refreshment in the
realms of a glorious immortality.
Templars ! is this not an impressive admonition to us,
yet in the harness of life's cares and duties, to review
the past, to examine our hopes and preparations for the
future world, and thus better perform present duties,
redeeming the remnant of life from follies, superfluity
and idleness? Let us, my brethren, with loins girded
with truthj our hearts saturated with the spirit of charity,
brotherly love and good-doing, go forth to deeds of more
exalted usefulness.
From an extensive correspondence and observation,
both in this and other lands, we take great pleasure in
assuring you that Christian Knighthood is rapidly
extending her conquests and influence within the great
centres of commerce and of government, within the
beautiful and more quiet shires of rural districts ; and
even in remote capitals of semi-barbarous nations, where
the leaven of Christianity has been working, we find
Encampments multiplying, embracing the merchant
prince, the law-giver, the gospel minister, the scientific
and classical professor, as well as numerous more humble
but not less worthy artisans and husbandmen.
Within our own jurisdiction our cause has been
steadily progressing. During the past year we have
organized, in the city of Philadelphia, Keystone En-
campment, No. 5, the only legal one in that city. We
have had such indications from other sections in our
34 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPI.AR.
State as to expect that in the coming year applications
will be made for several additional organizations. A
goodly number of members have been added to our
several Asylums ; peace, harmony and union of purpose
pervade all our assemblies. We are also gratified to
find our recent organizations flatteringly alluded to in
most of our sister Grand Encampments in other States,
especially in New- York.
It must not, however, be concealed that we are labor-
ing under some disadvantages. The irregular bodies in
Philadelphia and Reading, styling themselves Encamp-
ments, and to which we made allusion in a former
address, still continue to occupy grounds prejudicial to
tlie progress of our ancient and honorable institution,
and to exercise assumed powers which we believe un-
warranted by the usages of Knighthood and inconsistent
with the spirit and regulations of Freemasonry. We
must confess we are at a loss to understand why such
organizations should persevere in their isolated condi-
tion, whose members can have no Knightly intercourse
with any Templars in the United States, and are thus
deprived of many social pleasures and other advantages
peculiar to our Order. We cannot but conclude that
these bodies continue to exist under the special counte-
nance and god-fathership of the State Grand Lodge,
located in Philadelphia — a patronage given contrary to
the wishes and feelings of three-fourths of the Masonic
Fraternity in the State. We think it unfortunate that
our Grand Lodge should be located in the extreme
border of our State, inaccessible to so large a majority
of our Lodges, witliin a large city whose numerous
Ijodges exercise a controlling influence, and by virtue
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 35
of long possession seem to think and act as if the Grand
Lodge existed specially for their use and advantage.
Thus situated, thus influenced, our " Country Lodges'^
and " Country Members/^ as we are called, meaning all
the fraternity outside of Philadelphia, seem to be de-
prived of nearly all reciprocal advantages, and are
destined to continue a merely nominal connection, the
chief bond of which is the rigid exaction of annual dues
and servile obedience. From this local centralization
of power and assumed superiority proceeds that spirit
of exclusiveness which has become so offensive to all our
sister States, but in which no county in the whole State
sympathizes except Philadelphia.
Our well-settled opinion is that no Grand Lodge
should have control over the orders of Knighthood.
Templarism is superior to, and independent of. Masonry.
The only intimate relationship existing between the two
institutions is one established by the Templars, viz. : re-
quiring all candidates for the Orders being R. A. Masons.
A Grand Lodge in fact, as such, knows nothing about
either Knighthood or R. A. Masonry; then is it not
inconsistent to claim control over these bodies ?
To the Templars in our State, who are present and
Past Masters, and possess an extensive influence as
Masons, we recommend that no effort be spared to have,
at an early Communication of our G, L., those resolu-
tions which recognize the Philadelphia illegitimate En-
campment stricken from our records, as they were
passed some six years ago, not only without our know-
ledge, but contrary to the known Avishes of all the State
except Philadelphia; and should these efforts fail of
their end, then we recommend early measures to separate
36 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAIt.
the G. L. from its present location, and make it either
itinerating or established in some central position of the
State, where all our Lodges could be represented and
where powerful sectional influence would be unknown.
In conclusion, it gives us pleasure in justice to state,
that within our own personal knowledge many of our
most gifted brethren in Philadelphia are and have been
opposed to the present position of our G. L., in recog-
nizing the Philadelphia organization of self-assumed
Temjilars as a part of the Masonic jurisdiction. Among
these we are glad to be able to name our R. W. G. M.
Hutchinson, D. G. M. Williamson, S. G. W. Phillips,
and many others.
We are satisfied that the establishment of the Orders
of Christian Knighthood in this State, on a liberal and
permanent foundation, must be preceded by the dis-
incumberment of the whole jurisdiction from any
unauthorized imitation, and from any interference of our
Grand Lodge ; the sooner, therefore, these objects shall
have been accomplished, the sooner will the glorious
principles and benefits of our Order be extended to
benefit the Masonic Brotherhood — Companions and
Templars.
The past year has been one of great commercial em-
barrassment and financial disaster. This has seriously
retarded all benevolent enterprises, and has not been
unfelt in the numerous bodies of Masonry and Knight-
hood ; but at present, from reliable indications, Ave
rejoice to say these are rapidly passing away, as the fog
before the rising sun, and we may justly anticipate great
enlargement and prosperity in the Orders of Knighthood
by the time we are next called together. But let me
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 37
admonish the rej^resentatives of our various subordinate
Encampments — be careful ; admit no one to our Asylums
who has not a well -ascertained character for sobriety,
honor and intelligence. Remember this fact, the pro-
gress, purity and prosperity of Freemasonry in all our
States, is largely indebted to the wise counsels, bright
examples, and exalted character chiefly of those whose
names stand forth most prominent in the Templar
calendar. As long as we can point to these honored
names and others of like character rapidly being enrolled
with them, we shall continue to look upon the vast
Masonic brotherhood in these United States, and say, in
the spirit of the inspired seer of old. How goodly are thy
tents, O Jacob ! and thy tabernacles, O Israel ! In this
beautiful benediction, permit me to say, that our numer-
ous Antimasonic and Antitemplar persecutors are
already virtually joining with us, and, like Balaam^s
ass, each when they would be compelled by inveterate
prejudice and ignorance to curse our ranks, can only find
their tongues unloosed when they bless us. Sir Knights !
to those who have passed through our solemn ceremonies,
who have listened to the moral teachings at our altars,
who have become acquainted with the history and
exalted principles and honorable requirements of Knight-
hood, we need scarcely say one word further in com-
mendation. Is the wisdom, the morality, the maxims
of the Bible, pure, exalted, unrivaled ? So are those
of our Order. Does the Christian religion teach and
require of its disciples, in their earthly relations, un-
wearied zeal, unsullied honor, and universal benevo-
lence? So pre-eminently does Knighthood.
Is it right in any human organization to seek the
4
38 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
welfare first of its own members, to spread the cement
of love and friendly care in the hearts of all who kneel
around the same secluded altar, and then go forth to see
that the widow and fatherless of such in their affliction
are visited and cared for? Then does our beloved
Order far excel any with which we are acquainted, and
next to the Church of our blessed Redeemer, exemplifies
the principles of pure and undefiled religion. To those
whose long connection with and mature study of our
Order have made them intimate with its practices,
principles and teachings, we need not commend our
favorite institution ; but to those who are just putting on
the harness of membership, and to those worthy com-
panions who await membership, it may be proper thus
briefly to allude to its excellence. To the observing
world without — from which many an arrow with
poisoned barb has been blindly shot at our walls — we
would gratuitously, indeed, thus describe what their
envenomed prejudice will doubtless disbelieve, and say
to them, we forgive, ye know not what ye do ; or perse-
cute, have ye not already found in persecuting us it is
hard to kick against the pricks.
Sir Knights of the Grand Encampment of Pennsyl-
vania, the committees appointed at our last annual
meeting to report on various important subjects, on
jurisprudence, on history, relations and usages of our
Order, and on business in general relating to this body
and its subordinates, I doubt not will report ably at
this meeting, and that this session will be pleasant and
profitable.
Let us engage in the several duties delegated to us
with zeal, with prudence, and with a determination to
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 39
advance the interests of Knighthood within this jurisdic-
tion to the utmost of our ability and wisdom. Thus,
indeed, may we discharge all duties here and elsewhere.
Sir Knights, from the infancy of our first Encamp-
ment organized in this State until the period when we
had the pleasure to aid in the organization of this Grand
Encampment, my best efforts, time and means have
been expended. You have been pleased to honor me,
in two successive elections, with the highest office in
this body ; and now, finding it firmly established, with
every prospect of prosperity and rapid enlargement, I
crave permission to retire from its arduous duties, pray-
ing that you may be prospered in this laudable under-
taking, and that we may all be spared to meet again in
this place, on the second Tuesday of June, 1856, and
record enlarged prosperity. Should, however, it be the
will of Providence to call any one of us hence, ere we
meet again, to part with the valued friendships, the
clustering joys, as well as the cares and disappointments
of earth, may we, or such as may be thus called, be re-
ceived into the Grand Asylum above, redeemed and
saved by the merits of the blessed Immanuel, meet on
the bright shores of our distant home those we have
loved on earth, where crozier and cross, banner and
banquet, and unspeakable joy shall succeed the fading
shadows of our earthly ceremonies, and where the
intellect, the affections and the senses shall expand and
ever flow with inconceivable delight in the presence of
God and the Lamb.
On motion, the address was referred to a special com-
mittee, viz. : Sir Knights, Bretz, Noble, and McKahan.
40 HISTORY OF THE KXIGTITS TEMPLAR.
The Committee on the Address of the G. ^I. sub-
mitted the following report :
We acknowledge, with feelings of sincere gratitude, the
hand of an overruling Providence which has protected and
fostered the prosperity of our Asylums during the past
year. Though called upon to mourn the loss of so eminent
a Knight as our late companion in arms. Sir Samuel Mc-
Kinley, we rejoice to know that he was one of those whose
deeds are his best armor in the hall of the Great Judge
whom he called Master, while a member of our earthly
Asylum. Samuel McKinley rests after the manful battle
of his life.
That portion of the address which so ably points out the
progress of our just cause, is well calculated to arouse the
best energies of every Sir Knight valiantly to extend the
borders of legal and true Knighthood throughout the
whole of our State. The admonition contained in the latter
part of the address, very justly points out to us, that the
battle of the true Christian must be fought first in his own
breast, for he is the greatest conqueror who subdues his
own passions. Let watchfulness, truth, justice, and self-
denial, worthy the pious founders of our Order, prevail in
our Asylum, and our enemies will soon have to acknowledge
that Christian Knighthood is second only to Christianity
itself in its moral and benevolent influence upon man.
With deep regret we learn that some deceived persons
in the city of Philadelphia continue associated as Knights,
in an illegal Encampment, to the injury of true Knight-
hood, but we trust they will soon see the error of their way
and seek to fight under true colors. The address contains
much which affords ample cause for the exercise of Christian
giatitude and humility.
The committee offer the following:
Resolved, That so much of the address as relates to the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 41
death of Sir Samuel McKinley, be referred to a special
committee, to report resolutions thereon.
Resolved, That so much as relates to the organization of
legal and illegal Encampments be referred to the Com-
mittee on Land Marks.
G. Z. Bretz, 1 ^
WT TVT T^ > Committee.
Wm. McKahan, J
On motion, the report was received and committee
discharged, and then the report and resolutions were
adopted, when the G. M. appointed Sirs Alfred Creigh,
J. B. Musser, and J. W. Hailman, said committee.
The committee, at the subsequent Annual Conclave
held in 1856, presented the following report:
The Special Committee appointed at the last annual ses-
sion of the Grand Encampment, submitted the following
report, through their chairman, Sir Alfred Creigh :
To the M. E. Grand Master, Officers and Sir Knights com-
posing the Grand Encampment of Pennsylvania —
The undersigned, having been appointed a committee at
the last annual communication of this Encampment, and
in accordance with the recommendation of P. G. M. Wil-
son, in his first annual address, "to educe and concisely
state those cardinal virtues, maxims, teachings and duties,
which belong to our institution, and which are required to
be practiced by all true Templars," would respectfully offer
the following, as the result of their labors :
That the subjects referred to them are of the greatest in-
terest to every Sir Knight, and to every Encampment ;
hence it required your committee to investigate the origin
of Knighthood, an institution peculiar in itself — in its ori-
ginal formation, and in its present organization — an insti-
tution whose acts are recorded on the historic page, and
4 *
42 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
uliose virtues and reiiOAvn have received the approbation
of the historian, the poet, and the statesman. There is not
a class or order of men, in any civilized country on earth
to be found, but will acknowledge the fact that the Order
of Knighthood, as practised by the General Grand En-
campment of the United States, and of which we are proud
of being a subordinate, was brought into existence during
the reign of Darius, King of Persia, about 530 years before
the birth of Christ. We speak particularly of the Red
Cross Degree — while that of the Knights Templar origi-
nated in Jerusalem, A. D. 1118, for the purpose of protect-
ing and defending the weary pilgrim on his journey to
offer up his devotions at the holy shrine of our Saviour,
and to serve as a guard to protect them from the dangers
to which these pilgrims were exposed; while at the same
time its members were sworn to cherish and sustain the
Christian religion, and its code of morals ; to protect the
female sex from the laborious oppression to which she was
doomed in that early age, and place her in her true posi-
tion, as a wife, a mother, a daughter; and to defend
destitute widows, helpless orphans, and innocent virgins.
For these noble purposes our Order was organized, and to
its accomplishment our honors are j^ledged — which, if re-
deemed, will check licentiousness, and diffuse the sublime
teachings of our institution, as embodied in the first Great
Light sf Masonry. These precepts have been handed down
to us for upwards of seven hundred years, through a long
and illustrious line of Sir Knights, whose highest aim on
earth was to diffuse and disseminate those principles, whose
direct tendency would be to elevate and ennoble man, and
place him in his true position, in every relation of life,
governed by the laws of the sternest morality.
Honor — and above all, the requirements of the funda-
mental principles of Christianity — to a correct understand-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 43
ing of which it requires every Sir Knight to recur to the
first principles of our institution, are the views by which
our ancient Grand Masters were governed.
Your committee would call the attention of this Grand
Encampment to some facts which have been educed from
the historic page of Knighthood, and in these days of inno-
vation and change seem to have been entirely overlooked ;
and if your committee shall have the pleasure of instituting
an inquiry into these various subjects, and the acts, deeds
and works again re-established in our Encampments, we
shall feel ourselves amply repaid for the time we have ex-
pended in the investigation of the matters referred to us.
NAME.
Every Knight was required to give his Christian name
and his surname at full length, the date and place of his
birth, and the name of his father and mother; also a correct
copy of his armorial bearings, that these might be embla-
zoned on his diploma.
TITLE.
In addressing a communication to a Knight, it is only
customary to prefix the word " Sir." It should be written
Sir A. B., Knt., which designates him as in possession of the
Orders of Knighthood. If the "Knight" is omitted imme-
diately after his name, according to the laws of heraldry, it
is applied to those inferior Knights who have only the title
of "Sir" prefixed to their names, and made by the word of
his majesty for some service to the Sovereign.
Knights Templar, in having their names engraven,
should remember this distinction.
vow OF PROFESSION.
In ancient times, the vows of profession were engrossed
44 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
in a book kept for that purpose, and signed by each Knight
before two witnesses.
When the profession was thus made and recorded, the
Knight was entitled to wear on the fore-finger of his right
hand, as a symbol of his perpetual union with the Order, a
gold ring, on which is enameled, on a white ground, the
Red Cross of the Order. On the inside of the ring is en-
graved the name of the Knight, date of his admission, and
name and number of his Encampment.
MEETINGS.
No Knight could appear at any meeting of the Encamp-
ment unless in full costume, or at least half-dress costume
of the Order, which is a full suit of black, with white vest,
sword and sword-belt. In Scotland, the guard receives
positive orders to permit none to pass, unless clothed in
conformity with this regulation.
HERALDRY.
Knights in ancient times were distinguished by their
banners, shields, and armorial bearings. Through these
the most ancient families of Europe seek and find their
origin and proofs of their nobility. Would it not be well,
as our country is in its infancy, and Knighthood has been
brought into existence, for some Knight to make this sub-
ject a study, and write a work exhibiting the close alliance
which exists between heraldry and Knighthood, whereby
the American Templar can trace his origin and his history.
Your committee, without enlarging on this subject, firmly
believe (and the pages of history confirm the belief) that
it is as essential for every Knight Templar to have his
armorial bearings as a Mark Master his mark.
ELECTION OF OFFICERS.
Your committee believe that uniformity in this matter
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 45
should prevail throughout every Encampment, and would,
therefore, remind the officers and Knights of this Grand
body that the old regulations required the election to take
place on the 11th of March of each and every year (or on
the day following, should the 11th March fall on Sunday),
this day being the anniversary of the death of Jacques De
Molay, while the installation should take place on Good
Friday — the Friday preceding Easter.
EXPULSION.
In Knighthood there is no such term or penalty; a
Knight may be degraded from his rank, or suspended from
the honors of Knighthood ; if the latter, it is done by
motion made and carried by two-thirds of the Sir Knights
present ; if the latter, by three-fourths, and the following
ceremonies took place in ancient times :
"If any Knight absented himself from his king's service,
leaving his colors, going over to the enemy, betraying castles
or forts, and for such crimes, he was apprehended, and
caused to be armed, and then seated on a scaiFold erected
in the church, where, after the king had sung some funeral
psalms, as though he had been dead, they first took off" the
Knight's helmet to show his face, then his military girdle,
broke his sword, cut off his spurs from his heels with a
hatchet, pulled off his gauntlets, and afterwards his whole
armor, and reversed his coat of arms. After this the
heralds cried out, 'This is a disloyal miscreant,' and with
many other ignoble ceremonies, he was thrown down the
stage with a rope."
Your committee has been particular in investigating this
point, as circumstances of a peculiar and painful nature
render it necessary for us to do so. Within the borders of
our Grand Encampment, we have residing a Knight
Templar who was received and created a K. K. C. K. T
46 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
and K. jNI. in a legally constituted Encampment in a sister
jurisdiction, and under the authority of the G. G. E. of
the United States. The fact need not be disguised that in
the Asylum he swore allegiance to the Constitution of the
State and G. G. Encampment; but in moving into this
jurisdiction, forgetful of his honor as a Knight, forgetful
that obligations which no power on earth can sunder or
break, forgetful of the degradation that must await one so
reckless, and so lost to the sanctity of his obligations, he
throws them aside, and for the sake of office, goes over to the
enemy, deserts the broad banner of the G. G. G. of the
United States, and consents to become the illegal G. M. of
the illegal G. E. of Pennsylvania. What course should be
adopted to degrade one wdio has acted so treacherously, or,
in Knightly language, so "disloyally," the superior wisdom
of I his Grand Encampment must determine.
Vs'^e leave these subjects and pass to one which requires a
close, critical, and historical investigation. History in-
forms us that Leo X. and Clement VIII. granted to the
Guardian of the Religious of St. Francis in the Holy
Land, the power of making the Knights of the Holy
Sepulchre, w'hich power first granted verbally, was after-
wards confirmed by a bull of Pope Pius IV. In 1558, the
Knights of this Order in Flanders chose Philip II., King
of Spain, their Master, and afterwards his son ; but the
Grand Master of the Order of Malta prevailed on him to
resign ; and when the Duke of Nevers assumed that quality
in France, the same Grand Master, by his interest and
credit, procured a like renunciation of him, and a confirma-
tion of the union of this Order with that of Malta.
Your committee, in referring to the Constitution of the
Grand Encampment of the State of New York (1854),
Art. 1, uses the following significant words: "This Grand
Encampment being the highest source of the Orders of
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 47
Knighthood, as conferred in Encampments of Knights
Templar in the State of New York, claims and enjoys of
right the government and superintendence of all Councils
of Knights of the Red Cross, and Encampments of Knights
Templar, Knights of Malta, Knights of the Christian
Mark and Holy Sepulchre, within its jurisdiction." And
in Art. 2 the Constitution says: "All regular assemblies of
Knights of the R. C. are called Councils; and all regular
assemblies of K. T. and K. M. and appendant Orders are
called EncampmentsJ^
From the foregoing, your committee learn that New
York at least recognizes the union of 1558, of the degrees
referred to ; if she is correct, and your committee cannot
doubt it, why are not these degrees incorporated into our
constitution as ^^ Appendant Orders f Would not expediency
alone dictate to this grand body the necessity of author-
izing the Grand Officers to procure the degrees of Knight
of the Christian Mark, and Knight of the Holy Sepulchre,
and authorize the various subordinate Encampments to
confer them in regular succession, as conferred in New
York?
Your committee would now, in a concise manner, in this
report, speak of the cardinal virtues of a Knight Templar.
A Knight, by his obligation, is required never to violate
his obligation — he must be faithful to his every engage-
ment; but should a Knight prove faithless to his engage-
ment and his obligation, the personal stigma remains in-
delibly fixed upon his character ; and in ancient times, " no
after good conduct or valor could retrieve it." Fidelity
was one of the chief virtues ; next to this virtue was Justice,
or a " settled determination to prevent or redress injuries by
whomsoever perpetrated." Upon these two virtues Templar
Masonry may be said to be erected ; destroy them, and the
beautiful structure which is erected thereon must fall and
48 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
perish ; sustain and cultivate them, and we will find in our
Asylums no Sir Knight who will not be an honor to the
institution, possessing that character which Templar
Masonry confers, and "with whose fame, fortune and
honor, we find our heart-strings entwined, and for whom,
and for the widow and orphan, and the holy institution of
a sacred religion, we may, if called upon, bare the blade,
and do better than the deeds of chivalry, even those of
Justice, Fortitude and Mercy,"
The duties which, as Knights Templar, we owe to each
other, are Brotherly Love, Humility, Forbearance, Kind-
ness, Truth, Benevolence, Charity. It is the constant
practice of these duties which will adorn the path of life
and cheer the bed of death. Your committee believe that
to define each one would not only be an insult to the in-
telligence of this Grand Encampment, but a power which
this committee do not "wish to arrogate to themselves,
satisfied that the mention of them will be a sufficient
guarantee that the duties as enumerated will be practised,
enforced and taught by every Sir Knight.
The teachings of our Order require unblemished morals
— a morality indispensable to the existence of every social
or civil compact, and bound by the force, authority and
weight of moral obligation. With this view% your com-
mittee can readily conceive that the Christian Orders of
Knighthood require a pure heart, or, in other words, pro-
fessions with principles.
Our teachings require of us, both in our Asylums and
while performing our respective parts on the vast theatre
of life, perfect harmony and perfect concord — a harmony
and a concord which prevailed at our election; hence
personal prejudices, self-interest, evil-speaking, jealousy,
shouhl never enter our hearts, but tranquillity and purity
should reign supreme. As Knights, we should be bound
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 49
together as an indissoluble band of brothers, animated by
but "one hope, and sustained by the same heavenly con-
fidence;" and in the language of a Masonic writer, "as link
after link in the chain of these attachments is dissolved at
death, let it be such that it can be renewed again, in unde-
caying strength and immortal beauty."
Your committee, in conclusion, would remark, that in
view of the scarcity of Masonic authors on the subject of
Knighthood, and the various subjects therewith connected,
would it not be well for this Grand Encampment to appoint
a Sir Knight to prepare a suitable work, as the circum-
stances demand, and the increasing demand for Masonic
literature requires ?
All of which is respectfully submitted.
Alfred Creigh,
j. b. musser,
J. W. Hailman.
On motion, the report of the committee Avas accepted,
and committee discharged. The report was then
adopted.
Annual Address delivered by the R. E. Sir Charles E.
Blumenthal, Grand Commander of the Grand Com-
mandery of Pennsylvania, at its Third Annual Conclave,
held in the City of Pittsburg, June, 1856.
Templars and Fellow-Soldiers : The Great Je-
hovah, who takes pleasure in the works of those who
serve him in singleness of heart and uprightness of
spirit, has once more permitted us to assemble in our
Grand Asylum. Cordially and with heartfelt pleasure
do I greet you ; and when I look around me, and hear
5 c
50 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the glad tidings that not one of those who met with us
a year ago in our Grand Conclave has fallen a victim
to the angel of death, I feel constrained to say, " For
He is good, for His mercy endureth for ever."
At our last annual meeting, when we came together,
the sound of mourning fell upon our ears, and we felt
bowed down in spirit ; for from our small band of true
and trusty Templars one had been called to praise his
Lord before His throne on high. It is true, we knew
it was gain to the departed, but we felt also how great
the loss to us. It was a period in the history of our
Order in this State when we hardly knew how to spare
a single trusty blade, much less one wielded by so bright
and shining a luminary as he was who had then left us.
But Templars, above all others, must ever contemplate
the sublime injunction, that our trust is not to be in
man, no matter how great and good he may be, but in
the Lord of hosts, who can make the least among us,
as well as the greatest, the instrument of his good
pleasure.
Great and unusual has been the progress of our cause
during the past year ; and, with the profoundest grati-
tude, do I direct your attention to the great success with
which Immanuel has blessed the efforts made in behalf
of our Order.
In every State our ears are greeted with the clanking
of Knightly armor. Old weapons, which had been laid
aside for years, are grasped with renewed zeal by their
owners, or burnished to shine brightly for the day of
battle when it shall come. Start not at the phrase,
" for the day of battle.'^ I have no doubt that that day
will come. I have no doubt that our Great High
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 61
Priest has permitted the revival of our Order for some
special purpose in His diviue providence. And what
else can that be but the defence of the Christian religion
in its purity ? No Knight at all familiar with history,
and particularly the history of Christian Knightliood,
can doubt this for a moment. God has a work for us
to do, or else our Order is worse than a mummery.
What Knight so recreant as even for a moment to
admit the latter? If we then concede the former, it
may well cause us to pause and reflect. Ought we not
seriously propound to us the question, Who are they
that can fitly and without hypocrisy, which is near akin
to blasphemy, assume the cross ? Those only who are
willing to take the vow of strict obedience to the Master
of the Temple not built with hands. Who practice
chastity — not monkish chastity, but that chastity which
is one of the noblest attributes of the Christian ; and
who, like the original nine, are resolved to protect the
pious pilgrim (and our Christian land) against the in-
roads of the infidel and the insidious advances of the
followers of Antichrist and antichristian dominion ?
Let us, therefore, examine well our own hearts, and
ascertain whether we are fit to call ourselves " the poor
fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ!^' Should that exami-
nation result in the discovery that there are Knights in
our ranks conscious that they, by their conduct, have
proved stumbling-blocks, let them now resolve to put
on the whole armor of God, which is the Christian
Knight's armor for his soul. Let me beseech you not
to cast a stain upon our noble Order by any act or word
unbecoming a true Christian. But if you cannot serve
Immanuel, if you find His yoke too heavy, His burden
52 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
too wearisome, then better lay down your sword, tliro^v
off your cloaks, and retire from amidst those who need
serried ranks of sound hearts to meet the struggles
before us.
But not only are old weapons re-burnished, new arms
are also everywhere forged, to supply the young and
vigorous hands of those who daily crowd into our Asy-
lums. From Maine to California we hear of the mus-
tering of our troops.
The success and prosperity of true and loyal Tem-
plarism in our own State affords us ample justification
for a Te Deum.
Last year when we met we were threatened with the
frown of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, while it
gave its countenance to a body of Masons in Philadel-
phia who illegally assumed the name of Knights Tem-
plar, and who, recognized by that Grand Body, hoped
to overawe our then feeble Grand Encampment. Last
year we could only point to four Asylums within the
borders of our State holding allegiance to legal Knights
Templary. Since then I have opened six new En-
campments.
Blumenthal Encampment, at Altoona, Blair County,
was the first among these to unfold the banner of our
Order. Situated on almost the highest position of the
Allegheny Mountains, the beams of the rising and the
setting sun gild its fair Beauseant. From all parts of
the State may we look up to it as one of our trustiest
fortresses of Templary, for it is garrisoned by high-
minded and faithful champions, who will never suffer
their standard to trail on the ground.
Next came Parke Encampment, at Harrisburg, led
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 53
on by the veteran Benjamin Parke, whose fame as a true
and trusty Mason has long ago been established during
the most gloomy and trying period of Masonry in the
State of Pennsylvania. Around him are gathered a
number of young and zealous Knights, whose names
and characters are a guarantee for the faithful services
we may expect from them. They have possession of
the Capital, and they will take care to make use of that
advantageous position to spread legal Templarism
throughout the borders of our State. Bro. C. F. Knapp,
of Bloomsburg, hearing of the gathering of our troops,
resolved to cast in his lot with us. By his aid, and that
of several others who proved worthy of the cause, I
opened Crusade Encampment at Bloomsburg, Columbia
county. Next in order came Columbia Encampment,
at Lancaster, the members of which had been detained
for some time past from taking their position in our
lines by representations wholly unfounded in fact. A
few weeks after the formation of that Asylum, a zealous
Knight in Carbondale wrote to me and urged me to
open an Encampment in that region ; and with his aid I
planted Palestine Encampment in Luzerne county.
And last, though not least in the line of new Asylums,
do we register Jerusalem Encampment, at Pottstown,
Montgomery county.
Thus while a year ago only one solitary Encampment
of Knights Templar stood as an outpost of our noble
host east of the Allegheny Mountains, now our glorious
banner floats over seven, which, together with the
veterans west of the mountains, are fully able, and will
know how to make themselves felt and respected if any
power should illegally claim jurisdiction over them.
5 «
54 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHT8 TEMPLAR.
Never, I trust, will it be said hereafter of the Knights
Templar of the Keystone State that they condescend
even to parley or listen to accommodation with the un-
believer, if he arrogantly claims authority over the
Orders of Christian Knighthood.
The irregular bodies in Philadelphia and Reading are
now so completely surrounded by our loyal Asylums
that their existence can only be of short duration.
I must not forget here to express my gratitude to our
M. E. G. G. Master, Sir Wm. B. Hubbard, for the
efficient aid he gave by issuing a circular to all the En-
campments in the United States and Canada, warning
them against holding Knightly intercourse with any one
hailing from the illegal bodies in Philadelphia ; and my
thanks are also due to Sir B. B. French, the General G.
Recorder, for the promptitude with which these circulars
were distributed. They have been of great use to us.
It is not necessary that I should occupy your time
now by an endeavor to prove how totally untenable are
the claims of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania as it
regards our Order. Our late G. Master, Sir. W. W.
Wilson, has done ample justice to the subject in his
annual address last year, and I have taken care to have
his address placed in the hands of every Templar in
Pennsylvania, as far as it was in my power to do so.
Soon after my installation in office I was impressed
with the importance of my becoming fully possessed of
tlie correct work of the Order, for the benefit and the
advancement of the Encampments under our jurisdic-
tion. For much of what I possess I will here acknow-
ledge my indebtedness to the M. E. P. G. Master, Sir
W. W. Wilson. But I was also anxious to compare
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 55
what I had acquired with the work of other Encamp-
ments. I visited, therefore, the Encampments in the
neighboring States, frequently Morton Encampment in
New York, after it had been instructed by the M. E.
G. G. Master; and finally, by a courteous invitation,
Sir B. B. French, who, as I had learned, had exempli-
fied the work before the G. G. Encampment at its late
Session in Lexington, Ky. What I saw and heard I
then carefully compared with the result of my studies,
as well as my inquiries into the past of our Order, and it
brought me to the conclusion that much foreign matter
has been added, while matter is omitted which at one
time constituted some of the distinguishino^ character-
istics of Templarism. I hope and trust that at the next
triennial convocation of the General G. Encampment
the whole work will be restored to its pristine purity.
That triennial convocation will take place in the
course of the present year (the 9tli day of September).
It appears, therefore, proper that we should prepare in
our deliberation for the changes which may be proposed
before that body. The General Grand Encampment is
our highest judiciary and executive tribunal. Its action
will, therefore, affect the whole Order in the United
States, so as either materially to advance or retard our
prosperity.
The subject of the greatest immediate importance,
which has already been brought to its notice, and which
will engage its attention, as far as I can learn, will be
an amendment to the constitution, involving some
changes in the titles of the officers. This is much
needed, for the titles as now given are not only totally
different from those which were originally bestowed
56 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
upon the officers of our Order, but they are also at vari-
ance with the good taste, simplicity and propriety which
has ever distinguished pure Templarism. The whole
matter is now in the hands of a committee. What its
report will be we cannot know at present, but I have
no doubt it will propose changes which will prove
acceptable to good taste, and make the titles more like
those in use by our ancient brethren.
But a matter of vastly more importance might, and I
hope will, be brought before that General G. Encamp-
ment, and which, I trust, will be a subject of the most
serious deliberation.
The high and holy object of Templarism is known to
you all. When the original Nine allied themselves to
put into practice what constitutes the rudimentary
principles of our Order, they sought no alliance with
any other body of men. Scantily supplied with means,
they carried out their design unaided and unsupported.
When afterwards more powerful, they sought not, but
accepted, the countenance of the Pontiff, who shrewdly
foresaw the prominent position the Knights were
destined to occupy. They accepted the rule of St.
Bernard, because it suited well the character which
every Templar was expected to sustain. But they never
held allegiance to any prince or potentate, except to
their own officers, elected by themselves.
They presented to us in their organization a rare
example of the most perfect military despotism, amalga-
mated with the leading features of a republican govern-
ment. But throughout their whole career the Knights
Templar refused all close alliance with any other body.
Throughout their whole career, amidst prosperity or ad-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 57
verslty, they stood aloof from all other associations.
Neither did they require any qualifications of their
candidates, beyond those of Knighthood (and that not
in all cases) and a good Christian character, as well as a
willingness to take and keep the vows of the Order.
This continued until the infamous Philip sought to be-
come the assassin of the Order, and when the martyr
James de Molay laid down his life in defence of the
integrity and holiness of its principles. Then, in that
unfortunate hour, was a portion of our Order induced
to seek the shelter and the countenance of the Masonic
body ; and Masonry, the same of old as now, the liberal
protectress of all the oppressed, particularly of those
persecuted for their opinions, granted the shelter so
much needed. For years did this state of things con-
tinue, and none but the initiated ever knew that the
mysteries of our Order were still transmitted in an
organized Asylum. The mantle of Masonry concealed
them from the eyes of the profane. Let us, therefore,
here acknowledge our indebtedness to Masonry for the
noble and disinterested manner in which she alone came
forward as the protectress of the persecuted Templars, at
a period when the whole world frowned upon them, and
the tongue of slander diffused poisonous lies against
their fair character.
But Masonry is too noble in its spirit to make her
deeds of benevolence and kindness the instrument of
oppression, or a pretext to gain dominion over those who
do not desire her sway over them.
I think the time has come for Templary to stand
again before the world untrammeled by entangling
alliances. The aims and objects of our Order are diifer-
58 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
ent from those of any other association. Its character
is more than semi-religious. The religion which we
profess is that of the Christian Church. Every alliance,
therefore, with any association which cannot wholly
enter into our views must more or less retard the pro-
gress of both. Masonry and Templary have each a
mission in the present age, as they had in the past, but
their respective missions differ widely. While the
former seeks to improve the moral condition of man,
without an attempt to bias his religious views, the
latter is avowedly Christian in all the characteristics of
its eiforts, and requires of its followers a profession of
Christianity as it is preached in the orthodox Protestant
churches of our country. I think the time has come,
when good and true men should again be admitted into
our Order without the qualification of being a Royal
Arch Mason, as now required. What is there in
Templarism of a Masonic character that should make
such previous step necessary? As well might the
churches require of a convert who wishes to become a
member that he should have previously professed Juda-
ism. No, let us follow the example of a portion of our
brethren in Europe, and stand again untrammeled with
such objectionable restrictions. A host of the best, the
choicest men of our land, stand ready to flock to our
rank, if we demand of them only the qualifications which
our ancient brethren required of the candidates for ad-
mission to the Order. I pledge you my word, that if
the General Grand Encampment will at its next session
reorganize Templarism in the United States in the form
nearly resembling that which existed in the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries, bur banner will in less than a year
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 59
float over more than four hundred Priories (the ancient
name for what we call now Encampments) in the States
of Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey alone.
My proposition, then, would be to adopt again the
ancient work, which, in its simplicity, beauty and happy
influence, surpasses any rite of human invention with
which I am acquainted.
Let one Grand Master be elected to rule over the
whole Templary in the United States, and let him hold
his office for four years. Let each State constitute a
Grand Priory, with a Grand Prior at its head, whose
term of office may expire annually or biennially, and
who should be elected at a Conclave of the Priors of the
subordinate Priories in the State. But to lay before
you the details of the government would require more
time than the present opportunity affords.
I offer these few hints merely to turn your attention
to a subject of vital importance to our Order, trusting
that other and better-qualified Knights may improve
upon and carry out the idea here presented.
It also appears to me that some plan ought to be de-
vised for adopting a uniform for all the members of our
Order. The regalia which is now used is defective in
many respects: 1st. It is not the dress of Templars; it
resembles that of the Knights of Malta, certainly in
color. 2d. It is too expensive and cumbrous. And
lastly, it is in some of its details inconsistent and use-
less. A\^hy should a Knight wear an apron? It is
neither ornamental nor useful to liim ; so likewise the
collar, which serves no other purpose than that of hav-
ing his jewel dangling from it, and detracts certainly
from a dignified military appearance.
60 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
As it regards a uniform, I would suggest that in this
also we copy from our ancient brethreji, with such modi-
fications as may be required by the present age. I
would therefore propose a buflP-colored coat, with the red
cross on the left breast, buff pants, white cloak bordered
with black, with a red cross bordered with black on the
left shoulder, a helmet with black plume, and Barret for
undress. The weapons, a cross-hilted sword suspended
by a sling-belt, a girdle holding the dagger and a brace
of pistols, the latter as a modern weapon, and because
no soldier at present can be considered properly equipped
Avithout fire-arms. I would add also the lance for such
companies as propose to serve on horseback. The G. G.
Conclave would also materially aid the Order by ap-
pointing several Templars in different sections of the
country to act as authorized commissioners to furnish
the Asylums with the regulation arms and uniform, at
prices fixed by a committee, and thus secure to our
Order uniformity, cheapness and good quality in the
articles required.
Every Asylum should moreover be required to have
a Senior Warden, whose duty it should be to perfect him-
self in the necessary military exercise, and to drill the
members of his Encampment once a month.
This would enable the Grand Prior to hold annually
a public review of all the forces of his Grand Priory.
Such a re-union of all the Knights of a State in a
military camp, to be held once a year, would be of great
benefit to the Order in a social and military point of
view.
Many of the changes to which I have alluded must
necessarily, if made at all, be made by G. G. Conclave,
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAE. 61
at a regular meeting. But they may legitimately be-
come subjects for your deliberation, so that your views
upon them can be laid before that Grand Body by
your representatives at its next triennial session in
Hartford.
The various committees appointed at our last annual
meeting will now lay before you their respective re-
ports. The character of the Sir Knights of which these
committees consist warrants me to assure you that they
come prepared fully and ably to report upon the subject
respectively committed to them.
Sir Knights: A year ago, when your kindness placed
in my hands the staff of the Grand Master, I deemed
my lot permanently cast within the borders of the Key-
stone State. But God disposes often differently from
the plan man proposes. I am now a resident of New
Jersey. Last April I removed from Carlisle, Pa. It is
true, I have not as yet severed my connection ^vith.
Templarism in our State. I am still a member of St.
John's Encampment, No. 4. But my residence be-
yond the State has made the duties of my office more
than usually burdensome, though I trust that I have
discharged them, if not skilfully, at least not with
relaxed zeal. Our brothers in New Jersey have already
begun to lay claim to what service I may be ready to
render the Order in that State, and I do not know how
soon I may have there to raise our Beauseant, and as a
matter of course transfer my allegiance thither. Permit
me therefore to say to you that I shall ever cherish the
Knightly courtesy, fraternal kindness and Christian
love I have experienced at your hands, and that I shall
never forget to pray to the Great Head of our Order for
6
62 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the welfare and happiness of the Knighthood and the
Knights of the State of Pennsylvania.
You will soon be called upon to elect a new Master.
My experience of the past year must be my plea to your
indulgence for presuming to offer a few words of advice.
Divest yourselves, as much as possible, of all sectional
as well as personal prejudices; remember, it is not for
the glory of the individual, but the welfare of the Order,
that a head is elected. Our position is not as yet
Avholly without its difficulties. It is true we have
gained victory after victory in the contest with illegal
Knighthood in our State. But our opponents still
occupy considerable ground. One false step, or any
relaxation in vigilance or exertion on our part, may
give them an advantage which it would take us years
to overcome. The G. Master must, therefore, be a Sir
Knight of unflinching courage, persevering energy, and
holding a position, Masonically and as a citizen, which
commands the respect of all those who know him.
Such a man will carry our banner victoriously through
the length and breadth of the State. Sir Knights,
pray, pray devoutly, that the Great Immanuel may
direct your choice to such a Templar.
In conclusion, and before you enter upon your de-
liberations, permit me to speak a Avord in behalf of the
six young Encampments now before your Grand Asylum
praying for admission. Receive them with indulgent
kindness, cherish the young champions, and they will
repay it hereafter by the service they will render in our
cause. And now may the works we are about to do
form a sweet remembrance, when we shall be called
upon to put off our armor, to lay down the sword and
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 63
buckler, and join the throng to sing around Immanuers
Throne the song of Moses and the Lamb.
On motion of P. G. M. Wilson,
Resolved, That the address of the M. E. G. Master be
referred to a special committee, to divide the various sub-
jects mentioned therein to appropriate committees.
Sir Knights Wilson, Creigh and Davage were appointed
the committee.
The Committee on the Grand Master's Address, by their
Chairman, Sir W. W. Wilson, reported that they had not
had time to perform their duty and asked to be continued.
The request was granted.
The Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers sub-
mitted the following report :
To the Grand Encampment of the State of Penyisylvania :
The Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers,
would report, that having examined the doings of the Grand
Officers, they (in their opinion) have discharged their re-
spective duties with honor and fidelity, and richly deserve
the thanks of this Grand Encampment for the Knightly zeal
manifested in promoting the interests of this Grand Encamp-
ment. They beg leave to offer the following resolution :
Resolved, That a copy of this report, with the resolution
attached, be handed to the M. E. Grand Master, Sir
Charles E. Blumenthal, for his eminent services in consti-
tuting six additional Encampments in the Keystone State ;
and that, although he has removed from our jurisdiction to
the State of New Jersey, yet he bears with him the Knightly
and courteous feelings of the Officers and Sir Knights of
this Grand Encampment.
All of which is respectfully submitted.
H. H. Frisbte, ")
Wm. Johnston, V Committee.
Geo. Passmore, j
64 HISTORY OF TPIE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
On motion, the report was accepted, and the committee
discharged ; after which the report with the resolution was
unanimously adopted.
Report and Resolutions of a Special Committee on a portion
of the Address of R. E. Sir Chas. E. Blumenthal, ivho re-
commended in his Annual Address the expediency of dis-
connecting the Orders of Christian Knighthood from
Ancient Craft Masonry. {See Address, page 56.)
The committee on the address of Past Grand Master
Blumenthal, read at the Third Annual Communication,
and which was referred to a special committee, made report
through Sir Alfred Creigh.
To the R. E. Grand Commander, Officers and Sir Knights,
composing the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania :
The committee, to whom was referred the address of
M. E. Grand Master Blumenthal, at the opening of the
Third Annual Conclave of Knights Templar, and who
were instructed to report at the present Communication,
submit the following as the result of their labors :
That while the address exhibits to the Templar a mind
thoroughly versed both in Masonic and historic knowledge,
we, as the descendants of an illustrious line of heroes of
former ages, should carefully revert to the past, scrutinize
our early history, our ceremonies, and our ritual, in order
to transmit to those who shall succeed us the very princi-
ples which gave birth to Templarism. We should care-
fully guard our institution from any innovation, or any
change, but, as far as we can, preserve it in its pristine
beauty. It is the brilliant history of our Order, and her
time-honored principles, which throw a halo of glory
around her name; it is these w^hich have elevated the
standard of our institution, under which we all love to
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 65
rally, and to the defence of which our very lives are
pledged. Thus believing, your committee approach the
consideration of this subject, impressed with the responsible
position in which we are placed, and shall endeavor to
place Templar Masonry in the very position for which she was
originally intended, and for which she was organized, and,
we might add, which our country demands. Already the
question is being agitated in some Grand Commanderies
about dissolving, divorcing, severing and sundering the
ties which have united the destinies of Ancient Craft
Masonry and the Orders of Christian Knighthood. Against
this proposition your committee would solemnly protest,
and in our report adduce such reasons as we think will
convince every reflecting mind that our position is correct
and tenable.
It is true that Templarism, as now practised in the United
States (to use the language of our learned and M. E. Grand
Master, W. B. Hubbard), is "somewhat Americanized," or,
as Sir Knight Cross says, "the useless ceremony and ex-
ceptional parts are expunged and the Orders are left a
beautiful moral institution."
Your committee need scarcely remark to the intelligent
Mason that there is not a branch of Masonry, whether we
consider the Lodge, Chapter, Council or Encampment, but
we will discover that they have all more or less become
Americanized. In every country where Freemasonry has
been planted, and has grown with its growth and strength-
ened with its strength, we find our Masonic brethren
adapting our institution to that particular government ; all
carefully observing, however, never to infringe or violate,
alter or abridge the great, unchangeable and ever-to-be-re-
vered Landmarks of our time-honored and world-wide
institution.
AVhile England, Scotland, Ireland, France, and other
6*
Q6 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
countries, liave not only assumed, but practised, the very-
principle which your committee has just given, we can see
no good reason why America, progressive America, the
Land of Freedom, and in which Freemasonry was cradled
at its birth, should not give to the Masonic world a system
of Masonry, based upon the Ancient York Kite, superior to
all others. Your committee would observe, that the pro-
gressive country in which we live demands it, the Masonic
literature of America requires it; and above and beyond all,
the healthiness of the Institution in every department of
Masonry, from the Lodge to the Encampment, ^vhich pre-
vails throughout America in her thirty-five Grand Lodges,
her twenty-eight Grand Chapters, her fifteen Grand Coun-
cils, and her eighteen Grand Commanderies, is the very
best evidence your committee can adduce to sanction the
position, that all the degrees of Freemasonry are conserva-
tively right in their ritual and lectures, as practised, taught
and enforced in America; and W'e feel no hesitancy in
making the prediction, that ere another half century shall
have elapsed, the system which we, as Americans, have
brought into existence, will prevail and be practised
throughout the habitable globe.
The first subject to Avhich your committee would call the
attention of this Grand Commandery is the union which
has been effected between the Grand Commandery under
the jurisdiction of the G. G. E. of the United States, and
the G. E,, under the jurisdiction of the G. L. of Pennsyl-
vania. That union is now perfected; the differences which
existed, being upon constitutional questions, amicably, fra-
ternally and courteously settled, and the past jealousies
and bickerings consis-ned to the tomb of oblivion, the
banner elevated by every Commandery throughout the
Keystone State, should have inscribed upon its folds the
sublime inscription, "Union and Harmony," a perfect
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPI.AR. 67
union and a perfect harmony, by which all Sir Knights
will be embraced in the arms of true brotherly love and
affection, and among whom will be found true and trusty
soldiers, standard-bearers and officers, to carry out and
enforce the principles of the Orders of Christian Chivalry.
Your committee fondly trust that every Sir Knight will be
henceforward found at his post, ready to perform his duty
in promoting the peace, the honor, and the happiness of the
Order of Knighthood in the State of Pennsylvania, or in
the language of a distinguished Sir Knight of New York,
"that peace will reign within our borders, that the reful-
gent beams of the rising sun will greet our fair banner,
floating in the van of true and courteous Knights, free from
petty jealousies or unknightly bickerings. Our serried
ranks have grasped the sword of truth, standing shoulder to
shoulder in the field, and henceforth must faithfully watch
upon the towers and outposts of our jurisdiction."
The next subject of the address which claims the atten-
tion of your committee, is the title of Officers. As these
have undergone some changes at the late session of the
General Grand Encampment of the United States, held in
Hartford, in September last, and which is well known to
every Sir Knight, it is unnecessary for your committee to
dwell upon that subject. The Constitution of that Grand
Body is the law by which we are to be governed, and to
its mandates we bow submissively.
But the subject of the address which, of all others, de-
mands an expression from this Grand Commandery, is the
position assumed "that good and true men should again be
admitted into our Order without the qualification of being
a Royal Arch Mason, as now required." And the same
address also adds, "let us follow the example of a portion
of our brethren in Europe, and stand again untrammelled
with such objectionable restrictions." He also says, "a
68 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
host of the best, the choicest men of our hind stand ready
to flock to our ranks, if we demand of them only the quali-
fications which our ancient brethren required of the candi-
dates for admission to the Order."
Of all questions which can be presented to the mind of a
Templar this is by far the most important. It reverts to
the infancy of our Institution, and we endeavor to catch
the very spirit, nay the very principles, which actuated and
governed the founders of the Order of Christian Chivalry.
The stream of time bears us along, century after century,
and the subject remains in almost impenetrable darkness.
It is true, occasionally a ray of light darts across our path
from the historic page, but still there is darkness. The
light which we have from the history of the past, the
teachings of our institution, the sublime ceremonies through
which the novitiate passes, all voluntarily and indelibly
stamp upon his mind the internal evidence that, with all the
light and all the knowledge he has received in all the de-
grees of Ancient Craft Masonry, the candidate is scarcely
prej^ared to enter upon the solemnities of Christian Knight-
hood. We belong to an Illustrious Order, and in
times long since gone by were styled " the poor fellow-
soldiers of Jesus Christ and of the Temple of Solomon."
To our Order was committed the duty of defending the
religion of Immanuel, and our fathers consequently
assumed the Cross as their emblem; to us the sword is
given to wield in God's faith and fear ; to us is revealed in
so clear and forcible a manner our love to God, our faith
in Christ, our benevolence to mankind, our charity to the
poor and distressed, in conformity with the principles and
statutes of our Order, that the mind of man can scarcely
comprehend the subject. If our solemn ceremonies have
such an effect upon the mind of the weary pilgrim as trials
of his faith and honesty, of his courage and constancy, as
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 69
he passes through the solemn scenes and ceremonies of our
Asylum, after having been prepared for these trials by
taking his degrees of Ancient Craft Masonry, your com-
mittee are at a loss to conceive and to divine what effect
our mysteries would have upon a candidate who has never
taken any degree in Masonry. We can conceive no other
picture of the subject than that a cloud of darkness would
rest upon our Asylum, our ceremonies would not be appre-
ciated, and the Sir Knights would scarce ever convene.
Such would be the shock our institution would necessarily
receive from the intended death-blow. It is a truth that
Freemasonry, the term including the degrees of Ancient
Craft Masonry and the Orders of Christian Knighthood, is
a religious institution. In the former, our rites and cere-
monies refer to the book of the law; the latter is based
alone upon the second Covenant, the union of the two
founded upon the only Great Light of Masonry, inculcating
the sublime doctrines of Faith in God, Hope in immortality,
Charity to all mankind, and ineffable and eternal happi-
ness in that Asylum not made with hands, eternal in the
heavens. From the knowledge we therefore derive from
the internal evidence and the usages of the Order, your
committee never can consent that a separation shall take
place, that the bond of union shall be dissolved, and that
the great purposes for which " our Great High Priest has
permitted the revival of our Order for some special purpose
in His divine providence," shall be frustrated. If Free-
masonry has preserved the Book of the Law, surely the
Orders of Christian Knights can protect and defend its
principles.
But to the proof from the historic page, that Masonry
and Knighthood have sailed down the stream of time
together, Anderson, in his Book of Constitution, page 90,
says : By reference to the reign of Henry II., A. D. 1154,
70 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the Lodges in England were then superintended by Knights
Templar, which time the Knights Templar built their
Temple in Fleet street, London.
The same author, p. 91, says: The Templars built their
Domus Dei at Dover, A. D. 1220.
Again, on p. 105, the same author uses the following
significant language : The Grand Master and Fellows of
the Order of St. John, at Rhodes (now at Malta), assem-
bled at their Grand Lodge and chose King Henry their
Protector, A. D. 1500.
Reghelline says: Eighty-one Masons, under the con-
duct of Garimont, Patriarch of Jerusalem, crossed over
into Europe in 1120. They went to the Bishop of Upsal,
Avho received them very favorably, and by this means the
Bishop was initiated into the mysteries brought from the
Copts ; afterwards they entrusted to him the sacred depot
of these doctrines, rites and mysteries. The Bishop of
Upsal took care to conceal them in the subterranean vault
of the tower of the four crowns, which at that time was the
treasure-house of the King of Sweden. Nine of these
Masons, amongst whom was Hugh de Payens, established
in Europe the Order of the Templars. They afterwards
received from the Bishop of Upsal the depot, which had
been confided to him, and which contained the dogmas,
mysteries and doctrines of the Coptic priests. It was by
this act that the Templars subsequently became the con-
servators and guardians of the mysteries, rites and cere-
monies brought from the East by the Masons, and the
Levites of the true light. (Gourdin 5.)
Thory says that the Templars governed the Masonic
Order in England from 1155 to 1199.
Lawrie says that in 1244 the Templars were Free-
masons, and that at some of their meetings those Syrians
who were also Masons were admitted.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 71
The old lectures say : That the reason why our Lodges
are dedicated to God and the Holy St. John is, that in the
time of the Palestine wars the Mason Knights, having
united with those of St. John of Jerusalem to fight against
the infidels, they placed themselves under the protection of
that Saint, and proving victorious in battle, they agreed,
after returning thanks to God, that the Lodges of Masons
should in future be dedicated to him.
After the death of Jacques de Molay, in 1313, Gourdin
informs us that some endeavored, alone and unaided,
secretly to preserve their beloved Order according to the
rules by which in its day of glory it was governed. Some
sought refuge in the society of Free and Accepted Masons,
in order that they might there enjoy, with impunity, the
religious dogmas which they had brought with them from
the East — the pure doctrines of the primitive Christian
Church.
Our P. G. Master, Sir Chas. Blumenthal, admits the fact
in his address, " that in that unfortunate hour (when De
Molay laid down his life in defence of the integrity and
holiness of our principles) a portion of our Order was in-
duced to seek shelter and the countenance of the Masonic
body; and Masonry, the same of old as now, the liberal
protectress of all the oppressed, particularly of those perse-
cuted for their opinions, granted the shelter so much
needed. For years (says our P. G. Master) did this state
of things continue, and none but the initiated ever knew
that the mysteries of our Order were still transmitted in an
organized Asylum. The mantle of Masonry concealed
them from the eyes of the profane."
During the Reformation many Knights Templar and
Order of St. John embraced Protestantism and fraternized
with the Freemasons. Again, we find that the Sterling
Ancient Lodge conferred the degrees of K. A., Red Cross,
72 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the Sepulchre, Knights of Malta and K. T., until the begin-
ning of the last century, when two Lodges were formed.
In 1500 the Grand Masters of Knights of Malta were
patrons of Masonry.
At the introduction of Ancient Craft Masonry into the
colonies of England, now the United States, the degrees of
Knighthood were conferred subsequent to Freemasonry.
Its history has become identified with the history of our
country, and let a revolutionary and innovating spirit be
introduced, who can foresee the end and all its con-
sequences? For seven centuries and a half they have
traveled hand in hand, dispensing aid to the poor and the
afflicted, and protecting weary and wayworn pilgrims.
Let it not be said, that in the middle of the nineteenth
century, with all the light of history about and around us,
that the Grand Commandery of the State of Pennsylvania,
emphatically and truly styled the Keystone of the Templar
Arch, removed that ancient Keystone, and threw into ruins
the most magnificent Temple which the mind of man ever
conceived to enforce upon our minds, through ceremonies
and emblems, lessons of morality, virtue and religion.
With regard to a costume, your committee would recom-
mend the appointment of a committee to report upon this
subject to the present Conclave now in session.
Your committee would oflTer the following preamble and
resolution :
Wiereas, Ancient Craft Masonry is based upon the
"Book of the Law" (generally known as the Old Testa-
ment), from which we derive our ceremonies, ritual and
landmarks; all of which are enforced upon our minds as a
type only of that which is to follow; while the Orders of
Christian Knighthood are founded upon the Old and New
Testament; from these, the principles of both Masonry
and Christian Knighthood are derived; and thus they are
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 73
recognized as the only infallible rule of faith and practice
among Freemasons;
And whereas, The Truth and the Cross are the two
great instrumentalities employed in Christian Knighthood
to improve our social relations ; " Truth draws forth the
ardor and tenderness of the heart towards Him who was cruci-
fied, while the Cross sheds its fragrance there, and minds
horn in sin there receive the seal of the Cross and its hope
of immortality;" therefore
Resolved, That the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania,
in solemn Conclave assembled, after mature deliberation
upon the subject, with the weight of heavy responsibilities
and obligations pressing upon every Sir Knight, cannot
CONSENT that the sacred ties which have united Ancient
Craft Masonry and the Orders of Christian Knighthood
together for seven centuries and a half shall be sundered,
separated or divorced ; but with the spirit which becomes
every Knight Templar, armed with the panoply of Truth,
will FROWN INDIGNANTLY upon any movement of the kind,
calculated in its effects to produce ruin and disaster to the
ONE, and anarchy and confusion to the other ; and bury amid
the ruins of the Temple, not only the principles which were
established by our three Grand Masters, but even those
which make the Cross triumphant not only "in its narrative,
its truth, its love, its power, but in its loveliness."
W.W.Wilson, ^
Alfred Creigh, [-Committee.
Thomas Da v age, )
The report of the Special Committee was accepted and the
committee discharged. After discussion, the report, together
with the preamble and resolution, were unanimously adopted.
The Committee on the " Irregular Organization of En-
campments and the Appendant Orders in Philadelphia,"
submitted the following report, June, 1855:
7 D
74 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
To the M. E. Grand Encampment of Knights Templar of
Pennsylvania :
The committee to whom was referred that part of the
Grand Master's Address at the last annual Communication
which relates to the ^'Illegal Association of Knights Templar
in Philadelphia,^^ respectfully submit the following report:
The subject entrusted to the committee involves a
principle of no ordinary character, and which, if admitted
to be legitimate, would introduce into the Masonic juris-
prudence a novel and extraordinary feature, to wit: the
right and power of a Masonic body to revive its own exist-
ence after a lapse of some twenty years' total extinction.
In order to understand the true position of this associa-
tion in Philadelphia it will be necessary to examine the
history of Knighthood in Pennsylvania, so far at least as
any history thereof is within our reach.
In 1814 a Grand Encampment was organized in Phila-
delphia by delegates from New York, Maryland, Pennsyl-
vania and Delaware. Soon after this organization at least
one Encampment was constituted in Philadelphia, under a
warrant from this Grand Encampment. This Grand
Body, after having existed for a number of years, ceased
operations and became extinct. The subordinate in Phila-
delphia, under the same influence, also ceased to meet and
labor, and it too became extinct. After a lapse of some
twenty years or more of total extinction and inactivity,
this subordinate Encampment in Philadelphia assumes the
power to recuscitate and revive its own existence, and now
claims to be a lawfully-constituted Encampment of Knights
Templar and appendant Orders.
The existence of this association being so directly
opposed to the established usages and customs of the Fra-
ternity, your committee deem it unnecessary to investigate
its legality, especially so in view of the fact that this Eu-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 75
campment became the subject of consideration and action
of the General Grand Encampment of the United States
in 1850, and was by that Grand Body declared to be
"illegal and justly subject to condemnation and non-intercourse
on the part of all regular Encampments.^'
Since our last annual Communication we have learned
through a reliable source that a so-called Grand Encamp-
ment of Knights Templar had been organized in Phila-
delphia by authority and under the jurisdiction of the
Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania. This extraordinary as-
sumption of power and authority on the part of the Grand
Lodge involves a question of great magnitude and im-
portance to the whole Fraternity, to wit : Is a Grand Lodge
of Ancient Craft Masonry the fountain and source of all
Masonic power and authority within the limits of her juris-
diction ?
Whether such power and authority over Ancient Craft
or Symbolic Masonry is legitimately vested in a Grand
Lodge is not the province of your committee to investigate ;
but whether such power and authority lawfully extends
beyond Symbolic Masonry, including Christian Knight-
hood, we conceive to be a question within the range of our
duty, and we will accordingly proceed to examine it. And
we remark, in the first place, that if the power and author-
ity claimed by the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania is legiti-
mate, then such power and authority has been misconceived
by the combined wisdom and intelligence of all other Grand
Lodges both in Europe and America, for in no instance
can we find a precedent where any other Grand Lodge has
ever claimed or exercised jurisdiction over the Orders of
Christian Knighthood.
The power, jurisdiction and authority of a Grand Lodge
constitute a part of the usages and customs of the Order,
and as such are unalterable and unchangeable.
76 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
If the jurisdiction and authority of a Grand Lodge were
subject to its own regulation and extension at pleasure,
there would be no end to alteration and invasion of the
rights of one Grand Lodge by another. The established
usages and customs of the Order, whether found in the
jurisdiction of a Grand Lodge or in anything else pertain-
ing to the Order, are sacred and inviolable, and subject to
no change or alteration. This being an universally
acknowledged j^rinciple, let us inquire what has been the
usage and custom since the origin of the Orders of Christian
Knighthood in the organization of Encampments of
Knights Templar.
Christian Knighthood had its origin in the Crusades, in
or about the year 1118, and its primary object was the
protection of the pilgrim in his journey to the Holy City.
Hugh de Payens and Godfrey Adelman, together with
seven other young French noblemen, bound themselves
together by a solemn obligation to defend the pilgrims from
their infidel enemies, and they proceeded to the Holy Land
to carry into effect the objects of their organization. They
enacted their own laws and made such regulations for their
own government as the objects of their association and the
circumstances by which they were surrounded demanded.
Daring their stay in the Holy Land great acquisitions
were made to their number, and their virtues and well-
earned fame excited the admiration of all Europe, and
particularly of European princes, who, after their return
from the Holy Wars, conferred upon them large estates —
after which numerous Commanderies were organized, over
each of which was placed an officer, called Prior, or Emi-
nent Grand Commander.
From this time, for many successive years, the Order
passed through various vicissitudes and serious persecutions,
and was governed by a succession of Grand Masters, when
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 77
it finally passed into English hands by the election of Sir
Sidney Smith, Grand Master, in 1838. The Templars who
returned from the Holy Wars with Kichard the First
established three Encampments in England — one in Lon-
don, one in Bristol, and one in York ; and these three En-
campments are the parent head of Christian Knighthood in
England and America.
Up to the time when the Order passed into the English
hands there is no evidence that it ever was under the
jurisdiction of, or in any way identified with, Ancient Craft
Masonry. The Templars were not subject to any tax or
tribute to Freemasonry, but were left to enjoy and dispose
of their vast possessions in that way which suited their own
dispositions. They enacted their own laws, selected their
own officers, and established their own Subordinates with-
out the interference of any Grand Lodge.
An opinion is prevalent, and maintained by some
brethren, that the articles of union between the two Grand
Lodges in England, in 1813, placed the Orders of Christian
Knighthood under the protection and jurisdiction of the
United Grand Lodge of England. The fallacy of this
opinion will readily be perceived by a reference to the
articles of union ratified by the Grand Lodges of England,
in December, 1813, as published in the "Masonic Library"
by Bro. Hyneman of Philadelphia, Art. 2, Vol. i., No. 8 :
" It is dtclared and pronounced that pure Ancient Masonry
consists of three degrees and no more, viz: E. A., F. C, and
M. 31. , including the Supreme Order of the Holy R. J..," and
then it is added, " hut this article is not intended to prevent
any Lodge or Chaptter from holding a meeting in any of the
Degrees of the Orders of Chivalry according to the Constitu-
tions of the said Orders^ It is contended that this proviso
places the matter beyond dispute ; but the very fact of in-
serting this proviso makes the conclusion irresistible that
7*
78 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
SO far from claiming authority and jurisdiction over these
Orders, it is expressly disclaimed by a permission, or rather
a disinclination to interfere with their rights and privileges
as an independent Order, and this inference is strengthened
by the article itself, in declaring " That Ancient Masonry
consists of three degrees and no more," unmistakingly indi-
cating that the jurisdiction of a Grand Lodge is confined to
Ancient Craft Masonry.
Your committee are also aware that an opinion is
prevalent among Knights Templar "that the Orders of
Christian Knighthood are dependent upon Freemasonry for
its cement, and that the principles that govern one govern
both," simply "because no man can become a Knight
Templar who is not a Mason of the R. A. Degree." This
opinion we conceive to be founded on error; there is no
evidence, nor any usage or custom in the Order, which
warrants the conclusion. To argue that because a man
must be a R. A. M. before he can be a Knight Templar (it
therefore follows as a necessary consequence that Knight-
hood is dependent upon Freemasonry for its cement, and is
therefore governed by the same principles), would be to
argue upon false premises; for, although such a regulation
does exist in our Order, it must be borne in mind that it
was incorporated into their laws by the Templars them-
selves, and was not prescribed for the Order by Free-
masonry.
But the fallacy of this position will still more clearly
appear if we compare the origin, design and laws of
Christian Knighthood with Ancient Craft or Symbolic
Masonry.
Ancient Craft Masonry had its origin in architecture,
and maintained its operative character until the building
of the Temple at Jerusalem by King Solomon, when it
assumed a speculative character, which it has ever since
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 79
maintained. This change in the institution gave it the
character of a "sublime system of morality, veiled in alle-
gory, and illustrated by symbols and emblems" — a system
in sublimity unequaled by any human institution, and ex-
celled alone by the Christian religion. It has never
claimed to be a religious institution, nor has it ever
approached any nearer to Christianity than to enforce the
practice of moral and social virtues. Her doors are open
to men of all religions — the Christian, the Jew, the Turk,
the Musselman, and the Mohammedan have equal access to
her sublime mysteries — requiring only from candidates for
admission a firm belief in the existence of a Supreme Being,
the Ruler and Governor of the Universe ; in short, it is the
boast of Freemasonry that she unites in one common fold
men of all religions. On the other hand. Christian
Knighthood is essentially a religious Order, founded upon
the Christian religion and the practice of that system of
Christianity established by the sufierings, the death and
resurrection of the Son of God. It was essentially Christian
in its origin, and has maintained that character ever since.
The doors of the Asylum ever have been, and ever must be,
eflfectually closed to all but the true and sincere believer in
the Christian religion and its Divine author ; and yet it is
contended that the principles that govern one institution
also govern the other, and th^t the Orders of Knighthood,
which are founded upon and identified with the Christian
religion, are dependent upon Freemasonry for its cement.
The idea is too absurd to admit of further argument.
It is true, the Templars have incorporated many of the
ceremonies and adopted most of the usages and customs of
Ancient Craft Masonry into their Order, because they were
suitable (but not essential) to the existence of Christian
Knighthood. As an Order, founded upon the Christian
religion, it could have existed independent of any ceremony
80 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
or any usage or custom of Symbolic Masonry, for its aim
and object soar far above the aim and design of Ancient
Craft Masonry. It is contended that inasmuch as the
Order of the Knights of the Red Cross has been incorpo-
rated into our Encampments, and as that Order is intimately
connected with the K. A. Degree, Christian Knighthood is
therefore identified with Ancient Craft Masonry.
It is true that the circumstances which gave rise to that
Order of Knighthood are intimately connected with the
circumstances peculiar to the R. A. Degree; but this Order,
in its origin, had no connection with Christian Knighthood,
nor has it ever since become identified with it. In Europe
it is to this day a separate and distinct Order; it was in-
corporated into our Encampments by the General Grand
Encampment of the United States, not as a part of Christian
Knighthood, but simply because it was an Order of Knight-
hood, and is now conferred as a preparatory step to
Christian Knighthood.
In conclusion, as a matter of interest to Templars
generally, and as a means of correct information as to the
true source and fountain of authority and jurisdiction over
the Orders of Christian Knighthood in the United States,
we beg leave to subjoin the following:
In 1805 the first Grand Encampment of Knights
Templar in the United Stated was organized at Providence
by delegates from Massachusetts and Rhode Island ; and,
in 1816, this Grand Encampment sent three delegates to a
General Convention of Knights Templar in New York
city, at which time the General Grand Encampment of the
United States was duly organized. This General Grand
Body has since that time continued in successful operation,
and it now numbers twenty-eight Subordinate State Grand
Encampments, all acknowledging its jurisdiction ; and we
trust the time is not far distant when every State in the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAE. 81
Union can boast of a Grand Encampment, subordinate to
the General Grand Encampment of the United States.
Your committee offer the following:
Resolved, That the General Grand Encampment of the
United States is the only true source and fountain of
authority and jurisdiction over the Orders of Christian
Knighthood in the United States.
Resolved, That the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, in
authorizing the organization of a Grand Encampment of
Knights Templar in Philadelphia, and assuming jurisdiction
over the same, has invaded a jurisdiction independent of
Ancient Craft Masonry, and over which, as an Order, she
has no lawful authority, either by usage or custom.
Resolved, That all Knightly intercourse between the Sir
Knights acknowledging the jurisdiction of this Grand En-
campment and the so-called Knights Templar in Phila-
delphia is hereby strictly interdicted.
All of which is respectfully submitted.
J. B. MUSSER, 1
^TT x\r f Committee.
vVm. Wolf, J
On motion, the report was accepted and the committee
discharged. Whereupon the report and resolutions were
adopted.
The following correspondence was had at the date of the
foregoing report and published with the proceedings :
To the proceedings of the Grand Encaihpment of Knights
Templar of the State of Pennsylvania the Committee of
Publication have deemed it advisable to add the following
remarks upon the illegal Encampments organized in Phila-
delphia and Reading under the sanction of the Grand
Lodge of the State of Pennsylvania. The letter was writ-
ten by Sir Knight Alfred Creigh, P. G. Commander, En-
campment No. 2, in reply to queries propounded to him by
D*
82 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Sir Knight C. Moore, Editor of the Cincinnati Masonic
Keview. In the June number of the Review, Sir Knight
Moore says : Below we have the reply of Sir Knight Creigh,
which will throw much light on the disputed question. It
is proper for us to say that the letter of Sir Knight Creigh
was laid before the D. G. M. (Musser) of the Grand En-
campment of Pennsylvania (that which derives its author-
ity from the G. E. of the United States), and that it meets
his sanction and approval, as will be seen by the following
note to ourself : —
Office of the D. G. M. of the
G. E. OF Pennsylvania,
Washington, April 16, 1855.
C. Moore :
Dear Sir and Brother : — Having examined a letter of P.
G. C. A. Creigh, Esq., in reply to your inquiries in relation
to the existence of two Grand Encampments of Knights
Templar in Pennsylvania, and believing it to be the duty
of any Sir Knight to correct error wherever found, I cheer-
fully endorse the position assumed by Brother Creigh in
his reply in reference to the Orders of Christian Knight-
hood, and believe the publication thereof will have a ten-
dency to diffuse light and correct information among the
Craft in general, and among Knights Templar in par-
ticular.
Very truly yours, in Knighthood,
J. B. Musser, D. G. M.
In addition to the above recommendation, the committee
would add the following testimonial of approval from the
present M. E. G. Master of this State, dated
Carlisle, July 7, 1855.
Dear Sir Knight : — In reply to your favor of the 29th of
June, 1855, permit me to say, I heartily approve of having
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 83
the article referred to inserted as an appendix, for I coin-
cide fully in Sir Knight Creigh's views as there expressed.
Yours Fraternally,
Charles E. Blumenthal,
G. M. G. E. K. T. of Pennsylvania.
With these preliminaries, we submit the letter of Sir
Knight Creigh. — Editor Review.
Sir Knight Moore : — It is my intention to respond to
your inquiry with regard to the organization and existence
of the two Grand Encampments, both claiming jurisdiction
over the degrees of Christian Knighthood in Pennsylvania.
After mature deliberation, I cautiously approach the
consideration of a subject in which some of the principles
of our time-honored institution are seriously involved, and
it shall be my intention to place these intricate questions be-
yond even a reasonable doubt, so that the Masonic world can
readily determine that the organizations of Knights Tem-
plar existing in Philadelphia and Reading were contrary
to the ancient landmarks and acknowledged constitutions
of the Order ; premising, however, that I disclaim all in-
tention of impugning the motives or wounding the feelings
of those who may differ with me on the questions necessa-
rily involved in the issue.
It is not my intention, in an essay of this character, to
inquire into the introduction of the degrees of Knighthood
into the United States, nor their connection with Ancient
Craft Masonry. Two of the earliest Masonic writers in
Pennsylvania have settled both these questions, and which
have a direct bearing upon the inquiry you have made,
and, therefore, it is proper at this time to call your atten-
tion to it.
Dr. William Smith, in an edition of the Ahiman Rezon,
published by order of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania,
84 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Nov. 22, 1781, on page 16 of the preface to the work, says,
" were it necessary we might proceed to show that from this
Ancient Fraternihj (Masonry) the Societies or Orders of
Warlike Knights, and even some religious Orders and
Societies, have borrowed many of their wisest institutions
and most solemn usages." This is the only reference to
Knighthood in the whole work, in which, however, the
Royal Arch is recognized as the completion of Ancient
Craft Masonry ; for on page 50 of the same work Dr.
Smith says : " The Master of a particular Lodge has the
right and authority of calling his Lodge or congregating
his members into a Chapter at pleasure, upon the applica-
tion of any of the brethren." Also, on page 104, the same
author says : " The members of the Grand Lodge of Penn-
sylvania, and all warranted Lodges, so far as they have
abilities or members, have an undoubted right to exercise
all degrees of the Ancient Craft; and consequently the
Eoyal Arch."
To ascertain what was originally considered Ancient
Masonry, I must refer you to the " rules and regulations
for the government of the Grand Royal Arch Chapter,
held under the protection of, and supported by, the Grand
Lodge of Pennsylvania, unanimously agreed to and estab-
lished at a grand Chapter held in Philadelphia, Feb. 24,
1798, and confirmed in the Grand Lodge, 5th March,
1798." These rules and regulations are published in the
" Freemason's Companion, or Pocket Preceptor," by John
Phillips, and printed in Philadelphia, 1805, and dedicated
to the M. W. G. M. Israel Israels, Esq. On page 130 I
find these words : "Ancient Masonry consists of foitr degrees,
the three first of which are that of the Apprentice, the Fel-
low Craft, and the sublime degree of Master ; and a brother
being well versed in these degrees, particularly that of
Master, is eligible on due trial and examination, by the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 85
Chief of the Chapter, to whom he shall have applied, and
by them found worthy of being admitted to the fourth de-
gree, the Holy Royal Arch." On page 127 of the same
work I find that at a meeting of the Grand Lodge of
Pennsylvania, held Nov. 25, 1793, a preamble and resolu-
tions were adopted, approving the organization of a Grand
Royal Arch Chapter, and the preamble on the other page
referred to is couched in these words : " Whereas, the
Supreme Masonic jurisdiction over all Lodges of Ancient
York Masons, held in Pennsylvania, has uniformly been,
and is duly and legally, vested in the Grand Lodge of
Pennsylvania ; and whereas, it is the acknowledged right
of all regular Warranted Lodges, so far as they have ability
and members, to make Masons in the higher degrees, and
as it is possible that some difference may exist or innova-
tions may be attempted to be introduced in those high
degrees, which for want of some proper place of appeal may
create schism among brethren ;
" And whereas, it is the prevailing wish of the Royal
Arch Masons that a Royal Arch Grand Chapter should
be opened under the authority of this Grand Lodge ;
therefore,
" Resolved, unanimously, That a Grand Holy Royal Arch
Chapter be opened under the immediate sanction of the
Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania."
In the same author, page 125, in the charge to a newly-
exalted Companion, are to be found these words : " Having
attained this degree, you have arrived at the summit of
Ancient Masonry."
Having thus traced Ancient Masonry in Pennsylvania,
from 1781 to 1805, to consist of four degrees, the question
will at once arise to the inquiring mind, At what time did
the several Orders of Knighthood become connected with
the Masonic Institution ? — for Webb, in his Monitor, page
8
86 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
308, edition of 1818, says that " the Orders of Knighthood
compose no part of the system of Freemasonry ;" let this
be, however, as it may, for the author in his edition of
1812, page 219, says, " That a convention of Knights Tem-
plar was holden at Philadelphia, 12th of May, 1797, for
the purpose of taking into consideration the propriety and
expediency of forming a Grand Encampment." Which
Grand Encampment was organized on the 19th of May,
1797 ; how long it continued in existence we have not the
means of ascertaining. But in 1805, a United States
Grand Encampment was organized by a Convention held
in Providence, of the State Grand Encampments then in
existence; but when this Grand Body ceased we do not
know.
From the circular of St John's Encampment, No. 4,
dated Philadelphia, May 25, 1849, we learn that a State
Grand Encampment was in existence in 1814, from which
Encampment No. 4 derived her authority to work ; but in
1825 this Grand Body adjourned, and has never to this
day been re-organized. But it appears this subordinate
Encampment, No. 4, continued to meet from 1825 to 1835,
when it temporarily adjourned, although the constitution
from which it derived its authority to act requires every
Encampment to make a return in every year, otherwise the
warrant should be forfeited, unless satisfactory reasons shall
be given and admitted; although it is contended by St.
John's Encampment that the constitution was altered on
the 15th of June, 1823, requiring, besides a failure of re-
turns for two years, that six months' notice should be given
by the Grand Encampment, and hence it is that the G. E.,
having ceased in 1825, and St. John's Encampment having
no Grand Body to report to, continued to meet until 1835,
when it adjourned and did not assemble until April, 1848 ;
after having laid dormant from 1835 to 1848, it reassem-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 87
bled, because the Constitution of the G. E. of Pennsylvania,
Sec. 2, Art. 2, says that "the officers thus elected shall con-
tinue in office until their successors are duly elected."
It is not my intention to discuss the question of this
"holding-over principle ;" suffice it to say, that it is con-
trary to Masonic law and Masonic usages, and that officers
cannot claim to hold their office through a series of years;
hence it is conclusive that the reassembling of Encamp-
ment No. 4 was wrong and unmasonic.
In support of this position, I would remark that Pitts-
burg Encampment, No. 1, deriving her charter from the
General Grand Encampment of the United States, which
was organized on the 22d of June, 1816, and at its triennial
meeting was reported to have Grand and Subordinate En-
campments in twenty-eight States, issued a circular, Sep-
tember 8, 1848, in which, after stating the organization of
the Grand Encampment and the cessation of Encampment
No. 4, uses the following pertinent language : " The creature
and creator both being dead, we cannot conceive of any
power to resuscitate either," and in view of these circum-
stances. Sir Knights were cautioned against visiting the
said illegal association or holding fellowship with any one
hailing therefrom.
The General Grand Encampment at its triennial meeting
held in Boston, in 1850, sustained Pittsburg Encampment,
No. 1, and from the printed proceedings of that General
Grand Body, page 32, I extract the following : " Your
committee agree to the conclusion arrived at by the Grand
Master, that the association at Philadelphia, styling itself
•-an Encampment of Knights Templar and the appendant
Orders, is illegal and justly subject to condemnation and
non-intercourse on the part of all regular Encampments."
Having disposed of St. John's Encampment, No. 4,
which is the oldest of the Philadelphia "illegal Encamp-
88 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
ments," we now turn to Philadelphia Encampment, No. 5,
Union Encampment, No. 6, and Heading Encampment,
No. 7, which at present constitute the illegal Grand En-
campment of the State of Pennsylvania, and the officers'
names of which were published in your last Review.
From some unaccountable cause, it appears that there
were no other Subordinate Encampments under the charter
of 1814, and consequently a new experiment must be re-
sorted to to add an additional Encampment, so that a State
Grand Encampment could be organized. "The light
shineth in darkness," and some of the members of No. 4
believed that the Grand Lodge is "the source of all
Masonic authority," and that the Grand Lodge could
authorize the degrees of Knighthood to be conferred, in di-
rect opposition to their very resolutions, etc., which I have
explained to you at the beginning of this communication.
Accordingly a number of Sir Knights applied to a Lodge
of Master Masons for the sanction of its warrant to open an
Encampment of Knights Templar ! A committee was ap-
pointed who reported favorably, which report was adopted,
although two brethren dissented. The subject went before
the Grand Lodge of Masons, and was referred to the Com-
mittee on Landmarks. This committee reported that the
action of the Subordinate Lodges of Master Masons in
granting their warrants to open an Encampment of Knights
Templar was in accordance with Masonic usages in Penn-
sylvania. This action has created Encampments Nos. 5, 6,
and 7, which, together with No. 4, have organized the
illegal State Grand Encampment (May 10, 1854), of which
Pv. Sterling Wilson is M. E. G. M.
The legal Encampments in Pennsylvania, who have de-
rived their authority from the Grand Encampment of
Pennsylvania, are Pittsburg Encampment, No. 1, at Pitts-
burg; Jacques de Molay Encampment, No. 2, at Wash-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 89
ington ; St. Omer Encampment, No. 3, at Uniontown ; St.
John's Encampment, No. 4, at Carlisle; Keystone Encamp-
ment, U. D., at Philadelphia; and Hubbard Encampment,
at Waynesburg, U. D., from the G. G. E. of the U. S.
From the foregoing remarks and authorities quoted I
deduce the following inferences :
1. That the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, as early as
1795, only recognized the degrees E. A., F. C, M. M., and
R. A., as belonging to Ancient Craft Masonry.
2. That the Ahiman Rezon, as published by the G^and
Lodge in 1781, acknowledges the iact that the Order of
Knighthood is based on the Masonic institution.
3. That St. John's Encampment derived her authority
from a State Grand Encampment organized in 1814, but
that this Grand Body having ceased in 1825, the jurisdic-
tion of the State of Pennsylvania reverted to the Grand
Encampment of the United States.
4. That Encampments of Knights Templar deriving
their authority from a Grand Lodge, or Lodges of Master
Masons, is unwarranted in the history of Masonry.
5. That the General Grand Encampment of the United
States is the only legitimate authority in the United States
from which a charter can emanate.
Report on the legality of the Philadelphia Encampments.
On the 8th September, 1848, Pittsburg Encampment, No.
1, gave notice through a circular that the Encampment of
Knights Templar, of Philadelphia, was "working under
what they claim to be a revived Charter of an Encampment
legally constituted many years ago by the then Grand En-
campment of Pennsylvania. This latter body was orga-
nized in 1814 by delegates from the States of New York,
Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland, but has been ex-
tinct for many years, while the Subordinate one has
90 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
ceased to labor for the last twenty or twenty-five years, and
is therefore condemned as an illegal body by the Constitution
and By-Laws of the Grand Encampmerit to which it originally
owed its existence. Sections 9 and 18 of the By-Laws pro-
vide that if any Subordinate Encampment shall cease to
meet for the space of one year, its Warrant shall be for-
feited. The creature and the creator being both dead, we
cannot conceive of any power competent to resuscitate
either;" hence a resolution was adopted cautioning all Sir
Knights from visiting the Encampment or holding fellow-
ship with its members.
Hejoly.
To this circular St. John's Encampment, No. 4, made
the following rejoinder. May 25, 1849 :
"This circular makes the following assertions:
" 1. That this Encampment was in the beginning legally
constituted.
" 2. That its Charter having expired, it claims at present
to work under a revived Charter.
" 3. That it has ceased to labor for twenty or twenty-five
years, and is therefore condemned as illegal by the Consti-
tution and By-Laws of the body to which it owed its ex-
istence ; in proof of which the 9th and 18th sections of the
By-Laws are quoted."
The first assertion being correct, and therefore undisputed
by either party, it follows, that if the present Encampment
can be proven not to have violated the laws of the Body
which gave it existence, and thereby forfeited its Warrant,
it is still a legal body.
As to the second and third assertions, they are not sus-
tained by the facts of the case, and as in these assertions is
contained the whole question at issue, they alone require to
be refuted.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 91
A comparison of dates will show that this Encampment
has not ceased to work for twenty or twenty-five years,
having adjourned temporarily in 1835, and re-assembled in
1848.
2d. The 9th and 18th sections quoted must have been
taken from the earliest copy of the By-Laws of the Grand
Encampment, printed in 1814. Since which time they
have been materially modified, as appears by the original
minutes.
On the 15th June, 1823, the 9th section was amended in
the latter clause to read thus :
"Every Encampment neglecting or refusing to make
such returns for two years, shall forfeit all the privileges of
their Warrant, if the returns he not made within six months
after being notified to such efiect by the Grand Recorder,
UNLESS a reasonable excuse be given for such neglect."
Under this 9th section, therefore, as amended, in order
to work a forfeiture of Charter, it is requisite that an En-
campment should fail to make its returns for two years,
that six months' notice should be given by the Grand Recorder^
and after both these a reasonable excuse should be made to be
given for such neglect. Now, if void for the first of these
reasons, the Charter was null and void for the whole period
of time from 1825 (the Grand Encampment closed in 1824)
up to 1835, when this Encampment adjourned temporarily,
no less than ten years, during which time this Encamp-
ment, No. 4, held COMMUNICATION WITH AND ADMITTED
VISITORS FROM ALL THE ENCAMPMENTS IN THE UnITED
States.
Again, if void for the second of these requisites, where is
the notice as above required ? None had been received up
to the period of adjournment in 1835, nor any since. For
these reasons, then, and inasmuch as the Grand Encamp-
ment has not, as yet, by any vote forfeited the Warrant of
92 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
this Encampment (a necessary step before forfeiture), it fol-
lows that the Warrant was good up to 1835, and if good
till then (by non-forfeiture), so it is good in 1848 and
1849.
18^^ section. This section was at the same time as above
amended by striking out all after the words " Knights Tem-
plars," and substituting therefor the following : " and can also
meet on its own adjournment or at the call of the Eminent
Grand Master."
Here then we see that a Charter was not to be forfeited
for failure to meet for the space of a year, but the power
was actually given to an Encampment to adjourn indefi-
nitely and re-assemble at the call of the Eminent Grand
Master. In further proof of which the 2d section of Article
II. of the Constitution of the Grand Encampment was at
the same time amended by adding thereto, " and the officers
thus elected shall continue in office until their successors shall
be duly elected."
Bearing in mind these laws as amended, the answer to
both of the last assertions in said circular becomes but a
simple matter of history.
In the year 1835, St. John's Encampment, No. 4 (for
reasons of its own, not necessary to be here detailed), ad-
journed to meet at the call of the E. Grand Master, as
evidenced by the minutes and the recollections of its then
active members. This call was to be issued when those
reasons which urged its adjournment were removed. This
took place in the month of April, 1848, when the E. Grand
Master of St. John's Encampment, No. 4, called the mem-
bers together, when, the requisite number being present,
the Sir Knights proceeded in the business of the Encamp-
ment, and from time to time added many new members.
Hence the conclusion is inevitable that inasmuch as St.
John's Encampment, No. 4, has not, according to the Con-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 93
stitution and By-Laws of the Grand Encampment, forfeited
its Charter, it therefore never became extinct — it
IS NOT NOW A REVIVED CHARTER.
Your committee might enlarge upon these points and pro-
pose measures of retaliation, the members of the Pittsburg
Encampment having acted contrary to the express regula-
tions of the R. W. Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania by applying
for and obtaining a Charter from a jurisdiction out of the
State of Pennsylvania. But retaliation is not our object.
Then follows a resolution to send the rejoinder to all
Encampments throughout the United States.
Some months afterwards application was made to Frank-
lin Lodge, No. 134, for the use of its Warrant to open an
Encampment of Knights Templar. The question was
referred to the E,. W. Grand Lodge, and by them referred
to the Committee on Landmarks, consisting of Past Grand
Masters Bayse Newcomb, Joseph R. Chandler, and Samuel
H. Perkins, who reported favorably, and on the 17th De-
cember, 1849, the R. W. Grand Lodge passed the follow-
ing resolution :
Resolved, That the Grand Lodge approve the action of
Franklin Lodge, No. 134, regarding the use of their War-
rant to open an Encampment of Knights Templar.
This made Encampment No. 5.
Union Encampment, No. 6, was created by the sanction
of the Warrant of Union Lodge, No. 121, and De Molay
Commandery, No. 7, by the sanction of Lodge, No. — , of
Reading.
Four Subordinate Encampments existing, three of whom
derived their authority to work from the R. W. Grand
Lodge of Pennsylvania, and St. John's, No. 4, from the
Grand Encampment of 1814, met by committees on the
subject of forming a Grand Encampment for the State of
Pennsylvania.
94 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
The committee of St. John's Encampment, No. 4, in a
report to that body, reviews the whole ground, and the ex-
pediency and necessity of a Grand Encampment. We give
the report entire :
Formation of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar
under the R. W. Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania.
Report of committee, read Nov. 23, 1853. To the E.
Grand Master, Generalissimo and Captain General of
St. John's Encampment, No. 4.
Your committee, appointed at a meeting of this body in
April last, would respectfully beg leave to report:
That on the evening of May 20 they met the committees
of Encampments Nos. 5 and 6, at which time an organiza-
tion of the committee was effected by calling Sir David C.
Skerret to the chair and appointing Sir Jeremiah L.
Hutchinson as Secretary.
On motion, a committee, comprising Sirs J. C. Booth, A.
E. Stocker and J. L. Hutchinson, were appointed to take
into consideration the position of Encampment No. 4; to
examine its minutes, and obtain all information possible to
be collected with regard to its legal position and standing ;
to collect any books or papers of the late Grand Encamp-
ment, and obtain all possible information from any mem-
bers of the late Grand Encampment who might be at that
time living.
A committee, comprising Sirs A. E. Stocker, J. L. Hutch-
inson, and O. A. Norris, were appointed to report on the
expediency of the formation of a Grand Encampment, and
to report a draft of a Constitution and By-Laws, and report
at the next meeting of the joint committees, subsequent to
the report of the first committee.
Pursuant to call, the second meeting of the joint com-
mittees was held on Friday evening, Nov. 18, Sir D. C.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 95
Skerret in the chair, when the first committee appointed at
the meeting of May 20 reported:
That they had examined the minutes of Encampment
No. 4, and are fully satisfied that said Encampment is
legally constituted, and is at this time working under a
proper and legal warrant; that they had been unable to
procure any of the papers of the late Grand Encampment ;
but would further report that from all the information that
could be derived from the members of the late Grand En-
campment, they are fully warranted in confirming the
legal position of Encampment No. 4.
The committee on the second resolution of May 20 re-
ported that they had fully deliberated upon and examined
into the matter in all its bearings, and would recommend
to Encampments Nos. 4, 5 and 6 the immediate formation
of a Grand Encampment.
The above reports were unanimously approved of by the
joint committees. A proposition was received from No. 6
committee that the committee appointed on the second
resolution of May 20 be requested to wait upon Past Grand
Masters Newcomb, Perkins and Badger, and solicit them
to serve as Chiefs of the Grand Encampment from its
formation until St. John's Day in 1854, when their succes-
sors would be elected.
Your committee would further report that the above
reports and resolutions were submitted to Encampments
Nos. 5 and 6, and were adopted and approved by them.
Your committee would therefore respectfully suggest the
propriety of adopting the reports of the committee as above.
As to the suggestion emanating from No. 6, and which
was endorsed by No. 5, which was this: That there has
been and still is a feeling of hostility manifested towards
us by certain bodies of our Order in the western part of
the State, and that therefore in our first outset it would be
96 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
essentially requisite and important for us as a body to have
the concurrence and approval of the Grand Lodge of this
State, and show a good fraternal appearance to our branch
of the Order elsewhere. And as the Companions named
were Past Grand Masters of the Grand Lodge, as also
members of the Committee on Landmarks, and would serve
but a period of a few months, it would not jeopardize the
position, to a great extent, of some of the members of our
Encampment whose labors in this branch of the Order are
deserving of its highest honors, but would have a happy
and desirable influence on our subsequent proceedings.
Your committee would further state that a meeting of
the General Committee will be held on Friday, December
1, 1853, to hear the report from this Encampment.
J. L. Hutchinson, )
Alfred p. Hessee,/*^""""'**^®-
The effect of this report was to call a convention on the
10th of May, 1854, when a Grand Encampment of Knights
Templar, under the authority of the R. W. Grand Lodge,
was organized. (See History of Knighthood, First Series,
pp. 118-126.)
Annual Addresses of the R. E. Sir W. W. Wilson, Grand
Commander, and V. E. Sir Benjamin Parke, Deputy
Grand Commander, to the Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania, at its Fourth Annual Conclave, held in Harris-
burg, June, 1857.
The R. E. Grand Commander, Sir W. W. Wilson,
delivered the following address:
Templars of Pennsylvania! — Assembled once
more in Annual Conclave, we greet you. From the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 97
pursuits of business and of pleasure, we have for a few
hours turned aside to grasp the hand of friendship and
mingle in social converse; to revive the ties of fraternal
love, and within our Grand Asylum take counsel to-
gether to promote the welfare of our beloved Order.
It is well, my brethren, thus occasionally to withdraw
from the engrossing pursuits of life, and to divert the
train of thought into more pleasurable channels. From
these Knightly re-unions we doubtless derive fresh
strength and zeal, and go forth with burnished armor
in our noble mission of pure beneficence and active
charity.
On looking around upon the delegates to this Con-
clave, I notice with interest that almost every depart-
ment of honorable pursuit is represented — Agriculture,
Art, Manufactures, Commerce, as also the leading pro-
fessions ; nor would I overlook a fact significant of the
high estimation of our Order, that here also are gathered
with us many of those who minister at the altar — the
sentinels upon the watch-towers of religion — from whose
eloquent lips flow streams which refresh the intellect
and the heart, by whose hands the bread and the water
of life are presented to waiting multitudes, and who are
ever found in the van of all laudable, social, moral and
religious undertakings.
It is pleasant also to hail the representatives of almost
every important geographical section of our State.
From the " City of Brotherly Love,'^ of endowed chari-
ties, of merchant princes, and of intellectual light; from
the ^'Iron City'^ where educated industry levies tribute
from a continent — the early frontier fortress of liberty —
the present central asylum of arts, of beauty and of
9 E
98 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
health, whose surrounding scenery is the most beautiful
in the world, and whose vine-clad hills furnish from
their bosom that which gives generous warmtli to the
shivering poor, which illuminates our cities and lights
up the hearth-stones of millions; from our extended
mining and agricultural districts which furnish men of
hard muscle and generous hearts, — all have gathered
once more around the Templar x4Lltar, where, with
bended knee and grateful hearts, we offer humbly our
thanks to Thee, O God, for protecting care and many
valued blessings during the year just closed.
Fellow Templars : The interests of our beloved Order
have draAvn us once more around the illuminated
triangle. Here for a short time we shall linger, ming-
ling with our business, moral and intellectual exercises
and the enjoyment of social rites. Here we would
blend oui* fervent desires for the general dissemination
of the pure and elevating principles which characterize
our institution, and gratefully acknowledge the peace
and prosperity which have hitherto attended us. This
peace and prosperity doubtless is due to the practice of
that great and leading principle in our Order, the di-
vine attribute of God — Truth, which must universally
prevail and ever bloom in vernal beauty. The leaven
of this hath recently drawn together and cemented in
cordial union those separately organized sections of
Knights in our State, which, divided, were adverse to
the true interests of the Order.
Union should be the watchword of all systems and
organizations having for their end the welfare of our
race. It is a word dear to us as American patriots ; no
other word in the language so rich in associations and
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 99
SO suggestive of pleasant themes. It has wreathed
around the brow of this nation a chaplet of unfading
glory, and within its heart opened perennial springs of
love and happiness.
The preservation of the Orders of Christian Chivalry-
through long years of persecution and massacre, and the
final re-elevation of her significant Beauseant Banner,
now bathed in the sunlight of truth and universal
approval, was due to her union, centuries gone by, with
Freemasonry — a union not of rites and ceremonies, nor
of government, but of sympathy, of similar and con-
genial feelings; both institutions entertaining those
higher and nobler impulses of our nature which lead
those who possess them to extend shelter and protection
to the innocent and the helpless, and ever seek the
elevation and happiness of mankind.
Although the occasion of this ancient union has
ceased long since, and both institutions are entirely dis-
tinct and independent of each other, yet there is a
fraternal feeling and mutual regard, destined we believe
always to continue. As Templars, we cherish a grateful
remembrance of our ancient ally, and as a just tribute
to the excellence of Freemasonry we require (and we
trust it is a qualification that shall continue till our last
trump shall sound) that all our candidates shall be breth-
ren of the mystic tie and Companions of the Royal Arch.
Towards these ancient and honorable friends we cherish
a profound regard, and will at all times cheerfully ex-
tend to them protective escort, and as faithful sentinels
sound the alarm of approaching danger.
Our conservative influence within the related Order
of Freemasonry, though unobserved, hath often arrested
100 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the tendency to modernize and strip this ancient and
beautiful system of Symbol and Allegory, to divest it
of its intellectual, scientific and moral excellence, and to
reduce it to a merely beneficial and business institution.
During the late fierce politico-moral persecution of Free-
masonry what power kept the light still burning upon
many altars? stood unmoved amid the storm which
prostrated altar, and column, and arch, and finally
rallied the broken phalanxes of the Order? Templar-
ism ! More recently in a sister jurisdiction, torn by dis-
cordant elements within and wellnigh prostrated, what
power rescued the good and the true, separated order
from disorder, and preserved her Grand Lodge (though
shorn of her brilliancy) in the beautiful zodiac of
American Grand Lodges ? Templarism !
Another signal instance of Templar influence and
power in restraining disaffection, healing opposition and
restoring union in the Masonic ranks was but recently
exemplified in our own State. Some years ago the
Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania assumed jurisdiction over
the Templar Orders, contrary to the almost universal
sentiment of the country Lodges (those in the State out
of Philadelphia), which had not been consulted, and
placing in an embarrassing position a large body of
regular Templars already under the jurisdiction of the
General Grand Encampment of the United States (which
illustrious body by the universal consent of all Masonic
jurisdictions embraces a united jurisdiction in all our
States and Territories). Other minor causes with this
had created much disaffection towards the Grand Lodge ;
so much so that many had come to the conclusion to
withdraw. At this crisis the Templars put forth their
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 101
united influence, and from the mirror of truth reflected
upon the Grand Lodge such convincing evidence of
their ^error that this noble body receded from their
assumed jurisdiction over the Templars, and thus united
the Templars in a hearty support of her jurisdiction in
Masonic matters, restoring peace and prosperity. The
notice of the action of our Grand Lodge, as a matter of
Templar history, is worthy of record, and may be
properly permitted a place in this connection.
On the evening of Feb. 16, A. L. 5857, the Grand
Lodge of Pennsylvania held a Communication. It was
numerously composed of many of our old but splendid
Lights in Masonry, as well as the leading younger
members — an assemblage for dignity, for numbers,
for intellectual and Masonic excellence, perhaps hitherto
unequaled.
By the courtesy of our present excellent Grand
Master, Brother Peter Williamson, the time of the
Grand Lodge was appropriated exclusively to the con-
sideration of the absorbing question whether the Grand
Lodge of Pennsylvania should continue to claim and
exercise jurisdiction over the Templar Orders.
After, a protracted discussion the following resolution,
adopted with almost entire unanimity, settled this
question finally for this jurisdiction, viz. :
Resolved, That the Grand Lodge reiterate the
language used by our predecessors, "that ancient
Masonry consists of but three degrees, viz : E. A., F. C.
and M. M. (including the degree of the Holy Royal
Arch)," and this Grand Lodge claims no jurisdiction
beyond the limits of Ancient Masonry.
These brief allusions are sufficient to secure a concur-
102 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
rence in our jiosition, that Templar influence is active,
conservative, powerful.
Being based upon truth, it seeks to unite within its
own circle all those appliances which tend to better the
condition of our race and elevate the character and effi-
ciency of all who enter her Asylums. It is sometimes
asked what is the peculiar mission of our organization ?
What its leading principles ? To answer satisfactorily
these queries, so far as they relate to the world without,
would require more space than is allotted to this brief
address, and we trust some abler pen may soon accom-
plish this interesting work.
Our principles, our purposes, our morals are those of
the Book of God, and as taught in the Christian reli-
gion. They are those which should dwell richly in the
hearts of all good men, leading them to constant deeds
of charity, of benevolence, of good-doing, fully exem-
plified by the blessed Immanuel whilst upon earth —
principles, which if cherished and practised by every
true Sir Knight would shed light and joy and happi-
ness upon all circles in which they move, and finally
convert the moral wastes of this w^orld into well-watered
gardens. We wage war against oppression, against infi-
delity, and every system of error. The great antago-
nistic system of all these is the Christian religion.
Prophecy indicates — and the period of accomplishment is
close at hand — that before its millennial consummation
it is destined to encounter the sword of the infidel and
all those opposed to the pure precepts of Immanuel.
Templars ! in defence of the Christian religion and asso-
ciated virtues, we may ere long be called to wield not
only our moral and intellectual energies, but our swords.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 103
May it be our privilege, when it becomes our duty, to
be first in the conflict for God and humanity, leading to
victory and millennial glory. But if these be our prin-
ciples, this our mission, do not the relations we occupy
and the requirements of our Order demand that we
should be true followers of Immanuel? Do they not
require that we should blend humility with faith, peni-
tence with courage and meekness, and courtesy with a
determined adherence to truth. Seek then a saving in-
terest in the ever-blessed Immanuel, and in the volume
of divine truth that wisdom which is profitable to direct,
which alone gives us the true philosophy of life, the
knowledge of the future, and in the gloomy hour of
death that peace, consolation and joy which this world
cannot give, and, thank God ! cannot take away.
Since our last Annual Conclave I attended the tri-
ennial meeting of the General Grand Encampment of
the United States, held in Hartford, on third Tuesday
of September, 1856. From all of our States and Terri-
tories there was a numerous delegation. The returns
indicated a large increase of Encampments and member-
ship, and general prosperity. Much business contributing
to the welfare of the Order was transacted, and a new
constitution, amended and improved in many respects,
was adopted. The intercourse of the leading Sir Knights,
assembled from all parts of our country, was very pleas-
ant and profitable. It should not be expected in so
numerous a delegation, hailing from widely-separated
sections, of diverse tastes, interests and education, that
all should be equally impressed with the utility of this
General Grand Body — that each delegation should suc-
ceed in its own views and desires ; and doubtless some
104 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
would go away disappointed. Tlie honors of office can-
not alw^ays be distributed in a large body, during the
excitement and rapidity of the election, with a proper
reference to the merits or claims of individuals and
representations, and errors were doubtless made in the
late election, as indeed they are more or less in all de-
liberative bodies. I have been led to these remarks by
some severe criticisms which, I regret, have been
reported in proceedings of two of our State Grand Com-
manderies — reflections as unjust towards the General
Grand Encampment as they are unworthy of the high
source from which they were (without due consideration
I have no doubt) permitted to emanate.
By these censures I have been led to review my recol-
lection of proceedings, and have examined the printed
report. I must frankly say that my impressions and
convictions of the usefulness, efficiency and continuance
of this General Grand Body remain highly favorable.
Whilst the powers and operations of the State juris-
dictions are scarcely interfered with, the Grand En-
campment exercises an eminent conservative influence
in fixing general statutes and regulations for the whole ;
in regulating those States and Territories where Subor-
dinate Commanderies exist, and wherein no State Grand
Commanderies are formed ; in triennially assembling
from our whole country the leading luminaries of our
Order for consultation and legislation, for a season of
social intercourse, and numerous other incidental advan-
tages. It also creates another strong band to the union
of these States ; indeed I think our State Grand Com-
manderies can no more spare the General Grand En-
campment than can our several States dispense with our
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 105
Federal Government. Long therefore may it continue
to send forth the glorious light and sublime influence of
Christian Chivalry, not only over this continent, but to
the ends of the earth.
I have also the pleasure of reporting to you, as you
will see more at large in the printed proceedings here-
with submitted, that a cordial union of the Templars
of Pennsylvania has been accomplished. I am happy
to say that this union was effected with almost entire
unanimity on both sides, and not requiring the sacrifice
of any principle by either. Within this jurisdiction all
is now harmony, and our work is progressing with great
prosperity. Our Grand Commandery is now composed
of fifteen Subordinate Commanderies, and I take much
pleasure (if not pride) in saying that ours is the second
in the number of its Commanderies and members in the
Union. Glad am I that we have one noble State yet to
surpass (the Empire) — a worthy object to enlist our
emulation ; and as it is a " virtuous undertaking," we
may be permitted to pray for success. Let then our
best efforts be put forth in advancing the solid prosperity
of Templarism in the Keystone State. Let me indulge
the proud wish that at our next Annual Conclave I
may be permitted to review our thousand Templars,
who for mental, moral and social standing and character
shall compare with any body of men on this globe.
Hitherto the division in the Templar ranks in Penn-
sylvania, twelve Commanderies being under the juris-
diction of the General Grand Encampment of the
United States, and four under the Grand Lodge of this
State, formed the only breach in the ranks of Templars
on this continent. This being now honorably healed, with
E*
106 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
honest enthusiasm and pleasurable feelings we look
abroad upon the vast host of General, State and Subor-
dinate Templar bodies, with their thousands of veteran
members, eminent in all the offices and Avalks in society,
and all heartily engaged in extending the benefits of
Chivalry.
In conclusion it becomes my duty to suggest such
items for your consideration as my past experience may
recommend :
1st. A careful revision of our Statues and Regulations.
Our State Grand Commandery is yet in its infancy, and
with the beneiit of matured codes adopted by our sister
Commanderies, and such other helps as a judicious com-
mittee could command and report at our next Annual
Conclave, we may be able to adopt Statutes and Regula-
tions which will be of permanent authority and promote
the interests of the Order.
2d. As the best means of securing uniformity and
correctness in the business, work, &c., of our Com-
manderies, I recommend the election of a Grand In-
structor, who should be a member of this Grand Com-
mandery, whose duties should be to visit each Com-
mandery once during the year, under such regulations
as the Grand Commandery may determine.
3d. The appointment of a committee to report at our
next Annual Conclave costume and jewels appropriate
to and in harmony with the spirit and character of our
Order. This report should recommend, first, the Cos-
tume and Insignia to be worn within our Asylums ;
second, such as is proper to be worn on public occa-
sions.
Templars ! The present session closes my official rela-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 107
tions with you as Right Eminent Grand Commander.
In retiring permit my hearty thanks for your partiality
in thrice electing me to this responsible and honorable
position, and for your cordial co-operation in assisting
me in my various duties. When I last accepted this
office, it was solely with the view and desire of effecting
a union of the Templars of Pennsylvania during this
year just closing. In that difficult and arduous under-
taking I have been successful. Ten years ago with the
assistance of three others (two of whom now repose from
earthly labors), ^ve erected the Templar banner, and the
Beauseant of Knighthood floated for a time over but one
Asylum ; now it is waving over numerous Asylums pros-
perous and united.
The Templar Arch now spans our magnificent moun-
tains, its columns washed by the Delaware and the
Allegheny, and its Keystone bathed in the pure light
of heaven. Standing upon the Capitol ground of our
noble old Commonwealth, or elevated, if you please,
upon one of her loftiest mountains, we look out with
pride upon the numerous banners of Knighthood float-
ing in the breeze of popular favor, our tents pitched in
flourishing cities and rural centres, all reposing in har-
mony and employed in works of beneficence and good
doing, we may be permitted to refer to a similar scene
which met the eye of an ancient seer, and say : How
beautiful are thy tents, O Jacob, and thy tabernacles, O
Israel ! Peace be within thy walls and prosperity within
thy palaces !
On motion of Sir A. Jordan Swartz,
Resolved, That the Annual Address of the R. E. Grand
108 HISTOEY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Commander be entered at length on the minutes, and re-
ferred to a special committee, to divide and refer the various
subjects mentioned therein to appropriate committees.
Whereupon Sir Knights A. Jordan Swartz, A. A. Reese,
and R. A. Lamberton were appointed said committee.
The V. E, D. Grand Commander Sir Benjamin Parke,
submitted the following address :
Right Eminent, Sir Knights and Brethren : — My duties
during the past year as Deputy G. Commander have
been light, and my services in behalf of our Order in
that capacity so few that they are only here presented
in obedience to the '^ Rules of Order'^ of the G. Grand
Encampment, by which our proceedings are governed.
In July last I visited St. John^s Commandery, Car-
lisle, installed the Eminent Commander and such others
of the officers as were present. This Commandery,
from its favorable location and the high character of the
men who at first organized and still control it, continues,
as heretofore, to exercise in our Order a commanding
influence for good.
I have during the year visited Columbia Commandery,
Lancaster, three times, performing work in the several
Orders and installing the present Eminent Commander.
This Commandery is now in a flourishing condition,
and has, in connection with the Masonic Lodge and
Chapter, a spacious, convenient and beautifully arranged
and well-furnished hall as a place of meeting.
In February last, as one of the delegates from the
several Commanderies in this State acting under the
Warrant of the General Grand Encampment of the
United States, I met with other delegates from the En-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 109
campments organized and acting under the authority of
the R. W. the Grand Masonic Lodge of this State, in
convention at Philadelphia; where, after a full, kind
and fraternal interchange of sentiment, there was agreed
upon a plan of union and a constitution for bringing
these two bodies together. This work, I am gratified
to learn, has been approved and adopted by a-large
majority, if not all, of the Commanderies in the State.
Under this new arrangement we are here together as one
body, a united band of brethren Sir Knights.
I trust that this union, so auspiciously inaugurated,
will here be most harmoniously and surely confirmed
and cemented, that hereafter Templar Knighthood in
Pennsylvania may present an undivided front, ready at
all times to do battle in defence of the Truth, under
the banner of the Cross, against ignorance, infidelity
and superstition — our common foes.
Brethren : We have at this time, and on this occasion,
great cause for gratitude. The angel of death, in his
march through our world, has passed by and spared all
who met with us at our last Annual Conclave. Through
the tender mercy of Him in whom we live and move
and have our being, we have been permitted to assemble
once more in our Asylum, in health to greet each other
and exchange the kindly emotions of fraternal hearts.
Our first duty is that of thankfulness for our many
mercies, for the preservation of our lives, and a continu-
ance of the blessings which make life desirable. Our
next, to resolve, in reliance upon Divine aid, that the
record of the coming year shall be brighter than that of
the past, so that when these frail bodies shall return to
the dust, our souls, washed in the blood of Immanuel,
10
110 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
shall soar aloft to regions of life and light eternal — the
Asylum of the blest.
On motion of Rev. Sir A. A. Reese,
The Address was ordered to be spread on the minutes.
The special committee to whom was referred the address
of the R. E. Grand Commander, Sir W. W. Wilson, through
their Chairman, Sir A. Jordan Swartz, submitted the follow-
ing report :
That in reviewing the R. E. Grand Commander's address,
and in accordance with its suggestions, your committee
would recommend the following resolutions, viz. :
1. Resolved, That a committee be appointed whose duty
it shall be to report to our next Annual Conclave a well-
digested Code of such Statutes and Regulations as have
been adopted after much labor and experience, and re-
garded now as it were the settled princii^les and landmarks
of the Order; such as we are proud to designate in other
jurisdictions, especially that recently adopted in the New
York Grand Commandery.
2. Resolved, That in this jurisdiction there should be
established a uniform ritual, and would therefore recom-
mend that some experienced and well-instructed Sir Knight
be elected at each Annual Conclave, who shall be a mem-
ber of this Grand Commandery, with the office of " Grand
Instructor," whose duties shall be to visit at least once
annually each subordinate Commandery, and instruct their
officers and members in the work, and at our Annual Con-
clave exemplify the work.
The expenses of these visitations for instruction to be
paid by the subordinate Commanderies, until the income
of the Grand Commandery will enable it to pay the same.
3. Resolved, That a committee be appointed who shall,
during the coming year, settle upon the dress or uniform
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Ill
of a Templar, as well as the Jewels aud working Regalia
adapted to the dignity and wants of the Order, and report
the same with a sample at our next Annual Conclave.
That the following action with regard to demitting or non-
affiliated members be adopted :
4. Resolved, That the Orders of Knighthood shall not be
conferred upon any one whose petition shall not set forth
his desire of being a permanent member of the nearest
Commandery under whose jurisdiction he may here-
after be.
5. Resolved, That non-affiliated Templars, except in cases
of j^overty, shall be debarred from visiting our Asylums
and other privileges of this Order.
In reference to the remarks concerning the General
Grand Commandery, they Avould offer the following resolu-
tion:
6. Resolved, That we, as a State Grand Commandery,
have undiminished confidence in the utility and efficiency
of the General Grand Encampment of the United States of
America.
All of which is courteously and respectfully submitted.
A.' Jordan Swartz, ^
A. A. Reese, > Committee.
Robert A. Lamberton, )
On motion of Sir John L. Gore,
Resolved, That the report of the committee be accepted
and the committee discharged.
Whereupon the Grand Commandery proceeded to the
consideration of the first resolution, with regard to appoint-
ing a committee to report a well-digested Code of such
Statutes and Regulations as are now regarded as it were
the settled principles and landmarks of the Order; and
upon motion of Sir Wm. H. Stoy,
Resolved, That the first resolution of the report and
112 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
recommendation of the committee be adopted, and that the
R. E. Grand Commander be chairman of said committee.
The committee to consist of R. E. Grand Commander,
Sirs Benjamin Parke, P. R. E. G. C. Wilson, P. M. E. G.
M. Stocker, V. E. D. G. C. Swartz, and E. G. Recorder
Creigh.
On motion of Sir Francis R. Blackburne,
Resolved, That the second resolution be adopted, and that
we proceed to the election of a Grand Instructor ; where-
upon the resolution was adopted, and Past R. E. Grand
Commander, Sir W. W. Wilson, was unanimously elected
Grand Instructor.
On motion of Rev. Sir Henry Baker,
Resolved, That the third resolution, respecting the uniform
or dress of a Templar, be adopted.
Whereupon Sir Alfred Creigh, Sir Samuel H. Perkins,
Rev. Sir O. H. Tiffany, Sir J. A. Wright, and Sir R. A.
Lamberton, were appointed said committee.
On motion of Sir A. H. Tippin,
Resolved, That the fourth and fifth resolutions, as em-
bodied in the report of the Special Committee, be indefinitely
postponed.
On motion of Sir Wm. E. Harper,
Resolved, That the sixth resolution be adopted; where-
upon the vote being taken, it was unanimously approved of.
Vote of Thanhs to Past Grand Commander Sir W. IT.
Wilson.
On motion of Sir Robert A. Lamberton,
Resolved, That the thanks of this Grand Commandery be
and they are hereby tendered to Past Eminent Grand
Commander, Sir W. W. Wilson, on his retirement from
the high official station which he has occupied in this
Body, and for the signal ability with which he has dis-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 11
o
charged the duties imposed upon him, and the courtesy and
Knightly bearing which characterized his administration.
Resolved, That a copy, suitably engrossed, signed by the
Grand Officers, and attested by the seal of the Grand
Commandery, be presented to Past Grand Commander
Wilson, as a testimonial of the sentiments of this Grand
Commandery.
Address of R. E. Sir Benjamin Pakke, Grand Commander
of Fenns2jlva7iia, to M. E. Sir-W. B. Hubbard, Grand
Master of the Grand Encampment of the United States;
with his rejyly.
Also the Annual Addresses of R. E. Sir Benjamin Parke,
Grand Commander; of V. E. Sir A. Jordan Swartz, Dep.
Gr. Commander, and E. Sir John L. Gore, Gr. General-
issimo, at its Fifth Annual Conclave, held in Philadelphia,
June, 1858.
Most Eminent Sir Knight, Our Grand Master:
As R. E. G. Commander of Knights Templar in Penn-
sylvania, I bid you a cordial and hearty welcome to
this our Annual Grand Conclave.
I bid you welcome, honored sir, as our official head;
under whose enlightened guidance, direction and gov-
ernment, for the past ten years, our valiant and mag-
nanimous Order has so largely increased in both numbers
and influence. And I here assure you that for the zeal,
ability and faithfulness with which you have discharged
the arduous duties appertaining to the high and responsi-
ble position of Grand Master of Christian Knighthood
in the United States, you have, as you justly merit, the
high respect and deep gratitude of the Sir Knights of
this Grand Commandery.
10 *
114 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
I bid you also welcome to our Grand Asylum as a
Companion and Brother in the bonds ot* Christian
Knightliood, with whom we hope not only to take sweet
council together as we pass through and mingle in our
solemn and impressive ceremonies, but also from whose
extensive research, long experience and mature wisdom
we expect to gather many lessons of valuable instruction
in the noble and holy work in which we are all en-
gaged, the reward and wages of which are ^' the gratitude
of the Craft and the ap2:)roval of God.'^
And now, most eminent and honored Sir Knight, as
this is your first official visit to our Grand Commandery,
I take pleasure and pride in assuring you that in all
your extensive jurisdiction there will not be found a
nobler, truer, or more loyal band of Valiant and Mag-
nanimous Sir Knights than those belonging to the
seventeen Commanderies of this noble Commonwealth.
In their name, and as their representative, I again
bid you a hearty welcome, and hasten to perform the
pleasant duty of surrendering to you, as my superior
officer, the chair and government of this Grand Com-
mandery.
The following is the reply of Grand Master Hubbard :
Right Eminent Sir : Accept my sincere thanks for
the courteous and Knightly reception with which you
and your command have honored me on this occasion.
I reciprocate and return, with a Templar's largesse, to
you, your officers and members, the kind sentiments
you have been pleased, on your and their behalf, to ex-
press towards myself personally and officially; and
whilst acknowledging my gratitude for the high esti-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 115
mate you have bestowed upon my official acts during
the past years of arduous and responsible duties and
labors — an estimate far beyond my deserts — allow me to
transfer the larger portion of it to the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States, whose honored but humble
Chief Officer I am.
You have well remarked, Right Eminent Sir, that
this is my first visit to the Grand Commandery of the
noble Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. I rejoice to see
this day. And I do assure you that it affi^rded me
much pleasure to have it in my power to accept your
Knightly invitation to make this visit, to see in person,
and take by the hand the loyal Templars of Pennsyl-
vania, in Conclave assembled, in this your gorgeously
beautiful and emblematic Asylum. I had long desired
it, and come now with the surroundings of Masonic
auspices and incidents most cheering to the devoted
lover of our Orders, whether Ancient Craft or modern
Chivalric. I visit you, accompanied by two distin-
guished and illustrious members of your Sister Grand
Commandery of New York (Sir John W. Simons,
P. G. M., and Sir Robert Macoy, Grand Recorder of
the Grand Commandery of New York), who bring with
them the glad tidings of a union — a fraternal and no
doubt lasting UNION — between the heretofore divided
Freemasons of that great State. I come, too, when the
union of the gallant Templars of Pennsylvania has
proved itself, consolidated by time, a blessing to all of
its members, and, relatively, to all the other Masonic
Orders in the State ; and in this happy union and fellow-
ship of all your Masonic bodies at home, what an im-
portant, nay blessed influence, has it upon not only the
110 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
brethren in your own State, but upon those in other
States of our civil Union ! And now, at this auspicious
day, we may look abroad over the whole of our common
country, and beliold with exultant joy and gratitude
that in all of the States and Territories composing our
Federal Government fraternal union and peace prevails
among all of the Masonic bodies, whilst our glorious and
chivalric Order of Knights Templar, the honored aegis
of Ancient Craft Masonry, is united and in fraternal and
Knightly relation, one member with another, throughout
our w^hole continent, inclusive of the Canadas, and in-
deed throughout all Christendom, whether in the
Eastern or Western hemisphere. With peace, union
and fraternal fellowship at home, they proclaim with the
majestic yet musical "sound of many waters,'^ "the
Cross of Christ triumphant,'^ "peace on earth and good
will to men !"
Right Eminent Sir: I heard with profound respect
your declaration and Knightly pledge of the loyalty of
all the members of your Commandery. AVorthy are
they of the high commendation you have bestowed upon
them. Their merit, and yours, Right Eminent Sir, as
the talented and devoted Chief of those true, loyal and
magnanimous Knights, has been known to and appre-
ciated by me. The unanimous vote of your Commandery
at its last Conclave meeting, repudiating the schismatic
if not disloyal acts of another Commandery, in connec-
tion with the other enlightened proceedings of that
body, was honorable alike to the head and the heart of all.
Though junior in years to some others of our State
Grand Subordinates, your Commandery in true Knightly
merit ranks with the foremost in our gallant army of
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 117
noble and magnanimous Templars. The high position
you occupy, standing upon the constitution and the
faithful observance of the vows of Knighthood, with the
intelligence, zeal and devotion that have characterized
your labors, are well calculated to exercise an important
and beneficial influence upon the destiny of Templarism
in these United States. Side by side with the great and
glorious Commandery of New York, represented on this
occasion by two of her illustrious members, your hon-
ored guests — in line of march too, with the other con-
servative, loyal and magnanimous Commanderies — what
is to stay the perpetuation and spread of the true prin-
ciples of Christian chivalry over the whole of our con-
tinent? The right conception of our duties and obliga-
tions, individually and relatively as Templar Masons,
and an honest desire to live up to and discharge those
duties, give us fraternal peace and harmony, union and
strength.
The Knights, our honored ancestors of old, were en-
gaged in hostile array and in mortal combat with Sara-
cen and Infidel. With sword and spear, helmet and
shield, battle-axe and claymore, they fought in defence
of the innocent, the destitute, the helpless, and the
Christian religion. Their motives were pure ; their
aspirations holy. With the strictest and most rigid
Christian and military discipline, united under one com-
mon head, they were irresistible. They went forth
" conquering and to conquer ;'' and thousands of ensan-
guined fields, made red with the blood of their enemies
and their own commingled, attest their noble daring and
heroic prowess. They stopped not to count their ene-
mies until they were prostrate in the dust. Three to
118 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
one — nay, ofttimes ten to one — against them, had no
terror in tlieir eyes. They had faith in their motto,
" III hoc sir/no vhices/^ and they did conquer. They ac-
complished, in their day, their mission. They stopped,
by ramparts of living and faithful breasts, the miglity
hordes, the avalanche of Saracens and Infidels that
otherwise would have overrun and subdued all Chris-
tendom. Their moral acts and influences were greater
and more lasting than their feats in arms. They resus-
citated, firmly implanted and installed in the heart-affec-
tions of the people, the great principles of religious and
civil liberty. The divine principles of truth, justice,
love and mercy were implanted in the breasts of their
fellow-men ; whilst the protection and rights of the
weak against the strong, the sanctity of female virtue,
and the individual rights of all as equal subjects in the
sight of their Maker, were engrafted in the minds of
the people throughout Christendom. Their hand was
visibly seen in the bill of rights that extorted from an
unwilling king the Magna Charta of England.
High on the list, above that of the nobility themselves,
and next only to those of the Archbishop and the Pope's
Nuncio, stands the name of the Grand Master of the
Temple in London upon that immortal paper. This
proudly-called " bulwark of English liberty" was the
forerunner and prototype of our American Constitution,
more perfectly securing to the American people, and to
their descendants (I trust) for ever, the blessings of civil
and religious liberty. The}^ also, and in their day,
founded and built many, very many, temples for worship
and education. Time will not admit, nor does the occa-
sion call for, a more detailed allusion to the acts, prin-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 119
ciples and virtues of our ancient and most worthy pre-
decessors. Suffice it to say, that they were, under Pro-
vidence, the life-giving, vivifying reform agents of the
world. High on the Temple of Fame are the names, the
deeds and virtues of the Templar; emblazoned with
helmet, spear and sword — surrounded and festooned
with olive and myrtle — inscribed immortal.
I have thus briefly alluded to our most ancient pre-
decessors to examine our own position and duties as
their honored successors. Whilst we retain the same
and most solemn usages in our Asylums, the same mili-
tary government and Christian profession, we are not
called upon, as were the Templars of old, to battle in
the field against Saracen and Infidel, nor to be ordered,
at a moment's warning, to march to a distant country to
fight the enemies of our Order. But we, in this our
day, have our duties to perform and our mission to
fulfill, and as imperatively so as had our honored
Knights of old theirs. We have the same brethren in
arms to fraternize with and love; the same enemies —
the Saracen and Infidel not in the field, but in our own
breasts — to fight. The evils of our sinful nature are
with us, and require watch and ward to be kept in sub-
jection. They are a numerous band under the command
of our most wily foes, unlawful passion and appetite.
Thev nestle in and contaminate the unres-enerate hearts
of men. We must wrestle with these our foes until they
are subdued and put under foot. Nay, the conceptions
of our nature, and its evil tendencies, are like princi-
palities and powers entrenched in strong fortresses ; and
of our own or innate strength we fight against them in
vain. But in that sign we profess to venerate, in Him
120 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
whom that sign represents, we can conquer ; and under
no other sign than that can we obtain the victory. Our
profession to the world is, that we are Christians —
Christian Knights. Do we live up to our professions ?
Have we our armor on, with the breastplate of the
Christian, and our faces always to the foes that so
" easily do beset us ?''
Our induction into the Asylum, and our progress in
our emblematic pilgrimage until we are found worthy to
be dubbed and created a Knight of our most magnani-
mous Order, is most solemn and impressive, teaching us
that we have enlisted for life and death into the grand
army of " Poor fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ.'^ We
are taught to believe in Him, and to promulgate that
belief to the whole world. In all of our ceremonies, in
all of our teachings, at the altar or the triangle, we have
but one article, one faith, one creed; and that is,
" Christ, and Him crucified." Here, Christians of all
sects and denominations meet in the same faith as bre-
thren. No discordant feelings exist while, as brethren,
united by the same bonds of love and fellowship, they
worship at the same altar. Thus, from the deep and
solemn impressiveness of our ritual, I have known
several instances in which the newly-created Knights
dated their conversion, and who afterwards attached
themselves to one or other of the Christian churches.
Thus, also, in some instances, and I trust in many, there
are members who, though not attached to outside
churches, are sincere and worthy Christians, like our
Knights of old, worshipping at their own altar ; believ-
ing in Christ as their Redeemer and Saviour, and
battling manfully, whilst performing their pilgrimage
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 121
here below, for that celestial crown that awaits the trvly
Christian Templar beyond the grave. It is a blessing
that our Asylums do afford such sanctuaries and means
of grace to all.
Instructed as the Templar must be, before he is ad-
mitted into the Order, in the teachings of Ancient Craft
Masonry, he there learns, by the inculcation of princi-
ples, by emblems, and signs of correspondence, the fore-
shadowed truth of that new dispensation of Jesus Christ ;
and hence the reason that our most ancient Templars,
as well as the able and devoted ones of the present,
guarded the doors of Lodges and Chapters as well as the
avenues to their Asylums. Hence, also it follows that
the Templar Mason and Christian has, as it were, a
double reason for his faith in the Cross, and the truth
of its dispensation. The mission, therefore, of our
Order is as weighty upon us in a moral point of view as
it ever was upon our venerated predecessors. The
times too conclusively show that it has been in our age,
and is destined to be in the future, a great conservative
power in the defence and propagation of the Christian
religion against materialism and infidelity, which have
been and are rife in our land. And if in the change of
powers and governments, by convulsions in the Old or
New World, the time should ever arrive in which the
Christian and civil liberty in these United States is en-
dangered by violence at the hands of foreign armies or
intestine foes, I trust that the sword of every true and
gallant Templar will leap from its scabbard in defence
of those liberties ; and that, army after army, by tens
of thousands of valiant and devoted Knights, with the
great banner of that Order in the midst, and numerous
11 F
122 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Beauseaiits streaming in the wind, will march to the de-
fence of that religion, our homes and our altars !
Right Eminent Sir, in the world's security or danger
we stand in need of that loyalty to which you have so
emj)liatically alluded : loyalty to the head government,
and loyalty to our vows and professions, I consider one
and the same. Such is the constitution and framework
of our society that one cannot exist in purity without
the other. A loyal Templar therefore is one who has a
conscientious regard for his vows and obligations, living
in constant fealty to his superior officers and the pa-
rental head of the whole — the Grand Encampment of
the United Stutes. In this high and just sense do I
then appreciate your loyalty and that of your illustrious
command. May all others throughout our vast juris-
dictions be actuated by the same high motives and con-
scientious principles ! And may that paternal head be
continued until the last of time itself, in its labors of
love for the good of its members and of mankind !
You have, Right Eminent Sir, most courteously
offered to surrender to me, as your superior officer, your
command. Retain it, most worthy Sir: keep the baton
and the crozier, and may they never fall into less
talented or less worthy hands.
On motion of Rev. Sir B. R. Waugh,
Resolved, That the thanks of this Grand Conimandery be
and they are hereby tendered to our Most Eminent Grand
Master of Knights Templar, Sir William Blackstone
Hubbard, for his courteous and Knightly visitation, and
for his lessons of instruction and valuable advice ; which
we trust will be well received and practically applied by
the Officers and members of this Grand Commandery.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 123
Resolved, That this Grand Commandery respectfully re-
quest a copy of the very eloquent and no less courteous
remarks of our Grand Master at the time of his reception,
for entry upon our records and publication in the proceed-
ings of this Grand Commandery.
Resolved, That the foregoing resolutions be carried out
by the R. E. Grand Commander Parke, and E. Grand Re-
corder Creigh, of this Grand Commandery.
Office of the Grand Master of Knights ^
Templar in the United States, V
Columbus, Ohio, Jidij 17, 1858. J
Sir Benjamin Parke, R. E. G. Commander,
Harrishurg, Pa. :
Dear Sir: — I duly received on my return from New
York, in the fore part of this month, an official copy of cer-
tain resolutions unanimously adopted at the late meeting
in Philadelphia of your command, among which is one
requesting me to furnish, for publication with their pro-
ceedings, a copy of my remarks made in rej^ly to your very
courteous address of welcome, on the occasion of my visit
to your Asylum.
It would be impossible for me literally to comply with
the request so kindly and even flatteringly communicated,
as no original of them ever existed ; those remarks were
wholly extempore. Although I have not even a note Avhere-
with to guide me, yet I have endeavored to comply with
the Knightly request by writing out the substance (in so
far as memory supplies me) of what I said on that occa-
sion ; and I herewith transmit the same to you, for such
disposition as you and your Commandery may direct.
With kind regards to yourself and officers, and members
of your Commandery, I am yours, fraternally,
W. B. Hubbard, G. M.
124 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
ANNUAL ADDRESS.
The Eight E. Sir Benjamin Parke then resumed the
chair and delivered his Annual Message, as follows :
Templars of Pennsylvania : Another year, with its
silent changes and startling events, its gilded hopes and
gloomy fears, its mercies and chastisements, expectations
and disappointments, for weal and for woe, has passed
away, and we are once more assembled in Annual Con-
clave. We have again been permitted to bow around
our triangle ; with one accord in the " Apostles' Creed"
to renew the profession of our Christian faith ; and, in
the words taught by our Lord himself, to pay our devo-
tions to " Our Father who art in heaven."
Gratitude for life and health, with their attendant
blessings, should pervade our hearts, and prepare us
rightly to enjoy and properl}^ to improve our Annual
Meeting here as brethren, having at heart one common
object, and engaged in a common cause. Here, retired
from and elevated above the bustling activities, the
feverish anxieties and corroding cares of everyday life ;
in this magnificent temple, dedicated to ^^ Virtue, Science
and Universal Benevolence ;" consecrated by the teach-
ings of " Brotherly Love, Relief and Truth," with their
kindred virtues ; we ought, by friendly greetings, mu-
tual interchange of fraternal feelings, and above all by a
hearty, unselfish and harmonious action upon the sub-
jects brought before us connected with the welfare and
prosperity of our Christian Order, make this a union
long to be remembered in our Masonic life, a green and
pleasant spot upon the map of our Templar pilgrimage.
In no place upon this sin-cursed earth, save within those
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 125
heaven-constructed sanctuaries — the family and the
Cliurch, where all are influenced and moved by heaven's
law of love — can the pleasantness and beauty of unity,
harmony and friendship be so clearly developed and so
deeply felt and appreciated, as within the sanctuary of
an Asylum of Masonic Knights Templar — the triangle —
surrounded by brothers true and approved, whose hearts
have been permeated and moulded by the mild teachings
and august mysteries of our Order. Who among us, in
view of such an assembly, will not, with the holy
Psalmist, exclaim : " Behold how good and how pleasant
it is for brethren to dwell together in unity !"
Taking man as he is, with social affections and fra-
ternal longings to be indulged, selfish propensities and
turbulent passions to be curbed and restrained, and
duties to his fellow-man to be performed, our Order (in
which I here include Masonry, with which Christian
Masonic Knighthood is in close alliance) is as much a
wantj yea a need, of man's nature as are the institutions
of civil government; w^iich, unlike ours, have been so
frequently remodeled, upturned and changed in form as
almost entirely to lose the lineaments of their antiquity.
There is much truth, as well as beauty, in the saying :
" Ever since symmetry began or harmony displayed her
charms our Order has had a being." No man can show
when it was not known, or point us to the time when it
began to exist. Its birth was, therefore, anterior to
either authentic history or tradition. Our Ancient
Grand Master, King Solomon, in the erection of the
Temple, did with operative Masonry as an art, what he
undoubtedly did for our Order as a science — prepared,
arranged and brought into form and symmetry mate-
11 «
126 HISTORY OF THE KNIOHTS TEMPLAR.
rials already created ; many of which ages had gathered
to his hand. In the one case he erected a temple to
the honor of God, the uses of his religion, the glory of
his nation, and the wonder of the world. In the otlier
case, he organized an institution more enduring than the
Jewish temple, system, or religion — an institution which
should faithfully transmit from generation to generation,
to all future time, the moralities and mysteries symbo-
lized in the inventions of Tubal-Cain; their use in the
construction of the ark, to save the Church, or in rearing
the heaven-defying walls of Babel; and from thence
transmitting the universal language of symbolism, as
well as the august mysteries and solemn ceremonies by
which this science was to be indelibly engraven upon the
mind and memory of the humble and submissive neo-
phyte, and as securely hidden from all the world beside.
That institution, whose teaching has been beautifully
and truly described as "a system of pure morality veiled
in allegory and illustrated by symbols,'' after a hundred
generations have passed away, still stands in the social
world like a colossal column or magnificent structure ;
the crumbled ruins of nations and empires, and the de-
cayed fragments of civil and religious institutions lying
around its base and hiding its foundations ; but itself,
towering towards heaven, bears almost as many marks
of primitive origin and antiquity as the ledges of rocks
or chains of mountains which stand upon the surface of
our globe. In itself the most perfect symbol in exist-
ence of the GREAT BROTHERHOOD OF HUMANITY, it
needs no other justification of its rigid to exist than the
fact of its existence ; for while man shall continue to be
a social being, with a yearning for intimate communion
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 127
with his fellow-man, while man shall have wants to be
supplied, and the innocent and helpless of the other sex
shall need and claim his protection or support, our
Order will be a necessity, Nor until sin shall be
destroyed, and the apocalyptic angel shall descend from
heaven and declare that time shall be no longer, will
the mission of either Masonry or Knighthood be fully
accomplished, or their work of benevolence be finished.
Their requiem shall be mingled with the millennial
chant, and their epitaph, traced in the ashes of a burn-
ing world, shall be read before an assembled universe :
"I was an hungered and ye gave me meat, I was thirsty
and ye gave me drink ; I was sick and ye visited me ; in
prison and ye Game unto me.''
The truth of this was never more patent and clear
than at this time, when all enlightened observation
proves a great icant of moral force and action in the
movements of the social world. In point of physical
activity, energy and power, the present age is far in ad-
vance of any other in the world's history. Mind has
also been educated and its energies developed, until its
powers and achievements are almost superhuman. The
one seems to walk the earth with the tread of a giant,
and the other to soar in the heavens with the wings of
an angel ! The very elements are made to labor at the
bidding of man. The lightning is taught to whisper
his winged thoughts from state to state, and kingdom
to kingdom, as with the telescope he scales the stars and
traverses the fields of immensity. But all these mighty
developments and wondrous achievements of physical
and mental power do not educate the soul or purify the
heart. They do not teach man to govern his spirit,
128 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
subdue his passions, and spread righteousness and peace
over the world, which, in obedience to Divine com-
mand, he has subdued. They neither teach nor enforce
that central truth of morality — a compendium of the
law and the prophets — "As ye would that men should
do to you, do ye even so to them ;" and consequently
fail in rendering either individuals or society good or
happy. To do either, as regards even the present life,
requires not only physical and mental, but moral in-
fluence, education and power. Now, we believe that
next to that divinely-constructed ark for the world's
safety and salvation — the Church, "the pillar and
ground of the truth" — our Order is the most efficient
moral agency operating upon man from without that
the world has ever seen; furnishing an exhibition of
unity of purpose and harmony of action, in a common
object and cause, which it might be well for that higher
agency to emulate as a divinely-instituted proof of her
mission. " TJiat they all may be one; that the ivorld may
know that Thou hast sent me.'^
It is not, therefore, marvelous that at this day our
Order should stand high in the estimation of the wise
and the good wherever civilization and Christianity
have shed their light, and that its portals should be
thronged with applicants for admission. Nor is it
wonderful that among those who seek and obtain
entrance within our enclosure, impelled by a heart-
yearning for fraternal faith, confidence and communion,
like that of David and Jonathan, there should be
many incapable of appreciating our privileges ; and
some, actuated by unworthy motives, like the sorcerer
of Samaria, who, professing his faith, was received into
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 129
the Church, and yet was found to have neither part nor
lot in the matter. Tares among the wheat — among us,
but not of us.
As Templars, it is with great pleasure that I can say
to you that, so far as I am informed, in every part of
our wide-extended country, our Order is prosperous,
yearly increasing in numbers and influence; that our
banner, emblazoned with our Templar emblem — The
Cross, an ensign before which superstition must cower
and infidelity bow down — is now unfurled from Maine
to California, and the Warder^s trumpet sounds from
Hudson's Bay to the Gulf of Mexico. In this, having
the highest moral welfare of our own country and the
good of our race at heart, we greatly rejoice; for,
although we may not be called upon, like the Templars
of old, to wield our swords in mortal combat with the
hosts of infidelity or superstition, we are, if true to our
professions and vows, engaged in a moral and spiritual
warfare against the hosts of the arch-enemy of man, the
lying vanities of the world, "temptation witliout and
corruptions within,'' involving consequences to eacli of
us of most tremendous importance.
It has been said that "the age of chivalry is gone."
We trust this is true so far as its spirit was publicly ex-
hibited in the fanaticism of the Crusades, even though
the object was to rescue the sepulchre of the Saviour
from the possession of the Infidels, that Christian pil-
grims might pay their devotions at the holy shrine,
might meditate beneath the olive trees of Gethsemane,
follow the Saviour in his last walk through the Holy
City even to the hill of Calvary, shed tears with the
holy women in the garden of Joseph, tread the streets
130 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
and recall the hallowed memories of Bethany, or walk
the heights of Olivet and view the sacred scenes upon
which Immanuel had gazed. We trust it is also true
so far as its spirit was exhibited in some of the features
and customs of the feudal system — its pride of birth and
martial aristocracy; its pomp of helmets, spears and
blazonry ; its tournament and combat, when surrounded
by bishops and barons, and ladies of rank and fashion
and beauty, the Sir Knights attended by their esquires,
so covered with shining armor as only to be recognized
by device or emblazoned shield, contended for the prize
of valor; the victor receiving it from the Queen of
Beauty amid the music of minstrels and the huzzas and
shouts of an assembled multitude ! We are more than
willing that all these things should have been laid aside,
or exchanged for more enlightened though more effemi-
nate customs.
But we are not willing that the noble traits of
character — the virtues which chivalry, even in its ruder
forms, developed, fostered and handed down — should be
either lost or forgotten. Its love of valor and readiness
to take up arms in defence of home, of country, or of
right; its gallantry in redressing wrong, especially when
woman was the party wronged or oppressed; its lofty
spirit of patriotic enterprise and passion for daring ad-
venture ; its whole character exhibing the highest appre-
ciation and sense of honor; all deeply tinged, and in
many cases thoroughly imbued, with reverence for God
and the Christian religion, a love for the Church and its
ordinances; — all these we delight to cherish.
Many of these characteristics of the age of chivalry,
and especially of Christian Chivalric Knighthood, are
HISTOEY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 131
worthy of being emulated and practiced at this day,
when self and the vices connected with selfishness —
Avhose name is legion — have grown rampant, and eaten
deeply into the vitals of society, if not of the State, as a
body politic. True chivalry was, and ever will be,
magnanimity, hospitality, honor, courage, appreciation
of woman's worth, patriotism, rigid regard for truth,
faith in God, unswerving adherence to friends and
brethren — in whose behalf money was freely expended,
hardships endured, and even life itself risked.
Right glad are we that the Knightly Orders, and
the teachings which developed, fostered and mellowed
these noble characteristics, after a baptism of blood and
training in the school of affliction, have been trans-
planted to this, our free land, and here have found a
congenial home; and that, under the influence of our
free institutions and pure Christianity, they have become
Americanized — that Christian Masonic Knio;hthood
in America is destined to occupy a lofty position, and a
true Christian Sir Knight to stand in the highest rank
OF MANHOOD. Let US, therefore, in view of this our
true position, take heed that our life and walk, our
whole conduct, correspond with the sublime tenets and
teachings of our Order.
In this connection I beg leave to make a suggestion
in regard to the history of Knighthood in the United
States, expressing the confident belief that when that
history shall be written, Pennsylvania Knighthood,
like Pennsylvania Masonry, will stand the grandest and
the firmesty if not the loftiest, column in the Union. In
a brief notice of" Encampments of Knights in America,"
published in 1816 by Thomas S. AVebb, he places the
132 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
" Grand Encampment of Pennsylvania'^ as the oldest in
tlie Union, having been organized o^i the 12th of May,
1797; at which time it seems that there were four
Encampments in the State, two of which were in
Philadelphia. As Templar Knighthood has at all
times, in this country, been in alliance with Masonry,
and for a while in this State was considered to be under
its protection and care, it is most likely that its early
history in this State may be clearly traced in the well
and carefully kept records of our Grand Lodge. I sug-
gest, therefore, that proper resolutions be here passed,
respectfully asking of the Eight Worshipful the Grand
Lodge of Pennsylvania permission to examine her
records for that purpose, and to copy therefrom any
items of Templar history which may be found therein.
Since our last Annual Conclave I have issued two
dispensations to form and open new Commanderies, both
in the north-eastern section of our State. Both of these
have been opened and organized under favorable aus-
pices, and with promises of success.
On the third of October last I issued a dispensation
to Sir Sidney Hayden, Sir George H. Bull, Sir Gordon
F. Mason, and their legal associates, authorizing the
o])ening and holding a Commandery of Knights Templar
and the appendant Orders at Towanda, in Bradford
county, by the name of Northern Commandery.
Under this dispensation the Commandery was duly
opened and organized on the 4th of December last, by
Sir J. L. Gore, E. G. Generalissimo, acting as my
proxy for that purpose.
On the 24th day of xipril last I issued a dispensation
to Sir Robert C. Simpson, Sir William H. Perkins and
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 133
others, authorizing the opening and holding a Com-
mand ery as aforesaid at Scranton, in Luzerne county,
by the name of Cceur De Lion Commandery. And
on the 28th of the same month, with the aid of our
V. E. D. G. Commander, Sir A. J. Swartz; E. G.
Generalissimo Sir J. L. Gore; E. G. Capt. Gen. Sir C.
F. Knapp, with other Sir Knights, I opened and
organized the said Commandery in due form. After
which the orders of Knighthood were conferred upon
four applicants; Sir Knight Gore acting as E. Com-
mander, and Sir Knight Knapp as Prelate.
Both of these dispensations are returnable at this time
for the action of the Grand Commandery upon their
application for charters. They are located at eligible
points, surrounded by an intelligent community, and
manned by highly competent and intelligent officers. I
cannot doubt their future success.
The dispensation to open Northern Commandery was
issued without the payment of any fees therefor, that
question being reserved for the consideration of this
Grand Commandery. On page 29 of the proceedings of
our last Grand Conclave will be found the following in
relation thereto:
"Application having been made to this Grand Com-
mandery by George Bull, for the endorsement or revival
of a charter, herewith presented, of an Encampment
which was formerly held in Towanda, Pa., which he
asks to be granted without j)ayment, except fee to the
Recorder ;
"On motion of Sir F. Blackburne,
" Resolved, That the matter in relation to the Towanda
Encampment be referred to the first four Grand Officers,
12
134 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
with full power to take such action in relation thereto
as they may deem advisable."
Upon the presentation of a petition in due form, I
submitted the question of fee to the Grand Officers
named, who with me agreed to remit $50 of the $90 due
for dis])ensation. This proposition not being satisfactory
to the petitioners, who pressed the request made to the
G. C-ommandery by Sir Knight Bull to have the $90
remitted, at the urgent solicitation of several Knights
the Grand Officers agreed that the dispensation might
be issued, referring the question of the fee to be paid
therefor to the decision of this Grand Commandery.
The correspondence in regard to this matter on both
sides is contained in my letter-books, and will be sub-
mitted either to a committee or to the G. Commandery
when required.
The last Grand Commandery having by a unanimous
vote elected ^'an experienced and well-instructed Sir
Knight as Grand Instructor," and made it his
*' DUTY to visit at least once annually each subordinate
Commandery and instruct their officers and members in
the work," I felt myself in a great measure relieved
from the obligation of visiting the several Commanderies
for that " supervision, instruction and direction " which
the office and the constitution both imply , although they
may not in terms require of the Grand Commander. If
it is not intended that the Grand Instructor should re-
lieve your chief officer from the duties of visitation, I
think the opinion should be so expressed. I have, how-
ever, visited Columbia Commandery in Lancaster, twice;
De Molay Commandery, Reading, once, and Parke
Commandery, Harrisburg, several times; at each place.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 135
besides giving instructions in the work, I installed their
officers for the present year. During the year I have
several times been called upon for my opinion upon
certain questions of Templar Law and Usage, which I
have promptly given. These decisions I will lay before
this Grand Commandery for revision-, approval, or re-
jection, as you may deem proper. This is necessary, as
the decisions of the R. E. G. Commander are the law
for this jurisdiction, until corrected or set aside by the
G. Commandery.
At our last G. Conclave the Committee on the Doings
of the Grand Officers presented several important sub-
jects for future consideration, which were referred to
special committees to be reported upon at this meeting.
Most of these committees, it is presumed, will present re-
ports for our consideration.
The committee to report upon a uniform dress and
regalia have pre2)ared an able and elaborate report,
which I beg leave to recommend to your patient and
careful consideration. It will be well to have the
question. What is the proper costume of a Knight
Templar ? settled, so far at least as it can be settled by a
State Grand Commandery. I think it is evident from
all history that the original dress of a Knight Templar
was a white mantle or surcoat to represent a '^pure
life,'' with a red cross as a "symbol of martyrdom."
The present dress (black) was most likely adopted partly
from the Knights of Malta, with whom the Templars in
some countries united after the martyrdom of their
Grand Master, and partly as an emblem of mourning
for his death and a memento of his virtues. The apron,
as now worn, I think might be entirely laid aside. As
136 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Templars " we have no more occasion for level or plumb-
line, for trowel or gavel, for compass or square." Our
Masonic work is completed. We have taken up the
sword, and are expected manfully to use it. Ours is a
military Order, and the costume should be appropriate
to military exercise, either on foot or on horseback. In
naturalizing Christian Knighthood in this our land, its
trappings of helmet, mail and blazonry, with its vows
to Mary, St. Peter and the Pope, and many other things
of like character, appertaining to the age and time 6f
the Crusades, have very properly been laid aside. Other
effete appendages may yet be lopped off.
The unselfish virtues of chivalry, with the solemn
and impressive ceremonies which imbedded them in that
great deep of feeling that lies far below the surface of the
world-hardened heart, mellowed, chastened and purified
in the light kindled by the Reformation, and arrayed in
a costume simple, expressive, yet sufficiently imposing,
is and should be, as I conceive, American Knighthood.
The committee ^' to report a proper method of paying
representatives to the Grand Commandery,'' will also, it
is presumed, report. This is a subject of considerable
importance. The present regulation of "paying the
actual expenses of three representatives from each Com-
mandery," it is evident, cannot be continued unless the
fees and dues of the subordinate Commander ies shall be
increased, or there shall be a large addition to our
membership; and yet we should be sorry to see any
change, which, by reducing the number of Sir Knights
attending our annual Grand Conclave, would render
them less interesting and profitable, not only to those
who attend, but to the Order represented.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 137
Of the committee ^'to report a code of statutes and
regulations " I was appointed the chairman. The
matters referred to this committee might easily have
been construed to include almost all the matters of
Templar legislation, and opened a field for an extended
report. Holding, /or myself, opinions adverse to much
leo:islation — believino; it to be the evil of our American
Masonic bodies; that our present constitution, with a
very few amendments in regard to matters purely local,
with the common law and obligations of our Order, all
well-known and understood, were all that was needed
at this time in the way of general statutes ; yet, desirous
of learning the opinions of others — I issued a circular to
the leading members of our Commanderies, asking their
views or suggestions in relation to our duties. Not re-
ceiving, in reply to this circular, any definite sugges-
tions, I very naturally concluded that no alterations or
additions were required.
I did desire the opinions and aid of our brethren,
especially of the clergy, in preparing an appropriate form
of service for the burial of the dead, which for several
years past I had thought necessary. Templar Knight-
hood is emphatically a Christian Order, acknowledging
as its compendium of faith the "Apostles' Creed.'' In
its government and ritual, therefore, it must be entirely
separate from, and independent of, Ancient Craft
Masonry. Although every Knight must have passed
through the degrees of Symbolic Masonry, including the
Holy Royal Arch — the best moral training-school ever
instituted by man — he is not required by the rules of
Knighthood to continue his membership in either Lodge
or Chapter; yet, without such membership, he is not
12 *
138 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
entitled to Masonic burial. Nor can Knights Templar,
as such, clad in their proper regalia and bearing the
symbols of their Order, join in a Masonic funeral pro-
cession if the regulations of our Grand Lodge are en-
forced.
Knowing that several Sir Knights had expressed a
desire to be buried with the honors of Christian Chivalry,
I thought it highly proper that we should have a
burial service — chaste and imposing, though brief and
eminently Christian. After issuing my circular, I learned
that a committee of the Sir Knights of New York had
prepared a burial service, a copy of which I have since
received, as adopted by the Grand Commandery of that
State. It is a work of great merit, yet I think capable
of being considerably shortened and otherwise improved.
When we separated one year ago, our whole country
seemed to be in the height of prosperity and progress.
Suddenly the car of business, in its rapid motion, was
brought to a dead-lock! The concussion shook the
commercial world, and scattered ruin, bankruptcy and
blight throughout the land. The consequent pecuniary
embarrassment has undoubtedly, to some extent, retarded
the increase and diminished the funds of our Com-
manderies; yet we trust the lessons taught have largely
added to their moral strength and purity — much more
to be desired than numbers.
Such events prove the truth and show the value of
the teachings of our Order, which it would be well for
us often to review. Commencing with that dread and
well-remembered hour, when with trembling steps we
first entered u})on the tesselated ground-floor of Masonry,
symbolizing the vicissitudes and changes in human
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 139
affairs, our path of life checkered with good and evil,
yet bordered with blessings and comforts strewn around
by Him in whom we then solemnly avouched our trust;
thence upward through the grander courts and sublimer
scenes of our Mystic Temple to the lofty position of a
pilgrim-warrior in the army of Immanuel, pledged, as a
champion of Truth and " Fellow-soldier of the Cross/'
to assist and befriend the weary and way-worn in the
broken and thorny paths of life, and to use our mystic
swords, combining the virtues of Faith, Hope and
Charity, with Justice, Fortitude and Mercy, to succor,
defend and protect as well our brethren bending under
the cross of adversity, sickness and want, or assailed by
the shafts of calumny and detraction, as the innocent
maiden, the destitute widow, the helpless orphan; and,
having professed the faith of Christ crucified, manfully
to fight under his banner until our life's end — there
can be no teachings better adapted to impress our hearts
and lives for good, and to move us effectually in the
right direction, than the truths brought before us in the
prescribed lessons of our ritual.
In 3Iasonry — the history of God's chosen people from
the dawn of creation — the promises sweetly whispered
by angels at Bethel, and the threatenings thundered
from Sinai's burning mount; the noiseless rearing of the
Temple in the peaceful reign of Solomon, with its re-
building in troublous times by Zerubbabel. In Templar
Knighthood — the history of the thrilling events which
cluster around the Cross — the agony, betrayal and
trial; the death, burial, resurrection and ascension; the
voice of eternal love wafted on the midnight breeze from
the bloody sweat in the garden of Gethsemane; the
140 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
dying wail which rent the air and darkened the noon-
day sun as it rolled from the hill of Calvary ; and the
angelic shout which pealed down the sky and the
heavenly radiance which burst forth as the everlasting
doors were opened to receive the King of Glory in his
ascension from Olivet. Well has it been said that he
who can pass through all tliis and not become a good
man has in himself indisputable proof that his heart is
*^ deceitful above all things and desperately wicked.^'
And now, fellow-Templars, having enlisted in this
warfare, having laid aside the staff and taken up the
sword, we are expected maiifully to fight our way and
valiantly to run our course. The outside world look
for us to be better than others, better than themselves ;
else why are we so carefully watched, and any deviations
from the right path so invariably noted and proclaimed,
while a similar error in one of themselves excites no sur-
prise? The uninitiated believe that our privileges are
great, that we enjoy a rich treasure; and, on the gospel
rule that "where much is given much is also required,"
they expect us to walk uprightly as children of light,
and steadily to tread in the footsteps of our magnani-
mous and chivalric forefathers, those valiant Sir Knights
— "Poor fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ" — whose well-
earned fame has spread both far and wide for acts of
charity and pure beneficence, for noble deeds of exalted
usefulness.
In view, then, of our position and privileges, let it be
our grand ambition to become, in the loftiest sense.
Pilgrim- Warriors ! With the cross our emblem,
"/?i hoc sir/no vinces^^ our motto, and a heavenly crown
our aim, let us pitch our tents day by day nearer the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 141
Christian pilgrim's home, imbibing each day more of
the pilgrim's character, and longing more and more for
the pilgrim's rest and the pilgrim's reward.
Seated in this our quiet and beautiful sanctuary, the
emblems of our Order appropriately displayed around
us, none teach a more impressive or instructive lesson
than the naked skull and crossed bones, in close con-
tiguity with the Holy Bible — Mortality and Divinity !
It is appointed unto all men once to die ! In the midst
of life we are in death ! And yet no truth is less
heeded until the grim messenger makes his alarm at our
door, and, waiting not for the Warder's announcement,
enters our Asylum in search of his victim. Then,
indeed, he is the King of Terrors, and we instinct-
ively pray that, if it be possible, the cup may pass
from us.
The framers of our ritual were therefore wise in
bringing our mortality prominently before us in inti-
mate connection with the word and way of life, so that
the lamp of our faith might be ever kept burning, in-
creasing its light even as we approach the dark portico
of the sepulchre, that so from its darkness and gloom,
in the storm-night of the soul which is to close the
drama of life with us, w^e may hear above the roar of
Jordan, our Master's voice in its soothing power, saying,
" It is I ! Be not afraid ; only believe !" And then
listen to an Apostle : " If we believe that Jesus died and
rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus will
God bring with him." Cheerful assurance ! If we
rightly improve the days of our pilgrimage, though our
weak and frail bodies miist ere long lie down in the
tomb — their resting-place — our disembodied spirits shall
142 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
soar aloft, like an eagle unfettered, to the cloudless
regions of life and light eternal.
I am not aware that, during the past year, death has
called away any member of our Grand Commandery;
yet as his sweeping scythe cuts down manhood in its
ripeness, youth in its prime, childhood in its innocence,
and infancy in its tender bud, we must presume that
some intimately connected with us have helped to swell
his swath. As Masons, we have lately been called to
mourn the departure of our Grand Master, Dr. J. K.
Mitchell. Called by a summons which none can evade,
his wearied soul left its weakened body, his chair was
made vacant, and his gavel laid at rest. We can pro-
nounce no higher eulogy uj)on him than to say. He was
a good man and our brother ! That he was prepared for
his Master's call who can doubt after reading the follow-
ing from his last poem? —
"'Tis a blessing to live, but a greater to die,
And the best of the world is its path to the sky.
Be it gloomy or bright, for the life that He gave
Let us thank Him — but blessed be God/o?- the grave!
'Tis the end of our toil, 'tis the crown of our bliss,
'Tis the portal of hapj^iness — aye, but for this
How hopeless were sorrow, how narrow were love,
If they looked not from earth to the rapture above !"
To encourage us who are yet in the flesh to be more
faithful, as well as to comfort those who mourn, we
have a message direct from the courts of heaven: "I
heard a voice from heaven saying unto me. Write :
Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from hence-
fortli ; yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their
labors, and their works do follow them."
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 143
And now, Sir Knights, thanking you for the unani-
mous vote by which, one year ago, I was elected R. E.
Grand Commander, and for the uniform kindness and
resjject manifested to me during my term of office —
knowing that there are among you many others equally
zt^alous and competent, and having more leisure, to de-
vote to the duties of the office than myself — I request
you to select some other Sir Knight as my successor.
After nearly twenty years of official service in Masonry
and Knighthood, I think I have a right to ask that
others may take the van and allow me a quiet position
in the ranks.
On motion of Sir John L. Gore,
Resolved, That the annual address of the R. E. Grand
Commander be entered at length on the minutes, published
with our proceedings, and referred to the usual committee
to divide and refer the various subjects mentioned therein
to appropriate committees.
The V. E. Sir A. Jordan Swartz, D. G. C, delivered the
following address, which was also referred to the Committee
on the Doings of the Grand Officers :
Right Eminent Commander and Sir Knights: The
duties enjoined upon the Deputy Grand Commander
by the constitution, being of a character almost entirely
subordinate to those of the R. E. Grand Commander,
my report must of necessity be brief.
During the past year I was summoned but once by
the Right Eminent Grand Commander to accompany
him upon his official business. I obeyed this summons
promptly. The occasion alluded to was the constitution,
by a warrant of dispensation, of a Commandery at
144 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Scranton, in Luzerne county. From my previous
acquaintance with the Sir Knights in that region, as
well as from personal observation, I am satisfied that
the interests, as well as the dignity of the Order, could
not be committed into more courteous or honorable
keeping.
I have also visited officially, upon frequent occasions,
De Molay Commandery, No. 9, at Reading. I am
happy to report that this Commandery is in a most
flourishing condition. I have always found its officers
zealous in the discharge of their various duties, and the
portals of the Asylum duly guarded against the ad-
mission of those who are unworthy to assume Templar
vows, or who might cast a stain upon the bright
escutcheon of our glorious Order.
The union of the Sir Knights in our good old Com-
monwealth, so much desired, and so hapj>ily and honor-
ably accomplished, I am happy to say continues with
bonds unbroken, and is received, I believe, by every
true Sir Knight who has the real interests of our Order
at heart with increasing favor. If anything had been
required to make that bond of union indissoluble, it
would have been this very Annual Conclave, assembling
as it does, in the very bosom of those with whom a
portion of the Order were at one time denied Knightly
intercourse. I allude to this subject with pride, because,
as the second Grand Officer of one of the Grand Bodies
forming the union, I took an active, and, I trust, not
inefficient part. Esto perpetua.
E. Sir John L. Gore., E. G., delivered the following ad-
dress, which was referred to the same committee :
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 145
Templars of Pennsylvania : I greet you in the delight-
ful moments of this annual gathering. I have looked
forward to this meeting with emotions of liveliest
pleasure; faces which surrounded us at our last meeting
are now once more and again numbered with us. Coming
from the most distant part of the State, we are once
more brought together to review the past and look
forward to the future. During the past year, early in
the month of December, I proceeded to the borough of
Towanda, and established Northern Commandery of
Pennsylvania, U. S. To the Sir Knights of St. Omer's
Commandery, Elmira, N. Y., we are largely indebted
for their assistance on that occasion.
Much to my surprise, I found at Towanda some
twenty-five applicants for the Orders — all of whom were
of the best citizens of the place. We Knighted thirteen,
the others were reserved for future labors. Sir Knight
S. Hayden, the E. Commander, I am happy to say is
conversant with the history, origin, etc. of Christian
Chivalry, as well as being familiar with the ritual.
Judging from the material, ability and zeal of the Sir
Knights, I can truly predict that Northern Commandery
of Pennsylvania Avill be first among her equals.
On March 19 I installed the officers of Palestine
Commandery.
On April 27, I had the pleasure of meeting the R. E.
Sir Knight, our V. E. D. Sir Knight, and our E. C. G.,
together with a detachment from Crusade Commandery.
We assembled at Scranton for the purpose of organizing
Coeur de Lion Commandery. It will be useless for me
to make any comment upon this Commandery, as our
R. E. Sir Knight has done the matter ample justice. I
13 G
146 HISTORY OF THE KNIGPITS TEMPLAR.
will, however, add I have had the pleasure of meeting
them twice since their organization. I find them rapidly
improving, and can truly say they are worthy of the
protection and admiration of this Grand Body. Their
ritual they have nearly jx^rfect, and I am very happy to
say, through their industry and Knightly ability, they
hav^e done more than could have been expected under
the circumstances. We can look forward to North-
eastern Pennsylvania with much satisfaction.
Thus, Sir Knights, close my labors for the past year.
All I ask of you is, if I have committed errors, name
them errors of the head and not of the heart ; and in the
language of one of earth's lowly, say: "He hath done
Avhat he could.'^
E. Sir C. F. Knapp made a verbal report of his acts as
G. C. G. during the present official term of office.
Sir A. E. Stocker, P. Grand Commander and Chairman
of the Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers, made
the following report :
The committee appointed to report upon the doings of
the Grand Officers during the past year report : That the
officers have attended to their various duties with com-
mendable zeal, and must satisfy the minds of every Sir
Knight that their interest in all that concerns the welfare
of Knighthood in this jurisdiction has been committed to
able and faithful representatives.
The R. E. Grand Commander, Sir Benjamin Parke, in
his eloquent address to this Grand Commandery, has called
the attention of the members to the great antiquity of the
Orders of Knighthood in Pennsylvania, and to the value
which must attach to the collection of materials illustrating
their early history and introduction into this State. Be-
lieving that much may be found in the early records of the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 147
R. "W. Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania of interest in this
connection, the R. E. Grand Commander has suggested the
importance of passing a resolution asking permission to
examine the records of the R. W. Grand Lodge of Penn-
sylvania, and to copy therefrom any items of Templar his-
tory which may be found therein.
In this recommendation your committee fully coincide,
and in addition thereto that a similar application be made
to Lodge No. 3, and Chapter No. 3, believing that much
valuable information in relation to Knighthood may be
obtained from all these sources. In furtherance of these
views, your committee append to this report resolutions 1
and 2.
In reference to granting a dispensation to "Northern
Commandery without the pre-payment of the required fee,"
the committee believe that under the circumstances of the
case the R. E. Grand Commander acted with discretion in
so doing. It is, however, recommended that this should not
be considered a precedent, but that in all future cases the
requirements of the constitution shall be rigidly adhered to.
The delay of a few months which must necessarily inter-
vene between such an application and the time appointed
for the next session of this Grand Commandery is suffi-
ciently short to enable the Grand Commandery itself to act
upon the matter of granting a dispensation or warrant
without fee, and to judge, upon representation of the facts
of the case, as to how far such departure from the regula-
tions may be safe or expedient.
Your committee observe that the R. E. Grand Com-
mander has considered himself, in some measure, " relieved
from the necessity of visiting the several Subordinate Com-
manderies for supervision, direction and instruction," inas-
much as the Grand Commandery "had appointed an
experienced and well-instructed Sir Knight as Grand
148 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Instructor, and made it his duty to visit at least once
annually each Subordinate Commandery, and instruct their
officers and members in their -work." In this view your
committee does not coincide. However great the advan-
tages to be derived from the appointment of a well-instructed
Sir Knight as Grand Instructor, who may at the request of
Subordinate Commanderies visit and instruct the Sir Knights
of those Commanderies, your committee believe that there
are other and important reasons why this duty imposed
upon the R. E. Grand Commander by the constitution, of
visiting and instructing, should not be superseded or volun-
tarily cast aside. The R. E. Grand Commander of this
State Commandery should always, and doubtless ever will
be, well instructed in the work, the ritual, the customs and
the landmarks of the Order. To him as the head of the
Order, every Sir Knight should look for light and informa-
tion, as a child looks to its parent for direction in difficulty,
for counsel or advice. The nearer this feeling can be
brought to that which should subsist in a Avell-ordered
household, the stronger will be the bonds which unite the
members of our household into one band of brothers, under
one head.
Admit the other view of the case, and the Grand Officers
will soon become cyphers ; the Grand Instructor will upon
all occasions be looked to for advice and counsel, as well
as for instruction in the ritual. Rather let a Sir Knight
hesitate to take upon himself the duties of the exalted sta-
tion of R. E. Grand Commander, because unacquainted
with the sublime tenets, customs and ritual of the Order,
than, once placed there, to fail fully to perfect himself in all
the requirements of the station, and to be able and willing
to communicate to others the knowledge he has himself
acquired. If every R. E. Grand Commander, upon closing
his term of office, can thenceforth be looked upon as one
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 149
who has been distinguished for his familiarity with ritual
and the customs of the Order, we shall soon have scattered
through the various districts of our State such bright lumi-
naries in the firmament of Knighthood as to render light
accessible to each and every Sir Knight.
In these remarks your committee speak entirely in anti-
cipation of the future, not in any regrets for the past. For,
notwithstanding the statement of our R. E. Grand Com-
mander that he had considered himself in a great measure
absolved from the duties spoken of, he has proved himself
" in labors to have been more abundant." In addition to
the Subordinate Commanderies he has visited during the
past year, the R. E. Grand Commander has reported to
you sundry decisions upon important subjects which, as
they have been referred to your committee for examina-
tion, are herewith submitted at length :
Decisions of the R. E. Grand Commander.
1. July 16, 1857. — In Masonry, by constitutional regu-
lations in Pennsylvania, the petitioners for a oieiv Lodge
must " not be members of any Lodge" at the time of pe-
titioning. In Knighthood there is no such law. Any Sir
Knight being a resident of this State may be one of the
petitioners for a new Commandery, and act in it while it is
under dispensation. When such new Commandery obtains
a charter, I think he should withdraw from one or the
other, though I know of no law requiring hira to do so.
2. August 24, 1857. — There is no statute in our Order
giving power to the Grand Commander to issue dispensa-
tions for conferring the Orders of Knighthood out of the
usual course, or waiving the provisions of by-laws. A
reason for this may be, that no such power is necessary to
accomplish the object you seek. There is no law of our
Order which prohibits conferring the Orders at the time of
13 *
150 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the application, with the unanimous consent of all the mem-
bers present. Unless therefore, your by-laws prohibit it,
you can confer the Orders at the time you desire.
3. September 21, 1857. — It is not necessary to a member-
ship in a Commandery that a Sir Knight should belong to
either a Blue Lodge or Chapter in Masonry. Templarism,
or Christian Masonic Knighthood, as an organization, is
entirely independent of Masonry. Its only constitutional
alliance therewith is the requisition that the Orders of
Knighthood shall not be conferred upon any but a Royal
Arch Mason.
4. December 17, 1857. — There is no law in Masonic
Knighthood, that I know of, prescribing or requiring the
" ballot box^^ or even a " ballot," as the mode of ascertaining
the opinions of the members of a Commandery upon a
proposition or petition for the Orders of Knighthood.
Neither was there any such law in Masonry under the
" Ancient charges," which simply provided that the mem-
bers " are to signify their consent or dissent in their own
prudent way, either virtually or in form, but with unan-
imity.'''' The constitutions or regulations of Grand Lodges
generally prescribe the " ballot ;" and general usage in both
Masonry and Knighthood is in favor of the use of the
" ballot box," with white and black balls ; which, being so
well understood and so convenient, I recommend to be used
in our Commanderies, especially and in all cases when it is
asked for by any member present. But if, when the appli-
cant was proposed, unanimous consent was given by all the
members present, no one expressing a dissent or asking for
a ballot, he was legally elected, and you were right in con-
ferring the Orders upon him.
5. April 6, 1858. — The dues to be paid by the Subordi-
nate Commanderies to the Grand Commandery are, "the
sum of two dollars for each initiation, and the further sum
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 151
of one dollar for every member of said subordinate Com-
mandery. The number of members is taken at the time
the return is made: no difference between those made
twelve months or twelve days before the return day. So
if any members had withdrawn, or been suspended or de-
graded at any time before the return day, they are not
counted in the number of members for whom dues are to
be paid.
6. April 28, 1855. — A petition for dispensation need not
nominate officers, though it is usually done. The officers
of a Commandery under dispensation are the appointment
of the R. E. Grand Commander. The usage in this State
has been for Commanderies under dispensation to adopt
by-huvs and elect officers, to be named in their charter,
when granted. These by-laws, together with all their
proceedings, are returned to the next Grand Commandery.
If they are approved and a charter granted, the officers
named therein, if present, are installed and take their seats
in the Grand Commandery as members thereof
7. June 2, 1858. — Neither charges preferred against a
Sir Knight in a Masonic Lodge or Chapter of which he is
a member, nor his suspension or expulsion therefrom upon
a trial of those charges, will, of themselves, without a trial
by his Commandery, deprive him of membership therein.
Nor do I think the legal doctrine of " res judicata" can be
admitted in its full extent in regard to the judgment of
such Lodge or Chapter, so as to preclude the necessity or
bar the right of a full investigation by the Commandery
upon the merits of the case. The strong presumption in
regard to the proceedings should probably be that the trial
was regular and the judgment right. But as it might turn
out that there was a mistake, or that some extraneous or
undue bias had influenced or colored the proceedings, they
ought not to be considered conclusive. Every Sir Knight
152 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
is entitled to a fair trial by his peers in Knighthood, the
social and moral code of which is that of the highest style
of Christian morality, a conformity to the whole moral
law, and the precepts of Him who gave as the great central
rule of moral action, "As ye would that men should do to
you, do ye even so to them."
1. With the first decision of our R. E. Grand Com-
mander your committee fully concur, that there is no law
prohibiting a Sir Knight from continuing a member of two
Commanderies at one and the same time. But your com-
mittee believe that a law prohibiting such continuance of
membership in two Commanderies, when both are regularly
and duly warranted, would be expedient and conducive to
the interests of the Order. In pursuance of this view, your
committee submit resolution No. 3.
2. In relation to the second decision, it is believed there
can be no difference of opinion as to there being no law
prohibiting the conferring of degrees upon a petitioner at
the time of application, so far as this Grand Commandery
is concerned. Your committee deem, however, the exer-
cise, except in urgent cases of persons desirous to be
Knighted who are about to leave the country, as of more
than doubtful propriety. The portals of Masonry have
been thrown open so long since that the attainment of the
previous necessary degrees is hardly to be considered a
voucher for character or of fitness to receive these degrees.
Much rather, therefore, would your committee recommend
that the names of applicants should be presented in ad-
vance of the time of conferring the degrees, either at the
previous meeting of the Commandery, or in time at least
for the Recorder to include in his summons to each member
the name of the applicant for the degrees of Knighthood.
The third, foui'th, sixth and seventh decisions need no
comment, and the fifth scarcely any, as there can be no
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 153
difference of opinion upon the subjects touched therein.
But your committee would recommend that a day be speci-
fied as that up to which all returns shall be made from
year to year. That day might be conveniently fixed at the
first day of May, inasmuch as Good Friday can in no case
fall at a later period in the year, and accordingly submit
resolution No. 4.
The V. E. Deputy Grand Commander and the E. Grand
Generalissimo have likewise been prompt in the discharge
of the duties of their stations. The latter has conferred the
degrees of Knighthood upon thirty-three candidates during
the past year.
The recommendations contained in the report of the
Grand Recorder are worthy of the serious consideration of
the Grand Commandery. Returns should now be prepared
containing all necessary and desirable information for
future reference. Their value to our successors will amply
repay the outlay of time and expense in their present
preparation. Your committee recommend the passage of a
resolution (No. 5) authorizing the Grand Recorder to pro-
cure said books of record.
1. Resolved, That a committee be appointed to address
a communication to the R. W. Grand Lodge of Pennsyl-
vania, to Lodge No. 3, and Chapter No. 3, asking their
consent to examine the early records of their respective
bodies for the purpose of obtaining any matters of interest
in relation to the introduction of the Orders of Knighthood
into Pennsylvania.
2. Resolved, That when such consent is obtained, the
same committee have power to take order and to report, if
possible, at the next meeting of this Grand Commandery.
3. Resolved, That while this Grand Commandery recog-
nizes the right of a Sir Knight, while a member of a
subordinate Commandery, to assist with his name and
G*
154 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
presence in tl\e formation of another Commandery, while
under dispensation, without losing his membership in the
former, yet, upon the reception of a warrant by the second
Commandery, the Sir Knight should elect in which Com-
mandery he will maintain his membership.
4. Resolved, That all the returns by the subordinate
Commanderies shall be from the first day of May in the
previous year to the first day of May in the year for which
the return is due, and shall contain a list of the names of
the officers elected to the several offices in the Commandery,
as well as the number of Sir Knights who are members on
that day, of those who have received Orders during the said
term of twelve months, with the dates upon which those
Orders were severally conferred; and also, a list of the re-
jections, suspensions, expulsions and deaths during the same
term, and the dates of the same.
5. Resolved, That the E. Grand Eecorder is hereby au-
thorized to have blank returns printed, in conformity with
resolution No. 4, and to distribute the same from time to
time to each Commandery, for the purpose of filling up
said blanks.
6. Resolved, That the E. Grand Eecorder be directed to
have a suitable book prepared for the purpose of arranging
the details contained in said returns, with an alphabetical
list of all the Sir Knights who have received the degrees,
so far as the same can be ascertained.
All of which is resjDcctfully submitted.
Anthony E. Stocker,
W. P. Thomson.
Philadelphia, June 24, 1858.
On motion, the report was accepted, and committee dis-
charged.
On motion of Rev. Sir B. R. Waugh,
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 155
Resolved, That the report be adopted, and that the reso-
lutions be considered separately.
Whereupon the resolutions were separately read and
unanimously adopted.
Vote of thanks to Sir Benjamin Parke, P. Grand Coiiv-
mander of the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania.
On motion of Sir Jeremiah L. Hutchinson,
Resolved, That the thanks of this Grand Commandery be
tendered to our Past Right Eminent Grand Commander Sir
Benjamin Parke, for the very able and satisfactory manner
in which he has discharged the various duties of his office ;
his administration being one to which we will ever recur
with emotions of pleasure and pride, as tending in so emi-
nent a degree to uphold and support the true interests and
dignity of our Order.
Resolved, That a copy of this resolution, suitably en-
grossed, and signed by the Grand Officers, be presented to
him as a testimonial of the sentiments of this Grand Com-
mandery.
Grand Commandery adjourned to meet at 4 o'clock P. M.
Annual Addresses of R. E. Sir A. Jordan Swartz, Grand
Commander, and of E. Sir Christian Frederic Knapp,
Grand Generalissimo of the R. E. Grand Commandery
of Pennsylvania, at its Sixth Annual Conclave, held in
Altoona, June, 1859.
GRAND commander's ANNUAL ADDRESS.
The R. E. Sir A. Jordan Swartz, G. C, delivered the
following Address :
Sir Knights : Through the merciful providence of
our great Grand Master above, and under His all-seeing
156 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
eye, we are again permitted to assemble in Annual Con-
clave, to render an account of our stewardship for the
past year, and to counsel together as to the future. Both
custom and duty require me to give such information
and make such suggestions as in my judgment may
prove beneficial to the interests and promote the pros-
perity of our beloved Order. I shall do this briefly.
Another year now swells the mighty past since, in
accordance with the provisions of our Constitution, we
met to discharge our duties as members of this Grand
Commandery, and to renew our Templar vows in
Union, Peace and Harmony. Upon the occasion of
the assembling of this, our Sixth Annual Conclave, I
extend to you a w^arm and sincere greeting, as it bids
fair to be one of unusual pleasure, and to be marked by
the most agreeable associations and recollections. The
high character and respectability of those assembled
here should cause the heart of every Templar to swell
with pride, as it is an evidence of the high standing of
our Order in the community. The pleasure of such a
meeting is enhanced, too, by the fact that many who are
bound together by the sincerest ties of friendship, made
still stronger by their Templar vows, only meet each
other at these Annual Conclaves. After such re-unions,
and the discharge of our duties, we again separate, each
to seek his home and cast his bark again upon the
troubled sea of life, and none knowing, when the next
annual summons shall come, how many may answer to
the call. The uncertainty of life obtrudes these thoughts
upon us, for in the providence of God none may escape,
and, sooner or later, each one of us must set out upon
that dark journey whose pathway, save to the Christian
HISTOKY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 157
mind, is enshrouded in mystery and night. Let me
exhort you, Templars, to be prepared to meet this last
dread summons — it may come in an instant of time.
We have had a melancholy instance of this since the
last annual meeting of our Grand Commandery at Phila-
delphia. There was one who met us then, who will
meet us no more this side of the grave. Death, for the
first time since the organization of our Grand Com-
mandery, has entered our Asylum, and taken from us
one of our Past Officers. I allude to the death of Past
R. E. Grand Commander R. Stirling Wilson. He
died suddenly, and without warning. But we trust,
with the Templar's faith, he was not unprepared to meet
this great and solemn change, and, according to the
teachings of our ritual, having placed a firm reliance on
Divine protection, he will enjoy eternal and inefPable
happiness in the world above. Such is our most fervent
prayer. As soon as information of his death was re-
ceived, I called a Special Conclave of the Grand Com-
mandery, at Philadelphia, but was not able, owing to
the shortness of the notice, to summon all the officers
and members. Twelve pall-bearers w^ere appointed to
take charge of his remains and pay the last sad tribute
of respect to his memory. In connection with the above,
I suggest that in the present instance, and hereafter, a
suitable tablet to the memory of deceased Officers and
Past Officers of the Grand Commandery be appended to
each year's proceedings. Forms will be found in the
proceedings of the Grand Encampment of the United
States, held at Hartford, Connecticut, in 1856, and of
our Order 738. I would urge the committee to pre-
pare a burial service to discharge their duties without
14
158 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
delay. If no form has yet been agreed upon, I would
call their attention to that adopted by the Grand Com-
mandery of the State of Indiana, a copy of which will
be furnished them.
No new Commanderies have been formed during the
past year, but those in existence (with one or two ex-
ceptions) are in a prosperous and flourishing condition.
This is no doubt owing, in a great degree, to the union
of the former two Grand Bodies of this Commonwealth,
the beneficial results of which are now fully felt and
appreciated. Kindness, Knightly courtesy and harmony
now reign supreme within the sacred precincts of our
Asylum. Indeed, I do not think that the fact of no
new Commanderies having been added to our roll
should be regarded as a matter of regret. We are already
strong in numbers and influence, and the past has taught
us that where there are few Commanderies the portals
of the Asylum are more securely guarded against the
admission of those unworthy to receive the honors of
Knighthood. Several of the Commanderies which, since
the union, find they are too near each other to work to
advantage, are seeking to consolidate — a course which I
strongly recommend and hope to see accomplished.
As Masons, we have also reason to rejoice at the
union of the two Grand Lodges of New York, and the
settlement of the unhappy difficulties that have so long
estranged the Craft of that State.
I must call the especial attention of the Sir Knights
to the financial condition of the Grand Commandery,
that immediate steps may be taken to relieve the treasury
from embarrassment. During my continuance in office
I have received at the hands of the Sir Knights with
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 159
whom I have been placed in official intercourse the most
uniform kindness and courtesy, and when I retire from
office it will be with feelings dampened by no single
regret.
On motion of Sir K. A. Lamberton,
Resolved, That the address of the K. E. Grand Com-
mander Swartz be entered at length on the minutes, pub-
lished with the proceedings, and referred to the Committee
on the Doings of the Grand Officers.
V. E. Sir Wm. H. Allen made a verbal report as Deputy
Grand Commander.
E. Sir Christian F. Knapp, Grand Generalissimo, made
the following report, which was ordered to be spread at
length on the minutes.
To the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania : The under-
signed respectfully reports that he has been called upon,
since the last Annual Conclave, to perform no important
official act, except to sign warrants Nos. 16 and 17. I
corresponded during the year with Commandery No. 3,
through Sir A. Creigh and Alex, Wishart; No. 2, through
Sir M. R. Muckle, No. 4, through Sir R. Stirling Wilson;
No. 9, through Sir A. J. Swartz; No. 11, through Sir Benj.
Park; No. 14, through Sir W. R. Baker; No. 15, through
Sir. S. A. Stout; No. 16, through Sirs S. Hayden and Geo.
Bull; No. 12 I visited officially, installed the officers and
exemplified the work. I am happy to add that the Order,
so far as heard from in this State, has never been in a more
healthy and prosperous condition than it is at the present
time. The triennial Session of the Grand Encampment of
the United States is near at hand, and whereas individuals.
Subordinates, and even Grand Commanderies have arrayed
themselves against the parent body, it is but reasonable
to suppose that Pennsylvania should be heard from,
160 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
although this body has heretofore shown its fealty to the
parent body in unmistakable terms. Union is the only
bond which will preserve Templarism in the United States,
and fealty to the Grand Encampment; without these,
Templarism will be scattered into a thousand fragments.
Dissolve the Grand Body, and w^hat would Templarism be
one year hence? Would you see the Order of the Temple
conferred (as in England) under a Blue Lodge warrant ?
This will surely come to pass, and more, for some will con-
tinue to W'Ork as we now do, and Pennsylvania I trust will
stand to this. Is it not preferable to go on as we are and
prosper ? AYhat advantage would we gain by blotting out
the General Grand Encampment? We reap where we
have not sown, and we gather w^here we have not strew^n,
so long only as we are true to the j^arent body. We will
not inquire on w^hat side the majority is or may be; it is
sufficient for us to know that w^e have a duty to j)erform,
and with constancy and courage we will fight the good fight
and gain the victory, or perish in the attempt. Like the
Templars of old, Ave will not turn our back to the enemy,
although there be ten to one. Our motto is still, In hoc
signo mnces — in that we have faith, in that we will conquer.
He who will not be convinced by the reasonings of a Hub-
bard and a French on this subject deserves to have his
armor reversed, his spurs struck off*, and his mantle taken
away and bestowed on a worthier subject.
Loyalty to the head government and loyalty to our vows
and profession I consider one and the same; a loyal
Templar, therefore, is one who has a conscientious regard
for his vows and obligations, living in constant fealty to his
superior officers and the parental head of the whole — the
Grand Encampment of the United States. As for myself,
and whatever influence I may possess, I shall at all times
and under every circumstance sustain and support the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 161
Grand Body. If errors creep in, correct them ; but, for the
sake of our time-honored and ever-to-be-revered Order, do
not correct them by breaking down the constitution, at the
expense of broken vows, of molated faith, of perjured princi-
ples, which must be the inevitable result if we renounce
our fealty.
Respectfully submitted,
C. F. Knapp,
Grand Generalissimo of the Grand
Commandery of Pennsylvania.
E. Sir John A. Wright, Grand Captain General, made a
verbal report.
Sir J. L. Hutchinson, Chairman of the Committee on the
Doings of the Grand Officers, respectfully submitted the
following report:
To the J?. -E. Commander of the Grand Commandery of
Pennsylvania: The Committee appointed to report upon
the Doings of the Grand Officers during the past year
report, That the officers have attended to their duties with
fidelity.
The Er. E. Grand Commander has referred to two matters
in his address which your committee think should claim the
immediate action of this Commandery, viz. : The increase
of the revenue of the Grand Commandery, and the arranging
of an appropriate Tablet in our Annual Report to the
memory of deceased Sir Knights.
They would therefore propose the adoption of the first
resolution, on page 52 of the proceedings of the Grand
Commandery of 1858, relative to increasing the revenue
and the adoption of a Tablet similar to that adopted by the
Grand Encampment of the United States.
They would also propose the adoption of the annexed
14*
162 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
blank, as suggested by the Grand Eecorder, as a form of
returns for the Subordinate Commanderies.
Kespectfully submitted,
J. L. Hutchinson,
Chairman.
On motion the report was accepted and the committee
discharged.
On motion of Sir James Lindsey,
Resolved, That the revenue of the Grand Commandery
be increased as follows: Each person hereafter receiving
the Orders of Knighthood in the several Commanderies
under this jurisdiction shall pay to the Grand Commandery
the sum of three dollars, in addition to the fee to be paid by
the Subordinate Commanderies. And each Subordinate
Commandery shall pay annually into the treasury of this
Grand Commandery the further sum of fifty cents for each
member, in addition to the one dollar provided for in the
Constitution.
AVhich was unanimously adopted.
On motion of Sir J. R. Patton,
Resolved, That the E. G. Recorder give immediate notice
to each Subordinate Commandery informing them of the
increase of revenue.
On motion of Sir E. H. Turner,
Resolved, That the blank form for returns, as recom-
mended by the Recorder, and approved by the Committee
on the Doings of the Grand Officers, be adopted, and that
the same be printed under the direction of E. Grand Re-
corder Creigh. On motion, the Commandery adjourned to
meet at 2 o'clock P. M.
On motion of Sir James Lindsey,
Resolved, That the unanimous thanks of the Grand Com-
mandery of Knights Templar of the State of Pennsylvania
be, and they are hereby, tendered to the R. E. P. G. C. Sir
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 163
A. Jordan Swartz, for the dignified, able and courteous
manner in which he has discharged the arduous duties of
Grand Commander during the past year.
Resolved, That the foregoing resolution be properly en-
grossed, signed by the Grand Officers, and presented to
P. G. C. Swartz, as a testimonial of the Knightly regards
of this Grand Commandery.
Resolutions adopted on the death of Past R. E. Sir R. Stirling
Wilso7i, and referred to in the foregoing Address.
Sir J. L. Hutchinson, on behalf of the committee, re-
ported the following resolutions, which were unanimously
adopted :
RESOLUTIONS.
Whereas, It has pleased our Grand Master above, before
whom all earthly things are as nothing, to issue his dread
summons, which has called from a transitory to an eternal
existence our much-beloved companion. Sir K. Stirling
Wilson, Past Right Eminent Grand Commander of the
Grand Commandery of Knights Templar and the Appen-
dant Orders of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania ; there-
fore, be it
Resolved, That whilst we bow in submission to this de-
cree of inscrutable wisdom, we cannot refrain from mani-
festing our sorrow, and deploring the loss of one whose
name has been so long connected with us in social and
Masonic ties, agreeable companionship and Knightly
fellowship.
Resolved, That the decease of our Past Right Eminent
Grand Commander is a serious loss to our Order, and that
his untiring zeal in promoting its welfare and unquestion-
able devotion to its principles will be long cherished in
our memories. Mainly through his exertions, Templarism,
which had long slumbered in Pennsylvania, received new
164
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
life and vigor, and now presents a Grand Commandery of
which all Templars may feel justly proud.
Resolved, That in addition to his Masonic and Knightly
virtues, we can attest to his amiable character and kind-
ness of heart. Whilst he never cherished an unkind feeling
towards another, he was always ready to forgive those who
maligned him. His affection as a son, his devotion as a
husband, and his sincerity as a friend, form a tablet of
brighter renown than any that earthly praise could bestow
upon him.
Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be suitably en-
grossed, and sent to the family of the deceased.
The K. E. G. C. appointed as pall-bearers :
Sir Wm. H. Allen No. 2.
Sir J. L. Hutchinson
Sir Chas. Brothers.
Sir W. E. Harpur.
Sir Jno. E. Marshall
Sir Thos. D. Watson
Sir Jno. Thornley .
Sir Jacob Bennett .
Sir Wm. J. Phillips
Sir Wm. F. Kline .
Sir A. G. Waterman
Sir G. Parker Cummingi
(late)
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
The Grand Commandery then closed to pay the last
tribute to the memory of our late Past R. E. Grand Com-
mander, R. Stirling Wilson.
" Requiescat in Pace.^'
J. L. Hutchinson,
Grand Recorder, pro tem.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 165
Annual Address of R. E. Sir William Henry Allen,
LL. D., Grand Commander of the Grand Commandery
oj Pennsylvania, at its Seventh Annual Conclave, held in
the City of Reading, June, 1860.
Sir Knights : After another year of separation, we
are again assembled to exchange Christian salutations
and Knightly courtesies. We have been engaged in the
active duties of life's earnest warfare, but here we gird
on the panoply of a nobler service ; we rally as soldiers
of the Cross, enlisted for a war in which there is no dis-
charge, and marshaled for the battles of religion and
humanity. Let us pay the homage of grateful hearts to
the Supreme Being for his care of our health and lives
since we last met in Conclave, and for the privilege of
gathering once more around our consecrated triangle, to
oifer up our adoration with united hearts and voices to
his Divine Majesty.
We are about to review our past labors and to take
counsel together for the future prosperity of our Order.
In all our deliberations let us exemplify the courtesy
which Christian Knighthood inculcates, and imitate the
meekness of Him who proclaimed peace on earth, good
will to men. Whatever differences of opinion may exist
among us, let us express them with respect and fraternal
kindness, always remembering that he who has learned
to conquer himself is best prepared for the conquest of
the world.
Nothing has occurred since we last assembled in
Grand Conclave to disturb the harmony or check the
progress of our Order. The union of the two Grand
Bodies which formerly claimed jurisdiction over Masonic
166 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Knighthood in Pennsylvania, so happily consummated
three years since, has been cemented by time and mutual
good will, and the wounds which fraternal strife had in-
flicted have been so thoroughly healed that not a scar
remains. Having borne some humble part in the move-
ment which accomplished this reconciliation and union,
I may be permitted to say that the representatives of
those Grand Bodies brought to the discharge of the
delicate duty assigned them a forbearance, moderation,
and spirit of concession which disarmed opposition and
demonstrated their love for the Order. It is due to this
forbearance, moderation, and concession, that the Chris-
tian Chivalry of this Commonwealth now presents an un-
broken front and marches steadily forward to victory.
We have no less cause for mutual congratulation that
fealty to the Grand Encampment of the United States
has been nowliere violated, and that the threats of seces-
sion and disorganization which were heard a few years
since in some of the State Grand Commanderies found
no voice in the Grand Encampment at its last triennial
Conclave at Chicago. No traitor's cry of disunion dis-
turbed with its harsh dissonance the harmony of that
august body; and now the solid phalanx of Templars,
from the Lakes to the Gulf, and from the Atlantic to the
Pacific, is harassed by no mutiny and dreads no treason.
Would to God that this example of our Order might be
imitated by the political parties of our country, and that
North, South, East, and West might cease from sectional
strife and rally around the Union of the States as the
palladium of our liberty and the ark of our safety !
I have the pleasure to inform you that dispensations
have been granted to open and hold three new Com-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 167
maiideries during the past year. Kedron Commandery,
No. 18, at Greensburg, Westmoreland County, was
opened and the officers installed by our Grand Re-
corder, acting under warrant as the proxy of the Grand
Commander. He exemplified the work, assisted by our
Grand Junior Warden and several Sir Knights from
Pittsburg Commandery, No. 1, by constituting nine
Knights of the Red Cross and dubbing eight Knights
Templar and Knights of Malta.
Hugh de Payens Commandery, No. 19, at Easton,
Northampton County, was opened and the officers in-
stalled by the Grand Commander in person, assisted by
the Grand Captain General and Sir J. E. Marshall, Past
Commander of St. John's Commandery, No. 4. The
work was exemplified by conferring the Order of Knights
of the Red Cross on nine Companions of the Royal Arch,
and the Orders of Knights Templar and Knights of
Malta on eight. This young and spirited Commandery
is well provided with furniture and the new regalia, and
has a commodious hall fitted up with all the appendages
of an actively working Commandery.
Allen Commandery, No. 20, at Al lento wn, Lehigh
County, was opened and the officers installed by the
Grand Commander in person, assisted by Sir. J. E.
Marshall and several Sir Knights from De Molay Com-
mandery, No. 9. The work was exemplified by con-
ferring the orders of Knighthood on three Companions
of the Royal Arch.
I recommend that charters be granted to these three
Commanderies, and that immediately thereafter their
legal representatives, who may be in waiting, be admitted
to seats as members of this Grand Commandery.
168 HISTOllY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Having been informed that St. Omer's Commandery,
No. 7, stationed at Uniontown, Fayette County, had not
reported to the Grand Commandery for two years past,
from the fact that the officers had removed and left the
Commandery destitute of members expert in the work,
and that the Sir Knights of said Commandery desired
to be congregated, to hold an election of officers and to
be instructed in the work and drill, I issued a warrant
to Sir Alfred Creigh to reopen said Commandery, hold
an election, install the officers and exemplify the work
of the Orders. The Grand Recorder will report to the
Grand Commandery his doings under this warrant.
Impressed with the importance of collecting and pre-
serving the history of Masonic Knighthood in Pennsyl-
vania, I appointed, in August last, our Grand Recorder,
Sir Alfred Creigh, Historiographer of the Grand Com-
mandery of this State, and sent him a commission hand-
somely engrossed on parchment. The ability and zeal
of this officer have been illustrated by his activity in
collecting and arranging a great number of documentary
and traditional memorials, which will prove of much
interest and value to the Order. All this has been
done without any other compensation than the pleasure
which these researches have afforded him, and the
hope of contributing to the honor of Pennsylvania
Knighthood.
Having been prevented by other engagements from
attending the Triennial Conclave of the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States at Chicago, I appointed and
commissioned Sir H. H. Frisbie, Past Grand Captain
General of our Grand Commandery, and a member of
Jacques de Molay Commandery, No. 3, to serve as my
HISTOKY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 169
proxy. I regret that no report has been received from
him.
In reply to a letter which I addressed to Sir Thomas
Dickson, of Scranton, I was informed that Coeur de
Lion Commandery had not been organized after the re-
ceipt of its charter, that there was no one in it who
understood the work, and that the Sir Knights had not
congregated for more than a year. I replied that if the
Sir Knights at Scranton desired Cceur de Lion Com-
mandery to be instituted, I would request our very Emi-
nent Deputy Grand Commander, Sir Christian F. Knapp,
to visit them for the purpose of opening and dedicating
the Commandery, holding an election of officers, install-
ing the officers and exemplifying the work. No answer
to this pro]30sition has been received.
I have visited St. John's Commandery, No. 8, at
Carlisle; Parke Commandery, No. 11, at Harrisburg;
De Molay Commandery, No. 9, at Reading; Jerusalem
Commandery, No. 15, at PottstoAvn, and St. John's
Commandery, No. 4, at Philadelphia. The work of the
Order of Knights of the Red Cross was exemplified by
the officers of Parke Commandery, and that of the three
Orders by the officers of De Molay Commandery.
At Pottbtow^n, assisted by the Grand Captain General
and the officers of Jerusalem Commandery, I conferred
the Orders of Knighthood on two Companions. I am
indebted to the Sir Knights of all the Commanderies
which I have had the pleasure to visit for liberal hos-
pitality and Knightly courtesy, for which I tender them
my cordial thanks.
The proceedings of our Grand Commandery at its
sixth Annual Conclave were printed in September last,
15 H
170 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
by order of Past Grand Commander, Sir A. Jordan
Swartz, but on account of the inaccuracy of the edition,
he declined either to distribute them among the Com-
manderies of the State or to deliver them to me. I
therefore ordered the printing of a revised edition, copies
of which have been sent to the Commanderies under our
jurisdiction, reserving a sufficient number for the use
of the Grand Commandery. In the revised edition the
burial service which was adopted at our last Grand Con-
clave was omitted, having been superseded by the ritual
subsequently adopted by the Grand Encampment of the
United States.
The Grand Officers having been invited to meet at
the Asylum in Philadelphia on the 8th of June, the
Grand Commander, Grand Generalissimo, Grand Cap-
tain General, Grand Prelate, and Grand Junior AVarden
were present; also Sir E. C. Smeed, of Crusade Com-
mandery, No. 12, and a number of the officers and mem-
bers of Philadelphia Commandery, No. 2, and St. John's
Commandery, No. 4. The drill was exemplified, the
work of the Orders rehearsed, and numerous points of
interest discussed. The officers of Philadelphia Com-
mandery, No. 2, were installed by the Grand Com-
mander.
At our last Annual Conclave the financial embarrass-
ments of the Grand Commandery were under considera-
tion, and two resolutions for the relief of the treasury
were adopted — one having in view a diminution of ex-
penses, and the other an increase of revenue. The first
resolution declared that the expenses of only one repre-
sentative from each Subordinate Commandery, incurred
by attendance at the Annual Conclave, should be paid
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 171
by the Grand Commandery. By some oversight this
resolution was not printed in our published proceedings.
The second resolution required that each person receiv-
ing the Orders of Knighthood should pay to the Grand
Commandery the sum of three dollars, in addition to
the fee of two dollars to be paid by the Subordinate
Commanderies, as provided for in the Constitution ; and
that each Subordinate Commandery should pay into the
treasury of the Grand Commandery the further sum of
fifty cents for each member, in addition to the one dollar
provided for in the Constitution.
It is hoped that the report of the Grand Treasurer
will show such an improvement in our financial con-
dition as will justify the Grand Commandery in reliev-
ing the Subordinate Commanderies and newly-created
Knights of this additional burden, by rescinding the
resolution to increase the revenue of the Grand Com-
mandery, on page 26 of our printed proceedings. It is
the true policy of the Grand Commandery to collect no
more revenue than will suffice to defray its necessary
expenses.
The Constitution of the Grand Commandery is defec-
tive, and requires careful revision. I recommend that
a committee be appointed for this purpose, and instructed
to inquire whether Wednesday next preceding June
24th, except when June 24th shall fall on Wednesday,
would be a more convenient day for the assembling of
the Grand Commandery in Annual Conclave than June
22d ; also whether the rule requiring that the election
of officers shall take place on the morning of the third
day of the Annual Conclave should be altered or struck
out ; also whether the Subordinate Commanderies should
172 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
be required to pay three dollars instead of two dollars
for each person receiving the Orders of Knighthood;
also whether some more effectual mode of proceeding
should be adopted in case a Subordinate Commandery
shall neglect to make its returns and pay its dues.
Having been informed by the Grand Recorder that
new returns and charters were required for immediate
use, I have caused five hundred coj)ies of the returns
and fifty copies of the charter to be printed.
I submit herewith a file of the correspondence of my
office during the past year, and an account of my ex-
penses, with vouchers for the same.
I should do injustice to the feelings of a grateful
heart should I close this address without an expression
of my warmest thanks for the uniform kindness and
respect which I have received from every officer and
member of the Grand Commandery, and from every Sir
Knight of the Order, with whom the duties of my office
have brought me into communication, either personally
or by writing. I shall cherish the remembrance of your
courtesy, magnanimity, and loyalty through life, and
shall strive to cement the friendships which it has been
my happiness to form with you by a firm adherence to
our sublime faith and by the practice of all Christian
and Knightly virtues.
And now, being about to surrender this post of honor
and responsibility to my successor, I retire from the
office in which your partiality placed me with an affi;c-
tion for the Order which has been strengthened by a
more thorough knowledge of its principles, and a better
appreciation of its spirit than I had attained before ; and
with earnest prayers for its prosperity, and for the hap-
I
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 173
piness, here and hereafter, of every one of its members,
I commend you to God, and to the grace of our Lord
Jesus Christ.
On motion of Sir M. Richards Muckle,
Resolved, That the address of the Grand Commander be
spread at length on the minutes, and published with the
proceedings.
V. E. Sir Christian Frederic Knapp, D. G. Commander,
and E. Sir J. L. Hutchinson, G. Captain General, made
verbal reports of their doings as Grand Officers.
On motion of E. Sir Wm. H. Strickland,
Resolved, That the thanks of this Grand Commandery be
presented to Right Eminent Past Grand Commander Sir
William Henry Allen, for the eloquent addresses delivered
by him at the installation of the present Grand Officers,
and that copies of the same be requested for publication
with the proceedings of this Grand Conclave.
E. Sir Edmund H. Turner, Chairman of the Committee
on the Doings of the Grand Officers, reported :
That the officers have been unusually active in their
labors during the recess of this Grand Body. We find in
their official action nothing which is deserving of disappro-
bation, but much that is entitled to our warmest commend-
ation.
The address of the Grand Commander has been in part
referred to committees specially appointed for the consider-
ation of the important suggestions therein made. This re-
lieves us from the necessity of speaking of them in this
report.
In the address reference is made to the imperfect execu-
tion of the work of printing the proceedings of this body at
its last Annual Conclave — an imperfection which rendered
said work entirely valueless to us, in the opinion of R. E.
15 *
174 HISTORY OF TPIE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
P. G. Commander Swartz. A new edition having been or-
dered and circulated, and the publishers having been paid
therefor, they now present a bill amounting to $114 98 for
the printing of the first and imperfect edition. This claim,
however, they profess a willingness to compromise for the
sum of seventy-five dollars, if promptly paid. Your com-
mittee deem it advisable to refer them for the settlement
and adjustment of their claim to R. E. P. G. Commander
Swartz, w4io is familiar with all the facts touching the
matter.
Your committee would also notice briefly that portion
of the Grand Commander's address which speaks of the
appointment of a Historiographer of the Order in Pennsyl-
vania. We approve most cordially both the propriety of
making such an appointment and the judicious selection of
our distinguished Grand Recorder, E. Sir Alfred Creigh,
for that position. And we recommend that when the work
now in the course of preparation by him shall be published,
this Grand Commandery shall purchase such a number of
copies thereof as shall be alike honorable to us and due to
the zeal of the author.
Edmund H. Turner, ^
Thos. D. Wattson, > Committee.
H. D. Lowe, J
On motion of Sir James Lindsey,
Resolved, That the report be adopted, the committee dis-
charged, and the report spread upon the minutes.
On motion of Sir Kt. W. H. Strickland,
Resolved, That the thanks of this Grand Commandery be
tendered to our R. E. Past Grand Commander William
Henry Allen, for the very able and satisfactory manner in
which he has discharged the various duties of his office ;
his administration being one to which we will ever recur
with emotions of pleasure and pride, as tending, in an emi-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 175
nent degree, to uphold and support the true interests and
dignity of our Order.
Resolved, That a copy of this resolution, suitably en-
grossed, and signed by the Grand Officers, be presented to
him, as a testimonial of the sentiments of this Grand Com-
mandery.
Annual Address of the R. E. Sir Christian Frederic
Knapp, Grand Commander of the Grand Commandery
of Pennsylvania, at its Eighth Annual Conclave, held in
Pittsburg, June, 1861.
Templars of the Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania : In compliance with our laws, I have tlio
honor herewith to submit to you a report of my official
acts since our last Annual Conclave. But, before pro-
ceeding with this duty, allow me to express my un-
feigned gratitude to the Supreme Grand Master of the
Universe for the countless blessings He has vouchsafed
to us during our year of past separation. With hand to
hand and heart to heart, under the sacred emblem of
our Redeemer, we have been enabled once more to guard
our sacred triangle, and, with resolutions more strength-
ened by time and experience, manfully discharge our
duties as Templars.
We are reminded by the absence of many familiar
faces that our ranks are broken. It is my official but
painful duty to announce the death of P. E. Grand
Prelate Kev. Sir B. R. Waugh, who departed this life
March 27th, A. O. 743. He was indeed a brother,
friend, gentleman, and a Christian Sir Knight. A bright
and shining light — one whose light never waned, and
176 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
whose strength never failed; in faith strong, in hope
enduring, in charity profound, in fortitude fervent, and
in mercy consistent, death summoned him hence to the
regions of light ineffable and life inmiortal. May one
page in our records be set apart, where, in print, shall
be represented a monument more enduring than marble,
perpetuating his memory and his virtues !
Being informed by our E. G. Recorder that a number
of new charters were on hand, the same being an im-
provement on the old ones, and application having been
made to me to grant new charters for the old ones, I
consulted with my Grand Officers, and we unanimously
agreed that all Subordinate Commanderies desiring new
charters should have the privilege of doing so on the
payment of $5 to the Grand Recorder, the E. G. Re-
corder to pay the cost-price of said charters into the
treasury of this G. Commandery. I sent communications
accordingly to such Commanderies as I did not expect
to visit.
On the 19th of September last I issued two dispensa-
tions to hold an election and resume labor; the one to
Coeur de Lion Commandery, No. 17, stationed at Scran-
ton, the other to St. Omer's Commandery, No. 7,
stationed at Uniontown. These dispen.sations I for-
warded to our E. G. Recorder, who informed me that
Coeur de Lion had resumed labor.
At the request of some of tlie G. Officers of this G.
Commandery, I called a Meetino; of Instruction at the
city of Philadelphia, December 4th. I summoned my
officers and invited all Sir Knights in good standing ;
which was accomplished to the satisfaction of all
present.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 177
V. E. D. G. Commander Sir John A. Wright, Feb-
ruary 13, 1861, solicited permission for all Commanderies
desiring the same to be present, in Templar uniform, on
the 22d of February, at Harrisburg, at the raising of the
National flag ; which I granted, and Parke, Mountain and
De Molay Commanderies were respectively represented
on that interesting event.
I received a communication from Kedron Comman-
dery, ISTo. 18, stationed at Greensburg, stating that their
first three officers had left the place — the E. Commander
and Generalissimo for the war, the Captain General to
a distant part of the State. This Commandery asked
that a dispensation be granted to hold an election, and
having received a similar communication from tlie
Captain General, I granted their request.
I received invitations to visit Commanderies ISTos. 2,
3, 4, 9, 10, 12, 15, 16, 18, 19 and 20. I visited No. 9,
stationed at Reading, October 23; practiced the drill
and instructed them in the Avork, accompanied by Sir
E. C. Smead of No. 12. Commanderies Nos. 2 and 4,
stationed at Philadelphia, I visited December 4; con-
ferred the Orders of Knighthood upon Companion F. C.
Hodden. On May 24 I again visited Commandery
No. 4; conferred the Orders of Knighthood upon Com-
panion Thomas Stilman, assisted by D. Washburn as
Prelate, and installed the officers. No. 8, stationed at
Carlisle, I visited June 9. The E. Commander in-
formed me that it would be impossible to assemble the
Sir Knights in Conclave, as the Sir Knights were en-
gaged in military duties. No. 9, stationed at Reading,
I visited December 8, and conferred the Orders of
Knighthood upon Companions L. G. Coleman, S. W.
H *
178 HISTOllY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Hollenbach, F. P. Heller, and Christian Stoltz. I
again visited the same June 3; gave instructions in the
work and installed the officers. No. 11, stationed at
Harrisburg, I visited June 8. The G. Commander in-
formed me that it was not in his power to assemble his
Commandery, many of the Sir Knights having left the
place on account of the present National difficulties.
Commandery No. 12, stationed at Bloomsburg, I visited
during the year seven times; conferred the Orders of
Knighthood upon fifteen Companions, and installed the
officers last April. No. 15, stationed at Pottstown, I
visited December 6; I gave the necessary instructions.
I again visited the same June 4; conferred the Orders
of Knighthood upon Companions Ernest Knapp and
Wm. H. Clegg, and installed the officers. No. 18, sta-
tioned at Greensburg, I visited June 10; installed the
officers and gave instructions in the work. No. 19,
stationed at Easton, I visited this month; gave instruc-
tions in the work and installed the officers. No. 20,
stationed at Allentown, I visited June 6, and gave in-
structions in the work. February 22, I visited St.
Omer's Commandery, stationed at Elmira, N. Y., accom-
panied by Sir Knights Rev. Joshua Kelly, Wm. V.
Higgins, V. S. Doebler, and H. Stanley Goodwin, of
Crusade Commandery, No. 12. All the kindness and
hospitality in the power of the New York Sir Knights
was conferred upon us. Long and gratefully will we
remember them for their liberality and devoted n ess to
the Pennsylvania Crusaders. We witnessed their work
in both Orders; equals they may have, superiors none.
May we soon be able to extend to them that hospitality
which they so justly merit.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 179
I have issued no dispensations for new Commanderies,
although I did expect to establish three Commanderies.
However, our National difficulties prevented the Com-
panions and Sir Knights from accomplishing so desira-
ble an end, and war, with all its horrors, blasted our
prospects, for "the ploughshare is beaten into swords,
and pruning-hooks into spears;'' and as Masonry
never flourished in times of war, so we cannot expect
it now.
Failing to establish new Commanderies, I doubled
my exertions and devotions to those now existing, thereby
encourasins: the Sir Knio-hts to deeds of more exalted
(DO O
usefulness. If Templarism ever needed encouragement
and support, it does so now. ^o sooner is war pro-
claimed than Templars from all quarters come to the
rescue. Some Commanderies have lost their best officers,
and others still are seriously affected in a pecuniary
sense. Whoever may be your next E.. E. Grand Com-
mander will have great responsibilities resting upon
him ; for on him, in a great measure, the prosperity of
Templarism in this State Avill depend. But I believe
that the Grand Master of all will give us the right man,
at the right time and in the right place.
I would call your attention to the patriotic circular
issued by our Grand Master, M. E. Sir B. B. French,
and the noble sentiments therein expressed, and to the
circulars issued by Sir E. H. Gill, the E. E. Grand
Commander of the State of Virginia. Comment is un-
necessary. Whatever course the Knights of Virginia
may adopt, Pennsylvania, ever true and loyal to her
parent head, will always be found ready for any
emergency. I doubt not but before this session closes
180 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
she will inscribe her sentiments upon a monument that
our children's children will be proud of.
It is desirable whenever this Grand Body makes a
display, similar to that at Reading one year ago, that
there should be an orator for the occasion. In examin-
ing the letter-book, I find that some of my predecessors
endeavored to procure the services of those fitted to ad-
dress the Templars and the public, but failed. Follow-
ing in the footstep? of my predecessors, I endeavored to
procure the services of a Sir Knight to address you on
that occasion, but, like my predecessors, I failed. We
see in other Grand Bodies an officer styled "Orator,'^
whose duty it is to address the Sir Knights, in public
or private, whenever called upon, during his term of
office. I leave this, however, in your hands, to dispose
of as you think proper.
I had intended to visit each Commandery in this
State, but could not accomplish it. I would recommend
that this Grand Body make, annually, an appropriation
for visiting purposes; these funds, or part of them, to be
used by the R. E. Commander for defraying his actual
traveling expenses when visiting the Subordinates under
him, and at the end of the year present his bill in detail,
that this Grand Commandery may see what moneys
have been expended and for what purpose.
I have expended during the year, for visiting Subor-
dinate Commanderies, meeting of Grand Officers, station-
cry, postage and express, J87.25.
I corresponded with nearly all Commanderies through
their officers. All is harmony, and not one case of
discipline has come to my notice.
I look upon the next year as one of great prosperity
HISTOKY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 181
to our Order should the existing ^National difficulties
pass away. We may look for an increase of Com-
mand eries and membership if we are true to ourselves
and our beloved Order.
This, Sir Knights, closes my labors as R. E. Grand
Commander of Pennsylvania. I now tender you my
heartfelt thanks for the honor conferred upon me, for
the kindness and hospitality which I received at your
hands. I endeavored to do my duty. I regret that I
could not visit each Commandery in this jurisdiction.
The duties I have performed were simply such as were
required by the rules of our Order. Others may have
done more and better; but none with a better heart, or
a heart that throbbed more for our Order, Avhich was
handed down to us by our illustrious predecessors.
That my labors may meet with your approbation, and
the blessed Immanuel keep and bless you and our be-
loved Order, is and will be my humble prayer.
On motion of Sir James E. Smiley,
Resolved., That the address of the Grand Commander be
spread at length on the minutes, and published with the
proceedings.
Resolved, That the Grand Commander's Address be re-
ferred to the Committee on the Doings of the Grand
Officers.
The Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers
made the following report :
We have examined the address of our E,. E. Grand Com-
mander, and recommend the allowance to him of the sum
of eighty-seven dollars and twenty-five cents, expended in
official visits, etc. ; and would respectfully call attention to
the efficient manner in which he discharged the duties of
16
182 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
his office, and recommend the adoption of the following
resolution :
Resolved, That the thanks of the Grand Commandery of
Knights Templar of Pennsylvania be tendered to our R. E.
Grand Commander, Sir Christian Frederic Knapp, for the
efficient and dignified manner in which he has discharged
his duties.
All of which is respectfully submitted.
Geo. B. Schall, ^
E. C. Smead, > Committee.
James E. Smiley, J
Annual Address of the B. E. Sir John A. Weight, Grand
Commander of the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvaiiia,
at its Ninth Annual Conclave, held in JEaston, June, 1862.
The address of R. E. John A Wright, Grand Com-
mander, was read by the Grand Recorder, and referred
to the Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers :
Templars of the Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania : The meeting of our Annual Conclave brings
with it the duty of reporting my official acts.
Circumstances beyond my control have rendered it
out of my power to perform properly the duties of my
position.
I have the pleasure of greeting you in this Conclave
with peace and harmony in our borders. The unholy
and wicked war waged against us by brethren has
drawn severely upon some of our Commanderies. Yet
other Commanderies have added to their members
worthy Companions.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 183
I am happy to report that Parke Commandery, No.
11, is in a more prosperous condition, and trust, with
some forbearance on the part of your body as to its dues,
it will again assume its place among our most flourish-
ing Commanderies.
St. Omer's Commandery, No. 7, having paid their
dues, I issued a dispensation to E. Sir Alfred Creigh, to
place this Commandery and her membership in their
true position as courteous Knights, by the election of
officers, which has been accomplished ; and at their own
request, and by a former resolution of this Grand Com-
mandery, I gave authority for its removal to Browns-
ville in said county, at which place exists a Lodge,
Chapter and Council in a prosperous condition.
De Molay Commandery, No. 9, on the 23d of INIarch,
lost by fire their charter, seal, regalia, etc. I granted
them a dispensation by which they might resume their
work until the meeting of your body, when a new
charter can be granted. Deep sympathy was felt for
their misfortunes and severe loss.
The P. E. Commander of St. John's Commandery,
No. 8, of Carlisle, failing to install the E. Commander
elect, Kev. Sir H. M. Johnson, I directed P. E. Com-
mander John Palmer to attend to that duty.
Our P. P. E. G. Commander, C. F. Knapp, has been
acting as Grand Lecturer during the past year, and I
must refer to his report for a more detailed statement
of the working condition of the Commanderies in this
State.
I cannot close this brief report without an expression
of regret that the honorable position met me in a year
where duty to my country presented her superior claims
184 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
to my time, nor without the reiteration of my brotherly
love and Knightly affection for the Sir Knights here
met and those they represent.
May Peace, Harmony, Brotherly Love and Knightly
Affection bind us together here on earth, and when our
Conclaves here may end, may we all be partakers of
that endless Conclave in our Father's kingdom, where
our joy will be to recognize it as proceeding from a
risen Saviour.
John A. Wright,
R, E. Grand Commander.
The following is the report referred to in the foregoing
address of the R. E. Sir John A. Wright, Grand Com-
mander :
P. P. E. Sir C. F. Knapp, Grand Lecturer, made the
following re]3ort of his official acts, which was referred to
the Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers.
R. E. G. Commander, Officers and Members of the Grand
Commandery of Knights Templar of Pennsylvania:
I have the honor herewith to submit a report of my do-
ings for the past year as Grand Lecturer and Instructor
of the State :
1861.
Nov. 26. Visited Crusade Commandery, No. 12, conferred
the Order of Knighthood upon Companions Peter
Kinny and S. H. Furgeson, and practised the drill.
Dec. 5. Visited Jerusalem Commandery, No. 15, and con-
ferred the Order of Knighthood upon Companions
George Walters, Addison Vanderslice, Isaac Clegg
and George Clegg.
Dec. 6. Visited De Molay Commandery, No. 9, but owing
to the absence of some of its members no business
could be done.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 185
Dec. 24. Visited De Molay Commandery, No. 9, conferred
the Order of Knights of the Ked Cross upon Com-
panions John Phillips and Henry Ruth, and gave
instructions in the work.
1862.
Jan. 31. Visited Northern Commandery, No. 16, and gave
instructions in the work.
Feb. 3. Visited Northern Commandery, No. 16, and con-
ferred the Order of Knighthood upon Companion O.
AV. Northrop.
Feb. 4. Visited Northern Commandery, No. 16, and con-
ferred the Order of Knighthood upon Companion J.
F. Means.
Feb. 25. Visited De Molay Commandery, No. 9, and con-
ferred the Orders of K. T. and K. of M. upon John
Phillips and Henry Ruth.
March 24. Visited Crusade Commandery, No. 12, and in-
stalled its officers.
April 10. Visited Crusade Commandery, No. 12, and con-
ferred the Orders of Knighthood upon Companions S.
V. Polk, J. Vallerchamp and F. C. Hoffman.
May 8. Visited Crusade Commandery, No. 12, and con-
ferred the Order of Knighthood upon Companions C.
B. Davies, F. D. Green and J. K. Robbins.
May 23. Visited St. John's Commandery, No. 4, and con-
ferred the Order of Knighthood upon Companion G.
Mustin, and installed officers.
May 29. Visited Jerusalem Commandery, No. 15, and con-
ferred the Order of Knighthood upon Companions J.
Vanderslice, G. C. Nicols and Levi B. Kaler.
I would state that I only visited those Commanderies
which invited me to do so through their officers or other-
wise. Northern Commandery had no official visit since its
organization until last January. De Molay and Jerusalem
16*
18G HTSTOHY OF TITE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Commanderies needed all the help to bring them on a sure
footing. I attended to all the calls made on me as Grand
Lecturer, advancing the interests of our Order to the best
of my ability. By the above you will observe that I spared
neither time nor labor, which have been crowned with suc-
cess, as those concerned will testify. My actual expenses
for traveling, postage and telegraph are $57.56.
Kedron Commandery, stationed at Greensburg, desired
me to visit them on several occasions ; but not wishing to
incur expenses which might be avoided, I referred them to
the K. E. G. Commander and V. E. Dept. G. Commander,
both of whom reside near by, and who undoubtedly have
attended to their wants.
Peace and harmony prevail in our borders. Grateful
to Almighty God for the blessings bestowed upon us, and
thankful to you for the honors conferred upon me for the
last five years,
I remain yours in the bonds of Christian Knighthood,
C. F. Knapp,
G. L. and Instructor of the G. Com. of Pa.
The Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers
made the following report :
To the R. E. Grand Commander, Officers and Sir Knights
of the Gixmd Commandery of Pennsylvania :
Sir Knights : —
The Committee on the Doings of the R. E. Grand
Ofiicers of this Grand Commandery respectfully report
having examined the report of the Grand Commander,
and find the various matters therein contained, having been
acted upon during the sessions of the Commandery, require
no special mention by your committee.
In like manner they have given the report of the Grand
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 187
Lecturer their consideration, and recommend the adoption
of the annexed resolutions :
Resolved, That the reports of the R. E. Grand Com-
mander and Grand Lecturer be approved.
Resolved, That a warrant upon the Treasurer be drawn
in favor of C. F. Knapp, Grand Lecturer, for the amount
of the expenses incurred during his official term of service,
ending June, 1862, the same being ^57.56.
All of which is respectfully submitted.
M. Richards Muckle,^
Wm. H. Strickland, > Committee.
S. E. BiLGER, J
Easton, June 11, 1862.
On motion of Sir Knight Bretz,
The report was accepted, the committee discharged and
the resolutions adopted.
On motion of Sir M. Richards Muckle,
Resolved, That the thanks of this Grand Commandery be
and are hereby tendered to the P. Grand Commander Sir
John A. Wright, for the able manner in which the duties
of his i^osition were fulfilled.
Resolved, That a copy of this resolution be delivered to
P. G. C. Sir John A. Wright, attested by the officers of this
G. Commandery.
Annual Address of the R. E. Sir Edmund H. Turner,
Grand Commander of the Gixind Commandery of Penn-
sylvania, at its Tenth Annual Conclave, held in Greens-
burg, June, 1863.
Sir Knights of the Grand Commandery of
Pennsylvania: Another year, fraught with joy and
188 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
happiness to some, to others filled with pain and sad-
ness, has rolled away ; and we have been permitted, by
the mercy and kindness of the Grand Master of the
Universe, again to assemble within our Asylum, to
greet with welcome Avarm, and clasp with cordial grasp,
the hands of the many true and courteous Knights
whom it is our privilege here to meet.
When I look around upon this assembly and see the
well-known faces, mark the well-remembered forms fill-
ing those stations they have so long been accustomed to
occupy, I cannot but feel my heart swell with gratitude
to our Sovereign Master for his kind care and protec-
tion over us.
Since our last Conclave but one of our members (Sir
George W. Edleman, Eminent Commander of St. John's
Commandery, No. 4) has been removed by death. An
ardent Templar and a devoted Christian has been taken
from us : Rest to his ashes ! — Peace to his soul ! He
was indeed a brave and courteous Knight, and endowed
with all those Knightly and Christian virtues which
endeared him to all wdio came w^ithin the circle of their
attraction. AVben the dread summons came to him, it
found him ready and with his armor on ; and w^e have
the glorious hope that the Pilgrim-Warrior, having per-
formed his pilgrimage with courage and fortitude, has
been admitted to the Grand Asylum above, where the
blessed Immanuel presides.
During our present session several matters will be
brought before you which will require your careful
attention and mature deliberation. Among them will
be the amendment to the Constitution, requiring our
Annual Sessions to be held in a fixed locality. This
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 189
subject I deem to be one of vital importance, and which
will affect our whole future welfare. I am free to con-
fess that I dislike departures from old Constitutions and
established customs, except when the change contem-
plated is of such manifest benefit as to be apparent to
all, and to receive their unanimous approval. Our pre-
sent system of itinerating has, we know, worked well :
these re-unions, at different places, have been looked
forward to with pleasure, by the great body of our mem-
bers, as a pleasant variety; and whether the change
contemplated would be a benefit or an evil is a question
which must be determined by your united deliberation
and wisdom.
I ask your attention, also, to a matter which at first
sight may appear to be of little moment, yet one which I
consider of some importance. At our last two or three
Conclaves the members seemed disposed to hurry through
our business as quickly as possible, and, in order to
accomjilish this, subjected themselves and the Grand
Commandery to excessive fatigue. The evil of this
course has been apparent in too hasty action and por-
tions of our business overlooked. Assembled as we are,
representing the various Commanderies in the State,
and having in charge the interests of each, as well as
that of the whole body, I think that our proceedings
should be marked by that deliberation which is essential
to proper legislation. There are scarcely any of us, I
believe, but can spare two or three days for this pur-
pose, and it is undoubtedly but justice to those whose
preference has placed us in this honorable position.
Since our last Conclave no new Commanderies have
been added to our list of Subordinates ; but from per-
190 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
sonal inspection, as well as correspondence from various
sources, I am happy to inform you that our Order is in
a healthy and flourishing condition. It seems to be
reviving from the shock it encountered at the breaking
out of this most unnatural rebellion, when so many of
our brave Knights left our altars to hurry to the tented
field that our Commanderies were more than decimated ;
but their places have been supplied with worthy Com-
panions, Avho, actuated by pure and exalted purposes,
have pressed forward into our ranks. Some of our
Commanderies, also, which had suspended their opera-
tions from various causes, have again resumed labor,
and at the present time we number fully as many, if not
more, than at any former period.
On the 12th day of September last, having been no-
tified of the death of the Eminent Commander of St.
John's Commandery, No. 4, I issued a dispensation to
that Commandery to hold an election for Eminent Com-
mander and other offices that might become vacant
thereby.
On June 13th, 1862, I visited Parke Commandery,
installed their officers, and gave instruction in drill.
January 12th, 1863, I visited Mountain Commandery
at Altoona, inspected their labors and gave instruction.
March 9th, I again visited same Commandery, and
practised them in drill and work.
March 10th, visited Pittsburg Commadery, No. 1,
and instructed them in drill.
March 12th, visited De Molay Commandery, No. 9,
at Reading, instructed them in the work, and conferred
the Orders of Knighthood upon two Companions.
This Commandery, having lost their entire furniture.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 191
&c.y about a year since by fire, had done but little at the
time of my visit; they occupied, for the first time, their
new Asylum. Fresh impetus seems to have been im-
parted to them at their entrance, and I believe that ere
long they will take their old high position among our
Commanderies.
March 13th, I visited Parke Commandery, No. 11,
at Harrisburg, installed the officers, and conferred the
Order of Knighthood upon four Companions. This
Commandery, which was likewise suffering under some
disadvantages, has rid herself from all incumbrances,
again flung forth her beauseant to the breeze, and, by
the zeal and ability of her members, as well as officers,
will soon appear as one of the best and most polished
stones in the Templar arch.
I also attempted to visit Columbia Commandery, No.
13, at Lancaster, and St. John's, No. 8, at Carlisle; but
circumstances, beyond their control, prevented the mem-
bers of those Commanderies from meetins: me at the
time of my visit. In addition to this, I have met the
Commanderies at other times, but not in an official ca-
pacity.
I have been called upon several times during the
year for decisions, both in work and jurisprudence.
The only one of importance, however, arose from the
fact of a Sir Knight Templar, who was not a Present or
Past Commander, but only a Representative at our last
Conclave, being elected to fill an office in this Grand
Body. I decided that inasmuch as the Sir Knight was
duly accredited to the Grand Commandery, and entitled
to a voice and vote therein, he was eligible to any office
the Grand Commandery saw proper to bestow upon
192 HISTOKY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
him. This decision was confirmed by Grand Master
French, at the late session of the Grand Encampment.
(See page 25 of the printed proceedings of that body.)
On September 10th last, accompanied by the Very
Eminent Deputy Grand Commander, Sir J. L. Hutch-
inson, I was present at the Triennial Session of the
Grand Encampment of the United States, held in the
city of New York. During our Conclave the utmost
cordiality and unanimity prevailed, and the sentiments
expressed by the members showed that the few sparks
of secession which glimmered for a moment some time
since have died out, and unshaken loyalty to that
Supreme Head now animates the Templar Host in every
State represented at that meeting.
Among the subjects brought before us was that of a
Templar dress, and after fall discussion a uniform was
adopted, which I think will meet with general approba-
tion ; and I hope that vexed question is now finally set
at rest.
My correspondence during the year has been large.
I have expended for postage, envelopes, &c., $3.48, and
for traveling expenses, $48.76.
I had hoped that ere this, the unhappy war now
desolating our fair and beautiful country would be over,
and that peace would again extend over us her mild
and gentle sceptre; but God, in His inscrutable wis-
dom, has ordered it otherwise, and the dreadful conflict
still goes on. Why is this so ? Look at our past his-
tory : in less than a century we have been raised from a
few weak colonies to a great and powerful nation ; in
that short period we have reached a height unparalleled
in the history of the world. Have we not, in our pride
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 193
and haughtiness, attributed to our own might and the
power of our own arm this greatness and exaltation,
and forgotten that it is the Almighty alone who putteth
down one and setteth up another ? Hath not God seen
our arrogance, and sent this conflict upon us as a
punishment for our national sins? Fellow-Templars,
let us examine ourselves, whether this be not so ; let us
humble ourselves before Him ; let us approach His foot-
stool as piigrim-penitents, and, by fervent, earnest
prayer, endeavor to turn His fierce anger away from us.
Let us also commend to His kind care and sure protec-
tion our many valiant Knights w4io, at the first blast of
the war trumpet, buckled on their swords, and with
lances laid in rest, rushed forward at their country's
call, to vindicate her supremacy and uphold her cause.
Right bravely have they battled in the fierce conflict,
and their devoirs done on every battle-field, from York-
tow^n to Sliiloh, attest the fact that the old Templar
spirit still exists — the ancient fire still glows within
their breasts.
And now, Sir Knights, in a few brief hours you will
be called upon to choose my successor. Whoever may
be the one on whom your choice may fall, most heartily
do I invoke upon him the spirit of wisdom from on
high; may the great I AM endue him abundantly with
those qualities of head and heart which will enable him
to discharge so high a trust with credit to himself and
prosperity to the Order.
I would return to you my heartfelt thanks for the
very many marks of your kindness toward me, especially
that of having deemed me worthy to occupy the liigh
and exalted position of your Right Eminent Grand
17 I
194 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Commander. Be assured that the remembrance of it,
and of you all, will ever linger in my recollection, fresh
and verdant as the green bay tree.
May our Sovereign Grand Master watch over, guide
and prosper you in all your ways ; may He bestow upon
you abundantly every blessing; and when life's pil-
grimage shall be o'er, may each of you be admitted into
that happy Asylum above, there to enjoy ineffable glory
and happiness throughout the boundless ages of eternity !
Edmund H. Turner,
R, E. Gra7id Commande7\
P. G. Commander C. F. Knapp made the following re-
port, as Grand Lecturer and Instructor :
R. E. G. Commander, Officers and Members of the Grand
Commandery of Pennsylvania :
I have the honor herewith to submit a report of my do-
ings for the past year as Grand Lecturer and Instructor
of the State :
1862.
July 10. I visited Crusade Commandery, No. 12, and con-
ferred the Orders of Knighthood upon Companions E.
W. M. Low, S. R. Young and Rev. D. C. John.
Oct. 2. I again visited Crusade Commandery, No. 12, and
conferred the Orders of Knighthood upon Companions
Rev. J. R. Diram and P. John.
Dec. 4. I visited Jerusalem Commandery, No. 15, stationed
at Pottstown, and conferred the Orders of Knighthood
upon Companion Geo. Fronenfield.
1863.
Feb. 18. I visited Coeur de Lion Commandery, No. 17, sta-
tioned at Scranton, and conferred the Orders of Knight-
hood upon Companion John Koch.
March 24. I visited Crusade Commandery, No. 12, and
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 195
assisted in conferring the Orders of Knighthood upon
Companions M. F. Logan, Wm. B. Koons, E. W.
Matthews, R. B. Ricketts, and Rev. M. P. Crosth-
waite, and installed officers.
April 28. I visited Crusade Commandery, No. 12, sta-
tioned at Bloomsburg, and assisted in conferring the
Orders of Knighthood upon Companions John Pen-
man and John Parmley.
May 8. Received invitation to visit De Molay Command-
ery, No. 9, stationed at Reading. Declined, for ^Yant
of time.
May 15. I visited Jerusalem Commandery, No. 15, sta-
tioned at Pottstown, conferred the Orders of Knight-
hood upon Companion John Keim, and installed the
officers. I received, during the past year, a number
of invitations to visit Commanderies, but unavoidable
circumstances prevented my going. So far as I have
been able to visit, the Order seems to be in a healthy
condition, prospering, and with good prospects for the
future.
Grateful for the honors you have conferred upon me, and
thankful for the kindness I received at the hands of all Sir
Knights whom I met,
I remain yours, in the bonds of Christian Knighthood,
C. F. Knapp,
G. L. and Instructor.
On motion of V. E. Sir Jeremiah L. Hutchinson,
Ordered, That the addresses and reports of the Grand
Officers be referred to the appropriate committee.
The Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers sub-
mitted the following report :
To the R. E. Gh^and Commandery of Knights Tem^jlar of the
State of Pennsylvania :
Your committee, to whom was referred the Doings of the
196 ITISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Grand Officers of this Grand Commandery, respectfully re-
port that they have taken the business submitted to them
into consideration, and report as follows, viz. :
The Report of the Grand Recorder was carefully perused,
and approved by this committee.
The Report of the Grand Lecturer, submitted to us, was
carefully examined, and the action in accordance with pre-
vious authority of this Grand Body endorsed.
The Report of the retiring G. Commander, Sir E. H.
Turner, was laid before us.
The suggestions in relation to the proposed amendment
to the Constitution, selecting a permanent central locality
for the Annual Session, having been disposed of in the ses-
sion of this afternoon, we deem it inexpedient to advert to
it at this time.
The action of the R. E. G. Commander in issuing a dis-
pensation to St. John's Commandery, No. 4, of Philadel-
phia, to hold an election for Eminent Commander, is hereby
approved.
The Grand Commandery having ordered a warrant to
be drawn for the amount of $51 84, expenses incurred by
the R. E. G. C. Edmund H. Turner during his term of
office, the same requires no action at the hands of this
committee.
The tenor of the Report generally is of a nature to merit
the hearty approval of your committee, who cannot too
much commend the energy and zeal displayed by P. G. C.
Edmund H. Turner to the Order while acting both in and
out of his official capacity.
Respectfully and fraternally submitted.
M. Richards Muckle,
William Chatland,
John L. Young,
Committee on Doings of Grand Officers.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 197
On motion of Sir Jeremiah L. Hutchinson,
Resolved, That the unanimous vote of thanks of the Grand
Commandery of Knights Templar of the State of Pennsyl-
vania be and is hereby tendered to P. Grand Commander
Sir Edmund H. Turner for his official services as Grand
Commander, recognizing in him an able and efficient officer,
and ever ready to support our principles.
Resolved, That a copy of this resolution be engrossed on
parchment, signed by the Grand Officers, and delivered to
Past Grand Commander Turner as a testimonial of our
courteous regards as Knights Templar.
Annual Address of R. E. Sir H. Stanley Goodwin,
Grarid Commander of the Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania, at its Eleventh Annual Conclave, held in Carlisle,
June, 1864.
Sir Kniohts, Officers and Members of the
Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania: Throuo;h
the kindness of God we are permitted again to assemble
in Annual Conclave, and under circumstances Avhich
should call forth our most heartfelt gratitude to Him,
and our warmest mutual congratulations.
The past year has been one of great prosperity to our
Order in this State. Although so many of our best and
bravest, most zealous and active Knights have taken up
the sword in the cause of their country, and temporarily
deprived their Commanderies of their valued presence
and assistance, yet those who have remained have
pressed forward in the noble w^ork with a commendable
17 *
198 ITISTORY OF THE TvNTGTTTS TEMPLAR.
ardor and perseverance. Those Commanderies whieli
one year since lay almost dormant, and apparently under
the shadow of death, have revived, and are now in the
foremost rank among the prosperous, while from every
quarter of our jurisdiction the reports come up to us to
day of increased numbers, activity and zeal.
It is with unfeigned joy and gratification that I am
able to report to you that the relations existing between
this Grand Commandery and all her Subordinates, as
well as between all the Subordinate Commanderies in
their connection with each other, are those of perfect
peace, confidence and fraternal love.
We meet in peace and harmony, and surely we have
great cause for thankfulness to Almighty God, who has
vouchsafed to us these great blessings. Let us not for-
get that to Him, and to Him alone, we are iudebted for
our great prosperity and peace; let us lift up our hearts
to Him in adoration and praise for his goodness and
loving-kindness to us.
We meet to renew our vows of love and friendship;
to review and recount the labors, the trials and successes
of the past year; to repair what may have been done
amiss, and to unite our labors and counsel for the ad-
vancement and future prosperity of our beloved Order.
Let us pledge our hearts to each other with that sincerity
and brotherly love which become those who have taken
upon themselves the solemn vows of the Knight Temp-
lar; let us, in recounting the events of the past year,
avoid all unnecessary allusion to anything which can
possibly wound the feelings or sensibilities of a single
Sir Knight, and rather bury in oblivion the remem-
brance even of all occurrences which have caused discord
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 199
or bitterness in the past. In attempting to repair what-
ever may have been done amiss, let us do it without
using crimination or reproach toward any one who may
have erred; and in taking counsel together for the
future, let us look not to our own good, but to the good
of our whole Order; let us feel and manifest a willing-
ness to deny ourselves, and even to take up the Cross if
it be required of us, that the favor and blessing of God
may rest upon us, and that His glory may be made per-
fect in our continued peace and prosperity. So shall we
obey the mandate of our Divine Lord and Saviour, and
so shall we receive the glorious fulfillment of His
promises.
The Order of Knights Templar has seen and survived
the rise and fall of many nations and the birth and
death of many generations of men; fixed upon the Rock
of Ages, and firmly grounded upon the eternal principles
of the religion of Christ, it lias come down to us through
many centuries of time, pure and unspotted from the world.
Let it be our most diligent care and earnest endeavor
to transmit it to our successors, and to generations yet
unborn, with its doctrines and practices of patience and
perseverance, of constancy and courage, of faith and
humility, and all the manly and Christian virtues here
so beautifully taught and exemplified, untarnished and
unsullied.
I have been called upon during the past year to make
but one official decision ; it was the following : " That it
is right and proper to confer the Orders of Knighthood
upon any number of applicants at one and the same time.^'
I am not aware that there exists any law upon this sub-
ject, and as this decision is in accordance with the custom
200 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
of this Grand Commandeiy, and of all or nearly all her
Subordinates, I hope it may meet your approval.
My official correspondence has been somewhat exten-
sive and voluminous; but as all the subjects to which it
relates are settled and disposed of, it will prove of little
interest to you. I am ready to present it to you if you
desire.
I have during the year visited officially and by re-
quest the following Commanderies, viz. : St. John's, No.
8, at Carlisle; Mountain, No. 10, at Altoona; Parke,
No. 11, at Harrisburg; Crusade, No. 12, at Blooms-
burg, and Columbia, No. 13, at Lancaster. In each of
these I have conferred the Orders of Knighthood, and
have given instruction to those which needed in the
work and drill. In Parke and Columbia Commanderies
I have installed the officers. Several of these Com-
manderies I have visited more than once, and in each
and all of my visits I have met at the hands of the Sir
Knights that Knightly courtesy and liberal hospitality
w^iich are among the characteristics of our magnanimous
Order. For this I desire to return to them my very
cordial thanks. I should be happy if I dared to hope
that in these official visits I have conferred as much
pleasure and profit as I have myself experienced from
them.
By authority of this Grand Commandery, conferred
upon me at the last Annual Session, I have issued a new
charter to Allen Commandery, No. 20, at Allentown, to
replace the one mislaid or lost. I have, upon my own
responsibility, issued to the following Commanderies,
viz.: Crusade, No. 12, at Bloomsburg, and Columbia,
No. 13, at Lancaster, new charters in lieu of their old
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 201
ones, which were issued by the Grand Encampment of
Pennsylvania. Both of these old charters are in the
hands of our Grand Recorder. I would call your atten-
tion to the fact that others of our Subordinates are still
using tlie charters granted to them by the Grand Bodies
under whose jurisdiction they were instituted before the
union in 1857; and I would respectfully recommend
that new ones be issued to all such in exchange, without
the payment of any fee.
I desire to call your attention to two clauses in the
Constitution of this Grand Commandery, and suggest
for your consideration the propriety of amending them
so that they shall be more in accordance with the spirit
of our Institution.
1st. The last clause of Article II., Section 1, would
seem to exclude from eligibility to office present Emi-
nent Commanders, while admitting Past Eminent Com-
manders. The government of our Order is strictly
military, and as such a Present officer ought not to be
ranked by a Past officer of the same grade. I am sure
such was not the intention of those wise men who framed
our Constitution.
2d. Article VII., which provides for amendments to
the Constitution, would permit them to be made under
any circumstances, and at any time during any Annual
Session, without previous notice. We ought to consider
this document as the Mao-na Charta of our rio^hts and
privileges, and to give the greatest possible publicity to
all concerned and interested of any proposed change;
for we cannot too carefully guard it against the possi-
bility of hasty or ill-advised action. In my opinion all
amendments should be proposed at one Annual Meeting
202 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
and lie over until the next, and in the mean time be
published in our annual proceedings. I feel sure that
my reasons for both these suggestions will be fully ap-
parent to you all without further argument. I present
them for your consideration.
During the year 1859 the Very Eminent Sir Knight
Alfred Creigh, LL. D., our Grand Recorder, was
appointed Historiographer of this Grand Commandery.
This appointment was a very important one, and in my
opinion very judiciously made; for the Eminent Sir
Knight has for very many years, as you all are aware,
devoted much of his time and attention to the history
of Masonrv and of our Order in this State. I would
suggest, if it meet your views, that he be called on to
report the progress he has made in the work assigned
him, and that you take such action as may seem to you
right and proper to rescue our early history from
oblivion.
We have cause to thank God that none of the officers
and so few of the members of this Grand Body, and so
few of the Sir Knights among our number, have been
called since last we met from time to eternity. Those
few, however, whom we have lost, were brave and cour-
teous Knights, whom we could illy afford to lose from
our ranks. While we cherish their memory in our
hearts, let us, in accordance with our usual custom, in-
scribe a page to their memory in our annual record.
Officers and Members of the Grand Com-
mandery OF Pennsylvania ! — I cannot close this re-
port without expressing my most sincere and heartfelt
thanks to you all, and through you to all the Sir
Knights of the jurisdiction Avitli whom I have been
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 203
brought into communication by the duties of my office,
for your constant and uniform kindness and courtesy, as
also your hearty co-operation with me in carrying out
every measure adoj^ted wliich has seemed to be for the
good of the Order. I desire also to acknowledge with
gratitude my indebtedness to very many of you for
words of advice and encouragement at times when gloom
seemed to rest upon the future of our Order, and when
such words were particularly needed. And now, Sir
Knights, it only remains that I should express my
most earnest and anxious desire that this meeting should
redound to the benefit of our beloved Order. I hope
and trust that the measures you adopt may be character-
ized by wisdom and prudence, and that your action may
be such as to establish, strengthen and perfect in us all
the bonds of peace and unity, and that it may also
arouse the enthusiasm of all Sir Knights throughout
our bounds, and enkindle in their hearts a spirit of de-
votion and zeal for our cause; and may we all so conduct
ourselves during our earthly pilgrimage that at its close
we may be found worthy, through the merits of Him
who has gone before us, to enter that asylum of rest
which He has prepared for all those who put their trust
in Him, and receive the welcome plaudit, ^'Well done,
thou good and faithful servant ; enter thou into the joy
of thy Lord!''
On motion of Rev. Sir H. M. Johnson, D. D.,
Resolved, That the address of the R. E. Grand Com-
mander be referred to the Committee on the Doinas of the
Grand Officers.
Sir Charles A. Bannvart, from the Committee on the
Doings of the Grand Officers, submitted the following report :
204 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
To the R. E. Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of
Pennsylvania :
Your committee, to whom was referred the Doings of the
Grand Officers of this Grand Commandery, respectfully
report :
That they have carefully examined the address of our
R. E. Grand Commander, Sir H. Stanley Goodwin, and
heartily approve of his decision in regard to conferring the
degree of Knighthood uj^on any number of applicants at
one and the same time.
Your committee would recommend that new Charters be
issued to Subordinate Commanderies holding those granted
them prior to the union in 1857, and that the same be ex-
changed free of charge.
The suggestion made by our R. E. Grand Commander
Goodwin, in reference to amending the last clause of Art.
I., Sect. 1, of the Constitution, meets our hearty approval,
and also the proposed amendment of Art. VII., requiring
all alterations to the Constitution to be made at one Con-
clave and acted upon at the next, giving due publicity to
said alteration.
Your committee would also ask what progress Eminent
Sir Alfred Creigh, Historiograj^her of the Grand Com-
mandery of Knights Templar of Pennsylvania, has made
in the work assigned him ?
Your committee cannot but joraise the earnestness, vigil-
ance and zeal manifested by R. E. Sir H. Stanley Good-
win, and his sterling qualities, both in his official and pri-
vate capacity, which cannot but merit our highest com-
mendation.
Respectfully and courteously submitted.
Chas. a. Bannvart,^
Ch. Fr. Knapp, a Committee.
Jno. Vanderslice, 3
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAE. 205
On motion of Sir George E. Fox,
Resolvedj That the report be accepted and the committee
discharged.
Annual Address of the R. E. Sir H. Stanley Goodwin,
Grand Commander of the Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania, at its Ttvelfth Annual Conclave, held in Altoona,
June, 1865.
Officers and Sir Knights of the R. E. Grand
Commandery of Pennsylvania : The Great Archi-
tect of the Universe, who holds in His hand the desti-
nies of nations and of men, has permitted the representa-
tives of the various Subordinate Commanderies, with
the Grand Officers, to assemble in Annual Conclave
around our sacred Delta, and in the name of Immanuel
God with us, render Him the homage of our hearts for
his loving-kindness towards us, as an institution pledged
to carry out the principles of the New Covenant,
which "speaketh better things than the blood of
Abel.^^
It will be my pleasure, as w^ell as my duty, in pre-
senting to you this, my Annual Report, to refer to such
matters as will promote our individual and general in-
terests, and at the same time elevate the Grand Com-
mandery of the State of Pennsylvania to that dignity to
which she is so pre-eminently entitled.
Since our last Annual Conclave, eight Sir Knights
have passed into the spirit land, having died as good
and true Sir Knights should die, with their harness
on — having battled faithfully and honorably in life to
18
206 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
receive the rewards consequent upon a life of purity and
love — their hearts being governed by the great code of
Christian morals, and in their death being sustained by
Him who brought life and immortality to light through
the Gospel. I would recommend that our Sir Knight,
the E. Grand Recorder, prepare suitable memorials for
each of the Sir Knights, and have them published with
the Proceedings.
It affords me mucli pleasure and satisfaction to state
that, although two years since this Grand Body was in
debt, yet, through the exertions of all our Subordinates,
and a desire on their part to place this Grand Body in
her true and proper position, no debt rests upon the
Grand Coramandery of Knights Templar of Pennsyl-
vania, but there is in the Treasury a surplus fund of
more than fifteen hundred dollars, which I would
recommend to be invested in Government stock.
Peace and harmony prevail with all the Sister Juris-
dictions with which this Grand Commandery is in
communication ; and now that peace has spread her
snow-white wings over our heretofore bleeding and dis-
tracted country, we fondly hope that the valiant and
magnanimous Knights of the various State Grand Com-
manderies of the Southern section of our country, for-
getting the past, and with hearts devoted to our common
country — the blessings of civil and religious liberty —
and above all, to the principles of the First Grand
Master under the Christian Dispensation, will again
meet and re-organize, and re-unite with us in building
up a more glorious Temple than earth can give — a
temple in which all misgivings, all bickerings, all
hcart-rendings, and all 2:)olitical opinions are cast aside,
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 207
and meet around a common altar, having no other aim,
and no other object, but love to God and love to
MAN.
The Very E. Sir Knight Alfred Creigh, who was
appointed Historiographer, has prepared a report to
present to you, in accordance with the recommendation
of this Grand Commandery at its last Annual Conclave.
In preparing so valuable and interesting a work, it will
be the duty of the Sir Knights, as well as the Subordi-
nate Commanderies, to assist him in his labors ; and we
feel confident that this Grand Commandery will, by its
unanimous vote, not only give that encouragement to this
great enterprise, but in their wisdom pass such resolu-
tions as will enable us, at as early a date as possible, to
have published the History of Knighthood in the Key-
stone State. We, as Sir Knights, may be well proud
of our history, as Pennsylvania has the honor of estab-
lishing the first Grand Encampment in the United
States, in May, 1797.
With regard to the amendments of the Constitution,
as proposed at the Eleventh Annual Conclave, and after
one year's reflection, I am more than ever convinced of
the necessity for these amendments.
An application was made to me for a Dispensation to
constitute a Commmandery in York, Pennsylvania, by
the constitutional number of Sir Knights, and properly
recommended, with the fee accompanying the petition,
which was paid by me to the Grand Recorder. I
granted the Dispensation, and York Commandery, No.
21, was constituted the 19th day of January, 1865. I
would recommend that a Charter be granted. By con-
stituting York Commandery, we are not saying too
208 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
much wlien we assert that if a strict observance of con-
stitutional rights, an unswerving adherence to ancient
landmarks, a religious devotion to our principles, will
secure the prosperity of the Commandery and the union
of the Sir Knights, then, indeed, she will be pre-
eminently succevssful in unfurling the banner of our
Order, and preserving intact her fame, her principles
and her future history.
During the past year I have performed but few other
official acts worthy of being brought to your notice. I
have visited officially and by request, several of the
Subordinate Commanderies, but during the latter half
of the year I have been deprived of making many offi-
cial visits which I had contemplated performing, and
even noAV my health will not permit me to remain w^ith
you until the close of this Conclave.
Thanking you individually and collectively for your
many acts of kindness, I return into your hands the
power with which you clothed me two years since.
On motion of Sir G. B. Schall,
Resolved, That the Address of the R. E. Grand Com-
mander be referred to the Committee on the Doings of the
Grand Officers.
The Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers
submitted the following report :
Your committee, appointed to take into consideration the
acts of the Grand Officers of this Grand Commandery, beg
leave to present the following as their report :
1. That they have examined the address of the R. E. Sir
H. Stanley Goodwin, Grand Commander, and find nothing
special to call up to your notice but the efficient manner
in which he has discharged his official duties, and the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 209
heartfelt regret we feel in seeing him pass from the
chair.
2. That this Grand Commandery owes a debt of great
gratitude to the Eminent Sir Alfred Creigh, for the pre-
eminent success with which he, by great exertion, is rescu-
ing from oblivion the records of Templarism in Pennsylva-
nia, and therefore we offer the following resolution :
Resolved, That this Grand Commandery will co-operate
with Sir Knight Alfred Creigh in his labors, so far as it
may be in our power to aid him in his distinguished work.
All of which is courteously submitted.
E. H. Turner, -\
J. R. DiMM, V Committee.
J. M. Scott, )
The report was accepted and the committee discharged.
On motion of Sir James H. Hopkins,
Resolved, That the report and resolutions be adopted.
Vote of tlianhs to Past Grand Commander Sir H. Stanley
Goodivin.
On motion of Sir E. H. Turner,
Resolved, That the thanks of the E,. E. Grand Com-
mandery of Knights Templar of the State of Pennsylvania
are eminently due and are hereby tendered to Past Grand
Commander Sir H. Stanley Goodwin, for the able, dignified
and courteous manner in which, during his administration
of the past two years, he has presided over this Grand
Commandery.
Resolved, That a copy of this resolution, properly en-
grossed, be presented to P. Grand Commander Goodwin,
and signed by the officers of the Grand Commandery, and
attested with its seal.
18 *
210 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Annual Address of the R. E. Sir William H. Strickland,
Grand Commander of the Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania, at its Thirteenth Annual Conclave, held in Lan-
caster, June, 1866.
Officers and Sir Knights, Members of the
R. E. Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania :
Again are we permitted to assemble in Annual Con-
clave as representatives of our noble Order in this juris-
diction. Let it therefore be our first duty to render
thanks to Almighty God for the many blessings received
at His hand during the year that has just been num-
bered with the past.
Again have we assembled to interchange fraternal
greetings and renew our vows of fidelity to Immanuel
and his cause. Let us therefore cast far from us worldly
passion and every unhallowed feeling that has a tendency
to dim the purity of our escutcheons as Knights of the
Cross.
Again have we met to deliberate upon and devise
measures for the interest and advancement of Christian
Knio^hthood in this State. Let us invoke the wisdom
that Cometh from above to rest upon and be with us in
all our deliberations.
The year that has just passed will hereafter be re-
garded as an important era in the history of our country
and this Order. The brio;ht linino; to the dark cloud
of war that has so long lowered over our country has
expanded into the broad sunlight of peace.
" Grim-visaged Avar lias smootlied
His wrinkled front,"
and no longer does the tramp of armed legions resound
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 211
in the land, or the clash of arms denote that inflamed
passion is desolating and destroying our fair heritage ;
making desolate widows, helpless orphans, and violating
every principle and precept of the Christian religion.
The Sword has been sheathed, and, while we thank God
for it, let us pray that His wisdom may govern the
more mighty influence of the Pen that is now engaged
in arbitratirio: the various issues involved in the contest.
Our nationality has been preserved intact by the blood
of patriots, lavishly offered on the altar of freedom. Let
us cherish their memory by practically exemplifying
the precepts of our Order in behalf of their "loved
ones at home,'^ made desolate by the sacrifice.
The increase and prosperity of our Order during the
past year is unprecedented, and its influence during the
dark da}^ of the rebellion Avill in the future be regarded
as a proof of its efficacy in controlling human passion and
developing the finer instincts and impulses of our nature.
Like the hidden rivulet, it has flowed beneath the surface
of everyday life, giving evidence only of its course by
a brighter green. Peace and prosperity attend the
various Commanderies of this jurisdiction, and progress
upward and onward is written on all our records. The
banners of our Order are again displayed in union and
peace in every State, and the authority of the Grand
Head of the Order is acknowledged and obeyed in
almost every portion of its jurisdiction; no longer are
our ranks divided or convulsed by sectional discord.
Have we not therefore the highest incentive for grate-
ful exultation, and should we not devote ourselves with
more zeal to the active duties of the hour? " Let the
dead past bury its dead." Bearing aloft the standard
212 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
of our Order, looking only on the sign there displayed,
with "/>i hoc signo Vinces^' as our countersign, be it
ours to press on with vigor to the active duties of our
callino;, and with coura":e undaunted wield our swords
in defence of the innocent, the defenceless, and the
Christian religion, our only emulation to excel in ex-
emplifying the precepts of Immanuel, as rehearsed in
our beautiful ritual.
In obedience to the requirement of the Constitution, I
attended the sixteenth Triennial Conclave of the Grand
Encampment of the United States, held at Columbus,
Ohio, in September last. A number of Sir Knights of
this jurisdiction were in attendance, including Sir
Knights E. H. Turner, Past R. E. G. C. J. L. Hutch-
inson, Past V. E. D. G. C. Alfred Creigh, G. Recorder,
and R. A. O. Kerr, G. Treasurer. It was the first
national body to meet subsequent to the close of the re-
bellion, considerable interest being attached to it from
this fact. Twenty-two States and Territories were
represented, including a number of the States lately in
rebellion ; and it is almost unnecessary to remark that
while the Grand Encampment fully sustained its dignity
as a body (truly loyal to the Government), the utmost
harmony and Knightly courtesy prevailed throughout its
deliberations. I regret it is not in my power to report
to you any very important action of this Grand Body,
either legislative or preceptive, for the future interest of
the Order, notwithstanding its requirements in this re-
spect.
It is evident our ritual needs revision to make it con-
form more accurately with the ancient work, the ancient
usage and landmarks.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 213
We need a more perfect code of Templar jurispru-
dence, to be placed within the reach of every Com-
mandery in the United States and enforced by proper
legislation.
The address of Grand Master French was replete with
wise counsel, eloquently expressed ; the array of the Sir
Knights imposing ; the hospitalities of the Sir Knights
of Columbus unbounded; the selection of Grand Master
and other officers judicious ; but after the adjournment
the question involuntarily pressed on the mind : What
permanent advantage to the Order has been gained
to compensate for the hundreds of miles traveled
by the representatives to hold this General Grand
Conclave ?
Among the decisions made was one requiring every
Sir Knight to vote, in Subordinate Commanderies, when
a ballot is being taken on application for the Orders of
Knighthood.
Also one regulating the succession in which the Orders
are to be conferred, viz. :
1st. Red Cross.
2d. Knight Templar.
3d. Knight of Malta.
Sir H. L. Palmer, of Wisconsin, was elected Most
Eminent Grand Master, and it was decided to hold the
next Triennial Conclave at St. Louis, Missouri, in Sep-
tember, 1868.
During the past year I have visited and exemplified
the work in St. John^s Commandery, ]S[o. 4, De Molay,
No. 9, Parke, No. 11, Columbia, No. 13, Hugh De
Payens, No. 19, Allen, No. 20, York, No. 21 ; and take
much pleasure in commending the zeal, activity, and
214 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
knightly courtesy of the Sir Knights composing these
ditlerent Commanderies. They are manfully fighting
the good fight, and there is laid up for them a crown of
glory, in the success of their endeavor, that will event-
ually place this jurisdiction first among the bright stars
of Christian Knighthood that cluster around the central
orb of the Order in this country.
I have also visited and exemplified the work in Jeru-
salem Commandery, No. 15, and regret to state it is not
in as flourishing condition as desired. There are but
very few of its members now residing in the place where
it is located, and its meetings have only been held after
long intervals for some years past. I am assured, how-
ever, that it is the intention of the Knights attached to
it, who reside at Phoenixville, to endeavor to restore it
to its former activity and usefulness.
With this one exception, the increase of our noble
Order in Pennsylvania, during the past year, has been
unprecedented. Its prosperity, however, depends on
unity of action and a strict adherence to the principles
and precepts by which we profess to be guided.
Being sensible of the necessity of having a more inti-
mate connection existing between this Grand Body and
the different Commanderies under its jurisdiction, and
considering this could be best accomjilished by frequent
communication with the Grand Officers, I requested
and received the consent of the V. E. Deputy Grand
Commander to visit as many of the Commanderies west
of the mountains as his leisure would permit, for tlie
purpose of establishing a uniformity of work and in-
citing a livelier interest in the Order. He has attended
to this duty, and I have no doubt his report will pre-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 215
sent a gratifying exhibit of the Order in the locality-
referred to.
The sunshine of our prosperity during the past year
has also been clouded by sorrow. The dread presence
of death has passed unchallenged into the innermost
recesses of our Asylum and extinguished three of our
brightest tapers.
It was not altogether a mistaken philosophy that
placed a human skull amid the flowers that decked the
festive board, to testify of man's mortality and with a
mute eloquence restrain the grosser passions of his na-
ture. How often is it that the Oyprefis is found en-
twined with the Myrtle, and when we think our great-
ness is rij^ening, there comes a frost that nips our
budding hopes, a dark cloud that veils the sunshine of
our prosperity, to teach us that even well-earned honors
are but to be enjoyed for a brief moment.
Not only from among the line of weary pilgrims,
looking forward to the reward of faith and sincerity,
were they summoned, but from among those noble war-
riors whose well-earned fame in the cause of Immanuel
had gained for them the victor's wreath.
Sir William Blackstone Hubbard,
Pcist M. E. Grand Master of Knights Templar of the United
States of America.
Sir Alexander Jordan Swartz,
Past R. E. Grand Commander of Pennsylvania.
Sir William W. Wilson,
Past R. E. Grand Commander of Pennsylvania.
" After life's fitful fever
They sleep well !"
216 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Words are not needed to extoll their fame in your pre-
sence. Let us mourn their loss in silence, endeavor to
imitate their virtues and extend our sympathy to their
bereaved relatives.
The proceedings of special meeting of this Grand
Commandery, to pay the last tribute of respect to Past
Commander Swartz, are published with the proceedings
of 1865, and I caused a circular to be issued announcing
the decease of Sir Knights Hubbard and Wilson, direct-
ing that the sword of each Sir Knight in this jurisdic-
tion be draj^ed for thirty days after receipt of notice.
I have been called upon to decide a number of ques-
tions relating to Templar law during my term of office,
but as my decisions have repeated former usage it is not
necessary they be recapitulated at this time. The fol-
lowing only involves a principle worthy of mention :
On application from the E. Commander of St. John's
Commandery, No. 4, for permission to re-ballot in case
of several applicants for the Orders of Knighthood who
had been rejected, I decided that reference to the Grand
Commandery was not necessary, as it is the privilege of
the E. Commander of each Subordinate Commandery to
order or refuse a re-ballot at his discretion. Our Order
does not depend on any precedent established by the
Grand Lodge of Masons. Christian Knighthood is in
alliance with and not dependent on the Masonic Order,
and in decisions similar to the above it is presumed the
E. Commander will be governed by principles of honor,
probity and justice.
On the 28th of April a])plication was received from
nine Sir Knights, former members of Philadelphia Com-
mandery, No. 2, and others, desiring me to re-open the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAK. 217
said Commandeiy, that had ceased working for some
time past. This petition was accompanied by a com-
munication from the Recorder of St. John^s Command-
ery, No. 4, officially notifying me of a resolution unani-
mously adopted by the said Commandery, at a meeting
held on March 27th, 1866: ^^That St. John's Com-
mandery, No. 4, for the interest of Knight Templarism,
recommend to the Grand Commandery the re-organiza-
tion of Commandery JSTo. 2."
After consultation with Eminent Sir Knights on the
subject, I was induced to accede to the request, and on
April 11th I proceeded to Philadelphia for the purpose
and re-organized the said Commandery. An election
was held in my presence, and I installed Rev. Sir
Robert H. Pattison as E. Commander, and other
officers whose names are in possession of our Grand
Recorder.
The causes that led to a suspension of work in this
Commandery are familiar to the past and present offi-
cers of this Grand Commandery, and were beyond the
control of the Sir Knights of No. 2. As there is nothing
on our minutes showing that their Charter had been
demanded or surrendered, nor any charges on record
against them, I considered it expedient and proper to
accede to the request.
No. 2 has resumed its position under the most favor-
able auspices, and two Commanderies are scarcely suffi-
cient to meet the rapid increase of the Order in Phila-
delphia. The officers of No. 2 are possessed of eminent
ability and zeal, and determined to restore their Com-
mandery to its former usefulness. The E. Commander
is a Sir Knight whose social standing, marked ability
19 K
218 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
and earnest devotion to the Order, are sure guarantees
for the prosperity of the Commandery.
At the earnest request of a number of Sir Knights
residing at Lebanon and Reading, on May 17th I
granted a dispensation to the E. Commanders of De
Molay, No. 9, Columbia, No. 13, and Allen, No. 20, to
open a Special Commandery, with the indispensable
number, to confer the Orders of Knighthood on Comp.
Jacob Weidle, of Lodge No. 226, and Chapter No. 197.
His age and physical disability were rej^resented to be
such as would prevent him from conveniently attending
a regular Commandery for the purpose, wdiile his life-
long zeal and activity in behalf of Masonry fully enti-
tled him to the compliment they desired to be conferred
upon him. About twenty-five members from adjacent
Commanderies were present in the Masonic Hall at
Lebanon, and I consider the influence of this act will
redound to the credit of the Order among the Masonic
fraternity of that section.
This Grand Commandery having been freed from
every financial embarrassment, and being at this time
in possession of a considerable fund beyond what is
necessary for its annual expenses, with the prospect of
large additions in the future, I would recommend an
amendment to the Constitution providing for the elec-
tion of three Trustees, who shall invest the said fund, as
it accumulates, in such manner as they may be directed
by this Grand Body ; to attend to the settlement of its
financial transactions, and have direct charge of all pro-
perty thereunto belonging. The necessity of some
action on this subject is imperative, as our past history
demonstrates, and will prevent embarrassments in the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 219
future, from which your present officers have not been
free.
I would also recommend the present rate of dues be
continued until a sufficient fund has accumulated, the
interest of which will pay all necessary expenses, when
the amount now exacted from each Subordinate Com-
manclery might be dispensed with.
The accumulation of a large fund is not desirable or
essential to our prosperity as a Grand Commandery.
On the contrary, it might have a tendency to produce
discord in our ranks, as the history of other associations
amply demonstrates.
On February 22d I received a communication from
thirteen Sir Knights residing at Williamsport, and four
at Lock Haven, requesting a Dispensation to open a
Commandery at the former place. They had not re-
ceived the recommendation of Crusade Commandery at
the time, and the subject was therefore deferred. I
presume it will be presented for your consideration at
this session. The locality is favorable, the petitioners
worthy, and I have no doubt that a Commandery sta-
tioned at this place will prove to be of advantage to the
Order.
Burke, in one of his celebrated speeches, once ex-
claimed : " The age of chivalry is gone, thank God for
it V^ The age of chivalry gone ! It may be so, but the
spirit that organized and gave it vitality still exists,
and we can thank God it does. As long as innocence
requires to be defended, as long as destitution is per-
mitted to afflict the helpless, or Christianity requires
champions to promulgate its divine mission and defend
it against foes without and foes within, the spirit of
220 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
ancient chivalry will still be required, will still exist
— the heroic deeds and self-sacrificing virtues of the
founders of our Order still be held in veneration.
The stately ceremonials, pomp, feudal privileges, and
boasted heraldry engrafted on the Order by a supersti-
tious age have passed away for ever, and are now as a
" School-boy's tale, the ^yonder of an hour ;"
but the practice of the Christian virtues, integrity of
purpose, and chastity of honor, which then, as well as
now, constituted true chivalry, can never fade away, but
will extend their influence beyond the confines of mor-
tality. External forms may change with the ages, but
the principles that actuated the Knights of old can
never die.
As Templars, we profess to perpetuate those princi-
ples, and in our intercourse with each other and the
world to be guided by them. Consistency, therefore,
demands that in our Asylums there should ever be union
and peace. By this our sessions will become as resting-
places in the journey of life, where we can become in-
vigorated to renew our pilgrimage and combat success-
fully with the many trials that are incident to humanity.
Sir Knio^hts : I have endeavored to fulfill the duties
of the high office which your partiality assigned to me,
with a motive single to the progress and prosperity of
our beloved Order, and I now return to you the high
power with which I was invested, feeling that my official
duties have been lightened by constant and marked evi-
dences of Knightly courtesy and kind regard on your
part.
I will ever regard my term of office in this Grand
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 221
Commandery as one of the most pleasant epochs of my
life ; and I pray you, if I have erred in any official duty,
to regard it as an error of judgment and not resulting
from any disposition of the heart.
On motion of E. Sir Nathan Smith,
Resolved, That the address of the R. E. Grand Commander
be spread at length upon the minutes, and referred to the
Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers.
The Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers beg
leave to report :
To the JR. E. Grand Commander, Officers and Sir Knights
of the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of Penn-
sylvania :
That they have examined with great pleasure the very
admirable address of the R. E. Grand Commander Sir
William H. Strickland, and find in it very valuable sug-
gestions, inculcating the duties and tending to promote the
interests of the Order. His fidelity to the duties of his
office is manifested by the prosperity of Knighthood during
his administration.
His decision that an Eminent Commander may order or
refuse a re-ballot, according as his judgment may deem
proper, and this without appeal to the Grand Commandery
for intervention, meets our approval. Our Ordei* does not
pretend to be a democratic iustution. Its Commander is
invested with very great power, and Sir Knights should
have full confidence in the discretion of one they deem fit
to exercise such power.
Your committee also . note with great satisfaction the
recommendation that a Charter be granted for the forma-
tion of a Commandery at Williamsport. It is a rich and
19 *
222 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
beautiful country, and we trust will prove a fruitful soil for
Templarism.
Your committee have had too little time to inquire, as
we would like to, into the regularity of the proceedings of
No. 2. The question is a novel one, and while we are all
glad again to see their Beauseant displayed, we feel no dis-
position to cavil at the mode by which the desirable result
was accomplished.
The suggestion of the R. E. Grand Commander as to the
management of our finances we cordially commend. This
matter has been too long delayed, and now our funds have
so accumulated that they should have a more systematic
management. We therefore oiFer the following resolution :
Resolved, That the Grand Treasurer be directed to pur-
chase a book, in which he shall keep full and correct ac-
counts of the receipts and disbursements of the Grand Com-
mandery, and that said book shall be the property of the
Grand Commandery, and shall, with the funds and other
property of the Grand Commandery, be delivered to his
successor immediately after installation.
And in view of the unnecessary accumulation of funds
in our Treasury, we would recommend that Section 5th of
Article I. be amended by striking out so much thereof as
requires ihe payment by Subordinate Commanderies of
fees and dues for Knights receiving the Orders and being
members of Subordinate Commanderies.
Your committee have also examined the reports of the
Grand Treasurer and Grand Kecorder, and find them
correct.
In regard to the suggestion of our Grand Recorder Sir
Alfred Creigh, as to the publication of a Register of Penn-
sylvania Knighthood, we would commend it to the favor-
able consideration of the Grand Commandery. Such a reg-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 223
ister would be valuable and useful to all Sir Knights of
this jurisdiction.
Courteously submitted.
James H. Hopkins, "|
James M. Porter, V Committee.
John Hanold, J
On motion of Sir H. B. M'Kean,
The report of the committee was accepted and the com-
mittee discharged.
Vote of Thanks to Past Ch'and Commander Sir W. H.
Strickland.
On motion of P. E. C. Sir John Hanold,
Resolved, That the unanimous thanks of the officers and
members of the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar
of the State of Pennsylvania are due and hereby tendered
to our Past R. E. Grand Commander, Sir William H.
Strickland, for the efficient manner in w^hich he performed
the duties of his office for the past year.
Resolved, That a copy of said resolution be engrossed on
parchment and signed by the Grand Officers, and presented
to him as a memorial.
Annual Addresses of the R. E. Sir Robert Pitcairn, Grand
Commander ; of V. E. Sir J. L. Hutchinson, Dep. G.
Commander, and of E. Sir John Vallerchamp, Grand
Captain General of the Grand Commandery of Pennsyl-
vania, at its Fourteenth Annual Conclave, held in Pitts-
burg, June, 1867.
Sir Knights composing the Grand Commandery
OF Pennsylvania : At this our Annual meeting I
greet you individually and collectively. Another Temp-
224 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
lar year has gone, its pleasing associations, and its
hallowed reminiscences, from the history of the never-
to-be-forgotten past, and with it also have many generous
and noble Sir Knights passed to the spirit-land, leaving
behind them a name dearer than friendship, and a love
consecrated by the purest affections of the human heart.
As Templars, we rejoice that it is so — that Avithin our
Asylums we but prepare the heart for those eternal re-
unions which are sanctified by the teachings of Im-
manuel, after we have labored manfully and fought
valiantly the battle of life, clad as a pilgrim- warrior and
robed as a pilgrim-penitent in the righteousness of Jesus.
It is the aim, the design, the purpose of our Order to
raise man to that state of dignity and grandeur which
the Supreme Architect of the universe intended when he
created man and endowed him with those faculties of the
heart and mind which instinctively point to a glorious
resurrection and a more glorious immortality. Hence
all the teachings and principles of Templars are derived
from the precepts of Jesus and the new law as given in
the New Testament.
As Templars we cling to the Book of Inspiration as
the sheet-anchor of our hopes for time and eternity ; as
Templars we recognize no other belief and no other
foundation than is laid in the corner-stone of the
Christian religion, discarding all sectarianism and
bigoted views. We display the Standard of the Cross
in our Asylums, having upon its ample folds the ever-
to-be-revered motto, la hoc signo vinces. An Order
l)ased upon such principles must necessarily contain
within itself those undying cardinal principles of union
and harmony which are characteristic of our Templar
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TE^tPLAR. 225
Order ; hence I have the pleasure of announcing that
peace and brotherly love prevail throughout our widely-
extended jurisdiction, and that all our Subordinate Com-
manderies are actuated by the true and correct princi-
ple— who can best work and best agree? Hence no
official decisions have been made, nor have any questions
of jurisprudence been submitted, because our land-
marks and principles are so definitely settled, and our
officers and membership so well versed in their applica-
tion, that none were needed.
The work of the Commanderies, with a few minor
exceptions, is uniform, and is in accordance with that
promulgated by the Grand Encampment of the United
States.
It is a matter of doubt with some whether the Grand
Encampment of the United States, which is the source
of American Templar authority, is in possession of the
true work. In fact, after the perusal of the report of
our Historiographer at our last Annual Conclave, there
seems to be proof positive that we have not; and to
strengthen this opinion we have the report of the com-
mittee appointed by the Grand Commandery of Massa-
chusetts to reply to our Historiographer, admitting the
fact, but doubting the propriety of attempting a change.
One thing is certain : there is no authority for modern-
izing Masonry, no matter how applicable locally may be
the change. If there is one vow more binding than
another, it is that binding us to cling to and keep sacred
the ancient landmarks of our fathers. Modernize
Masonry, or change any part of the edifice, and you
destroy the beauty, strength and glory of the whole
building. I would earnestly recommend the propriety
K *
226 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
of appointing a committee of competent Sir Knights,
who shall be authorized to prepare a report on the sub-
ject preparatory to our next Annual Conclave, and in time
for the action of the Grand Encampment of the United
States, which will hold its triennial meeting in 1868.
During my official term I have visited the majority
of the Commanderies in the western part of this juris-
diction, while I assigned the eastern part to the V. E.
Deputy, Sir J. L. Hutchinson, to whom I am under
many obligations for the courteous manner he has per-
formed his labors and relieved me of many of the bur-
dens of the office, and to whom I am much indebted for
counsel and advice. I need not say that in our twenty-
three Subordinates the utmost harmony prevails, and
the Grand Officers were courteously received and enter-
tained with genuine hospitality in their official visits ;
and for their many acts of kindness to myself and those
with whom I have been associated they shall be always
remembered.
I would call the attention of the Grand Commandery
to the recommendation of my predecessor, that to
free this Grand Commandery from every financial em-
barassment the dues be continued until a sufficient fund
has accumulated, the interest of which will pay all
necessary expenses.
Application having been made to the Grand Com-
mandery at its last Annual Meeting (June 12, 1866) for
a charter, which Avas granted, in company with the
Grand Officers and other Sir Knights we visited
Williamsport, Lycoming county, on the 13th Septem-
ber, 1866, and instituted Baldwin II. Commandery, in-
stalled the officers and exemplified the work.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 227
On the 28th day of September, 1866, I received an
invitation from the R. W. Grand Lodge of Masons of
Maryland, inviting the Templars of Pennsylvania to be
present in Baltimore on the 20th day of November,
1866, to participate in the laying of the corner-stone of
the new Masonic Temple. Official business detained
me from participating, but the Grand Commandery was
represented by the following officers, viz.: V. E. Sir
J. L. Hutchinson, as Grand Commander; E. Sir Chas.
A. Bannvart, D. G. C. ; E. Sir James H. Hopkins, as
G. G.; E. Sir Fitz James Evans, as G. C. G.; Sir Chas.
E. Meyer, as G. P.; Sir Jno. R. Seibert, as G. S. W.;
Sir Chas H. Mann, as G. J. W.; E. Sir R. A. O. Kerr,
as G. T.; E. Sir Alfred Creigh, as G. R.; Sir Wm. K.
Alricks, as G. St. B.; Sir A. N. Green, as G. Sd. B.;
Sir J. H. Livingston, as G. W.; Sir D. M'Clintock, as
G. S., together Avith representatives from many of our
Subordinates. In the procession of upwards of eight
hundred Knights, the Grand Commandery of Pennsyl-
vania was honored with the post of honor, by being
appointed to the extreme right, she being the oldest
Grand Commandery in the United States, and when her
banner was unfurled to the breeze, the date of May the
12th, 1797, was enthusiastically received by all the Sir
Knights, especially the Templars of Maryland, when
they remembered that they had claims upon that glorious
old banner, for under it, fifty years ago, they marched
as one of its Subordinates. How pleasing the associa-
tion, yet how sad the recollection that nearly all of those
Templars Avho then were members had passed to their
eternal Asylum !
On the 30th of August, 1866, I received an apjilica-
228 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
tion from Sir Knights William Lilly, James Houston,
Anthony W. Raudenbush, Milton W. Rauclenbush,
Kobert Klotz, Thos. S. M'Nair, Joseph P. Salmon, A.
Dimmick and Isaac K. M^Collum, praying for a Dis-
pensation to enable them to open Packer Commandery,
No. 23, at Mauch Chunk, Carbon county. Pa. This
application having been properly recommended, and the
character of the petitioners being such as would fully
justify its establishment, I directed V. E. Sir J. L.
Hutchinson to organize the same, which was done on
28th of Sept., 1866, and of which he will give you a
detailed account, as well as other official acts which he
performed in his usual courteous manner.
Jerusalem Commandery, No. 15, established in 1856
at Pottstown, not prospering as highly as the members
desired, unanimously requested me to permit them to
change their location to Phoenix vi lie. There being no
law upon the subject, and but one precedent, wherein
St. Omer's Commandery, No. 7, was changed from
Uniontown to Brownsville, I consented to do so after
consultation with the Grand Officers ; and the officers
and membership have entered in good earnest upon the
glorious work of the re-edification of their Asylum.
I also issued a Dispensation authorizing Hubbard
Commandery, No. 5, to hold a special election at the
request of the Commandery.
On the 8th of May 1867, I received an application
from Sir Knights Jacob Weidle, Grant Weidman, J. P.
S. Gobin, W. H. Murray, John Ulrich, W. G. Bow-
man, L. E. Weimer, M. Manderbach, George L. Selt-
zer, F. Myers, John A. Donges and Rev. M. Rhodes,
praying for a Dispensation to enable them to open
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 229
Hermit Commandery, No. 24, at Lebanon, Lebanon
county, Pa. This application having been properly
recommended, and the character of the petitioners being
such as would fully justify its establishment, on the 23d
of May, in company with the majority of the Grand
Officers, I organized the same.
I received a revised copy of the By-Laws of De
Molay Commandery ; referred to the proper committee.
On the 15th of May, 1867, I received a communica-
tion from Sir Knights Samuel B. Dick, Christian M.
Hoover, William C. Hay, Benjamin F. Porter, F. R.
Rupp, Francis H. Foster, Theo. B. Lashells, Edward
G. Whitesides, George C. Porter, H. T. Colt, Edward
D. Draper, S. Johnson Thomas, D. D. Williams, F.
Shattuck, A. L. Power, N. Truesdale, I. R. Burchfield,
Chas. Bowman, J. G. Burlingham, T. B. Hoover, and
A. W. Hoover, residing at or near Meadville, Crawford
county, requesting a Dispensation to open a Command-
ery at Meadville, which I present to your considera-
tion at this session. The locality is favorable.
On the 7th day of June, 1867, I received a commu-
nication from the following Sir Knights, residing at or
near Lewistown, Mifflin county. Pa., to wit : Sirs John
A. Wright, Jesse Mendenhall, Jos. F. Mann, Wm.
Willis, Robt. H. Junkin, D. E. Robison, W. J. Long,
G. H. Long, Reuben E. Wilson, W. F. Johnston, H. J.
Walters, and Robt. Martin, requesting a Dispensation
to open a Commandery at Lewistown, which I present
for your consideration at this session. The locality is
favorable, and the granting of the Dispensation recom-
mended by the nearest Commandery ; and I would ear-
nestly recommend that their wishes be complied with.
20
230 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
On the nth clay of June, 1867, I received a commu-
nication from the following Sir Knights, residing at or
near Great Bend, Susquehanna county, Pa., viz. : Sirs
John H. Dusenbury, C. P. Bigelow, Sardis Smith,
George F. Thompson, A. C. Stephens, John Z. Brown,
Thomas D. Hays, Geo. W. Weed, R. T. Stephens, and
Wm. H. Powell, — requesting a Dispensation to open a
Commandery at Great Bend, which I present for your
consideration at this session. The locality is favorable
and the granting of the Dispensation recommended by
the nearest Commandery, and I would earnestly recom-
mend that their wishes be complied with.
On the same date I received a communication from
nine Sir Knights, residing at or near Wellsboro', Tioga
county, Pa., viz. : Sirs Robert C. Simpson, Thomas B.
Boyden, M. H. Cobb, Andrew Foley, J. B. Christie,
William Roberts, H. S. Hastings, E. H. Mason, and G.
D. Montauge, — requesting a Dispensation to open a
Commandery at Wellsboro', which I present for your
consideration at this session. The locality is favorable
and the granting of the Dispensation recommended by
the nearest Commandery, and I would earnestly recom-
mend that their wishes be complied with.
These have been all my official acts, and I should
feel myself wanting in courtesy to the Grand Officers,
the Subordinate Officers and individual Sir Knights,
did I not thus publicly thank them for their uniform
kindness and courtesy, throughout the past year, which
they have extended to me in my official capacity.
Having thus, Sir Knights, given you my official acts,
T desire to make some suggestions for your considera-
tion, which I trust you will receive with the same kind
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 231
feelings in which they are given. The Grand Com-
mandery has now in her possession two hundred copies
of the History of Knights Templarism of this State, as
prepared by our Historiographer, E. Sir Alfred Creigli.
I would suggest that these be distributed as follows,
viz : One copy be presented to each of the Grand Offi-
cers of the Grand Encampment of the United States,
and to those of Canada, England, Ireland and Scotland ;
three copies to each of the State Grand Commanderies
(one for the G. C., one for the G. E,., and one to be
deposited in their archives), and that each Subordinate
Commandery of Pennsylvania be required to furnish
the names of the widows of the deceased Sir Knights of
their respective Commanderies, to whom shall be pre-
sented a copy of said work in the name of the Grand
Commandery of Pennsylvania. It is due to these
widows that we should show that we can and do appre-
ciate those we loved in life, and now revere their
memory by placing upon the family altar the record of
the services of those to whom they plighted their early
love. This History of Knighthood was only intended
as the nucleus of our history. It needed but a starting-
point, and the high encomiums Avhich have been passed
upon it are worthy of our Historiographer ; but to com-
plete the task, and to bring it to perfection, I would
suggest the propriety of arranging for the publishing of
another edition, or a second series, to which all the ad-
dresses of Grand Commanders and all important reports
be added, also much matter of interest which was of
necessity omitted in the book referred to ; and then we
can boast of a perfect furnished and complete history.
To accomplish so desirable an object, I trust a com-
232 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
mittec will be appointed to take the matter into con-
sideration.
As the Grand Encampment of Massachusetts ap-
pointed a committee to reply to the report of the His-
toriographer as published in our last proceedings, I have
deemed it most advisable only to refer to the subject,
and state that I have requested E. Sir Alfred Creigh to
prepare a reply thereto, which report will be read for
adoption or rejection.
We cannot close our address without referring to the
fact patent to all, that our Order is increasing too
rapidly. It is due to our Order to restrain so many
from crowding into our Asylums. Our doors are swung
entirely too far back, and too many are rushed through
with locomotive speed.
It requires calm thought, deliberate action, purpose
of mind and holy resolves to enter our communion.
There is no place on earth so sacred as an Asylum of
Templars. Our rites and ceremonies are the embodi-
ment of silence, holiness, purity and sincerity. Then
why destroy the sanctity of these essentials by creating
more than one Sir Knight at a time ? My own opinion
is that it takes away that solemnity which the candidate
should preserve, and detracts from the beauty of our
rituals. Upon this question I trust a committee will be
appointed who will report fully upon the subject, and
limit the number to two or three persons, if not to our
ancient number, which in all cases was confined to the
individual himself. Many reasons might be advanced
for action in the matter, but I shall defer giving them
for the present.
It seems to me that we are allowing ourselves to be-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 233
come looser in our inquiries as to the character of candi-
dates for Knighting, especially as to their religious
belief; permitting Royal Arch Masons to become
Knights Templar who do not fully believe in the
trinity of the Godhead, and that Christ was the Son of
God, as revealed in the New Testament. It was for
this Knighthood was established ; it was for this the
Crusaders attempted to recover the Holy Land, in which
our Kedeemer was born, lived, crucified, buried and
arose from the dead; it was for this that the Templar
Order has unceasingly and perseveringly labored to
build up the doctrine of the Holy Trinity — "three per-
sons in one God: the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Ghost; and these three are one true, eternal God — the
same in substance, equal in power and glory, although
distinguished by their personal properties" — and which
is represented in all the Asylums by the sacred Delta.
I would recommend that the committee appointed to
take into consideration the propriety of recommending
the Grand Encampment to change the Templar Ritual,
also take into consideration the jDropriety of so wording
our petitions for initiation as to preclude all possibility
of evasion, by any candidate, on this all-important
subject.
Thanking you, officers and members and individual
Sir Knights of the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania,
for your kindness during my official term of office, I
now surrender to you the baton of autliority which you
placed in my hand, and commend you individually, as
well as the Grand Commandery, to that Triune God
who has watched over us and protected and preserved
us, and to His name be all the praise.
20*
234 HISTORY OF TITE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
On motion of Sir William Chatland,
Resolved, That the excellent address of the R. E. Grand
Commander be entered at length upon the minutes and re-
ferred to the appropriate committee.
The V. E. Sir Jeremiah L. Hutchinson, Deputy Grand
Commander, read the following account of his official acts :
To the Ch^and Commandery of the State of Pennsylvania :
Knights ! — The Deputy Grand Commander would re-
spectfully submit the following report of his doings for the
past year :
On September 15th, 1866, at the request of the R. E.
Grand Commander, I met him and the other Grand Officers
at Williamsport, Pa., and assisted them in constituting
Baldwin 11. Commandery, No. 22, as also in conferring
the Orders of Chivalry.
On Sept. 18, 1866, in pursuance of a Dispensation issued
by the R. E. Grand Commander, I visited Mauch Chunk,
accompanied by Eminent Commander Sir C. E. Meyer,
and with the aid of P. G. Commander Sir H. Stanley
Goodwin, E. Commander J. I. Elsegood, and other Knights
of Easton and Allentown, constituted Packer Commandery,
No. 23, and conferred the Orders on six.
On October 17, 1866, at the kind solicitation of P. G.
Commander Sir C. F. Knapp, I visited Crusade Command-
ery, No. 12. On this occasion I was accompanied by Sir
C. E. Meyer and Sir M. Sommerville. We assisted the
Knights of No. 12 in conferring the Orders on Wednesday
evening, when, at " low twelve," we were " called off from
labor to refreshment," which latter, "the refreshments,"
did not terminate until the next evening, when we took
the train for home. I know not which the most to extoll in
the Knights of No. 12 : their work and zeal in Templar
Masonry, or their unbounded hospitalities.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 235
On November 20, 1866, I accompanied a number of
the Grand Officers, and a large delegation of Knights of
Nos. 4, 2, 11, 13, 19, 20, 21, to Baltimore, on the invitation
of the Grand Lodge of Maryland, to assist in laying the
Corner Stone of the Masonic Temple. In the absence of
the E,. E. Grand Commander, I formed the Grand Com-
mandery. Pennsylvania was assigned the post of honor in
the procession, and received most courteous and cordial
treatment at the hands of the Knights of Baltimore.
On March 13, 1867, accompanied by Sirs C. E. Meyer,
E. Masson, M. Speigle and M. Sommerville, I visited Pitts-
burg, No. 1, at the invitation of the K. E. Grand Com-
mander, and assisted him in exemplifying the Orders of
Red Cross and the Temple.
On March 23, 1867, accompanied by E. C. Sir Nathan
Smith, of No. 4, Sirs Meyer, Robeno, Hale, Whittey,
Hanold, and some fifteen others of No. 4, with E. C. Rev.
Sir R. H. Pattison and others of No. 2, I paid a visit to
De Molay, No. 9, and conferred the Order of the Temple.
We were most hospitably received by the Knights, headed
by P. G. Commander Sir William H. Strickland.
On April 2, 1867, I visited Parke, No. 11, installed the
officers and conferred the Orders on two Companions. The
hospitality of the Knights of Parke Commandery is so
widely spread that they need no encomium in this place.
On April 11, 1867, upon previous notice sent to the
Eminent Commanders of Nos. 19 (Hugh de Payens, at
Easton), 20 (Allen, at Allentown), and 23 (Packer, at
Mauch Chunk), I, accompanied by a delegation of Knights
of Nos. 4 and 2, met the three Commanderies in Joint Con-
clave. We were joined by the R. E. P. G. Commander
Strickland, Grand Captain General Vallerchamp, with
other Knights of Nos. 9 and 11.
I have never in our jurisdiction witnessed a finer display
23G HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
or array of Knights Templar. The three Commanderies
were fully represented, and every Knight fully equipped.
I conferred the Order of the Red Cross on fourteen Com-
panions, and the Order of the Temple on seven Red Cross
Knights.
In this visitation I was, as in all others, indebted to Sirs
Nathan Smith, C. E. Meyer, E. Masson, M. Speigle, and
M. Sommerville, for their valuable aid.
On May 30, 1867, at the request of the R. E. Grand
Commander, I met him and the Grand Captain General,
and Grand Recorder, at Lebanon, and assisted in consti-
tuting Hermit Commandery, No. 24.
I have frequently visited Commanderies Nos. 4 and 2, at
Philadelphia. They are both in a very prosperous condi-
tion ; and both guard well the outer entrance of the
Asylum.
I regret that circumstances prevented me from visiting
the other Commanderies in the East, especially those at
Lancaster, York and Carlisle. I had notified Lancaster
Commandery that I would pay them a visit ; but was pre-
vented by attending the Grand Commander at Lebanon,
on the night fixed.
Respectfully submitted.
J. L. Hutchinson.
The Eminent Sir John Vallerchamp, Captain General,
submitted the following report of his official acts :
To the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania :
In the months of June, July, August and October, 1866,
I visited officially Crusade Commandery, No. 12, and ex-
emplified the work.
In September, 1866, I assisted in constituting Baldwin
II, Commandery at Williamsport.
Since March, 1866, I have attended all the meetings of
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 237
Parke Commandery, No. 11, and have also assisted in the
work in Allen Commandery, No. 20.
In June, 1866, 1 acted in my official capacity by visiting
York Commandery, No. 21, at York, where the Com-
mandery is in excellent working order.
On June 10, 1867, accompanied by P. G. C. Sir C. F.
Knapp, Grand Prelate Sir J. R. Dimm, and Grand Stand-
ard Bearer E. Knapp, I visited Hermit Commandery, in
Lebanon.
There is a general desire among the Sir Knights to be-
come proficient in the work and live up to the principles
of our Order.
All of which is respectfully submitted.
John Vallerchamp,
Grand Captain General.
The Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers
would report :
That they have examined Avith pleasure and interest the
address of the Grand Commander, and would make the
following suggestions and recommendations :
1. That the Grand Treasurer, upon his election and be-
fore his installation, shall execute to the R. E. Grand Com-
mander for the time being, a bond in the sum of five thou-
sand dollars, for the faithful discharge of his duty.
2. That it being an established and conceded fact, that
the Templar work as now used is not the true work, and
as this Grand Commandery has appointed the Historio-
grapher, the R. E. Grand Commander and the Past Grand
Commanders a committee to prepare a circular upon the
subject, your committee would most cheerfully adopt the
recommendation.
3. That the E. Grand Recorder be instructed to pre-
pare and forward, as a memorial of our regards, to the
238 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Officers of the Grand Encampment of the United States
respectively, one copy of Creigh's History of Knighthood,
also one copy to each of the Grand Officers of the G. En-
campment of Canada, England, Scotland and Ireland ;
three copies to each State Grand Commandery, viz. : to the
R. E. Grand Commander, the E. Grand Recorder, and the
third copy to be deposited in their archives ; one copy to
each Subordinate in every State where no Grand Com-
mandery exists, and one copy to the widow of each deceased
Sir Knight.
4. That each Subordinate Commandery be required
forthwith to inform the E. Grand Recorder of the name
of such widow, with her post-office address, belonging to
said Subordinate.
5. That the Historiographer be and he is hereby author-
ized and requested to publish (either as an appendix or a
second series) so much of the History of Knighthood in
this State as will embrace the addresses of all the Grand
Masters, together with all reports and matters of interest,
and this Grand Commandery hereby appropriates $ to
aid our Historiographer in the prosecution of so praise-
worthy and laudable an object — an object which we com-
mend to all Knights Templar — and that the R. E. Grand
Commander be authorized to draw on the Grand Treasurer
for the amount.
6. With regard to the number of Sir Knights to be cre-
ated at one and the same conclave, your committee believe
that the question is one which appropriately belongs to the
Grand Encampment of the United States, and before this
Grand Commandery will take action thereon, it would be
advisable to procure their decision to regulate the action
of all the Commanderies throughout the Union.
7. Your committee would recommend that it be enjoined
upon the Subordinate Commanderies to require all candi-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 239
dates to subscribe to the form of petition as laid down in
Oreigh's History of Knighthood, Series I., page 388, as ef-
fectually to 23revent any Royal Arch Mason from receiving
the Orders of Christian Knighthood who does not believe
implicitly and absolutely in the doctrine of the Holy Trinity
as revealed in the New Testament, recognizing three persons
in one God — the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost —
and these three being the same in substance; equal in
power and glory.
Your committee would offer the following resolution :
Resolved, That the unanimous vote of thanks of this
Grand Commandery be tendered to Past Grand Com-
mander Sir Robert Pitcairn, for the able, efficient and
zealous manner in which he has performed his arduous
duties as Grand Commander ; that in retiring from his
official station, he carries with him the heartfelt wishes of
this Grand Commandery for his future health, happiness
and prosperity.
Resolved, That a copy of this resolution be engrossed on
parchment and signed by the Grand Officers, and presented
to him.
Your committee have also examined the reports of the
V. E. Deputy Grand Commander Sir J. L. Hutchinson,
and of the E. Grand Captain General Sir John Valler-
champ, whose labors have been unceasing in diffiising the
sublime principles of the Order by the exemplification of
work, &c., &c. ; and for these official acts your committee
cannot praise these two officers too highly.
It is with peculiar pleasure your committee would state
that they have examined the report of the E. Grand
Recorder, and find that in his labors he has been pre-emi-
nently successful ; as in all our Sister Grand Commanderies
we have never yet found the record in which the minutes
of each Subordinate Commandery were personally exam-
240 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
ined by a Grand Recorder, except the Grand Recorder of
Pennsylvania. Such has been the fact during the year
which has closed. What recompense should be paid to so
faithful an officer of our Grand Commandery for these
official visits, independent of his salary, will be for this
Grand Body to determine. The visits necessarily took
both time and money.
All of which is courteously submitted.
E. H. Turner, ^
C. F. Knapp, >■ Committee.
C. M. Howell, )
On motion of E. Sir Jas. H. Hopkins, the report of the
committee was accepted.
The recommendations were read seriatim and considered,
after which the following motion was offered by Sir Richard
Coulter :
Resolved^ That the recommendations as reported by the
Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers be unani-
mously adopted, and that the blank in the 5th recommenda-
tion be referred to and filled by the first four Officers of
this Grand Commandery.
Address of R. E. Sir Jeremiah L. Hutchinson, Grand
Commander of the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania,
at a Special Conclave, held in the City of Philadelphia,
September 26, 1867.
Knights Companions : I have convened the Grand
Commandery of the State of Pennsylvania in Special
Conclave at this time for the following purposes : The
first and most important one, the adoption of a uniformity
of ritual and work throughout our jurisdiction. The
HISTOEY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 241
second is the report of the committee on the circular
prepared on the claims of the English ritual, and to be
distributed to the officers and members of the General
Grand Encampment of the United States, and the
officers and members of State Grand Commanderies ; as
well as such other matters as may come before this
Grand Commandery.
During the past Templar year, while in the perform-
ance of my duties as Deputy Grand Commander, I
found in my visitations a considerable difference in the
language of the ritual ; and though not affecting the
material working of the Order, yet this difference was
sufficient to create confusion and embarrassment to those
not familiar with the peculiar idiom of Templarism, and
thus mar the beauty so requisite and important in the
workings of our solemn ceremonies.
Impressed with the importance of correcting these
differences, and as the Order had increased to the extent
of twenty-eight Commanderies, I solicited and received
your assent at our last Annual Conclave at Pittsburg to
divide the State into divisions, and appointed the follow-
ing Sir Knights as Division Commanders :
No. 1. P. E. C. Sir J. Hanold, to superintend Com-
manderies Nos. 2 and 4.
No. 2. E. G. G. Sir Jas. H. Hopkins, Nos. 1, 3, 5, 7,
18 and 25.
No. 3. Y. E. D. G. C. Sir John Yallerchamp, Nos.
8, 10, 11 and 26.
No. 4. P. G. C. Sir Wm. H. Strickland, Nos. 9, 15
and 24.
No. 5. E. G. S. W. Sir Charles M. Howell, Nos. 13
and 21.
21 L
242 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
No. 6. P. G. C. Sir Christian F. Knapp, Nos. 12, 14,
17 and 22.
No. 7. E. G. J. W. Sir Abraham Miller, Nos. 19, 20
and 23.
No. 8. E. G. C. G. Sir H. B. IVrKean, Nos. 16, 27
and 28.
I have been careful to select, wherever I could con-
veniently, one of the Grand Officers, and to supply the
divisions with Knights tried and true, whose devotion
to the Order stands high upon our Templar records.
And here let me add that a more competent, intelligent,
faithful and zealous corps of Commanders would be
difficult to select, even from among the brilliant lights
of Templarism that have and do shed the lustre of their
devotion and talents over our noble and magnanimous
Order in this jurisdiction. To them I return my most
grateful acknowledgments cheerfully; ardently have
they seconded me in the desire to make Templars a unit
in all and everything, and only wait for you to deter-
mine what shall be our standard work — a work, once
adopted, not to be changed in jot or tittle. The ritual
of the Order of the Templar has always impressed me
as the most beautiful and sublime composition emanating
from man. The grand, noble, loving, sad, humiliating,
ignominious, glorious history of our Divine Model, por-
trayed and exemplified there, cannot but touch the heart
of the most insensible, and leave a deep and lasting im-
pression.
To the proper working of the Order of the Red Cross
I would also call your attention. As to its position in
being acknowledged as the first of the Orders of Christian
Knighthood, I join with the eminent Historiographer
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 243
of Knighthood, Sir A. Creigh, in stating " that it never
had any connection with the Templar Order and Knights
of Malta and St. John's of Jerusalem," but that it is a
part and portion, or should be, of the Royal Arch De-
gree, as all its incidents relate to the building of the
second temple. But as the Grand Encampment has
placed it as the first of the Orders, it is our duty to
work it out properly, but not as Knights Templar.
(See Ezra, 4th chap.)
With respect to the report of the Past Grand Com-
manders, it is important to be acted on at this Special
Conclave, as if left to the next Annual Conclave it
would be too late to be examined by the State Grand
Commanderies, and presented at the Triennial Conclave
of the Grand Encampment of the United States, to be
held at St. Louis, on the third Tuesday of September,
1868, A. O. 750. The committee has the report ready,
and it only requires the action of the Grand Com-
mandery to adopt and direct its publication.
I would also suggest the necessity and importance of
the Grand Officers being authorized to have a sufficient
number of blanks requisite for dispensations, orders, etc.,
printed. I have found in the duties of my office that
the absence of the necessary blanks has entailed a large
amount of labor upon me.
There will be presented to you an application for the
warrant of a new Commandery, to be located in Phila-
delphia. The application has been endorsed by Com-
manderies Nos. 4 and 2. I commend it heartily to
your favorable consideration, as, from the standing,
character and ability of the Knights connected with it,
it is destined to occupy a high position in the grand
244 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
galaxy of Templar Masonry. The petitioners are Sir
Knights Nathan Smith, Rev. John Chambers, John
Hanold, R. J. C Walker, Thomas Brown, Alphonso C.
Ireland, C. Oakford Klett, Charles K. Ide, J. H.
Livingston, William Ivins and Thomas R. Patton.
They have named it Kadosh Commandery, and recom-
mend as their three first officers —
Sir N. Smith, E. C; Sir Thomas Brown, G.; Sir R.
J. C. Walker, C. G.
I would also call your attention to an omission in the
printed proceedings of our last Annual Conclave, by
which seeming injustice (though we all know it was un-
intentionally) was done to Past Grand Generalissimo
Sir Charles A. Bannvart. It would have been proper
to have stated that the Eminent Knight declined the
election of Deputy Grand Commander, as his business
compelled him to leave the State. I trust the proper
record will be made to correct the omission. The zeal,
devotion and earnest discharge of every post and duty
assigned the Eminent Knight, whether as an officer of
Parke Commandery, No. 11, or as a Grand Officer, are
too well known to require any eulogy from me.
The Grand Officers to whom at the last meeting was
referred the second series of the History of Knight-
hood of this State, as prepared by our E. Historio-
grapher, Sir Alfred Creigh, will act definitely at this
Conclave before its adjournment. It becomes me, how-
ever, to say that the history of Knighthood in Penn-
sylvania is now completed, and as this State was the
first to introduce the Orders of Knighthood into
America, she is the ^rs^ to place upon the altar of Tem-
plarisni the first perfect, full, and complete history.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 245
I would also suggest that the resolutions authorized
to be presented to the different Past Grand Commanders
be handsomely engrossed on parchment.
It becomes my painful duty to announce the death of
Sir John L. Goddard, Past Eminent Commander of
No. 2, and at the time of his death R. W. Grand Master
of Pennsylvania. He was Knighted December 12,
1851, and elected Eminent Commander June, 1853. I
had the pleasure of an intimate Masonic acquaintance
with our departed Knight during the whole of this
period.
He was a member with me on the committee that
drafted the Constitution of the Grand Encampment of
the State of Pennsylvania, at the Convention held in
Philadelphia, May 10, 1854, and whilst his health
permitted, always took an active interest in the workings
of the Order; and in all his relations as a man and a
Templar he lived up strictly to the teachings of our
noble and magnanimous Order. I commend to you the
subject of an appropriate tablet to his memory.
And now. Knights Companions, as we have much
labor before us, I trust we will enter upon the perform-
ance of it with dispositions single to the further cement-
ing of the bonds of fraternal love and unity that now so
happily bind us together, remembering ever that " Love
worketh no ill to his neighbor; therefore, love is the
fulfilling of the law f " and now abideth Faith, Hope,
and Charity, these three, but the greatest of these is
Charity."
Jeremiah L. Hutchinson,
R. E. G7'and Commander,
21 -
246 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
On motion of E. Sir James H. Hopkins,
Resolved, That the address of the Grand Commander be
spread upon the minutes, and referred to a committee.
"Which was adopted, and P. G. Commander Sir Chr. F.
Kuapp, E. Sirs Dewees J. Martin, and Grant Weidman
were appointed said committee.
The Committee on the Address of the Grand Commander,
Sir J. L. Hutchinson, reported that they have examined
the address, and fully concur with the R. E. on the various
questions submitted, and would offer the following reso-
lutions :
1. Resolved, That a Charter be granted to Kadosh Com-
mandery. No. 29, to be located in Philadelphia. Its officers
to consist of
Sir Nathan Smith, E. C.
Sir Thomas Brow^^, G.
Sir R. J. C. Walker, C. G.
2. Resolved, That that portion of the Grand Commander's
address with regard to Past G. Generalissimo Sir Charles
A. Bannvart be forwarded to Sir Bannvart, under the seal
of the Grand Commandery, assuring the Eminent Sir
Knight that this Grand Commandery will ever remember
his zeal and devotion to Templar Masonry, and his Knightly
qualities as a true and courteous Knight while residing in
Pennsylvania.
3. Resolved, That as Knights Templar we may well be
proud of the history of our State, so fully prepared by our
Historiographer, Sir Alfred Creigh, and commend it to the
favorable consideration of all Sir Knights.
4. Resolved, That handsomely engraved testimonials be
prepared and presented to each of our Past Grand Com-
manders.
5. Resolved, That the necessary blanks be printed.
6. Resolved, That the Grand Recorder have a suitable
HISTOEY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 247
memorial tablet to the memory of Sir John L. Goddard
published with these proceedings.
All of which is respectfully submitted.
Chr. F. Knapp,
Dewees J. Martin,
Grant Weidman.
On motion of Sir Theo. F. Scheffer, the report of the
committee was accepted and the committee discharged.
The Grand Commandery proceeded to the consideration
of the resolutions seriatim. All excepting Resolution No. 4
were unanimously adopted ; which resolution was amended
by E. Sir James H. Hopkins, as follows :
Resolved, That a committee of three be appointed to' pre-
pare a design for a suitable Jewel to be presented to each
Past Grand Commander.
Whereupon Sir Knights Charles E. Meyer, Nathan
Smith, and J. M. Whitby were appointed said committee.
CHAPTER II.
REPORTS OF COMMITTEES ON FOREIGN CORRESPON-
DENCE, AND COMMITTEE ON COSTUME AND JEWELS.
First Report of Committee on Foreign Correspondence, read
June, 1857, before the R. E. Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania, by Rev. Sir O. H. Tiffany.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence submitted
the following report :
To the Officers and Sir Knights of the Grand Commandery
of Pennsylvania :
That they have received from the Grand Recorder, Sir
Alfred Creigh, the proceedings of the General Grand En-
campment of the United States at its session held in Hart-
ford in September last, as also those of the proceedings of
the Grand Encampment of the State of Vermont for 1856;
Maine, 1856, Texas, 1856; New York, 1856-7; Indiana,
1856 ; Virginia, 1856, and Massachusetts and Rhode
Island, 1856
VERMONT.
The Annual Session of this Grand Encampment was
held at Burlington, on the 8th January, 1856. Three En-
camj^ments were represented. M. E. G. Master Daniel L.
Potter delivered the address, in which he refers to the deatli
of Companion Nathan B. Haswell, who had done so much
for the institution of Freemasonry in that State. It is right
that the deeds of the illustrious dead should be spread out
before us, to incite each of us to the performance of our
duties.
248
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 249
The M. E. G. M. also recommends that the Grand En-
campment shall itinerate, and that the Constitution be
amended accordingly. The Sir Knights of that jurisdiction
will find an amendment of this nature well calculated to
increase and diffuse the principles of the Order.
Sir Daniel L. Potter was re-elected G. M., and Sir John
B. Hollenbeck, Grand Kecorder.
MAINE.
The Annual Convocation of the Grand Encampment of
Maine was held at Portland on the 1st May, 1856, three
Encampments being represented
Sir Jos. C. Stevens was re-elected G. Master, and Sir Ira
Berry, G. Kecorder. The address of the M. E. G. Master
exhibits a heart devoted to the cause of Templar Masonry,
and while the Sir Knights of Maine carry out the principles
of the address, the interests and prosperity of our institution
are committed to eminent Sir Knights, and are in safe
hands.
MASSACHUSETTS AND RHODE ISLAND.
This Grand Encampment has only published a list of
their ofiicers. Among those valiant Knights we find the
name of Sir Daniel Harwood of Boston as having been
elected to M. E. Grand Master, and Sir Calvin Whiting
of Boston, Grand Recorder.
NEW YORK.
This Grand Encampment may be regarded as a model
Grand Encampment. Nineteen Encampments were repre-
sented. The M. E. Grand Master, John W. Simons, de-
livered the annual address. Three new Encampments
ranged themselves under the banner of the G. E. of New
York. The address is worthy the perusal of every Sir
Knight, as being one of the most practical, able and dig-
nified addresses which has been read before any of our
Grand Bodies.
L«
250 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Sir Le Roy Farnham Avas elected Grand Master, and
Robert Macoy, Grand Recorder.
TEXAS.
The Grand Encampment of Texas assembled in Annual
Conclave at Huntsville, June 23, 1856, four Encamp-
ments being represented. Their proceedings are character-
ized by the principles of true and courteous Knights, and
so long as they battle manfully for the Orders of Christian
Knights, just so long may we expect to hear of them doing
good and essential service in the cause so dear to our
hearts.
Sir Wm. M. Taylor was elected Grand Master, and Sir
Andrew Neill, Grand Recorder.
INDIANA.
The Annual Convocation of this Grand Encampment
w^as held in Greensburg, on December 24, 1856, four
Encampments being represented. Harmony and union
prevails among the Sir Knights, which is a sure guarantee
of their prosperity. Sir Henry C. Lawrence was elected
M. E. G. Master, and Sir Francis King, Recorder.
VIRGINIA.
On the 11th December, 1856, the Grand Encampment
of Virginia met at Richmond, eight Encampments being
represented. Sir Edward H. Gill, M. E. G. Master, in his
address uses the following language: "The moral and
beneficial principles of our Order still survive in all their
pristine beauty and loveliness, to prompt and to excite us
to press onward in the cause of Truth, of Justice and of
Mercy, ever keeping before us, 'as a cloud by day and a
pillar of fire by night,' that all-important characteristic of
our Order — integrity of character. The honor of a
Knight Templar, like C?esar's wife, should be above sus-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 251
picion." Sir Edward H. Gill was re-elected Grand Master,
and Sir John Dove, Grand Recorder.
GENERAL GRAND ENCAMPMENT.
This General Grand Body convened in the city of Hart-
ford, Conn., on the 9th Sept., 1856. Eleven State Grand
Encampments were represented, and delegates from New
Hampshire, Maryland, District of Columbia, North and
South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana,
Tennessee, Michigan, Illinois, Missouri, Wisconsin, Florida,
Iowa, California, Arkansas, Minnesota, in every State of
which Subordinate Encampments are formed, all acknow-
ledging the authority of this General Grand Body, and in
its practical operation exercising a salutary influence over
the Orders of Christian Knighthood throughout the length
and breadth of the United States.
The M. E. Sir W. B. Hubbard, General Grand Master,
having presided over the deliberations of this General
Grand Body for the last twelve years, and raised it to that
unparalleled state of prosperity which it now enjoys, craved
rest from his arduous labors; but, unwilling that the noble
efforts of a gigantic mind should not be in the van of our
ranks, the representatives, with that prudence and thought
and foresight which so justly characterized their delibera-
tions, very properly continued him in the highest post of
honor in the gift of Christian Knighthood. Long may he
be permitted to wear upon his person the emblem of our
illustrious Order, and when he shall have finished his
labors on earth, may he "receive that glorious reward
which awaits the valiant Templar who holds out faithful to
the end."
All of which is respectfully submitted.
O. H. Tiffany, ^
W. T. Bishop, > Committee.
F. C. Harrison, J
252 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Second Report of Committee on Foreign Correspondence, read
June, 1858, by Sir W. H. Allen, LL.D., before the R.
E. Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania :
Sir William H. Allen, chairman of the Committee on
Foreign Correspondence, presented the following report,
which was, on motion of Sir Jas. R. Pattou, received and
ordered to be spread on the minutes :
To the R. E. Grand Commander, Officers and Sir Knights
of the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of the
State of Pennsylvania :
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence have received
from the R. E. Sir Benjamin Parke, Grand Commander,
and E. Sir Alfred Creigh, Grand Recorder, copies of the
proceedings of the following Grand Commanderies :
INDIANA.
Greensburg, Dec. 24, 1856. — R. E. Sir Henry C. Law-
rence, Grand Commander, Lafayette ; E. Sir Francis King,
Grand Recorder, Indianapolis.
MAINE.
Portland, May 5, 1857.— Sir Jos. C. Stevens, R. E.
G. Commander, Bangor; Sir Ira Berry, E. G. Recorder,
Portland.
CONNECTICUT.
Hartford, May 14, 1857.— R. E. Sir Cyrus Goodell, G.
Commander ; E. Sir Eliphalet G. Storer, G. Recorder, New
Haven.
TEXAS.
Huntsville, June 22, 1857.— R. E. Sir E. W. Taylor, G.
Commander, Houston ; E. Sir James M. Hall, G. Recorder,
Crockett.
NEW YORK.
Buffalo, Sept. 8, 1857.— R. E. Sir Le Roy Farnham, G.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEAEPLAR. 253
Commander, Buffalo ; E. Sir Eobert Macoy, G. Recorder,
New York.
MASSACHUSETTS AND RHODE ISLAND.
Providence, October 12, 1857. — R. E. Sir Daniel Har-
wood, G. Commander, Boston ; E. Sir Stephen Lovell, G.
Recorder, Boston.
ILLINOIS.
Chicago, Oct. 27, 1857.— R. E. Sir James V. Z. Blaney,
G. Commander ; E. Sir Wm. H. Turner, G. Recorder.
VIRGINIA.
Richmond, Dec. 17, 1857.— R. E. Sir E. H. Gill, G. Com-
mander, Richmond ; John Dove, G. Recorder, Richmond.
VERMONT.
Burlington, Jan. 12, 1858. — R. E. Sir Daniel L. Potter,
G. Commander, Middleburg ; E. Sir John B. Hollenbeck,
G. Recorder, Burlington.
MICHIGAN.
Detroit, Jan. 11, 1858.— R. E. Sir John Gilbert, Jr., G.
Commander, Detroit ; E. Sir Thomas Anderson, G. Re-
corder, Detroit.
Also, a copy of the address of M. E. Sir Wm. B. Hub-
bard, Grand Master of Knights Templar in the United
States, to the Grand Commandery of Ohio.
These documents possess more than the usual interest
which attaches to similar papers. They indicate a pros-
perous condition of Christian Knighthood throughout the
country, and contain searching inquiries and well-consid-
ered opinions relating to those questions of Templar polity
which have come under discussion since the Convocation of
the Grand Encampment of the United States in 1856.
The addresses of the R. E. G. Commanders, and the re-
ports of the Committees on Foreign Correspondence, are
replete with important suggestions, often expressed with
22
254 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
an eloquence which shows that the lips and hearts of the
writers have been touched with a live coal from the altars
of Christian Knighthood, and have richly repaid the care-
ftd perusal which your committee have given them. But
inasmuch as the extracts which your committee have
marked for insertion and review are so numerous that they
would swell this report beyond the limits which they have
prescribed to themselves, they will ask leave to omit all
subjects of merely local concern, and invite the attention
of the Grand Commandery to such suggestions and argu-
ments as bear upon the general interest of our valiant and
magnanimous Order.
MAINE.
This Grand Commandery still shines, as heretofore, a
bright star in the East, and her valiant sons, with the
" Dlrigo " of their State blazoned upon their shields, and
their banners reflecting the first rays of the rising sun, en-
courage and animate all true and courteous Sir Knights,
and dismay and confound their enemies. They have not
hesitated to stand forth as the leader and standard-bearer
of those who maintain fealty to the Grand Encampment of
the United States, and who oppose the dissolution of that
august body. On this point the report of Sir John J. Bell,
chairman of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence, is
bold and explicit :
" The necessity for some governing power, which shall
serve, like the ponderous fly-wheel or the more delicate
governor of the mechanics, to regulate and equalize the
progress of our institution, and to preserve that well-regu-
lated conservatism which is as far removed from a stupid
opposition to all improvement as from bold and wanton
innovation, is most evident. And were such a change as
is proposed expedient or desirable, how shall it be brought
about ? Who shall dispense with those solemn vows which
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 255
we have all taken to preserve our fealty to the Grand En-
campment ? By what sophistry is such treason to our obli-
gations, and to those Sir Knights whose banners stream to
the blast from one end of our extended Union to the other,
and who look to the Grand Encampment as that superior
and head to whom their voluntary vows have been paid,
and to whom their allegiance is due, as anciently to the
Grand Master and his Chapter, — by what sophistry, we
ask, is such treason to be justified? The Templars of
Maine have plighted their vows to the Grand Encamp-
ment, and they hope to receive strength from our Supreme
Head in heaven to fulfill those vows to our superior on
earth."
CONNECTICUT.
We regret that this intelligent body of Sir Knights have
resolved to continue, as heretofore, to require that candi-
dates for Knighthood shall have received the degrees of
Royal and Select Master. Uniformity in the qualifications
for Knighthood is not less important than uniformity in
the work. But it would seem that this want of uniformity
is not to be corrected ; for while the Grand Encampment
requires that all candidates for Knighthood shall have re-
ceived the degree of the Royal Arch, it has set no limit to
the number of modern degrees which any Grand Com-
mandery may think proper to require of candidates for its
Orders, in addition to the degrees of Ancient Masonry.
In reference to the Grand Encampment, the R. E. Grand
Commander says : " There is no doubt whatever in my
mind, that that organization has effected a vast amount of
good ; yet as it has already in some measure outlived its
usefulness, and seems to contain within itself a great ten-
dency to increase its powers, I do not think that the Order
would suflTer any very material injury by its discontinu-
ance."
256 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
The report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence,
Sir F. Turner, chairman, is a paper of* marked ability and
dignity, abounding with interesting and valuable informa-
tion. The committee add emphasis to the strictures of the
R. E. G. Commander upon the doings and shortcomings of
the Grand Encampment, and endorse the proceedings of
the Grand Commandery of Ohio with reference to dispens-
ing with the organization of the said Grand Encampment.
TEXAS.
"We learn from the address of the Grand Commander
that peace and harmony prevail throughout the jurisdiction
of this large and intelligent body. " All the Subordinates
appear to be very cautious as to w^ho shall be dubbed Tem-
plars and bid to wield the sword in defence of injured
innocence." So long as the valiant Sir Knights of Texas
shall adhere to this wise caution they will maintain their
high reputation as ornaments of our Order, and set an ex-
ample worthy of general commendation and imitation.
Regret is expressed that no Committee on Foreign Cor-
respondence is appointed in the Grand Commandery of
Pennsylvania. This omission in 1856 was healed by the
appointment at the Convocation, held at Harrisburg, in
1857, of Sir O. H. Tiffany, Sir W. T. Bishop, and Sir F.
C. Harrison, to serve during the session. This committee
made a report.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence do not con-
cur in the views of the Grand Commandery of Ohio in
reference to dispensing with the organization of the Grand
Encampment of the United States, but bespeak for them a
courteous investigation.
NEW YORK.
The Grand Commander deprecates the practice which
prevails in some of the Subordinate Commanderies of con-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 257
ferring the Orders without cash payment of fees ; and the
committee on his address reported a resolution, which w^as
adopted, declaring the practice unmasonic and in open
violation of the well-established regulations of the Grand
Commandery.
The Grand Commander disapproves of the proposition to
admit candidates to the Orders of Knighthood who have
not taken the degrees of speculative Freemasonry, and uses
the following strong language :
"I believe Ancient Craft Masonry and the Orders of
Knighthood have been too long connected to be now sev-
ered, and that such an act would be the death-knell of the
Order wherever it should extend throughout this country.
Such association has afforded the best and surest means of
testing the character of men and their moral fitness to be-
come Sir Knights among our number. A zealous and up-
right Mason will hardly fail to make a worthy and zealous
Sir Knight ; and if otherwise, will prove a drone in our
hive, of which we are liable to have a surplus."
The Grand Commander regrets the censures Avhich have
been heaped upon the Grand Encampment of the United
States, and says : " There is no doubt that as a means of
harmonizing the different bodies throughout the entire land,
producing a fraternal feeling, of systematizing the w^ork,
and in many other ways promoting the interests and pros-
perity of the Order, it has fulfilled the expectations of the
Order at large ; and good reason exists for believing that it
will continue to do so as the country and the Order become
more extended, proving a bond of union to the Grand Com-
manderies throughout the United States. To sever our
allegiance would be an act of revolution, and prove a
source of disaster and dismay to ourselves, and encourage
and animate our enemies."
A resolution approving these sentiments of the Grand
22 »
258 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Commander, and declaring unswerving fealty and devotion
to the Grand Encampment of the United States, was re-
ported and adopted.
The report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence,
Sir Edward Tompkins, chairman, is a very able document,
breathing the true spirit of Knightly courtesy, but contain-
ing sentiments of the great questions which agitate the
Order somewhat at variance with those expressed by the
Grand Commander, and apj)roved by a majority of the Sir
Knights who were present.
The report pays a handsome and well-deserved compli-
ment to our late R. E. Grand Commander, Sir William W.
Wilson, in tile following terms :
"The R. E. Grand Commander delivered a most eloquent
and admirable address, its every tone ringing out full and
clear as the note of a clarion, and his exulting congratula-
tions over a union which no one had done more than him-
self to perfect, came warm from a heart beating high with
the noblest qualities of a true and courteous Knight."
But the committee dissent, in cautious and courteous
terms, from some of the sentiments of our Past R. E. Grand
Commander, in which he urges a continuance of the union
of Knighthood and Masonry. They say :
" There can be no difference of opinion as to the loyal
spirit with which he urges the continued union of Masonry
and Knighthood, although there may he room for wider
difference as to whether that union shall not be alliance
rather than dependence; and the most devoted Knight may
be pardoned a doubt whether we should continue to be dis-
tracted with the quarrels of every Lodge and Chapter in
our land, or whether the most unworthy member that may
steal into an Order that does not recognize Knighthood in
any form, or acknowledge its jurisdiction in any manner,
and who would not himself be permitted to approach our
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 259
precincts, shall yet hold in his hands, with a power that the
whole Order cannot control, the keys of our Asylum, and be
able to keep from our ranks, by his single vote, exercised
wholly beyond our jurisdiction, the wisest and best who,
possessing all the noblest qualities of Knighthood, should
be drawn by their affinities and our wishes to seek to enlist
under our banners."
Though that committee disclaim the expression of an
opinion on this subject, we cannot regard the above passage
as anything less than an emphatic dissent from the views on
this subject which prevailed last year in the Grand Com-
mandery of Pennsylvania. We believe that the Knights
of Pennsylvania are content that their present relations to
Ancient Craft Masonry should continue. The Grand Lodge
of the State has renounced all claim to jurisdiction over
them, no disposition has been manifested to dispute the
possession of the keys or the avenues to our Asylums ; and
we apprehend more danger to the Order from the facility
with which admission is gained to all the degrees of
Masonry than from the exclusion of good and true men
who seek to enlist under the banners of Knighthood.
The New York committee do not approve of the propo-
sition of Sir Knights Gourdin, Tucker and Gould to send
an agent to Europe to collect materials for a history of our
Order.
" While they appreciate fully the importance and value
of such a history, if faithfully and thoroughly prepared,
they are not unmindful of the fact that nearly ten thousand
dollars a year, paid by the Order, w^ould be a most desira-
ble outfit, and would enable its fortunate recipient to make
the tour of Europe in a style as creditable to his consti-
tuents as it would be satisfactory to the representative him-
self They have not found that such mighty preparation is
ever followed by any adequate performance. They believe
260 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
that the true records of Christian Knighthood will never be
exhumed by the comfortable laborer upon an ample salary.
The world's great works have not been thus wrought, and
the experience of ages should guide us now. When the
right heart shall be warmed up by a coal from off the altar,
this work will be done, and it will be valuable just in pro-
portion as it is baptized in tears and blood. No ample
salary will be thought of by him who shall write it ; but
its wide circulation and the certainty that every Templar
would be eager to procure it would yield a return that
should satisfy even cupidity itself. To the inspiration that
shall prompt it, and the sure and ample recompense it shall
win, we would leave the history of our noble Order."
This is very fine writing ; but the reasoning has failed to
convince your committee that no man is competent to write
history, unless, like our distinguished countryman, Prescott,
he is able to expend a fortune in the collection of materials
before he begins to w^ite. But the materials must be had,
and if the waiter has not means to prosecute his researches
for them, the means must be provided by others or the
work cannot be continued. A history, worthy of the name,
unlike the lighter productions of literature, cannot be struck
off at a heat, nor warmed into life '' by a coal from the
altar," nor inspired by the importunities of an empty
stomach to be thrown upon the market for means to pur-
chase a dinner. The baptism of midnight oil will be a
more authentic sign of its consecration than " the baj)tism
of tears and blood," and the grocer who supplies the oil
will hardly take for his pay an order on the publisher, to be
satisfied out of the profits of a book not yet commenced.
The bibliopole who collects the manuscripts, and the secre-
tary who copies them, are men of substantial flesh and
blood, and the waste of their living fibres cannot be repaired
by inspiration, however warm, nor by hopes, however
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 261
bright, nor by cupidity, however keen. They must have
ready pay and some breakfast.
The question of the reception of visiting Sir Knights in
good standing from Pennsylvania was referred to a com-
mittee, but no report was made thereon. From the high
character of the committee, of which the R. E. G. Com-
mander is chairman, we anticipate a liberal and courteous
report at the next Convocation, which Avill forever divorce
Templarism from the bickerings of the Grand Lodges of
New York and Pennsylvania.
There are indications that causes of dissension will be
sufficiently numerous in our own Order to occupy all who
are disposed to be belligerent, without going forth as
Knights errant to engage as champions in the quarrels of
others. If the committee shall turn aside, which we do not
apprehend, to "meddle with strife that belongs not" to
Christian Knighthood nor Christian neighborhood, we sub-
mit that they will put the Grand Commandery of New
York in an attitude of disobedience to the authority of the
Grand Master of Knights Templar in the United States.
By proclamation on the twentieth of June, 1857, the Grand
Master "enjoined upon all the Subordinates, State and
otherwise, and upon the officers and members thereof,
throughout our jurisdiction, to extend the right hand of
fellowship and Knightly courtesy to the officers and mem-
bers of all the Subordinate Commanderies in the State of
Pennsylvania, and to all other Templars in good standing,
hailing from the same, to the end that all may be recog-
nized as worthy members of our valiant and magnanimous
Order."
The proceedings on presenting testimonials of respect to
the Hon. Wm. B. Hubbard, Most Eminent Grand Master
of Knights Templar in the United States, and to Sir John
Simons, P. R. E. Grand Commander of New York, were
262 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
deeply interesting, and the sentiments expressed in the
addresses meet our cordial approval and admiration.
We close our notice of this Grand Commandery, which
is a star of the first magnitude in the Templar firmament,
with feelings of high satisfaction at its prosperity and the
elevated views and noble principles which its leading minds
inculcate. We regard, in particular, the Burial Service
which the Grand Commandery has adopted as a monument
of the refined taste, deep religious feeling, and sublime faith
of its authors. As we have seen nothing in the funeral
solemnities of any Order or society which we think superior
to this ritual, we hope that it will be adopted and used be-
yond the limits of the Grand Commandery for which it was
prepared.
VIRGINIA.
The Grand Commander of this distinguished body of
Knights " concurs with the Grand Commander of Ohio in
the opinion that the time cannot be far distant when the
Grand Encampment of the United States will be dissolved,"
but he condemns the action of the Grand Commandery of
Ohio in declaring themselves independent, " as premature,
discourteous and untenable." He suggests that "the repre-
sentative of the Grand Commandery of Virginia, at the
next Triennial Session of the Grand Encampment of the
United States, be requested to use his influence in procuring
an early dissolution of that Grand Body; and, should his
efforts prove abortive, that he be instructed to apply for
permission for this Grand Commandery to withdraw from
its jurisdiction." Finally, he disapproves of the proposition
to sever the connection which exists between the Knightly
and Masonic Orders, and gives strong reasons for the faith
that is in him, in a historical sketch of the two Orders
during the last seven hundred years, which has been pre-
pared with much care and research.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 263
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence endorse the
opinions of the Grand Commander in reference to a dissolu-
tion of the Grand Encampment of the United States, and
offer an argument in refutation of the views adopted by the
Grand Commandery of Maine on the inviolability of the
vow of fealty to the Grand Encampment. Your committee
do not concur in the opinions of the Eminent Sir Knight
who prepared this report. Without intending to enter
upon a discussion of the question, they may be permitted to
express the firm conviction that the vow of fealty is binding
so long as the Grand Encampment shall exist, unless the
obligation be remitted by formal consent of the superior;
and that while the existence of that body cannot be termi-
nated nor its rightful authority impaired by the violent
and revolutionary secession of Subordinate Commanderies,
it has the power of self-destruction whenever a majority of
two-thirds of its members shall resolve to commit suicide,
and shall sustain an appeal from the Grand Master on the
question whether a motion to dissolve is in order.
VERMONT.
The general condition of the Order in this jurisdiction i^
represented as prosperous, but we regret to learn that ^e
members of one of the Subordinate Commanderies have so
far misunderstood the sanctity of their obligation that, on
a visit of the Grand Commander, a summons was issued to
every member and failed to bring to the Asylum a suffi-
cient number to open a Council of Knights of the Red
Cross. This indicates something more than apathy and in-
difference.
The Grand Commander is of opinion that the time has
not yet arrived, nor will it soon arrive, when the Grand En-
campment of the United States will cease to be of any
further use to the Order of Knighthood ; and he is not a
little surprised that a Commandery possessing so much in-
264 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
telligence as that of Ohio should manifest a disposition to
withdraw from an institution that has done so much for the
honor and increase of our Order, and is capable of doing so
much by the moral influence it exerts upon the community
wherever assembled ; nor will he recommend any measure
that shall tend to such a result as its discontinuance.
ILLINOIS AND MICHIGAN.
These young and spirited Commanderies received their
warrants and completed their organization during the past
year. We greet them with a hearty welcome as bright
lights in the illuminated triangle of American Knighthood,
and we shall gladly interchange with them those Knightly
courtesies which should always distinguish the disciples of
Immanuel and soldiers of the Cross.
MASSACHUSETTS AND RHODE ISLAND.
An amended constitution, conforming with the new con-
stitution of the Grand Encampment, was laid on the table ;
the discussion showing that the Commandery was averse to
present change, in the expectation that other alterations
will be made at the session of the Grand Encampment in
1859.
OHIO.
In October last this Grand Commandery passed a reso-
lution terminating its connection with the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States. In December, a Sj^ecial Com-
munication of the Grand Commandery was held at
Columbus, when that unmasonic, uncourteous and revo-
lutionary measure was reconsidered, and the resolution
repealed.
Immediately after the repeal, that noble patriarch of
American Knighthood and ornament of Christian Chivalry,
the Most Eminent Grand Master, delivered an eloquent
address, congratulating the Commandery on its return to
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 265
its fealty and communion, and earnestly advocating the
necessity and usefulness of the Grand Encampment,
The Grand Master argues that every Subordinate Com-
mandery, deriving its powers from its superior, can have
no existence except in fealty to that superior ; and there-
fore secession puts the Subordinate out of being. It is sui-
cide as well as treason.
He next argues that the General Grand Encampment
had express an inherent power to alter its constitution;
and therefore it had not virtually disbanded, either by the
change of its name or its organic law. He says the Grand
Encampment made no change of principle, except in au-
thorizing an appeal from the chair — an innovation of which
he disapproves.
He next combats the error that the Grand Encampment
was created by State Grand Commanderies and exercises
powers delegated by them. He shows that not a single
State Grand Encampment appears upon the record of those
illustrious Knights at the head of w^hom w'as the M. E. and
Hon. De Witt Clinton, who framed the first constitution in
1816. The State Grand Encampments were the creatures,
not the creators, of the General Grand Encampment.
In reply to the argument that the Grand Encampment
has accomplished the purpose for which it was created and
is no longer of use, he shows that the territory in which
Grand Commanderies are to be formed is not half occupied ;
and that in case the supreme head should be removed every
species of irregularity and conflict would come in like a
flood, until the character of our Order would be prostrated
and its usefulness destroyed.
Finally, he shows that there need be no fear that the
Grand Encampment will ever become a pecuniary burden
to its subordinates, for a careful husbandry of its resources
will render it self-supporting ; but if these should be lost or
23 M
266 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
wasted, an assessment of five cents every three years upon
every Sir Knight would pay all the expenses of the Grand
Encampment.
Your committee would not venture, without more time
for investigation than they have now at command, to ques-
tion the conclusions of so eminent a Knight as our honored
and illustrious Grand Master. But we may be permitted
to say that we are not now able to see anything in the
principles or usages of our Order which makes the Grand
Encampment an integral part of our system and indispen-
sably necessary to its existence. In our view, the question
is one of expediency and policy. The Grand Encampment
of the United States must stand or fall by its usefulness or
want of usefulness to the Orders of Christian Knighthood
in this country ; and as the ability, zeal, moral influence
and unsullied honor of its individual members and officers,
and the w^ise legislation of its sessions, are the measure and
test of that usefulness, so by these it must stand, or through
the absence of these it must fall. Whenever its legisla-
tion shall become puerile ; whenever it shall " neglect the
weightier matters of the law to tithe mint, and anise, and
cumin," and whenever it shall " remove the old landmarks
which our fathers have set up," the end of its usefulness
will have come, and the termination of its existence will
speedily follow. But your committee submit that that
fatal end has not yet come, and is not near. The Grand
Encampment may have been guilty of some sins, both of
omission and commission, but we have failed to perceive in
its reported proceedings any evidence of a capital crime, to
be expiated only by the death penalty. The influence of
the State Grand Commanderies, with which every member
of the Grand Encampment must be affiliated, is both con-
servative and recuperative ; and by taking care to send
prudent representatives with wise instructions to the next
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 267
triennial Convocation, the omissions to the last may he re-
paired and its errors corrected.
Your committee think they perceive in the movements
of certain Grand Commanderies, in reference to the Grand
Encampment, a restlessness under restraint, an impatience
of authority, a hankering after a petty local independence
or impotent individualism, to which your committee are
indisposed to minister aid and comfort, either in Church or
State, Masonry or Knighthood.
Before we .destroy the work of our fathers, let us pause
and consider what will be the probable condition of Ameri-
can Knighthood in a few years without the restraining and
directing influence of a supreme head. Different qualifica-
tions for membership would soon be required in different
jurisdictions. Some would throw open their Asylums to
those who are not Freemasons, while others would perhaps
require candidates to be proficients in all the degrees of the
Scottish Rite. The work, the regalia, the weapons and the
drill would become every year less and less uniform, until
the Templars of different States could no longer recognize
one another, and Christian Knighthood, having ceased to
be a world-wide or even a national institution, would dwin-
dle into a multitude of local societies, without a common
interest, without mutual confidence, aimless, powerless and
discordant — all equally free, independent and insignificant —
until the Order would be shorn of its glory, and darkness
would reign in our Asylums and dismay in our ranks.
All of which is respectfully submitted.
Wm. H. Allen,
J. E. Marshall,
R. A. Lameerton,
H. M. Johnston.
268 HISTORY OF THE KNICJIITS TEMPLAR.
Third Report of Committee on Foreicjn Correspoiidence, read
June, 1859, by Sir Robert A. Lamberton, before the
E. E. Gh^and Commandery 0/ Pennsylvania.
Sir Robert A. Laraberton, chairman of the Committee
on Foreign Correspondence, submitted the following re-
port :
To the R. E. Grand Commander, Officers and Sir Knights
of the Grand Comynandery of Knights Temjylar of the
State of Pennsylvania :
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence respectfully
report that they have received from the Grand Recorder,
Sir Alfred Creigh, and have examined, copies of the pro-
ceedings of the Grand Commanderies of California, Con-
necticut, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts
and Rhode Island, Michigan, ]\Iississippi, New York, Ohio,
Texas, Vermont, Virginia and Canada. To these we pur-
pose to refer in detail.
CALIFORNIA.
Sir Isaac Davis, R. E. G. C, Sacramento ; Sir Alex. G.
Abell, R. E. G. R., San Francisco.
A Convocation of Knights Templar was held at San
Francisco on the 10th August, 1858, A. O. 740, in which
three Commanderies were represented, to organize a Grand
Commandery. The warrant of the M. E. G. M. was read,
a constitution adopted, and officers elected. On the 11th
August, A. O. 740, the f\rst conclave was held, and three
petitions received to open and hold Commanderies.
We rejoice even thus briefly to communicate the fact
that in our ranks have been enrolled the Christian Sir
Knights of the Golden State. We extend to them the
strono; right hand of cordial welcome. With fraternal
greetings we hail the new Grand Commandery on the
Pacific, and with earnest desires that its steps may be sure
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 269
and onward, that it may know only peace and harmony,
we pray " God speed it on its way."
CONNECTICUT.
Sir John A. McLean, K. E. G. C, Norwalk ; Sir Eliphalet
G. Storer, E. G. K., New Haven.
An assembly of the Grand Commandery was convened
on the 13th May, 1858, A. O. 740, at New Haven, six
Commanderies being represented. The address of the
Grand Commander was brief, but high-toned. He thus
enunciates his firm conclusion upon the question of with-
drawal from the jurisdiction of the Grand Encampment of
the United States : " We should be false to our Knightly
vows and to the interests of the Order to withhold our
allegiance from our Supreme Head." He recommends
that, to secure uniformity in the work, a rule be adopted
requiring an exemplification by the Grand Officers annually.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence allude to the
dissatisfaction manifested as to the proceedings of the
Grand Encampment of the United States, and think that
body " should regulate the matters in dispute between the
several States, but cannot legislate for each and tell them
what to do or what not to do. Such might have been the
custom among the Templars of the Middle Ages, when the
will of one ruled without control ; but the march of im-
provement and reason have altered a great many points
since those bygone days. In these United States we are
accustomed to submit only after inquiry into the merits of
the law, either by ourselves or by our proxies, the Senators
and Representatives ; but no man can say, or rather would
dare to say to us, ' Sic volo, sic jubeo : sit j^ro ratione
voluntas.^ " And again, " Discontent is assuming a shape,
and, sooner or later, a general blow will be struck, and so
well directed, that the Grand Encampment of the United
States must be numbered among the things that were."
28*
270 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
It is to be regretted that such expressions are uttered, as
their tendency is only hurtful. Safety lies in clinging
closely to our ancient customs and usages, and with these
is almost inseparably associated our form of government.
This truth, as well as the civil institutions of our own land,
have alike been consulted in our system of Templar polity ;
and the well-being of our Order reiterates the injunction,
" Remove not the ancient landmarks which thy fathers
have set." Whatever undue powers are exercised by the
Grand Encampment can be restrained, and whatever errors
exist in its constitution or legislation can be corrected by
those who there have voice. After proper efforts have
been used and exhausted to amend the evil, then it will be
time to aim the "general blow" against an offending
autocracy. Until then let us remember our vows and be
true.
The Grand Commandery concurred in the conclusion
which we have quoted from the Grand Commander's
address, and indefinitely postponed the consideration of a
resolution tending to a withdrawal from the Grand Encamp-
ment. They also condemned a circular which was issued
by Ohio ujDon the same subject, and expressed gratification
that the resolution was repealed upon which that circular
was based.
ILLINOIS.
Sir J. V. Z. Blaney, R. E. G. C, Chicago ; Sir Wra. H.
Turner, E. G. R., Alton.
The second Annual Conclave was held at Alton on 26th
October, A. D. 1858, A. O. 740, three Commanderies being
represented.
The Grand Commander, after giving a synopsis of the
duties discharged by him during the previous year, takes
high ground as to the allegiance due to the Grand Encamp-
ment. In a concise argument he shows the supremacy of
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 271
the Grand Encampment to be the nearest practicable
approach permitted by the existing arrangements of civil
government to the ancient organizations of the Order. He
then adds : " If anything objectionable exists in the consti-
tution last adopted, the remedy is found in the alteration
of the objectionable features at the next session ; surely not
in treasonable attempts to overthrow the organization and
abolish the Grand Encampment. To us, at least, the
youngest Grand Commandery in the galaxy, it would be
but the rankest treason to take part in any such effort. It
would not, however, be objectionable for you to investigate,
either by special committee or in committee of the whole,
the constitutions and rules of the Grand Encampment, with
a view of instructing your delegates in regard to amend-
ments which may seem to you desirable ; and such course I
could, indeed, recommend." We commend these senti-
ments of the true-hearted Grand Commander of Illinois to
those who, with sacrilegious hand, would lay the common
head in the dust, and who seek to annihilate the power to
which we must render obedience.
In the same address reference is made with marked
approbation to the report made to this Grand Commandery
on the subject of dress, jewels, &c., at our last Conclave, by
our learned and efficient E. G. R., Sir Alfred Creigh.
Charters were granted to two new Commanderies.
INDIANA.
Sir Geo. W. Porter R. E. G. C, New Albany ; Sir Francis
King, E. G. R., Indianapolis.
The Grand Commandery convened at New Albany, on
1st December, 1858, A. O. 740, representatives appearing
from six Subordinates. No disturbing questions had arisen
during the year preceding the session, and the Order had
made steady progress. The beautifully impressive ritual
for burial service of the Orders of Knighthood, as pre-
272 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
scribed by the Grand Commandery of New York, was, with
some slight modifications, adopted.
KENTUCKY.
Sir Theodore N. Wise, R. E. C. G., Covington; Sir Wm.
M. Samuel, E. G. R., Paris.
The Grand Commandery of Kentucky met on the 27th
May, A. D. 1858, A. O. 740, five Commanderies repre-
sented. During the session, the M. E. G. M., Sir Wm. B.
Hubbard, visited the Grand Commandery. The address
of the Grand Commander was not published. From a
meagre outline of the proceedings we gather that the Order
is in an advancino: condition.
'&
MAINE.
Sir Freeman Bradford, R. E. G. C, Portland; Sir Ira
Berry, E. G. R., Portland.
The Grand Commandery convened at Portland, 4th May,
1858, A. O. 740, four Commanderies being represented.
No wavering characterizes the fealty of the Sir Knights of
Maine to the Supreme Body. In the address of R. E. G. C.
Stevens he thus refers to the union which was cemented two
years ago in our own State: "I am happy to inform you
that harmony and union now exist between the Grand and
several Subordinate Commanderies of the State of Pennsyl-
vania, acknowledging their allegiance to the General Grand
Encampment of the United States. Most cheerfully and
fraternally do we extend to those valiant and magnanimous
Sir Knights the right hand of fellowship, and bid them a
hearty welcome to all our rights and privileges, 'even to
that disinterested friendship and unbounded hospitality
which ever has, and we hope and trust will long continue
to, adorn, distinguish, and characterize our noble Order.'"
An exceedingly able report was made by the Committee
on Foreign Correspondence, in which the supremacy of the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 273
Grand Encampment was admirably vindicated, and its con-
tinuance shown to be a necessity. Rebellion to it was
properly styled a breach of our vows to the Order.
A model code of by-laws was adopted for the govern-
ment of the Order in that jurisdiction.
MASSACHUSETTS AND EHODE ISLAND.
Sir Winslow Lewis, R. E. G. C, Boston; Sir Wm.H. L.
Smith, E. G. E,., Boston.
The Grand Encampment met on the 25th October, 1858.
The whole proceedings are contained in a single page, and
tell us little more than that an amendment to their con-
stitution was adopted, and a resolution passed recommend-
ing to the various Encampments within its jurisdiction a
contribution equal to one dollar for every member belonging
to each Encampment, to be made to the "Mount Vernon
Association."
MICHIGAN.
Sir N. P. Jacobs, R. E. G. C, Detroit; Sir G. W. Wilson,
E. G. R., Lyons.
The Grand Commandery of Michigan assembled at De-
troit, June 1st, 1858, A. O. 740, four Commanderies repre-
sented. The address of the Grand Commander gives a
concise history of Templar Masonry in Michigan, from its
establishment at Detroit upon the 8th June, 1851. A
Grand Instructor was appointed to visit each Commandery
twice in each year.
MISSISSIPPI.
Sir Geo. P. Crump, R. E. G. C, Vicksburg; Sir Ro. W.
T. Daniel, E. G. R., Jackson.
Li pursuance of a Avarrant of the M. E. G. M., dated
December 22, A. O. 738, a Convention of the Sir Knights
of Mississippi met on the 21st January, A. D. 1857, at
Vicksburg, to form a Grand Commandery. A constitution
was unanimously adopted and officers elected.
274 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR
Tlie second Grand Annual Convocation was held at
Vicksburg on the 4tli May, A. D. 1858. The Grand Com-
mander recommends great care to be exercised in establish-
ing new Commanderies, and every application to be rigidly
scrutinized. He also counsels caution as to any movement
towards impairing the authority of the Grand Encamp-
ment.
Thus has another star of first magnitude been added to
our Templar constellation. The proceedings of the Sir
Knights of Mississippi give assurance of that earnestness
and zeal which will crown our noble Order with success
within that jurisdiction. With heartfelt wishes for a pros-
l^erous future for the new Grand Commandery, w'e rejoice
in tliis additional enlistment of true soldiers of the Cross,
and welcome them gladly to the service of Immanuel.
NEW YORK.
Sir Charles G. Judd, E. E. G. C, Penn Yan ; Sir Eobert
Macoy, E. G. R., New York.
The Grand Commandery of New York held its forty-fifth
Annual Conclave at the city of Rochester, on the 14th
of September, 1858, A. O. 740, twenty-seven Commanderies
appearing by their representatives. The Grand Commander
in an address, brief but of dignity, glances at the convul-
sions and panic of the previous year, and the many causes
we have to unite in gratitude to Him who rides upon the
whirlwind and directs the storm. And he thus enunciates
a well-known but too frequently forgotten truth: "Many
there are who have no knowledge of the higher and more
interior sense of Masonry. With them it is, at best, but a
social organization ; good, most excellent, but embodying no
deeper principles tlian appear on its surface — possessing no
moral power, no help to purification. On these its lessons
fall like seed upon stony ground; like water on a rock, re-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 275
bounding by the force of* its own impetus, and leaving no
impress behind ; jagged stones are these, loosely builded
together with no cement, a blot and a blemish to our
spiritual temple.
" Having no higher aim in Masonry than the mere out-
ward advantages of the system, they jDurify not their lives
nor beautify their characters. The tools of our craft are
not found in their hands ; they are drones in our hives,
clogs to our chariot-wheels, laggards impeding the triumphal
march of our victorious army. Let such apply to them-
selves the plummet of righteousness, learning to walk up-
rightly among men; the square of virtue, shaping their
character to the pattern of that 'stone' which, though
rejected of the builders, has become the head of the
corner."
A patriarchal cross, manufactured of the celebrated
Charter Oak, was presented to the Grand Commander, to
be worn by him and his successors.
From the masterly report of the Committee on Foreign
Correspondence we take the following excellent remarks
relative to the agitation now at work in several of the
Grand Commanderies : "It will not be denied that the
object of every contested movement is change; for if no
change was desired, no movement would be necessary.
Truth seeketh no change, but is unalterable and eternal ;
and the highest prosperity that the warmest heart in our
ranks could wish our noble Order would be tliat its land-
marks should know no alteration for all time — that its pre-
cepts should remain ever the same — its principles be stamped
with the eternity of Truth, and its practices be unalterably
conformed to them for ever and ever. What an answer is
here, Sir Knights, to every movement that would disturb
the harmony or endanger the peace of a Brotherhood like
ours J * * * When all attempts at innovation, come
276 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
from what quarter they may, shall be properly suppressed
by the united sentiment of the Order, its prosperity will be
secured upon a foundation against which neither enemies
on earth, nor 'all the gates of hell,' shall ever prevail."
An excellent ritual of ceremonies and charges upon con-
stituting and dedicating a Commandery and installing its
officers, giving token of the work of that eminent Templar,
Sir Robert Macoy, was adopted, so as to conform with the
statutes and regulations. This ritual is worthy the attention
of this Grand Commandery, as it seems to be all that can
be desired.
The Committee on Uniform believe that to the Grand
Encampment alone belongs the right to regulate the uni-
form of its Subordinates, and the subject was jDostponed
until after the next regular meeting of the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United vStates.
One hundred dollars were appropriated to the "Mount
Vernon Ladies' Association," towards the purchase of the
Mount Vernon estate, and the vSubordinate Commanderies
were recommended to make donations for the same purpose.
"Foi^wardT' seems to be the never-changing watchword
of the chivalrous Templars of the Empire State. No
wavering or halting step marks their progress. What they
do is done with heart and might; and we trust that ever, as
now, their Beauseant may be discerned in the fore-front of
the onward march of our Order. And may the grateful
feelings of esteem and regard now existing between our
respective Grand Commanderies grow and strengthen as
the years roll on, within all our borders peace, and we
faithful to the end.
OHIO.
Sir John H. Achey, R. E. G. C, Dayton ; Sir John D.
Caldwell, E. G. R., Cincinnati.
On the 14th October, A. D. 1858, A. O. 740, the Grand
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 277
Encampment of Ohio convened at Columbus, with repre-
sentatives from twelve Subordinates.
The Grand Commander has found a law of that Grand
Commandery, requiring forty miles to intervene bet\Yeen
the place where one Commandery is in existence to the
point where another could be organized, to be improper ;
and he recommends its abrogation, and that the petitioners
should be dependent on those within whose jurisdiction they
might reside, and on whom they would be dependent for a
recommendation.
Whilst the Grand Commandery of Ohio has by resolu-
tion receded from the position it assumed of placing itself
beyond the pale of the Grand Encampment of the United
States, there still exist warm feelings of discontent. That
injustice may not be done to the Sir Knights, we extract
from the report of the committee to w'hom was referred the
address of the Grand Master: "The Constitution of the
General Grand Encampment, or rather of the Grand En-
campment of the United States, as it styles itself, adopted
at Hartford in 1856, gives to that body a perpetual exist-
ence, takes from the State Grand Encampments the power
given to them by the constitution of 1816, assumes authority
to revoke pre-existing charters, warrants, or dispensations,
and to do all matters and things pertaining to the good and''
well-being of the principles of Templar Masonry ; thus de-
priving the State Grand Encampments of their sovereignty,
and bringing them in all things into complete subjection to
the Grand Encampment of the United States or to its
Grand Master. This centralization of power in the Grand
Encampment of the United States, or in its Grand Master,
we claim to be dangerous to the happiness and prosperity
of Templar Masonry in this State." And the adoption of
resolutions is recommended in favor of amending the con-
stitution of the Grand Encampment of the United States,
24
278 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
SO as to conform to the constitution of 1816 ; and all future
amendments to be submitted to the several State Grand
Encampments, and to be of no force until approved by a
majority of them. This report was accepted and the reso-
lutions adopted.
Here, then, we have presented the broad allegation of
usurpation. It is unnecessary to enter upon the defence of
the action of the Grand Encampment of 1856. No mere
human legislation can arrogate to itself perfection. If
errors be committed, time and experience will unveil and
prove them, and the remedy to be applied is obvious. The
Sir Knights of Ohio are clearly right in the course they
now seek to follow, in carrying their complaint and griev-
ance to the proper tribunal for redress. Whatever fortune
betide them in the Grand Encampment of the United
States in the presentation there of that of which they now
complain, we trust they will bow to the will of the majority
of their peers.
TEXAS.
Sir James Saley, R. E. G. C, Galveston ; Sir Andrew
Neill, E. G. R., Seguin.
The Grand Commandery of Texas held its fifth Annual
Conclave on the 22d June, 1858, A. O. 748, in Huntsville,
six Commanderies being represented.
A resolution was adopted that a committee be appointed
to prepare a memorial to the Grand Encampment, and to
report at the next Annual Conclave, on the propriety of
dissolving that body. The Committee on Foreign Corre-
spondence avow their readiness and willingness to dissolve
the Grand Encampment, because it is of little good, is ex-
pensive and dictatorial. And they then declare of it :
" There is not a triennial assembly but the spirit of cliange
spreads its mighty wings over its every action, and we feel
no hesitation in saying that the Grand Commanderies
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 279
would be far better off and prosper as well without the
federal head as with it; and recommend to each Grand
Commandery In the United States, as well as our own, the
propriety of dissolving the Grand Encampment of the
United States ; and specially recommend to the Grand
Commandery of Texas to take bold and determined steps
in reference to dissolving the Grand Encampment of the
United States."
We receive in kindness and with fraternal regard the
recommendation thus made by our brethren in Texas, but
we regret that our convictions of right force us to differ
from them. From general charge and declamation it is
enough for us to point to that obligation which imposes
upon every Templar obedience to the Grand Encampment.
AVe look to it as the source of authority. If the rhetorical
flourish be true, that "the spirit of change spreads its
mighty wings over every action of the triennial assembly,"
in whom exists the power to clip the wings of this remark-
able spirit that so broods triennially and hatches out dis-
content? In that assembly the Sir Knights can have fair
audience ; there every objection can be explicitly made,
and if, after hearing there, the Texan Templars find them-
selves in a minority, will they not submit, as do other
minorities, and be calm ?
The committee — rightly, as we hold — were utterly opposed
to the views once expressed by Sir C. E. Blumenthal, when
G. C. of this Grand Commandery, in reference to conferring
the Templar degrees on persons not Masons. At our
Annual Conclave held at Harrisburg on the 22d June, 1857,
a resolution was unanimously adopted against sundering the
sacred ties which have united Ancient Craft Masonry and
the Orders of Christian Knighthood for seven centuries and
a half; and denouncing any such movement as calculated
to produce anarchy and ruin. We would not have referred
280 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
to this subject now, were it not to avoid all misapprehension
as to the sentiments of this Grand Comraandery, for we
maintain that the requirement of the Royal Arch degree
should ever be a prerequisite to the Order of Knighthood.
VERMONT.
Sir Barzillai Davenport, R. E. G. C, Brandon ; Sir
John B. Hollenbeck, E. G. R., Burlington.
The Grand Commandery of Vermont met at Burlington
on the 11th of January last; four Commanderies repre-
sented. The address of R. E. G. C. Sir Daniel L. Potter
is distinguished by a most earnest and devout spirit of
thankfulness for mercies past, and rejoicings in an humble
hope and trust in Him to whom we reverently bow. He
refers to an incident of thrilling interest which occurred in
one of our Asylums, "where the poAver of God's spirit was
most signally manifested in its subduing and controlling
power over the human mind, in bringing it to yield a will-
ing and cheerful obedience to his rightful government."
In strong and vigorous language he protests against any
efforts to subvert the government of the G. E., and in his
views on this subject he was cordially sustained by his
Grand Commandery.
VIRGINIA.
Sir E. H. Gill, R. E. G. C, Richmond ; Sir John Dove,
E. G. R., Richmond.
In the published proceedings of the Grand Commandery
of Virginia an interesting sketch is given of a Grand
Assembly of Knights convened at Richmond on the 22d
February, 1858, to act as a mounted escort of the M. W.
G. L. of that State, on the occasion of the inauguration of
the equestrian statue of George AVashington. When the
duties of the day were done, the evening bore witness to the
patriotism of the Sir Knights, and their devotion to the
sublime tenets of our Order, in fitting poems and addresses.
HISTORY OF TITE KXIGHTS TEMPLAR. 281
Sir B. B. French, Sir Jos. Hall and Sir Eob Morris,
there gathered new laurels for their attainments, literary
and Masonic.
The Grand Annual Assembly met at Kichmond on the
16th December, 1858, ten Commanderies being represented.
A resolution was adopted that the delegates from the
Grand Commandery to the next G. E. be instructed to ask
permission to withdraw from its jurisdiction.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence refer to the
instructive address delivered by G. M. Sir Wm. B. Hub-
bard, upon the occasion of the repeal of the resolution of
withdrawal by the Grand Commandery of Ohio, in which
he declared that a resolution by a Subordinate, asserting
itself independent of its superior, is palpably a violation of
the obligation of a Templar, a violation of the constitution
of such Subordinate, and that of the G. E. of the U. S.,
and puts such Subordinate out of existence. The com-
mittee give to the G. M. all credit for the eminent ability
and knowledge which he possesses, but dissent from the
view he takes of the allegiance due to the G. E. They
hold the national body to be self-constituted, claiming, and
exercising powers belonging to the State organizations, and
productive of discord and confusion ; and that some of the
powers which it is now exercising are innovations on the
body of Masonry. Speaking of the obligation of the
Templar to sustain the G. E., they pronounce it " like the
shirt of Nessus : it hangs around and about him wherever
he goes, and whatever he does, and from which he can
never divest himself, if the interpretation given it by the
M. E. G. M. and other supporters of the G. E. be correct."
The report gives evidence of great ability, and also of that
spirit of unrest which seems gradually being infused into
Templar Masonry. The voice of this Grand Commandery
lias been heretofore clearly heard upon this question.; and
24*
282 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
your committee but re-echo it when we re-affirm our con-
viction that these continual agitations against obedience to
the source of power, this impatient restlessness under
authority, this fretting against the Supreme Body to which
allegiance is due, will surely breed dissension and strife,
retard the progress of the Order, and at last bring it into
reproach. We will cheerfully help to correct whatever is
amiss, and will be found side by side with the gallant
Sir Knights of Virginia in toiling for the advance of the
institution, but when efforts are made to destroy the very
life of our superior, it would be unknightly for us to re-
main silent.
CANADA.
Frater, W. S. B. McLeod Moore, V. E. Prov. G. Co.;
Frater, Saml. D. Fowler, Prov. G. Chancellor, Kingston.
The Annual Convocation of the Provincial G. Conclave
of Masonic Knights Templar was held at Toronto on the
16th July, 1858. From the address of the Provincial G.
Commander, we learn that the Order of the Temple is ex-
tending and flourishing in all parts of her Majesty's domin-
ions, and there are now in India and Australia Provincial
Grand Commanderies. The Prov. G. Commander an-
nounces with gratification that " the bond of union has
been closely drawn between the Templars of the United
States and our own Supreme Grand Body, with every pros-
pect of a lasting feeling of good-will and kindly regard,
which ought always to exist, and ever keep our Companions
of the United States in harmony with the parent stock,
alike in kindred and common language." After referring
to Orders of the Temple and of St. John of Jerusalem or
Knights of Malta, not connected with the Masonic Body,
he mentions the "Observance Encampment" of Linden,
which dates from time immemorial, and is strictly Masonic"
"Their late Royal Highnesses, the Dukes of Kent and
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 283
Sussex, belonged to this Encampment, and were installed
therein." The Order in France, having no connection with
Free Masonry, has been suppressed by the Emperor. In
1844, in Scotland, the statute requiring every Templar to
be R. A. Mason was repealed, and, as a consequence, much
of the zeal in behalf of our Order abated. This caused the
former statute to be revived, and confident hopes are enter-
tained that the zeal of the Knights will once more be
aroused. The Prov. G. Com. believes that the Order of
the Red Cross is not requisite for obtaining admission to
the Order of the Temple, as it is only an adjunct to the
Royal Arch, and not recognized in England as a degree of
Masonry. He thinks it would be advisable and add greatly
to " a more cordial fraternization if an exception was made
in the case of Templars from a foreign jurisdiction, by not
insisting uj)on it as a prerequisite for admission to U. S.
Encampments." And he adds, " there certainly appears
an inconsistency in obliging an English Templar to require
the aid of a degree unknown to him to obtain admission to
his own Order. The G. M. of the U. S. admits that it is a
modern innovation."
At the hazard of extending this report to an immoderate
length, we make one more extract from the same address :
"Amongst other matters, the Grand Chancellor informs
me that the Templar ring of profession is worn in England
but is not imperative ; his own ring belonged to Sir Knt
BuCKHARDT, who was G. Sub. Prin. of England in 1809
it has, externally, the Templar Cross on a white ground
and inside is engraven the motto, 'In hoe signo vinces.
The ring of profession of a Scotch Knight, which is pre-
sented to him on his installation, is of plain gold, with the
Templar cross of red enamel on a round white enamel, and
on each side, engraven on the gold, the letters P. D. E. P.
(^Pro Deo et Patria.) On the inner side the Knight's name.
284 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPT. A R.
-svitli the words ' Eqiies Templi Prof. Consecr. Great.,' with
the month in Hebrew and year of the Order when his
installation took place. It is worn on the first or index
finger of the right hand, symbolical of pointing the way
that leads to the true faith." He recommends the adoption
of such a ring, and its presentation to a Kniglit at his
installation. As the G. E. has the sole control of the sub-
ject of uniform, jewels, etc., we can only here express our
opinion that a ring of the character described would be a
fit and beautiful mark of our profession, and would be
dearly prized by its knightly possessor.
Your committee have now given you the result of a care-
ful examination of the proceedings of other Grand Com-
manderies to which they have had access. Whatever of
common interest therein occurred has been laid before you;
much of local interest was done which is of no moment to
you. We have given prominence to the great question now
being agitated as to a disruption of the ties which bind the
Grand Commanderies and all of us to the Supreme Head.
We have done this because of the great importance of the
question involved. The overthrow of the G. E., we fear
with too much reason, would bring upon us destruction and
anarchy, whilst now in every State of the Union our be-
loved Order is most prosperous, and is progressing with
sure and rapid tread in the great highway of success. In
holding that we are bound to the support of the G. E., that
it is the supreme, legitimate source of authority, with great
uses to subserve and continued peace and harmony to pro-
mote, the high tribunal of last appeal, we would differ from
those who think and hold otherwise, as those who from like
conscientious convictions differ. In entering our most
solemn protest against the most unnatural divorce of the
Grand Encampment and its Subordinates, we concede in all
courtesy to our brethren elsewhere pure and sincere motives
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 285
in the course they have pursued on this question. Let us
in patience await the result of the Triennial Assembly of
1859, in the hope that all cause for dissension and difference
may be removed. Let us, then, differ as may the servants
of our risen and glorified Master, our only strife being who
shall do most for the advancement of His kingdom whose
birth was heralded by the angelic message, " On earth,
peace, good-will towards men." Then, wherever our light
may shine, whatever of good we may accomplish, we can all
unite in the ascription, Non nobis Domine, non nobis,
SED NOMiNi Tuo DA GLORiAM ; and WB unanimously sub-
mit for your action the following :
Resolved, That the delegates of this Grand Commandery
to the G. E. of the U. S. be and they are hereby instructed
to resist w^ith all firmness, yet in courtesy, every effort
which may be made tending to loosen the tie which binds
us all together in the G. E., or wdiich may aim at impair-
ing the riglitful authority, or lead to the disruption, of that
body.
Eespectfully submitted.
R. A. Lambetiton.
Sir J. A. AV right offered the following resolution as a
substitute for the resolution which was attached to the re-
port of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence :
Resolved, That this Grand Commandery express their
continued confidence in the Grand Encampment, and rely
on the purity of that body to j)reserve intact the prin-
ciples, and to avoid any act which may be subversive of the
welfare, of our Order ; and that our representatives be in-
structed to carry out the spirit of this resolution.
The question being taken on the substitute, it was de-
cided in the negative. The original resolution, as attached
to the report, was then adopted.
286 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAH.
Fourth Heport of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence,
by Hon. Sir James Lindsey, 7'ead June, 1860, before the
dxmd Commandery of Pennsylvania.
Sir James Lindsey, chairman of the Committee on For-
eign Correspondence, submitted the following report :
To the Gh^and Commandery of Knights Templar in the State
of Pennsylvania :
Your Committee on Foreign Correspondence beg leave
to submit the following report :
Through the appropriate channel. Sir Alfred Creigh, E.
Grand Recorder, we have received printed copies of the
proceedings of thirteen Grand Commanderies, and a printed
copy of the proceedings of the Grand Encampment of the
United States at its last triennial session. We have exam-
ined these proceedings with some care and great pleasure,
and we propose to pass them in brief review before you. In
so doing, it shall be our aim to confine our observations
chiefly to those matters of general interest which may be
regarded as relating to the common welfare of the Order.
Of the condition of Templar Masonry in those States from
Avhich we have received no official information we cannot,
of course, speak authoritatively ; but we have reason to
believe that prosperity beams upon all our banners, and
that the same lofty spirit of chivalric zeal animates the
valiant Knights of every jurisdiction.
CALIFORNIA.
The second Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery
of California was held in the city of San Francisco, June
20th, A. D. 1859, A. O. 741. The address of the Grand
Commander, Sir Isaac Davis, represents, in glowing lan-
guage, the rapid growth and healthy condition of the Order
in the Golden State. Only six years ago our Beauseant
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 287
was first planted upon the glittering sands of the Pacific,
and now it floats over six Commanderies of Templar Chiv-
alry, while more than two hundred Knights guard their
battlements. And, from the character of the proceedings
of the Grand Commandery, it would seem that this swift
growth has not outstripped the cultivation and extension
of the elevating and beneficent principles of Christian
Knighthood. Indeed, it is but an exemplification of the
amazing rapidity that marks the development of every
institution in that wonderful State. California herself
knew no infancy. Like a young giantess, spurning the
cradle as fit only for feebler natures, she leaped at once
into the full-grown proportions of a vigorous maturity.
Hence it is not to be inferred, from the ra23id extension of
Templarism on those occidental shores, that the doors of
the Asylum have not been guarded with sufiicient care.
The Grand Commandery continued its sessions through
three days, and the entire proceedings were characterized
by harmony and Knightly courtesy ; but, being mostly of a
local nature, we deem it unnecessary to refer to them in
detail.
We find no report on Foreign Correspondence.
R. E. Sir Leander Ransom, Grand Commander; Sir
Alexander G. Abell, Grand Recorder.
CONNECTICUT.
The Annual Assembly of the Grand Commandery of
Connecticut was held at Hartford on the 12th day of May,
A. D. 1859, A. O. 741. Its business was transacted, and
it Avas closed the same day.
Some confusion appears to exist in this Grand Com-
mandery as to the names and titles of itself and its officers.
In the printed proceedings of the body it is called " The
Grand Encampment of Connecticut," and its R. E. Grand
288 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Commaudcr is designated as " M. E. Grand Master." It
is so with all the other officers ; the old titles and names
being everywhere retained, save in the address of the retir-
ing Grand Commander, who styles the body a " Grand
Commandery," and uses the other titles in accordance with
the Constitution of the Grand Encampment.
The address of the R. E. Grand Commander, Sir John
A. McLean, is brie^ pertinent, and breathes the true spirit
of devotion to the principles and government of Knights
Templary.
The report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence
is unusually long and elaborate. It gives evidence of ex-
tensive research and great ability. Keviewing at consider-
able length the proceedings of fourteen State Grand Com-
manderies, it freely comments upon those of each. Cheer-
fully conceding the ability and dignity of the report, we
must be permitted to say, in all Knightly courtesy, that the
master-tone of the paper appears to be hostility to the Grand
Encampment of the United States. It is true, no direct
war is waged against that Suj)reme Body, nor is immediate
secession from it advocated. Still, the prevailing tendency
of the report is to create the impression that the Grand
Encampment, if entitled to fealty at all, has been exceed-
ingly prone to error. To sustain this view let a few ex-
tracts suffice. On page 10 of the printed proceedings we
find the following language, viz. : " In effect, all charters
issued previous to 1856 have been abrogated by it [the
Constitution adopted in that year], and we do not know
that the Grand Encampment of the United States has any
legal and binding power over the bodies that were chartered
by the General Grand Encampment, as all our charters
2?roclaim us to have been." And again : " The Constitution
of 1856 seems to us to be an ill-digested code of laws, sub-
versive of the ancient landmarks of the Order as established
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 289
in this country, and concocted by minds unfit for their duty
or crazed by the love of novelty." And still further : " If
such a bold and unwarrantable step had been taken by a
Masonic Grand Lodge, the whole Masonic body in the
United States would have risen against the innovation."
And the significant question is asked, "Have ever the most
bloody revolutions that have desolated the face of the earth
had a better or more justifiable origin?"
On page 15 they say that if the Grand Encampment
" continue, as they have of late year's, to neglect the matters
that are truly of importance, and to endeavor to aggran-
dize their power at the expense of the State bodies, then we
shall say the sooner the Grand Encampment of the United
States is removed the better for all." And on page 19,
speaking of the necessity of a uniform costume being
adopted by the then approaching session of the Grand
Encampment at Chicago, they say : " We may then hope
to see this important matter decided, as well as many
others, unless the splendid entertainments that are in pre-
paration for that time make the most illustrious body again
forget the object of their meeting, and lose their time in
worthless enactments."
We give these quotations in no spirit of fault-finding, and
with no desire to provoke discussion. We do not propose
now to enter into any argument against them. This Grand
Commandery, at its last Annual Conclave, expressed its
confidence in the Grand Encampment by a decisive vote.
We think Pennsylvania stands now on the ground she
occupied then ; and we look forward to no distant day, in
confident expectation that the good old "land of steady
habits" will join hands with us in a cordial support of the
Supreme Head. We feel, too, that we have good reason
for this hope, when we find, as we do by the proceedings
under review, that the Grand Commandery of that State
25 N
290 HISTORY OI' THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
appointed a committee to revise its Constitution in such a
manner as to make it harmonize with the Constitution and
Laws of the Grand Encampment of the United States.
The Order in Connecticut appears to be in a flourishing
condition. There are in the State six Commanderies and
396 Sir Knights.
K. E. Sir Geo. F. Dascam, of Norwalk, was elected
Grand Commander ; Sir E. G. Storer, of New Haven, was
re-elected Grand Recorder.
ILLINOIS.
A Special Session of the Grand Commandery of this
State was held in Chicago on the 12th of September, A. D.
1859, A. O. 741, being the day previous to the assembling
of the Grand Encampment.
The object of this special meeting was to make suitable
arrangements for the accommodation of the Sir Knights
attending the Grand Encampment, and the transaction of
business pertaining thereto. Nothing occurred of general
interest.
The third Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery
of Illinois was held at Peoria, on the 25th of October, A. D.
1859, A. O. 741. Five Commanderies were represented.
The proceedings were harmonious and dignified. The ad-
dress of the Grand Commander, Sir James V. Z. Blaney,
informs us that Templarism is in a most prosperous con-
dition in that jurisdiction. He says : " I am not aware of
a single case of discipline, or of a single jar of discord, in
the whole circle of our Subordinates." The whole address
shows that the Sir Knights of Illinois have had for their
Commander an intelligent gentleman, and an accomplished
and magnanimous Mason.
The Committee on Costume and Jewels reported simply
those adopted by the Grand Encampment. Their report
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 291
was approved, and a resolution passed requiring all Com-
manderies and Sir Knights to conform thereto.
The report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence
notices the proceedings of twelve Grand Commanderies.
The committee contented themselves, in most instances,
with merely chronicling the principal proceedings of the
several Grand Commanderies, without commenting upon
them ; and where comments are indulged in, they are of a
commendatory nature.
An application was made to the Grand Commandery by
Central Commandery, at Decatur, for a charter. It was
denied them ; and a general resolution was adopted declar-
ing that the Grand Commandery of Illinois will not grant
charters except to such Sir Knights as are worthy and fully
capable of doing regular work and keeping faithful records
thereof.
The manifest wisdom of this rule commends it to every
Sir Knight ; and it is to be hoped that every Grand Com-
mandery will regulate its action, in this respect, in con-
formity to it.
There are now in this State eight Commanderies and
310 Sir Knights.
R. E. Sir Josiah Hunt, of Alton, was elected Grand
Commander, and Sir W. H. Turner, of Chicago, was re-
elected Grand Recorder.
INDIANA.
The Grand Commandery of Indiana held its Annual
Conclave at Connorsville, on the 7th and 8th days of De-
cember, A. D. 1859, A. O. 741.
Four Commanderies were represented. There was no
report on Foreign Correspondence, but the Grand Com-
mander, Sir George W. Porter, in his annual address, re-
views briefly the proceedings of eight Grand Commanderies.
292 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
He also approves, in the most cordial terms, of the legisla-
tion of the Grand Encampment at its Triennial Session in
Chicago, and characterizes its course as "manly and
straightforward."
This Grand Commandery has been heretofore inimical
to the Grand Encampment ; but now that the spirit of dis-
content appears to have been exorcised, and these courteous
Sir Knights recognize the necessity of a supreme head and
a common altar, we predict for them still greater prosperity
and higher honors.
There are in this jurisdiction seven Commanderies and
223 Sir Knights.
R. E. Sir William Pelan, of Connorsville, was elected
Grand Commander, and Sir Francis King, of Indianapolis,
was re-elected Grand Recorder.
KENTUCKY.
The Annual Meeting of the Grand Commandery of Ken-
tucky was held in Frankfort, on the 26th of May, A. D.
1859, A. O. 741. Seven Commanderies were represented.
The proceedings were of a local character, and seem to
have been conducted with entire unanimity. There was
no report on Foreign Correspondence; and the Grand
Commander, Sir T. N. Wise, being prevented from attend-
ing the conclave by the filial love which kept him at the
bedside of a dying mother, there was, of course, no annual
address. He wrote, however, to the Grand Commandery a
most eloquent letter, reminding the Sir Knights of the glory
which comes down to us as a priceless legacy from the
Middle Ages, and admonishing them to the performance
of every present duty, that our chivalric institution may
continue without spot and without reproach.
Kentucky has ten Subordinate Commanderies and 210
Sir Knights.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 293
K. E. Sir Stephen F. Gano was elected Grand Com-
mander, and Sir Wm. M. Samuel was re-elected Grand
Recorder.
MAINE.
The Grand Commandery of Maine assembled in Annual
Conclave, at Portland, on the 3d May, A. D. 1859, A.
O. 741.
Representatives were present from all the Subordinate
Commanderies.
The able address of the Grand Commander informs us
that all the Subordinates are in a healthy and prosperous
condition. The blessings of peace have been with them,
and no sound of dissension has been heard within their
Asylums.
The masterly report of the Committee on Foreign Cor-
respondence is replete with interest. Thoroughly imbued
with a spirit of devotion to Templar Masonry, it proclaims
unfaltering fealty to the Grand Encampment of the United
States. Deprecating the action of those Grand Command-
eries which have indicated a desire for its dissolution or a
wish to withdraw from its jurisdiction, it argues, with great
force and clearness, the necessity of its continuance. Inti-
mating that there probably are errors in the Constitution
of that Supreme Body, it advises that they should be cor-
rected by constitutional and not by revolutionary means.
This is undoubtedly the true doctrine. In it alone lies the
path of safety. Here is the common ground, upon which
we can all meet, without danger to any, and amend that
which time and experience shall have proven defective.
Another matter of general interest, which had on a pre-
vious occasion been before that body, received considerable
attention. This is no less than the preparation of an au-
thoritative history of the Order of Knights Templar from
the martyrdom of Jacques De Molay down to the present
25*
294 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
day. No such history exists anywhere in print. It is be-
lieved, however, that reliable and sufficient materials may
be found in the monastic libraries and among the manu-
script records of old Encampments in Europe ; and it is
now proposed to defray the expense of collecting these ma-
terials and of preparing the work by the contributions of
the Order. This is a great enterprise, and is worthy of
careful consideration. It is greatly to be regretted by the
members of the flourishing and powerful institution of
Templar Chivalry, which traces its origin back to, and
claims unbroken descent from, those glorious Knights who
bore the Sacred Cross in triumph through the serried
legions of the infidel, that no persistent effort has yet been
made to replace and brighten anew the disjointed historical
links which connect it, in direct succession, with so splendid
an era. How interesting it would be to the Templar to
follow the humble footsteps of the Order through those
dark and troublous times which succeeded the death of the
revered De Molay till it again came out in the broad light
of civilization and Christianity, crowned with new honors
and dedicated to an equally high but more peaceful mis-
sion ! This history should be written. But your committee
will not undertake to say whether it ought to be done by a
salaried laborer employed by the Order for that purpose,
or by some one of its noble sons, whose high genius and
throbbing heart shall inspire him to dedicate himself to the
work, and patiently to await the rewards which will surely
follow its successful accomplishment. Experience is the
best instructor in such matters ; and that sage teacher ad-
monishes us that the human mind does not yield its finest
fruit when laboring for hire, with a comfortable salary
assured by pre-arranged contract.
There are in Maine four Commanderies and 141 Sir
Knights
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 295
R. E. Sir Freeman Bradford was re-elected Grand Com-
mander, and Sir Ira Berry, Grand Recorder.
MICHIGAN.
The Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery of
Michigan convened in Detroit on the 7th June, A. D. 1859,
A. O. 741.
Seven Commanderies were represented.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence review the
proceedings of six Grand Commanderies (all that had been
received), and of the Provincial Grand Conclave of Canada.
The address is marked by Knightly courtesy and unwaver-
ing loyalty to the Grand Encampment. Prominence is
given to this subject, and no equivocal language is used.
The Sir Knights of Michigan desire not to see the banners
of Templarisra waving over a divided jurisdiction.
A difficulty had existed in that State for three years, in
relation to a claim of the Grand Commandery to exercise
jurisdiction over Peninsular Commandery, which, although
located in the State, held its charter from the Grand En-
campment of the United States, and refused to become
connected with the State Grand Commandery. This diffi-
culty was definitely settled by the action of the Grand
Encampment at Chicago, which required Peninsular Com-
mandery to make unconditional submission. This ruling
by our Superior Body establishes a very important prin-
ciple, viz. : That all Commanderies in a State where there
is a Grand Commandery are subject to the exclusive juris-
diction of such Grand Commandery, and the Grand En-
campment cannot constitutionally interfere with them.
There are in Michigan five Commanderies and about
300 Sir Knights.
R. E. Sir N. P. Jacobs, of Detroit, was re-elected Grand
Commander, and Sir George W. Wilson, Grand Recorder.
296 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
MISSISSIPPI.
The Third Annual Conclave of the Grand Coraraandery
of Mississippi was held at Vicksburg on the 2d and 3d
days of May, A. D. 1859, A. O. 741.
Four Commanderies were represented. In the absence
of the R. E. Grand Commander, the Very Eminent Deputy
Grand Commander presided over the deliberations of the
Convocation.
The proceedings were mainly of a local nature, and we
deem it unnecessary to notice them in detail. They show
that the Sir Knights of that jurisdiction " act with cour-
tesy and valiantly perform their vows."
A Committee on Foreign Correspondence was appointed
during the session ; and they were directed to have their
report published along with the proceedings of the body.
Accordingly we find an appendix containing their report,
which is a most excellent and valuable production.
There are in Mississippi five Commanderies and 216 Sir
Knights.
R. E. Sir/ Giles M. Hillyer was elected Grand Com-
mander, and Sir R. W. F. Daniel was re-elected Grand
Recorder.
NEW YORK.
This Grand Commandery held its 46th Annual Conclave
in the city of Utica, on the 27th and 28th days of Septem-
ber, A. D. 1859, A. O. 741.
Representatives were present from twenty Commanderies.
The proceedings were interesting, and bear the impress
of noble zeal, magnanimous courtesy, and every Knightly
virtue.
The address of the distinguished Grand Commander
gives a gratifying account of the prosperity of the Order
in the extensive jurisdiction over which he presides with
such signal ability. Referring to the fact that at one time
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 297
during the past year strife and discord had invaded a part
of his jurisdiction, he rejoices to be able to state that these
old enemies of Christian Brotherhood had been expelled
from each Asylum in the Empire State, and that through-
out all her wide domain nothing now exists to mar the
harmony or impede the progress of Templar Chivalry. He
speaks in terms of warmest commendation of the costume
just adopted by the Grand Encampment. He thinks it
approaches as nearly as the usages of the present times will
permit to that worn by Knights Templar in the days of their
pristine glory, and recommends the Sir Knights of New York
to be "foremost of all" in wearing this Knightly dress.
The report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence
is replete with interest. Its lofty style and beautiful diction
are among the least valuable of its attributes ; the Knightly
enthusiasm and the manly earnestness with which our con-
stitutional obligations are defended give it esjoecial value,
and commend it to our heartiest good-will.
In accordance with a suggestion in the address of the
Grand Commander, a committee was appointed to prepare
a history of Templarisra in the State of New York.
The first five Grand Ofiicers were appointed a committee
to determine the true standard of work and lectures in the
several Orders of Knighthood, together with the military
drill, and they were directed, after agreeing upon the same,
to appoint a Lecturer to instruct the Subordinate Com-
manderies therein.
It was resolved that the officers of each Subordinate
Commandery be required to provide themselves with the
new costume; that every person thereafter admitted into the
Order within that jurisdiction should provide and wear the
same ; and that no Sir Knight (except a visitor) should be
allowed to sit in the Grand Commandery unless clothed
with it.
298 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
There are in New York 28 Commanderies and 1274 Sir
Knights.
R. E. Sir Charles Judd, Grand Commander ; Sir Robt.
Macoy, Grand Recorder.
TENNESSEE.
On the 12th of October, A. D. 1859, A. O. 741, repre-
sentatives from the four Commanderies in Tennessee assem-
bled in Nashville for the purpose of organizing a Grand
Commandery for that State. Of these four Subordinate
Commanderies, two were organized during the last year,
and two were chartered by the Grand Encampment at its
recent session in Chicago. The success which has attended
their labors, and the alacrity with which they hastened to
form themselves into a Grand Commandery, while attest-
ing their zeal and enthusiasm, prove that they are not un-
worthy of the confidence reposed in them by the Grand
Encampment.
The warrant for the formation of the Grand Commandery
was read ; Grand Officers were elected ; a Code of Statutes
was adopted, and the Convocation adjourned sine die.
On the afternoon of the same day the First Conclave of
the Grand Commandery of Tennessee began. The pro-
ceedings were harmonious and Knightly, but necessarily of
a local character. The Grand Recorder was instructed to
publish with the proceedings a short history of each Sub-
ordinate Commandery in the State. This history is scarcely
exceeeded in interest by anything which has fallen under
the observation of your committee. The biographical
notices of those distinguished Templars who have finished
their deeds of charity here, and passed on to the rest beyond
the sepulchre, are most loving, appreciative and just. And
the sketches of some who yet linger in the Asylum illus-
trating by their daily lives the excellence of the institution
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 299
which their writings have embellished, are terse, appropri-
ate and merited. Our Tennessee brethren do well to
cherish such names as Tannehill, Penn and Scott.
Thus has another Grand Commandery been erected.
We believe its foundations are safe, its walls durable, and
that the thrice-endowed swords of its valiant sons will ever
be ready to defend the standard that floats from its battle-
ments.
R. E. Sir Charles A. Fuller, of Nashville, was elected
Grand Commander, arj^ Sir Wm. H. Whiton, of Columbia,
Grand Recorder.
VIRGINIA.
The Annual Assembly of the Grand Commandery of
Virginia was held in Richmond, on the 16th December, A.
D. 1859, A. O. 741. Six Commanderies were represented.
From the dignified address of the Grand Commander, we
learn that the Order is prosperous, and increasing in num-
bers, usefulness, and influence.
The report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence
is brief, kindly and courteous.
The Grand Commander expresses the hope that they
may be permitted to withdraw from the jurisdiction of the
Grand Encampment ; and the Committee on Foreign Cor-
respondence reiterate the sentiment. We deeply regret
that our well-beloved and valiant brethren of the "Old
Dominion" still entertain this desire. We cannot look
upon such a precedent as would be established by the
event they desire as tending to produce anything but
mischief. And we are glad to learn that, at the time of
the expression of the sentiment referred to, they had not
seen the proceedings of the Grand Encampment ; and, as
Virginia was not represented therein, they had no accurate,
or, at least, official, information respecting the doings of
that body. We trust that, when they shall have received
300 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the published proceedings, they will, like the Sir Knights
of Indiana, dismiss all discontent, and brighten afresh the
links of their connection with our common head.
The Grand Commander and the committee also express
very decided disapprobation of the adoption of a funeral
service for deceased Knights Templar. They regard this
as an innovation, and an invasion of the rights of Master
Masons, whose exclusive 23rerogative they claim it is to
conduct all Masonic funerals. But, as these sentiments,
like those before mentioned, were expressed without having
a knowledge of the action of the Grand Encampment in
this respect, we deem it needless to dwell upon their argu-
ment.
It may not, however, be inappropriate, by way of refresh-
ing the recollection of our Virginia brethren, to call their
attention to the closing scene of the life of Grand Master
Sir Peter D'Aubusson, who died June 30th, A. D. 1503, at
the ripe age of 80 years. The learned historian, after de-
scribing the serenity with which his gallant spirit met the
last enemy, and the wise advice he gave to the sorrowful
Sir Knights whom he had called around him, proceeds to
detail the Templar ceremonies with which his funeral obse-
quies were celebrated : " In the funeral procession, first
went every religious corporation in Rhodes, next came the
Greek Patriarch and all his clergy ; then the Orders of the
Latin clergy ; a little before the bier, two hundred of the
principal Phodians, all in black and with torches in their
hands; following them, the Knights, carrying their colors
down so as to sweep the ground ; the bier, with the corpse,
borne on the shoulders of the Priors and Grand Crosses of
the Order ; after which marched the long body of the
mourners ; and loud were the weeping from the streets,
windows, terraces, and roofs, and the lamentations of the
whole populace." Over his tomb ivats broken the truncheon
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 301
of command and his spurs, and all the rest of the doleful
FORMALITIES Were observed, with singular testimonials of
heartfelt grief.
AVe do not claim that such reminiscences of the past con-
clusively establish the necessity of Templar funeral cere-
monies ; but we do maintain that they furnish some answer
to the sweeping charge of novelty preferred by the Sir
Knights of Virginia, and that they are evidence to show
the weight of antiquity is not all on one side.
There are in this old and powerful jurisdiction ten Com-
manderies and 408 Sir Knights.
TEXAS.
The Grand Commandery of Texas held its Annual Con-
clave in Huntsville, on the 22d, 23d, and 24th days of
June, A. D. 1859, A. O. 741. Six Commanderies were
represented. The address of the Grand Commander as-
sures us that the Order is flourishing and healthy; the
proceedings show that the Sir Knights are vigilant and
ardent.
The report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence
is exceedingly able and interesting. They review the pro-
ceedings of fourteen Grand Commanderies and of the
Annual Conclave of Canada. Of us they say : " We have
read with peculiar 2^leasure the proceedings of the Keystone
Grand Commandery for two years. * * * ^H is ^ow
peaceful and happy in Templary in Pennsylvania. * * *
The banner of the Order is unfurled, in all its glory, upon
her mountain tops and in the loveliest of her valleys."
"Well and courteously said, gallant Texas ! ! Thy ro-
mantic history, thy heroic deeds, and thy long baptism of
blood, while they inspire a peculiar interest for thee with
all chivalric Sir Knights, eminently fit thee to become the
nursing-mother of sons whose swords should be semper pa-
26
302 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
ratus et semper fidelis in every good cause. Long may our
Beauseant wave over thy beautiful plains, growing brighter
and lovelier, if possible, in the light of thy " Lone Star."
There are in Texas six Commanderies and 270 Sir
Knights. R. E. Sir George M. Patrick was elected Grand
Commander, and Sir Andrew Neil was re-elected Grand
Recorder.
WISCONSIN.
A convention of Knights Templar was held in Madison,
on the 30th October, A. D. 1859, A. O. 741, to form a
Grand Commandery for the State of Wisconsin. Three
Commanderies were represented. Grand Officers were
elected and installed ; statutes were adopted for the gov-
ernment of the Grand Commandery, and after a harmo-
nious session, auguring most favorably of the future, the
Convocation adjourned.
On the 4th January, A. D. 1860, A. O. 742, the Grand
Commandery held its first Annual Conclave in the city of
Milwaukee.
The address of the Grand Commander attests his Knightly
attainments. He treats of several matters of general inter-
est, but dwells most at length upon the subject of the cos-
tume prescribed by the Grand Encampments. He disap-
proves, in the strongest and most emphatic terms, of every
part of the costume, and declares his opinion to be that
" no satisfactory reason can be offered for its adoption."
Admitting, however, that the Grand Encampment has
plenary authority in the premises, and a perfect right to
obedience, he seems to think there is no particular necessity
for enforcing the new dress until the next Convocation of
the Grand Encampment, when, he trusts, that body will
have the " good sense " to adopt a more " reasonable and
becoming costume." This part of his address was referred
to a special committee. The majority of that committee
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 303
reported that no steps ought to be taken to enforce the
costume ; and from the character of their report we infer
that they entertain views of it similar to those expressed
by their Grand Commander. The minority of the com^
mittee, in a very learned report, defend the propriety of
the costume, and recommend that the Sir Knights in that
jurisdiction be required to equip themselves in accordance
with it.
The whole subject w^as then postponed till the next Con-
clave of the Grand Commandery.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence made a long,
elaborate and well-written report, in which they review the
rise and progress of our Order from the organization of the
first Encampment in the United States to the present time,
tracing the history and commenting on the condition of
each Grand Commandery.
GRAND ENCAMPMENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
The triennial meeting of this body had been awaited
with much interest and anxiety. The desire manifested by
several Grand Commanderies for its disruption ; the wish
expressed by others to withdraw from its jurisdiction ; the
hostility exhibited by some against the Constitution of
1856 ; and the general discussion elicited by these topics,
had induced all loyal Knights to look forward to the Con-
vocation at Chicago with great concern and some appre-
hension. Clouds seemed to be gathering about it ; distant
mutterings of direful portent appeared to be rolling toward
it. But the storm came not ; the tempest did not burst.
The true spirit of Knightly devotion ruled the hour and
banished all elements of discord. No effort was made to
sever the ties which unite us to one Head ; and no move-
ment toward secession was attempted.
Fourteen Grand Commanderies were represented, as were
304 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
also seventeen Subordinate Commanderies under the imme-
diate jurisdiction of the Grand Encampment.
The Most Eminent Grand Master, Sir William B.
Hubbard, after twelve years of faithful and distinguished
service, laid down his baton of authority and declined a
re-election. His address is ^vorthy of the head and heart
from which it emanated. Combining the force and lucidity
of practical business sagacity with the warmth and ardor
of a generous enthusiasm in the cause of Templar Masonry,
his words will sink deeply into the memories of all true
Knights ; and his name will be cherished as a worthy suc-
cessor to those illustrious Grand Masters whose valorous
deeds are celebrated in poesy and song, and will for ever
blazon on the page of history.
Sir Knight B. B. French was elected Most Eminent
Grand Master ; and we deem it high praise to say that we
esteem him worthy, in every respect, to wear the mantle of
his immediate predecessor. We know that, while his abili-
ties and attainments qualify him for any position in the
land, his zeal and proficiency in all that relates to our Or-
der designate him as peculiarly fit for its highest honors.
From the address of the Very Eminent Grand Recorder
we learn that the number of Subordinate Encampments
and Commanderies which have been formed by the Grand
Encampment of the United States is 99 ; that there have
been 5 Grand Masters, 9 Deputy Grand Masters, 10 Grand
Generalissimos, 12 Grand Captain Generals and 5 Grand
Recorders; and that the whole number of Sir Knights un-
der the jurisdiction of the Grand Commanderies and the
Grand Encampment is 7226.
During the session a committee was appointed to decide
upon and report to the body a suitable uniform or costume
for Knight Templars. The committee reported a costume,
which, after some alteration, was adopted. All Command-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 305
eries thereafter to be chartered were directed to wear it ;
the same direction to all Commanderies then existing, when-
ever they should procure a new costume ; and all State
Grand Commanderies were instructed to enforce it upon all
Commanderies thereafter chartered within their respective
jurisdictions. An elaborate description of the costume is
contained in the printed proceedings, and a beautifully-
colored plate, representing the same, is to be found upon
the title page.
A " Burial Service for the Orders of Masonic Knight-
hood " was also adopted, and its use was enjoined upon all
Grand and Subordinate Commanderies.
A Ritual of " Ceremonies and Charges upon constituting
and dedicating a Commandery and installing its officers "
was likewise adopted. This and the Ritual of Funeral
Service will be found in the Appendix to the printed pro-
ceedings.
A committee was appointed, with Past Grand Master
Hubbard at its head, to prepare and report to the next
triennial meeting of the Grand Encampment a system of
tactics corresponding to Knightly usages, ^ith appropriate
words of command for each evolution.
The Constitution of the Grand Encampment was so
amended as to allow the same to be amended, revised and
altered upon the concurrence of three-fourths of the mem-
bers present, provided one day's previous notice be given
of the motion to amend, and a particular time set to take
the vote.
A memorial was presented from the Grand Commandery
of Ohio, urging the appointment of a committee to revise
the Constitution adopted in 1856, with a view to restore
that of 1816. The committee to which the memorial was
referred reported adversely to the prayer thereof, and the
report was adopted.
26*
306 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
The decision of the question of jurisdiction, raised by the
Michigan case, removes, as we have already intimated, all
doubts which may have been entertained of the exclusive
jurisdiction of each State Grand Commandery within the
territory it occupies.
These are the principal matters of general interest which
have arrested our attention during our examination of the
Proceedings of the Grand Encampment. After a session
of six days it was closed, to meet again in the city of Mem-
phis on the 3d day of September, A. D. 1862, A. O. 744.
Having thus inadequately completed our review of the
condition of those Grand Commanderies whose proceedings
have reached us, we have little to add. The conclusions
which we draw from the records before us are all of the
most cheering character. We discern no cloud, " big as a
man's hand," in the sky of Templar Masonry. We see no
signs of evil omen. We find no indication of approaching
danger. Everywhere peace prevails. From the great
lakes of the North to the sunny plains of the distant South ;
from the city-teeming Atlantic slope to the golden coast of
the modern Ophir, upon each tower and battlement, the
voice of the sentinel rings blithely out that " All's well."
Respectfully submitted.
James Lindsey,
For the Committee.
Fifth Report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence,
read before the R. E. Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania^
June, 1861, by Sir Edmund H. Turner.
Sir Edmund H. Turner, chairman of the Committee on
Foreign Correspondence, submitted the following report :
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 307
To the 31. E. Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of the
State of Pennsylvania :
Sir Knights : Your Committee on Foreign Correspond-
ence respectfully report that they have been furnished by
the Eminent Grand Kecorder with the printed copies of
the proceedings of Grand Commanderies of the States of
Maine for 1860, Vermont for 1861, Mississippi 1861, Ten-
nessee 1860, Michigan 1860, Virginia 1860, Ohio 1860,
Illinois 1860, Indiana 1860, New Jersey 1860, Wisconsin
1861, Massachusetts and Khode Island 1860, California
1860, and Texas for 1860 ; and submit the following brief
review of the respective bodies :
MAINE.
The Grand Commandery of this State assembled in An-
nual Conclave at the Masonic Hall in Portland on Tuesday,
May 1, A. L. 5860, A. D. 1860, A. O. 742.
Four Commanderies were represented, being the entire
number in the jurisdiction.
The Grand Commander in his address remarks that their
" increase in number has been slow^, but I trust we are not
wanting in that element of strength which arises from union
and harmony."
He congratulates the Order on the increased number of
Subordinate Commanderies which have attached themselves
to the Grand Commandery of the United States, and adds :
" This accession of power and numbers, during a period
when discontent was most rampant, shows that the ' great
heart ' of Templar Masonry beats in unison with the efforts
that have been made ' to guard the sacred Triangle,' and
restore to our Order 'the life-giving and life-quickening
principle that was incorporated into it at its organization.'
To these efforts have the best talents and brightest intel-
lects of our country been assiduously devoted for many
308 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
years past, and have given us a 'name known and re-
spected as one of the foremost powers of Christian Chivalry
extant upon earth.' "
K. E. Sir John Williams was elected Grand Commander,
and Sir Ira Berry, Grand Recorder.
VERMONT.
The Grand Commandery of this State assembled in An-
nual Conclave at the Asylum of the Commandery in Bur-
lington on Tuesday, January 8, A. L. 5861, A. D. 1861,
A. O. 743.
Four Commanderies were represented, being the number
of Commanderies in the State.
The valedictory of the Grand Commander is able, em-
bodying teachings which, to the old and experienced as
well as young and inexperienced Templar, will prove valu-
able. He also adds the following, so fitly remarked by one
of the Sir Knights of Ohio, in viewing the vast army of
chivalrous Knights, with their holy banners waving to
the breeze : " This fact suggests the gratifying reflection
that, with such an army of Christian Knights dispersed
throughout this widespread domain, faithfully discharging
their duty as such, it is quite impossible to estimate the
mass of mind operated upon, through them, for good, by
the constant and varied instrumentalities thus exerted.
And it is no egotism for us to congratulate ourselves on
being co-workers with others in meliorating the condition
of our race by our humble but (I trust) eflScient efforts
in elevating the moral, social and religious standard of
society."
R. E. Sir Gamaliel Washburn was elected Grand Com-
mander, and Sir John B. Hollenbeck, Grand Recorder.
MISSISSIPPI.
The Grand Commandery of this State convened in An-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 309
nual Conclave at the Templars' Hall in Vicksburg on Fri-
day, January 25, A. L. 5861, A. D. 1861, A. O. 743.
Five Commanderies were represented.
The session, which was of short duration, was one of
harmony and good feeling, but otherwise of no special
interest, owing, we suppose, in a measure, to the absence
of the Grand Officers, whose places, however, were filled
temporarily during the Conclave. The Order appears to
be in a healthy condition.
E. E. Sir B. S. Tappan was elected Grand Commander,
and Sir R. W. T. Daniel, Grand Recorder.
TENNESSEE.
The Grand Commandery of this State convened in An-
nual Conclave at Nashville on Wednesday, October 10,
A. L. 5860, A. D. 1860, A. O. 742.
Four Commanderies were represented.
The session w^as a very short one, during which no busi-
ness of any special importance was transacted.
The returns from Subordinate Commanderies, attached
to the printed proceedings, exhibit the prosperous condition
of the Templar Order in this jurisdiction.
R. E. Sir L. J. Polk was elected Grand Commander, and
Sir M. B. Howell, Grand Recorder.
MICHIGAN.
The Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery of
this jurisdiction was held at the Asylum in Detroit on
Tuesday, June 5, A. L. 5860, A. D. 1860, A. O. 742.
Nine Commanderies were represented.
The Grand Commander in his address congratulates the
Commandery upon the prosperity of the Order throughout
the land, " and trusts that we shall emulate the good ex-
ample set by sister Commanderies, and guard well the por-
tals and recesses of our own."
310 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
The new costume ordered to be worn by the Grand Com-
mandery of the United States was adopted, and a recom-
mendation ordered to be issued to the Subordinate Com-
manderies that they conform to the requirements of the
Grand Commandery in relation to the same.
The proceedings were otherwise of little interest.
K. E, Sir Wm. P. Innis was elected Grand Commander,
and Sir George W. Wilson, Grand Kecorder.
VIRGINIA.
The Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery of this
State was held at the Masons' Hall in Richmond on Thurs-
day, December 13, A. L. 5860, A. D. 1860, A. O. 743.
Eight Commanderies were rejoresented.
From the report of the Committee of Correspondence we
learn that Virginia is opposed to the Templar Burial Ser-
vice, she having passed a resolution, " That this Grand
Commandery disapprove of a Templar Burial Service or
Kitual."
They further add : " In stating our objection to the use
of a Templar Burial Service in our report of last year, we
were uninformed that its introduction and adoption pro-
ceeded from the Grand Encampment of the United States.
This fact gives additional importance to the subject, and
we feel constrained to say that we consider this act of the
Grand Encampment as most unwise and ungracious, if not
violative of good faith to Ancient Craft Masonry and Ma-
sonic duty.
" Not one of the members of that Grand Body but knew
well that they could not have attained the high and distin-
guished position they occupy — nay, could not have even
entered the portals of a Lodge — without first solemnly
pledging themselves strictly to conform to the ancient cus-
toms of Free Masonry, and as they advanced, required to
abide by the laws of their Lodges, and to support the laws,
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 311
resolutions and edicts of their respective Grand Lodges,
not one of which but has a form of burial service, and not
a Lodge but feels it a solemn and prescribed duty to pay
the last tribute of respect to a deceased brother in the use
of that service ; nay more, the Grand Encampment knew
that, as early as the days of Solomon, the duty originated
of giving Masonic burial to a brother ; and that duty was
made imperative on the Craft by our first Grand Master.
We confess that we have been unable to find any authority
that has or can relieve a Master Masons' Lodge from that
duty, or can allow it to be superseded or substituted by any
other ; nor any right, in any body of Masons, to use a sec-
ond Masonic Burial Service, be it called Koyal Arch or
Templar, as long as a Lodge is in existence, and can be
ruled to discharge the proper functions of its organization.
" Considering this Templar Burial Service an innovation
and an infringement on the rights of Ancient Craft Ma-
sonry, and passed by a body possessing no legal authority
to force a compliance when it compromises Masonic duty,
we earnestly enjoin the Grand Encampment of the United
States to reconsider its action in this matter, strike from its
statute book the order for the use of a Templar Burial Ser-
vice, and forbid the practice on the part of its Subordi-
nates."
In this same style the acts and doings of the Grand Com-
mandery of the United States are freely commented on and
severely criticised by the Committee of Correspondence ap-
pointed by the Grand Commandery of Virginia, with what
degree of justice we leave you to decide.
R. E. Sir Edward H. Gill was elected Grand Com-
mander, and Sir John Dove, Grand Recorder.
OHIO.
The Grand Commandery of this State met at Columbus
on October 11, 1860.
312 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Fifteen Commanderies were represented.
The Grand Commander in his address refers to the com-
munication of Sir Knight French, Grand Master of the
United States, which was on motion referred to a select
committee, whose report thereon seems to have been dic-
tated by a sense of respect and esteem for the Grand En-
campment of the United States, and a desire to acknow-
ledge that body as the supreme head.
R. E. Sir Kent Jarvis was elected Grand Commander,
and Sir John D. Caldwell re-elected Grand Recorder.
ILLINOIS.
The Grand Commandery met at the city of Chicago,
October 23d, 1860.
Six Commanderies were represented.
The Grand Commander in his address refers to the sub-
ject of costume, as adopted by the Grand Encampment of
the United States, and recommends that each Subordinate
Commandery furnish every Sir Knight, upon his admis-
sion, with the regulation costume, or at least with the
fatigue dress and side-arms ; and the fee for admission to
be placed at such a figure as to cover the expense incurred
thereby.
He also refers to the drill as exemplified before them by
the Committee on Drill appointed by the Grand Encamp-
ment for that purpose at its last Conclave, and urges its
adoption (ad interim) as that which will be undoubtedly
adopted by the Grand Encampment at its next session.
R. E. Sir Josiah Hunt was elected Grand Commander,
and Sir Wm. H. Turner re-elected Grand Recorder.
INDIANA.
The Grand Commandery met in Annual Conclave at
Indianapolis, December 5, 1860.
Six Commanderies were represented.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 313
The address of the Grand Commander is eloquent and
impressive, and well calculated to urge upon the Sir
Knights their duties to their heavenly Father, to each
other and to the Order. He refers in a touching manner
to the deaths of Sir Knights Frybarger, Pepper, Butler and
Hinman, and pays to their memories a glowing tribute of
respect and esteem.
His address also assures us of the great harmony and
union among the Sir Knights, and of the healthy pros-
perity of the Order in that jurisdiction.
Much satisfaction is also expressed that the spirit of dis-
cord and hostility to the Grand Encampment of the United
States has given way, and that matters have been amicably
adjusted to the satisfaction of the various jurisdictions.
Kev and R. E. Sir Wm. Pelan was elected Grand Com-
mander, and Sir Francis King was re-elected Grand Re-
corder.
NEW JEESEY.
The Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery of
New Jersey was held in the city of Trenton on September
13th, 1860.
Three Commanderies were represented.
The address of Grand Commander Theophilus Fish is
able and eloquent ; it nobly vindicates our Order from the
attacks so often made upon it by our enemies, and con-
cludes by an earnest appeal to all to remember the high
object and aim of the institution, and to conduct them-
selves in a manner calculated to promote the same.
The report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence
is an able and lengthy document. They deprecate in
strong language the action of the Grand Commanderies
of Connecticut and Virginia in their opposition to the
Grand Encampment of the United States ; and they make
a strong appeal to all true and courteous Knights to hold
27 0
314 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
sacred and inviolable their allegiance to that honorable
and august body.
R. E. Sir John Hilton was elected Grand Commander,
and Sir Charles G. Milnor, Grand Recorder.
WISCONSIN.
The Grand Commandery assembled at Milwaukee in
Annual Conclave on January 2d, 1861.
Three Commanderies were represented.
Sir Knight Palmer, the Grand Commander, in his ad-
dress, says : " The transactions of the Grand Encampment
of the United States are full of interest to all those who,
like the Templars of Wisconsin, acknowledge it as their
supreme head."
Your committee are particularly struck with one part
of his address, which is as follows : " I have long enter-
tained the opinion that all our Masonic bodies are falling
into the error of excessive legislation, and in this respect
emulating the example of the political organizations of the
country. I trust the Grand Commandery of Wisconsin
will avoid that rock. It has been well said that that State
is governed the best which is governed the least, and this
is equally true of Masonic organizations."
R. E. Sir Henry L. Palmer was re-elected Grand Com-
mander, and Sir Wm. T. Palmer was re-elected Grand
Recorder.
MASSACHUSETTS AND RHODE ISLAND.
The Grand Commandery organized and held its first
Conclave at Boston, October 31st, 1860. Sir Knight Wm.
Field was elected Grand Commander, and Sir Knight Solon
Thornton, Recorder.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 315
CALIFORNIA.
The Grand Commandery held its Annual Conclave in
San Francisco, Nov. 13th, 1860.
Six Commanderies were represented.
Nothing of special interest occurred during the session.
The Order seems to be in a flourishing condition, and a
spirit of loyalty to the Grand Encampment is manifest.
K. E. Sir Leander Kansom was elected Grand Com-
mander, and Sir Alexander G. Abel, Grand Recorder.
TEXAS.
The Grand Commandery met at Huntsville, June 22d,
1860.
Five Commanderies were represented.
The proceedings throughout were characterized by that
courtesy and affability which is inherent in every true Sir
Knight, and we learn that throughout that jurisdiction the
greatest union and harmony prevail, and, to quote their
own language, that they yield to none in respect and devo-
tion to the supreme head, the Grand Encampment of the
United States.
R. E. Sir Geo. M. Patrick was elected Grand Com-
mander, and Sir Andrew Keill re-elected Grand Recorder.
In conclusion. Sir Knights, it becomes our mournful
duty to officially announce to this Right Eminent Grand
Body the decease of our gifted and talented chairman of
this committee, the Rev. Sir Knight B. R. Waugh, of Har-
risburg, who has departed from the labors of this earthly
pilgrimage since last we assembled in Annual Conclave.
The zeal and devotion displayed for Templarism on all
occasions, and in every position in which he was placed, in
addition to his kind and affectionate bearing towards all
brethren and Sir Knights, wdll keep his name and deeds
fresh in our memories for time to come.
316 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
The last official action of the Sir Knight in this Grand
Commandery on record, was the resolution which he offered,
" That the Burial Service, as adoj^ted by the Grand Encamjo-
ment of Knights Templar of the United States, be printed
ivith the present proceedings.^'
Little did he imagine, even with all the uncertainties of
this present existence, that the order to be promulgated by
the resolution tendered by him would be applicable to him-
self within so short a period. The pilgrim warrior has
been summoned, and " There is no discharge in that war."
Rest to his ashes ! Peace to his soul !
Respectfully submitted.
M. Richards Muckle,
Edmund H. Turner,
Pittsburg, June 11, 1861.
Committee.
Sixth Report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence,
read before the R. E. Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania,
by Sir Wm. H. Strickland, June, 1862.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence submitted
the following report :
To the R. E. Grand Commander and Eminent Sir Knights
of the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania :
Your committee, appointed to prepare the annual report
on Foreign Correspondence, have endeavored to perform
the duty assigned them as full as the limited time allotted
to them would permit ; and although many interesting sub-
jects appertaining to the Order are contained in the reports
of the various State Grand Commanderies, they could only
briefly review the proceedings of the States of Connecti-
cut, Illinois, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Massachusetts,
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 317
Maine, Rhode Island, Ohio, New Jersey, New York, Ver-
mont and Wisconsin, which have been furnished us by the
E. Grand Recorder, Sir Alfred Creigh.
CONNECTICUT.
The Annual Assembly of the Grand Encampment of
Connecticut was held at Hartford on the 9th of May, 1861,
and six Subordinate Encampments were represented. R.
E. Sir Howard B. Ensign was elected Grand Master, and
Sir E. G. Storer re-elected Grand Recorder. The proceed-
ings state that the Committee on Foreign Correspondence
presented an elaborate report, which was accepted and or-
dered to be printed; but it appears subsequently in the
proceedings that, in consequence of the low state of the
finances, and by the advice of the Grand Master, the report
has been omitted. Your committee regret this action, as
the report from this sister jurisdiction is replete with infor-
mation.
ILLINOIS.
This Grand Commandery held its 5th Annual Conclave
in Chicago, on the 22d October, 1861, with representatives
from nine Subordinates.
R. E. Sir Hosmer A. Johnson delivered an able address,
recapitulating his acts during the year. Among other mat-
ters he granted three dispensations for new Commanderies,
and refers in patriotic language to the address of the M.
E. Grand Master French on the subject of the present
fratricidal war now being waged in the United States.
His words are worthy of being perpetuated to the remotest
period of time ; hence your committee quotes them : " We
are torn as if by an earthquake, but let us not be disheart-
ened ; we are not destroyed. Our Order at its birth was
baptized in blood ; it was consecrated to the defence of all
that we hold most dear on earth and most sacred in heaven.
Through all its long history it has ever been true to its
27*
318 HISTORY OF THE KXTGHTS TEMPLAR.
VOWS, and though we may now misunderstand and misin-
terpret each other — though the swords of Templars may
clash amid the din of battle — we know that the time will
come when Peace shall weave around us her golden chain,
binding us once more into the great sheaf of a common
brotherhood."
This Grand Commandery has instructed its representa-
tives to the Grand Encampment of the United States to
use their exertions and influence to amend the Constitution,
so that no proxies be recognized in the State Grand Com-
manderies but the proxies of the three first officers of a
Subordinate Commandery.
K. E. Sir Hosmer A. Johnson, of Chicago, was elected
Grand Commander, and E. Sir Henry Collins Ranney, of
Chicago, elected Grand Recorder.
KENTUCKY.
The 15th Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery
of Kentucky was held at Lexington, June 12, 1861. They
published merely the list of officers, by which we learn that
R. E. Sir L. C. Steadman, of Georgetown, was elected
Grand Commander, and E. Sir Wm. C. Hunger, of Louis-
ville, re-elected Grand Recorder.
MISSOURI.
The Grand Commandery of this State held its 2d Annual
Conclave at Weston, May 1, 1861, the rej^resentatives of
four Commanderies being present.
The R. E. Grand Commander, Geo. W. Belt, in his an-
nual address, urges a strict adherence to the requirements
of the Grand Encampment with regard to the costume and
burial service which this General Grand Body has adopted,
because it will have the eflect of producing uniformity
throughout the United States — a desideratum greatly to be
desired.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 319
R. E. Sir George W. Belt, of Weston, was re-elected
Grand Commander, and E. Sir Edward G. Heriot, re-
elected Grand Recorder.
MICHIGAN.
The Grand Commandery of Michigan held its Annual
Conclave in the city of Detroit, June 4, 1861, nine Com-
manderies being represented.
R. E. Sir Wm. P. Innes delivered his annual address,
containing valuable local information, yet speaking in
glowing terms of our duty as patriots and Templars to
preserve constitutional liberty.
R. E. Sir Frank Darrow, of Pontiac, was elected Grand
Commander, and E. Sir George W. Wilson, of Ionia,
elected Grand Recorder.
MASSACHUSETTS AND RHODE ISLAND.
This Grand Commandery has only published the names
of the Grand Officers and the following statistical informa-
tion : It has thirteen Subordinate Encampments, 998 mem-
bers, and during the year has conferred the Order of
Knighthood on 100 members.
R. E. Sir William Field, of Providence, R. I., was
elected Grand Commander, and Sir Solon Thornton, of
Boston, Mass., Grand Recorder.
MAINE.
On the 7th of May, 1861, the Grand Commandery of
Maine held its Annual Conclave, four Commanderies being
represented. The V. E. Sir A. B. Thompson, Dep. Grand
Commander, presided, on account of sickness in the family
of the R. E. Grand Commander, Sir J. Williams, who, how^-
ever, sent his annual address to the Grand Commandery.
He urges " a strict uniformity in our work, harmony of
action, unbounded hospitality, fraternal regard and Tem-
plar courtesy."
320 HISTOHY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence passes high
eulogiums upon the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania,
especially in regard to her voice on the subject of disunion
and treason, as condemned by R. E. Sir W. H. Allen, her
history through Sir Alfred Creigh as Historiographer, and
the review of the proceedings of thirteen Grand Command-
eries through James Lindsey, chairman of the Committee
on Foreign Correspondence. We need but say that Penn-
sylvania shall endeavor to do her whole duty as Templars
and as patriots, and that language fails us to render justice
to the Grand Commandery of Maine for the honor con-
ferred on the Keystone State.
R. E. Sir John Williams, of Bangor, was re-elected
Grand Commander, and E. Sir Ira Berry, re-elected Grand
Recorder.
OHIO.
The 19th Annual Session of this Grand Commandery
was held at Columbus, October 10, 1861, fifteen Com-
manderies being represented.
R. E. Sir Kent Jarvis delivered an annual address, in
which he refers to the unhappy condition of our country,
and other matters of a local and interesting character.
This Grand Commandery passed the following resolu-
tion:
Resolved, That while the Encampment contemplates the
pending war, which is destroying our young men, devastat-
ing our fields, wasting means and paralyzing the industry
of our country, with great amazement and anguish of
heart, we yet deem it the duty of every Knight to main-
tain true allegiance and faithful obedience to the lawfully
established authorities of the land.
R. E. Sir Kent Jarvis, of Massillon, was re-elected Grand
Master, and E. Sir John D. Caldwell, of Cincinnati, re-
elected Grand Recorder.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 321
NEW JERSEY.
The Grand Comraandeiy of New Jersey held its 3d An-
nual Conclave in the city of Trenton, September 12, 1861.
K. E. Sir John Hilton delivered the annual address as
Grand Commander, filled with good counsel and patriotic
thoughts.
R. E. Thomas J. Corson, of Trenton, was elected Grand
Commander, and E. Sir Charles G. Milnor, re-elected Grand
Recorder.
NEW YORK.
The Grand Commandery of New York held its 48th
Annual Conclave at Binghamton, September 10, 1861,
twenty Subordinate Commanderies being represented.
The R. E. Frank Chamberlain, Grand Commander, for-
warded his address, sickness preventing his attendance.
The subject of all othei*s, in the proceedings of this pow-
erful Grand Commandery, which interests Templars, is the
opinion, faithfully and honestly expressed, that a burial
service for Knight Templars is right and ^^ro^^e?*, and gives
the committee the following reasons, which were adopted
by the Grand Commandery :
1. Because Knighthood is a distinctive department of
Masonry in its rites, precepts and duties.
2. Because its ceremonies are founded upon matters
which are neither symbolical nor traditional, but actual
and real.
3. Because its basis is more military than civil, requiring
distinctive allusions and practices, unlike those of the other
degrees.
4. Because it has a distinct creed, founded upon the
Christian faith and the practice of the Christian virtues.
5. Because, while it, like other degrees in Masonry,
teaches the immortality of the soul, it also teaches the
necessity of its salvation through the doctrines of the Cross.
0*
322 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
6. Because it is no innovation upon Masonry, but a strict
compliance with the instructions of the Orders of Knight-
hood, and would be no invasion of the privileges of the
Craft degrees, but a recognition of them.
K. E. Zenas C. Priest, of Utica, was elected Grand Com-
mander, and E. Kobert Macoy, re-elected Grand Recorder.
VERMONT.
This Grand Commandery held its Annual Conclave at
Burlington, on January 7, 1862, four Commanderies being
represented.
R. E. Gamaliel Washburn delivered the annual address
as Grand Commander — an address filled not only Avith
Christian spirit, but teaching Templar courtesy.
In the proceedings a resolution w^as offered, appointing a
" committee to inquire into the expediency and propriety
of this Grand Commandery withdrawing and dissolving its
connection with the Grand Encampment of the United
States ;" which committee subsequently reported a resolu-
tion couched in the following language :
" Resolved, That the connection of the Grand Command-
ery of the State of Vermont with the General Grand Com-
mandery of the United States be and the same is hereby
dissolved."
These proceedings becoming known to the M. E. Sir
Benjamin Brown French, Grand Master of the Grand En-
campment of the United States, he issued an edict on the
18th day of March, 1862, declaring the Grand Command-
ery of Vermont a spurious organization, and forbidding all
Templar intercourse between all true and loyal Templars
of the United States and the Grand Commandery of Ver-
mont.
This prompt, energetic and efficient action on the part
of our M. E. Grand Master had the desired effect of in-
stantly crushing out rebellion in the ranks of Templarism
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 323
in the United States, and. we rejoice to find that the Grand
Commandery of Vermont, with that magnanimity which
should ever distinguish Sir Knights, held a meeting on the
22d of April, 1862, and unanimously rescinded the resolu-
tion whereby she dissolved her connection with the present
body.
Your committee will only reiterate the opinion of our
own Grand Commandery, that she is diametrically opposed
to secession in every form and shape, and has time and
again expressed her sentiments upon this subject. We
cannot forbear, however, to quote the remark of P. R. E.
Sir W. H. Allen on this subject, in which he says of Tera-
plarism : " Having ceased to be a world-wide, or even a
sectional institution, w^ithout a common interest, without
mutual confidence, aimless, powerless and discordant — all
equally free, independent and insignificant — until the Order
would be shorn of its glory, and darkness would reign in
our Asylums and dismay in our ranks."
R. E. Gamaliel Washburn, of Montpelier, w^as re-elected
Grand Commander, and E. Sir John B. Hollenbeck, re-
elected Grand Recorder.
WISCONSIN.
The third Annual Conclave of this Grand Commandery
was held January 1, 1862, in the city of Milwaukee, three
Commanderies being represented. R. E. Sir Henry M.
Palmer, of Milwaukee, was re-elected Grand Commander,
and E. Wm. T. Palmer re-elected Grand Recorder.
We have thus hastily furnished our review of the pro-
ceedings of the various Grand Commanderies, and find that
some yet adhere to the old titles of Grand Master, instead
of Grand Commander, &c., &c. How these State Grand
Commanderies, owing allegiance to the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States, can reconcile the use of titles
abrogated and annulled by the parent body with the vow of
324 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
office as required by that body, is a mystery which your com-
mittee cannot unravel. We hope that the session of the
Grand Encampment of Knights Templar of the United
States, which will assemble in September, will require all
State and Subordinate Commanderies to conform to the
Constitution.
All of which is courteously submitted.
AVm. H. Strickland, ^
Jer. L. Hutchinson, v Committee.
W. B. Semple, j
Seventh Report of the Committee on Foreign Corresjyondencej
read before the R. E. Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania,
June, 1863, by Sir Isaac Whittier.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence submitted
the following report :
To the Officers and Members of the Grand Commandery of
Knights Temjjlar of Pennsylvania :
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence acknowledge
the reception from E. Sir Alfred Creigh, our Eminent Grand
Recorder, of the proceedings of the Grand Commanderies
of California, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts
and Khode Island, Maine, Michigan, New Jersey, New
York and Vermont, which your committee propose review-
ing for your benefit. We shall review each in the order
enumerated.
CALIFORNIA.
California held its 5^h Annual Conclave in the city of
San Francisco, on the 11th and 12th of November, 1862,
seven Commanderies being represented. The Grand Com-
mander, in adverting to the decrease of members in the
various departments of Masonry, truly says " that the stir-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 325
ring events which have attracted the minds of men during
the past twelve months may well account for this ; yet the
Commanderies are in a healthy and sound condition." As
a Grand Commandery they in all things obey the consti-
tutional requirements of the G. E. of the U. S.
R. E. Sir Charles Marsh was elected Grand Commander,
and E. Sir Lawrence C. Owen was elected Grand Recorder.
ILLINOIS.
The Grand Commandery of Illinois held its 6tli Annual
Conclave in Chicago, October 28, 1862, eleven Command-
eries being represented.
The G. C, in referring in his annual address to the pres-
ent fratricidal war, very appropriately uses the following
language : " I seem to stand in the very midst of the em-
blems of mortality ;" and in speaking of the officers and
soldiers who were members of the G. C, he says : '' They
died, as die the brave, in the discharge of duty, with the
flag of our country floating over them and the shouts of
victory ringing in their ears ; the Christian warriors passed
from the field of battle into the Asylum of rest." The sen-
timents thus eloquently portrayed give unmistakable evi-
dence that the Christian Knights of Illinois are fully pre-
pared to die, with their harness on, as offerings to save our
bleeding and distracted country.
" Dulce et decorum est, pro patria mori."
R. E. Sir G. W. Deering was elected G. C, and E. Sir
H. C. Ranney, Grand Recorder.
INDIANA.
Indiana held its Annual Conclave at Fort Wayne, April
1, 1862, seven Commanderies being represented.
Sir Solomon D. Bayless delivered an able address, filled
with those patriotic sentiments and Templar thoughts which
28
326 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
elevate the dignity and character of true and loyal Knights.
As Grand Commander he reviews the reports of all the
State Grand Commanderies ; and the idea is certainly a
most excellent one, as it makes the Grand Commanderies
better acquainted with the views and sentiments of each
other, and should be ajoproved of by every Grand Com-
mandery. As the Grand Commander is officially responsi-
ble for the published sentiments of his Grand Commandery,
why not make the duty devolve upon him ? He speaks
highly of, and compliments flatteringly, the Grand Com-
mandery of Pennsylvania, especially upon our action in
regard to the edict of Sir E. H. Gill, of Virginia, in declin-
ing to recognize the authority of the G. E. of the U. S.
R. E. Sir S. D. Bayless was re-elected G. C, and E. Sir
Francis King, Grand Recorder.
KENTUCKY.
The Grand Commandery of Kentucky held its 15th An-
nual Conclave in the city of Lexington, on the 12th day
of June, 1862, four Commanderies being represented.
In our sister jurisdiction of Kentucky it is a matter of
congratulation to all Templars, that even there, amid the
" pomp and circumstance of war," the representatives of
four Commanderies were permitted to meet; and the Grand
Commander truly said: "In our jurisdiction, every thing-
having been compelled to yield to the influences of the times,
no advance has been made in the progress of Templar
Masonry."
We trust that the gallant Knights of Kentucky will
never despair of our great and glorious republic, but battle
manfully against treason and rebellion ; so that, when these
shall be consigned to the tomb of oblivion, the fires upon
our altars may burn more brightly, i:)rotected by the glori-
ous old Constitution and the Stars and Stripes of a united
Union.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 327
R. E. Sir R. C. Steadman was elected Grand Commander,
and E. Sir AVm. C. Hunger, Grand Recorder.
MASSACHUSETTS AND RHODE ISLAND.
We never receive any proceedings from this Grand Com-
mandery but their printed list of oiScers. Are they deter-
mined to follow the Scriptures, wherein they speak of men
" putting their light under a bushel," or will they not rather
conform to the custom and usages of all the State Grand
Comraanderies, and give us a synopsis of their business ?
R. E. Sir William Ellison was elected Grand Commander,
and E. Sir Solon Thornton, Grand Recorder.
MAINE.
The Grand Commandery of this State held its Annual
Conclave in Portland, on the 6th day of May, 1862, all the
Commauderies being represented.
No business of importance was transacted ; yet we regret
that our space will not allow us to transcribe for publica-
tion the whole of the Grand Commander's (Williams) ad-
dress. It contains sentiments of the purest patriotism, most
exalted loyalty, most zealous and devoted interest to Tem-
plar Masonry. Let one or two extracts suffice : " Far dis-
tant be the day, if ever, Avhen, for want of moral courage
or virtue in the American people to sustain the Constitution
and laws of the land, the patriot shall be found in sack-
cloth, weeping over the last hope of Freedom on earth."
Again he says : " But, Sir Knights, however we may de-
plore this condition of our country, and could wish it were
otherwise, we must not forget that the national exigencies
involve a fundamental principle in our Order, and impose
a responsibility that no true Knight would seek to avoid ;
never to be drawn aside from the path of duty, but be ever
ready to discharge our duty with fidelity and patience."
328 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAE.
R. E. Sir Abner B. Thompson was elected G. C, and E.
Sir Ira Berry, Grand Recorder.
MICHIGAN.
We have barely received a list of the officers of this
Grand Commandery, in which is stated the officers for the
present Temj)lar year.
R. E. Sir John Clark was elected Grand Commander,
and E. Sir Geo. W. Wilson, Grand Recorder. This Grand
Commandery has eleven Subordinates and 311 members.
NEW JERSEY.
This young Grand Commandery held its 4th Annual
Conclave in Trenton, September 11, 1862, over which that
valiant and magnanimous Knight, Sir Thomas J. Corson,
presided. In his address he refers to our duties as Tem-
plars, and truly says, that when we enter the Asylum of
Knighthood "a new life is opened to us, and we are impera-
tively required to practice, in our daily Avalk and conversa-
tion, those virtues which characterize the true Christian.
Our professions will avail us nothing if we are not true to
them. Not all who say ' Lord ! Lord !' are saved, nor are
all Knights Templar at heart who are so in name. We
wear, as the distinctive mark of our Order, the Cross that
symbolizes Christ's passion and death. If we wear not this
Cross in our hearts, let us no more display it externally, so
that we may at least be free from the charge of hypocrisy."
R. E. Sir Geo. B. Edwards was elected G. C, and E. Sir
Chas. G. Milnor, Grand Recorder.
NEW YORK.
This ancient Grand Commandery held its 49th Annual
Conclave in Watertown, September 16, 1862, eighteen
Commanderies being represented. R. E. Sir Zenas C.
Priest delivered the annual address as G. C.
Much business of a local character was transacted. An
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 329
historical address, prepared by Rev. Sir Salem Town, Grand
Prelate, was read, and ordered to be entered on the minutes.
It is a document full of research, and worthy of the fame
of our venerable Sir Knight Town. May he long be spared
to continue his labors.
R. E. Sir Zenas C. Priest was elected Grand Commander,
and E. Sir Robert Macoy, Grand Recorder.
VERMONT.
The Grand Commandery of this State held its Annual
Meeting in Burlington, January 13th, 1863, all the Subor-
dinates being represented. R. E. Sir Gamaliel Washburn,
as Grand Commander, delivered the annual address. He
assures us that Templar Masonry is advancing and increas-
ing ; and his address throughout breathes the noble senti-
ments of a magnanimous Christian Knight, who rightly
appreciates his duty as a citizen and a Templar. The Sir
Knights of that jurisdiction may well be proud of such a
representative.
R. E. Sir Horatio Needham was elected Grand Com-
mander, and E. Sir John B. Hollenbeck, Grand Recorder.
We have now closed our labors, and trust that our feeble
efforts may be approved by the Sir Knights of the Grand
Commandery of Pennsylvania.
All of which is courteously submitted.
Isaac Whittier,
For the Committee.
Eighth Report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence^
read before the R. E. Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania,
by Sir James H. Hopkins, June, 1864.
Sir James H. Hopkins, from the Committee on Foreign
Correspondence, submitted the following report :
28-
330 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAH.
To the Grand Commandery of the State of Pennsylvania :
Your Committee on Foreign Correspondence have exam-
ined with care the proceedings of the several Grand Com-
manderies for the year 1863 which have been submitted to
them, and, as the result of their labors, beg leave to present
the following report of such matters as are most likely to
prove interesting :
CONNECTICUT.
We have received the proceedings of a body calling
itself " The Annual Assembly of the Grand Encampment
of Knights Templar, &c., for the State of Connecticut,"
which was held in the city of Hartford on May 14, 1863,
and was presided over by " M. E. Sir David Clark ;" which
had representatives from six " Subordinate Encampments."
Connecticut and Ohio persist in arrogating to themselves
titles which belong only to the highest Templar tribunal in
America, and to its presiding officer; and this notwithstand-
ing all the other State Commanderies have repeatedly urged
them to sacrifice their obstinacy, and make the uniformity
and symmetry of the Order complete. There are many
gallant, courteous and distinguished Sir Knights in Con-
necticut ; let them be magnanimous as well, and this old
subject of complaint will be heard no more.
We congratulate them upon their prosperity, and upon
the fact that the Angel with the scythe cut down none of
their number during the past year.
A resolution was introduced and laid over until the next
meeting, providing that the Grand Commandery should
meet biennially instead of annually. We hope it will not
pass. Frequent coming together and interchange of views
promotes Knightly courtesies, and add to the general in-
terest and prosperity.
It was also resolved "that a committee be appointed
who shall report at the next meeting the relations existing
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 431
between this Encampment and the Grand Encampment
of the United States, how far its orders are obligatory on
us, and whether any change is advisable or necessary on
account of such relations." This smacks a little of rebel-
lion, but we trust the committee will make a judicious re-
port, and that, recognizing and observing true faith and
allegiance to the rightful authorities, all will be well.
The Grand Recorder reviews the proceedings of the
Grand Encampment of the United States and of nine
Grand Commanderies, Pennsylvania being one.
Sir W. L. Brewer, of Norwich, was elected R. E. Grand
Commander, and Eminent Sir Eliphalet G. Storer, of New
Haven, was re-elected Grand Recorder.
ILLINOIS.
The seventh Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery
of Illinois assembled in Chicago on October 27, 1863. All
of the Commanderies — twelve in number — were represented.
R. E. G. C. Sir George AV. Deering addressed the Con-
clave, giving an account of his administration, &c. He
regards the resolution of the Grand Encampment of the
United States, requiring the Order of Malta to be conferred
separately, as an innovation. He says : " While I see no
benefit to be gained by departing from our present system,
it may be a question how far we, as loyal to the Grand
Encampment, are bound to obey this resolution, which is
directly the reverse of what they adopted six years ago,
and which they probably may rescind at their next ses-
sion." These views Avere concurred in by the Grand Com-
mandery in a resolution adopted after full discussion. "We
regret to notice this indication of rebellion. If the Grand
Encampment is fickle and uncertain, let us all try to cor-
rect that evil, and give it stability and strength. Continual
• complaints cause changes to be made for the sake of har-
mony. If all cease complaining, there will be a certain
332 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
guarantee against mutation. Upon the naked merits of the
question, it surely must be conceded that it is much more
in accordance with historic truth, much more rational, in-
telligible and aesthetic, to confer the Order of Malta sepa-
rately than to jumble it with another and independent
Order.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence make note
of the proceedings of ten Grand Commanderies in a very
laconic, but graphic style. A very handsome compliment
is paid to the Sir Knights of this jurisdiction. Sir Knights
of Illinois, we owe you one. AVe salute you.
We are glad to notice a high degree of prosperity, both
in point of membership and finances. None deserve it
more, none can enjoy it with more Knightly grace.
Sir William Harbron Turner, of Chicago, was elected
Grand Commander, and E. Sir Henry Collings Ranney, of
Chicago, was re-elected Grand Recorder.
INDIANA.
The Grand Commandery of Indiana held its Annual
Conclave in the city of Lafayette on April 7, 1863, upon
which occasion five Subordinate Commanderies were repre-
sented. The veteran Templar, R. E. Sir Solomon D. Bay-
less, Grand Commander, delivered an address, full of im-
pressive admonitions as to the transitory condition of all
things earthly, and of earnest exhortation to prepare for
the rest of the Asylum above. He announced the death
of Sir Knight H. C. Lawrence, P. G. C. of the State, and
paid a fit tribute to his memory and his Knightly virtues.
A full account is given of the proceedings of the Grand
Encampment of the United States, not forgetting the
banquet, of which he seems to have a pleasing recollection.
He expresses the hope that the Grand Encampment will
meet in Indiana, so that the Hoosiers may " relieve the dis-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAPw. 333
tressed with an ample supply of corny (Whether it is to
be solid or liquid^ we are not advised.)
There was no report from the Committee on Foreign
Correspondence.
A special committee presented a report, almost every
sentence of which is an attack upon or complaint against
the Grand Encampment of the United States. They are
glad that some decisions of the M. E. Grand Master were
suppressed ; glad the costume was changed, and yet don't
like the change ; don't like the chapeau, prefer the three-
cornered hat ; don't like the buff gauntlets, prefer hlack ! ! !
don't like the proceedings in regard to the Order of Malta,
although they admit that the new arrangement corresponds
with their own constitution and custom. We fear our good
friends are inclined to be captious and querulous.
K. E. Sir Solomon D. Bayless, of Fort Wayne, and E.
Sir Francis King, of Indianapolis, were severally re-elected
to the positions of Grand Commander and Grand Recorder.
We notice that the R. E. Grand Commander filled the
positions of Grand Prelate, G. S. W., G. J. W., G. St. B.,
and G. Sd. B., by appointment. How is that? The other
State Grand Commanderies follow the now democratic
mode of election.
KENTUCKY.
The Grand Commandery of Kentucky held its sixteenth
Annual Conclave at Lexington on June 11, 1863. Five
Commanderies were represented. It is a sad and significant
fact that but four of the regular officers of the Grand
Commandery were present to fill their respective stations.
The tide of war has so surged back and forth over Ken-
tucky as to have seriously affected most of her citizens with
its ebb or flow. So far removed as we are from the im-
mediate scenes of conflict, it is difficult to experience in its
full poignancy the sorrowful effect of this terrible war.
334 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
R. E. Sir L. C. Stedman, Grand Commander, in his truly
Masonic and Christian address, refers in a touching manner
to the devastations of the war, and reminds Sir Knights of
their duties arising from the passing events in our national
history. He says : " In seasons of peace and prosperity
Masonry labors to lay up treasures of good-will and broth-
erly love against the time of need. Now is that time of
need ! And while communities are warring against each
other, and the very foundations of society are shaken, let
us, Sir Knights of the Cross, exemplify the high duties of
our profession by unchangeable good-will towards each
other, and by devotion to the cause of Him who died for us
upon Mount Calvary. =!= * * jjj ^\^\^ conjunction of
affairs let me close my official career by tendering such ad-
vice and counsel as accord with the spirit-principles of
our Order, and are demanded by the exigencies of the times.
Let me remind you, in the words of the Monitor, of ' our
mutual engagements,' ' our reciprocal ties.' ^ ^ ■^- ^'
There has never before in our lives, Sir Knights, arisen
an occasion so imperatively demanding, at our hands, a full
and complete performance of all our high and solemn
duties and obligations as Masons. The pages of history are
full of sorrow, mourufuluess and blood, but they present no
scene more sad and lamentable than the one now passing
before our eyes. Every day witnesses the sad spectacle of
the flower of our country being born by war's remorseless
ravages to untimely graves — brothers slain by fraternal
hands — fire and sword strive with each other in their horrid
work. Let us, then, recall our solemn pledges, and strive to
be more than ever before attentive to Knightly vows and
duties. While one hand is wielding the sure defence of our
beloved Order, let the other grasp the mystic trowel and
widely diffuse the genuine cement of brotherly love and
friendship. It has ever been the boast of our ancient and
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 335
magnanimous Order, that no difference of country or
language could hinder their disinterested friendship and
boundless hospitality towards each other. Let us prove
that in these respects we have not degenerated from the
days when to be known as a Knight Templar was to be
admired and respected throughout the universe."
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence review the
proceedings of the Grand Commanderies — our own included
— and also of the Grand Encampment of the United States.
Suitable mention is made of the death of two Past Grand
Commanders of the State — Sirs Henry Wingate and D. J.
Ayres.
Sir Peter H. Jeffries was elected Grand Commander, and
Eminent Sir W. C. Hunger was re-elected Grand Recorder.
MASSACHUSETTS AND RHODE ISLAND.
We have been taught to look to the East for light ; but,
so far as these two luminaries are concerned, we look in
vain. Has the day not dawned ? or is there an eclipse ? A
Commandery that boasts of having the Athens of America
— the Hub of the Universe — within its jurisdiction, ought
certainly to take pleasure in enlightening us provincials.
Heretofore we have been favored with a circular announ-
cing the names of the Grand Officers elected ; but even that
is now withheld. Come, Sir Knights, let us see you with
your armor on, and let us witness your evolutions at your
next Annual Conclave.
AVe are pained to learn that the elegant Masonic Temple
in Boston was recently destroyed by fire. We extend to
the Brotherhood our sincere condolence and warmest sym-
pathy in their heavy loss.
MAINE.
The Grand Commandery of Maine assembled in Annual
Conclave in Portland on May 5, 1863. All of the Sub-
ordinate Commanderies, four in number, were represented.
336 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
R. E. G. C. Sir A. B. Thompson, in his addreBS, announces
in appropriate and touching language the death of the first
R. E. G. C. of the State, Sir Charles B. Smith, and also of
E. Sir D.C. Stanwood, G. S. W. Among other things, he
says : " Deplore as we may, and as every lover of his coun-
try must, the sad state of our hitherto singularly favored
land, the discussion of the causes which have led to our
present condition, and the best means to be used to restore
the blessings of peace to our homes and happiness to our
people, belongs to other places than the Asylum of Chris-
tian Knighthood."
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence presented a
very able and elaborate report of the doings of the Grand
Encampment of the United States and of the Grand Com-
manderies of nine States, including Pennsylvania. In re-
ferring to the action of the Grand Encampment upon the
question of uniform, the committee discourse as follows :
" The wardrobe question came up, was referred to a com-
mittee, and the confusion heretofore existing was still far-
ther increased by the adoption of a revised uniform. The
hopes, therefore, which were inspired that through the
action of the Grand Encampment some escape might be
found from the confusion of tinsel and gaud with which the
tasteless ingenuity, or perhaps want of ingenuity, of regalia
manufacturers had burdened the dress and sapped the
pockets of Sir Knights, are overthrown. * * * ^^^^
we believe it to be a matter about which more has been said
and felt than its insignificance deserves, and we hope that,
with the exception of the shoulder-straps, Avhich are a mean-
ingless abomination, no complaint and no influence will in-
duce the Grand Encampment to recede from its present
determination." There is a good deal of stubborn, hard
sense in that ; but if Sir Knights of Maine insist on one
change, other Sir Knights will desire other changes ; so that
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 337
very soon we would have several changes of raiment ^ with-
out being any better clad. Let us " take no thought of
the wherewithal we shall be clothed ;" ever remembering
that it is not the external adornments of the person, but
the inner qualifications of the heart, that Masonry regards.
In referring to our Grand Commandery, the committee
say : " We notice that conferring the Orders in the Grand
Commandery seems to have become the established custom
in this jurisdiction." The object is to exemplify the work
in the presence of representatives from all the Subordinate
Commanderies, so that there will be entire uniformity
throughout the juristiction. What do our friends in Maine
think of the custom ? Is it not beneficial and interesting ?
oflfering as it does, an opportunity for interchange of views.
R. E. Sir A. B. Thompson was unanimously re-elected
Grand Commander, and E. Sir Ira Berry was, by the same
complimentary vote, re-elected Grand Recorder. E. Sir J.
J. Bell was re-appointed chairman of the Committee on
Foreign Correspondence, and we doubt much whether a
better selection could have been made.
MISSOURI.
The third Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery
of Missouri assembled in St. Louis on May 18, 1863. Three
Commanderies were represented. But two of the regular
officers were present. This fact, and the additional one
that two years had intervened since the Grand Comman-
dery last met, bring forcibly and sadly to our minds the
terrible results of intestine strife. The border States de-
serve a double portion of the sympathy of all humane
hearts. Poor Missouri has been torn and pillaged, mangled
and crushed almost beyond endurance. To the gallant Sir
Knights who must have suffered and borne so much we
extend our fraternal condolence and tenderest commisera-
tion. May they and all of us soon rejoice in seeing the
29 p
338 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
battle flag furled, and the glorious standard of the Prince
of Peace exalted in its stead.
R. E. Grand Commander Sir George W. Belt delivered
a very appropriate and Knightly address, concluding as
follows : — " I am satisfied of your unalterable devotion to
the cherished principles of our Order, and banish every
thought that you will suffer anything to arise calculated to
disturb our harmony or create dissensions. We wage a
glorious warfare, and for glorious objects. In hoc signo
vinces. Partisan, political or sectarian discussion has no
place among us. Our mission is higher and holier. Inno-
cent maidens, destitute widows, hel2:>less orphans and the Chris-
tian religion demand our services and our sympathies.
We will never endanger these great interests by disagree-
ments among ourselves. Cherishing an institution which
is founded upon the Christian religion, and reverently fol-
lowing the bright example of the meek and lowly Saviour
of the world, I beg to join with you in earnest prayer for
the speedy return of ' Peace on earth and good-will toward
men.' "
R. E. Sir George W. Belt was re-elected Grand Com-
mander, and Sir A. O'Sullivan was elected Grand Recorder.
MICHIGAN.
The Grand Commandery of Michigan met in Annual
Conclave in the city of Detroit on June 2, 1863. Ten
Commanderies were represented. The proceedings published
are very meagre. R. E. Grand Commander Sir John
Clark's address is ommitted "for want of space." The
report on Foreign Correspondence is "not published for
want of space." The reason is certainly a good one, con-
sidering the fact that but three-fourths of a sheet of letter
paper is all " the space" devoted to the entire proceedings.
But the reason of that reason is not good. Why, Fratres,
did you not have more space, and let us hear how you talk?
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 339
Sir L. R. Atwater, of Grand Rapids, was elected R. E.
Grand Commander, and E. Sir G. W. Wilson, of Ionia,
was re-elected Grand Recorder.
NEW YORK.
The venerable Grand Commandery of New York met
in Annual Conclave, for the fiftieth time, in the city of
Troy, on September 8, 1863. Twenty-six Subordinate Com-
manderies were represented at that semi-centennial anni-
versary. Sir Knight Zenas C. Priest, R. E. Grand Com-
mander, delivered a very eloquent and impressive address,
breathing the true spirit of Christian Knighthood. He
suggests that each Commandery procure and preserve the
names, number, rank, achievements, &c., of all of its mem-
bers who have entered the Union armies, and that a com-
mittee of the Grand Commandery procure and compile
this information into a biographical history. He also rec-
ommends the appointment of a standing committee on
Necrology, to prepare for the archives of the Grand Com-
mandery suitable sketches of all Sir Knights who may
have been called from earth during the current year. We
regard these as very valuable suggestions, and worthy of
adoption by all other Grand Commanderies. In after years
such a history would be of incalculable benefit and infinite
interest. The address discusses, at considerable length, the
duty of Masons and Templars in these dark hours of our
country's history. We cull one or two extracts : " At such
a time as this it must be proper for us — not as a society,
but as individuals, as members of the universal brother-
hood of Masons — to inquire if we cannot do something to
abate this dreadful calamity, to assuage the horrors of this
fraternal strife. The conservative spirit of Masonry ; the
ceremonies of our Order; the form of our ritual; the words
of the blessed Immanuel, who taught peace on earth, good-
will to men; the fact that Masonry is universal and knows
340 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
no sectional divisions ; that our obligations as Masons are
restricted by no lines or States — all point us to a course of
conduct which, if steadily pursued, will tend, in no slight
degree, to alleviate the condition of our afflicted country.
* * * To that end we can all address ourselves, and
with entire propriety. Each one of us, in his own proper
sphere, can inculcate the lessons of brotherly love, relief,
and truth, and strive to impress upon the mass of mind in
our country a proper respect for law and order and the
rights of citizens, which ever should distinguish the virtu-
ous, the intelligent and the accomplished Mason ; and a pro-
found sentiment thus instructed will, in time, announce
itself with imposing majesty and a decided tone." This
seems to be the feeling of the entire Commandery, for the
Committee on Foreign Correspondence, in referring to the
same subject, say : " Let us leave the potsherds to strive
with the potsherds, devoting our time and attention to the
lawful business of the Grand Commandery, and not to
futile and unavailing attempts to save the State. God forbid
that we should stifle the emotion, or place a barrier in the
way of the patriotic aspirations of any man or body of
men ; but we would have a place for everything, and this
place, of all others, should be sacred to the objects of our
solemn and Knightly vows."
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence had for its
chairman that eminent and valiant Sir Knight, John W.
Simons, and through him presented a very elaborate, in-
teresting, able and judicious report. The proceedings of
thirteen Grand Commanderies, including that of Pennsyl-
vania, are reviewed. Indiana and Connecticut get some
raps over the knuckles for their disrespect and disloyalty
to the Grand Encampment of the United States, and Mas-
sachusetts and Rhode Island are pleasantly twitted about
their reticence.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 341
Sir Orvin Welch, of Syracuse, was elected R. E. Grand
Commander, and E. Sir Robert Macoy, of New York, was
re-elected Grand Recorder.
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
We have received the proceedings of the organization of
the Grand Commandery of New Hampshire in 1860. From
the introductory remarks by E. Sir Horace Chase, Grand
Recorder, we learn that there was a grand Encampment of
the State organized on June 13, 1826, which was composed
of three subordinate Encampments, and which continued
until June, 1836, when it went down under the tide of
fanatical excitement that swept over the country during
that memorable period. After the storm was over, Masonry
revived. It was not dead, but slumbered ; and awoke more
invigorated by the sleep. The several Commanderies of
the State, from their re-organization, remained under the
immediate jurisdiction of the Grand Encampment of the
United States until, in 1860, it was deemed expedient to
organize a Grand Commandery for the State. Accordingly,
on June 2, 1860, the representatives from five Command-
eries met at Concord, under proper dispensation, organized
a Grand Commandery and elected their Grand Ofiicers.
On August 22, 1860, the Grand Commandery met again,
when M. E. Sir B. B. French, Grand Master of the Grand
Encampment of the United States, was present and installed
the officers. The occasion was doubtless a very pleasant
one. We extend to the Grand Commandery of the Granite
State our Knightly salutations ; we cordially welcome her
to our ranks, and hope to see her Beauseant ever proudly
floating to the breeze. We have no knowledge of the pro-
ceedings subsequent to 1860, but hope we shall hereafter
have regular intercourse. At the organization Sir Daniel
Balch, of Manchester, was elected R. E. Grand Commander,
and Sir Horace Chase, of Hopkinton, Grand Recorder.
29*
342 HLSTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
NEW JERSEY.
The fifth Annual Conclave of the Grand Comraandeiy
of New Jersey was held in Trenton on Thursday, Septem-
ber 10, 1863. Three Commauderies were represented. The
R. E. Grand Commander, in his address, refers to a diffi-
culty in the absent Commandery, which had prevented it
from being represented, and expressed the hope that the
difficulty was removed and that representatives from St.
Bernard, No. 2, would be with the Grand Commandery
during its session then opening. We regret that the R. E.
Grand Commander's expectations were not realized, and we
earnestly trust that the little band of valiant Knights in
the gallant State of New Jersey may soon and continually
realize the strength and efficiency there is in union.
R. E. Grand Commander Sir George B. Edwards opens
his short, but very chaste, address with a devout thanks-
giving to the Great Immanuel for all His mercies, and a
fervent prayer for a continued manifestation of His sovereign
grace, and the injunction : " Sir Knights, having been in-
vested with the emblem of that faith, keep it in your hearts
as a constant memorial of that death which gave to you a
life eternal." He refers in very complimentary terms to the
Sir Knights of Easton, in our jurisdiction, in connection
with an interchange of courtesies.
Referring to the dangerous tendency of the times, the R.
E. Grand Commander says : " Let us then try to do well,
that grace may abound, in our daily course heedful to vin-
dicate the character of those removed from our midst when
traduced wrongfully. I am emboldened to direct your
attention to this theme, because society is imbued with the
political aspect of bias and prejudice induced by intestine
war. The rules of our Order permit a defence before the
award of sentence, and however wrong as men may appear
to us the actions of others, yet, as Templars and followers
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 343
of Christ we should exert that charity and love which obe-
dience to His command requires. Templarism cannot be
allowed to commingle with temporalities, or the ruin of
our beloved Order will as certainly follow as in the days of
Clement V."
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence review the
proceedings of the Grand Encampment of the United
States, and of the Grand Commanderies of ten different
States, in a very succinct and interesting manner. We re-
gret to observe that the proceedings of our Grand Comman-
dery were not received. The good Sir Knights of New
Jersey will do us the justice to believe that the fault is not
with us ; we appreciate them too highly to neglect them in
any way.
Sir Charles G. Wilson was elected Grand Commander,
and P. G. C. Sir Thomas J. Corson, Grand Recorder.
OHIO.
On October 15, 1863, at Columbus, there was held the
" twenty-first Annual Convocation of the Grand Encamp-
ment of Knights Templar of the State of Ohio." Fourteen
Subordinate Commanderies were represented.
R. E. Grand Commander Sir Kent Jarvis delivered an
address full of interesting information as to the doings and
condition of all the Commanderies in his jurisdiction, and
containing many judicious suggestions, manifesting the in-
terest he feels in Knighthood. Through his instrumentality
the Subordinate Commanderies have been required to make
their reports at least a month before the meeting of the
Grand Commandery, so that the R. E. Grand Commander
may have time to prepare a statement of the year's trans-
actions for the information of the Grand Commandery. He
urges a re-publication of the proceedings of the Grand
Commandery from its organization to the present time. He
desires a more perfect system of correspondence. He refers
344 HiSTor.Y OF the knights templar.
in appropriate terms to quite a number of Sir Knights who
have laid off their armor and gone to sleep. He refers
to a pleasant visit to Pittsburg Commandery. Such inter-
changes of courtesies leave an agreeable memory and are
" rivets in the chain of affection."
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence, of which K.
E. Sir Kent Jarvis, G. Commander, is chairman, review
the proceedings of nine other Grand Commanderies. We
are sorry to learn that the line of communications between
Pennsylvania and Ohio has been interrupted. We will
join our Buckeye brethren in scouting for the guerrillas
who made that raid and captured our despatches. In re-
fering to the proceedings of the Grand Encampment of U.
S., the committee say that the resolution requiring the
Order of Malta to be conferred separately is in violation
of the new constitution of the Grand Encampment of the
U. S., but in conformity with the old one. They approve
of the change, but think it illegally effected. The doctrine
that the end justifies the means receives too ready an acqui-
escence in these degenerate times. It is unsound and dan-
gerous. And if the Grand Encampment has committed
the error charged, the constitution should immediately be
amended to conform with the practice, it being conceded
that the practice is right.
The " Committee on our Country" reported a re-affirma-
tion of the resolutions passed in 1861. The concluding
one breathes the true spirit of Christian Knighthood, and
is as follows : ^^ Resolved, That, casting aside every political
feeling, every political aspiration, every sectional prejudice,
and asking every Templar to do the same, we will gladly unite
with our brethren every where in any honorable reconciliation
which promises to establish peace and happiness, truth and
justice, throughout all sections of our beloved country."
The Grand Commandery of Ohio adopt all the costume
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 345
agreed upon by the Grand Encampment of United States
except the chapeau ; in lieu of which they wear the cocked
hat, with one white and two black feathers. Why higgle
about the shape of a hat ? Let us have uniformity.
A committee was appointed to meet a similar committee
from the Grand Encampment of the United States to con-
sult on the disagreements between the two bodies, and to
reconcile them as far as practicable. We are very glad to
see this movement in the right direction and with the right
spirit ; and in view of the beneficial results likely to ensue,
we will not say a word as to the name given by Ohio
Knights to their highest tribunal and its presiding officer.
R. E. Sir Kent Jarvis, of Massillon, was re-elected G. C.
for the fourth time ; and E. Sir J. D. Caldwell, of Cincinnati,
was re-elected Grand Recorder.
WISCONSIN.
The Grand Commandery of Wisconsin held its fourth
Annual Conclave in the city of Milwaukee on January 7,
1863. There were present representatives from four Com-
manderies.
R. E. G. C. Sir H. L. Palmer delivered an interesting
address, embodying in it the decisions of M. E. G. M. Sir
B. B. French, for the three years preceding the last trien-
nial meeting of the Grand Encampment of the United
States. Referring to the costume adopted, he says it " may
now be regarded as definitely settled, for three years at least."
Other Grand Commanderies make the same complaint of a
want of certainty and stability in the action of the Grand
Encampment of the United States. This is greatly to be
regretted ; and the more so, as there seems to be occasion
for the complaints. Masonry don't pretend to be progres-
sive, and our high and low authorities should be very care-
ful not to introduce changes, for every change destroys con-
fidence and causes discussion.
346 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
The R. E. Grand Commander makes the following very-
prudent and just remarks : " Scrupulous care should be
taken that none are admitted to the Orders of Knighthood
but those who are above reproach, and who possess the
qualifications of mind and heart needful to enable them to
appreciate the sublime truths and principles inculcated in
the several Orders, and to exemplify them in their daily
walk and conversation."
A very touching and eloquent tribute is paid to the mem-
ory of Sir Knight H. M. Billings, who was suddenly cut off
in his usefulness. He was a leading and prominent Mason.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence make a well-
digested report upon the proceedings of eight Grand Com-
manderies — including Pennsylvnnia ; and in summing up,
say, " We find, also, that many Sir Knights are engaged in
this strife, in both armies, and we have heard of instances
of their exhibiting the true spirit of the Knight Templar,
the valiant, magnanimous, true and courteous Sir Knight.
May none of them ever forget that ' mercy unrestrained '
is one of the divine attributes ; and, while they press on
with ardor to the faithful discharge of their duty, that their
enemy once subdued is no longer such. From the Grand
Comraanderies w^e hear but one voice touching the war.
The call for peace is universal. And if every Sir Knight in
our united jurisdictions should use the means in his power,
we might f-oon be among those nations who have beaten
their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning
hooks, for they know war no more."
R. E. Sir H. L. Palmer, of Milwaukee, was re-elected
Grand Commander, and E. Sir W. T. Palmer, of the same
place, was re-elected Grand Recorder.
GENERAL REMARKS.
In reviewing these proceedings of the several Grand
Commanderies, we were gratified to observe so great a uni-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 347
formity of feeling and sentiment in regard to the duty of
Masons in this eventful crisis of our nation's life ; we regret
to find one exception, which prevents this symjDathy from
being universal. Aside from the principles and teachings
of our Order, we would think it a cause of thankfulness
that there is one refuge from the strifes and troubles of a
fallen world, one shelter from its pitiless storms, one Asylum
w^here its inhumanity and heartlessness may be forgotten in
the kindly fellowship of kindred hearts. If we add to this
natural yearning, the obligation of our Knightly vows, the
remembrance of the sacred causes to which we have dedi-
cated our services, our swords and our lives, we cannot un-
derstand how any Templar can forget his fealty, and turn
Knight-errant to champion another cause, however luring.
We cannot appreciate the feeling of regret expressed by the
R. E. Grand Commander of Indiana that the Grand En-
campment of the United States did not pass some patriotic
resolutions. Resolutions may be a cheap and easy mani-
festation of patriotism, but acts are much more significant
and effective. Every Knight Templar has abundant op-
portunities, in the outside world, to prove his devotion to
his country ; and we doubt not these privileges are cheer-
fully exercised. As citizens, our duty to cordially and
earnestly support the Government is unmistakable ; it is
imperative, momentous and sublime. But we do not meet
here as citizens. Our proceedings are not for the world,
and hence the passage of such resolutions could not accom-
plish the object sought. Let us keep within our legitimate
sphere and all will be well : a departure therefrom — under
however laudable a pretext — would be a dangerous prece-
dent, causing, inevitably, dissension and discord hereafter.
The address of the R. E. Grand Commander of New York
and the remarks of the Committee on Foreign Correspond-
ence upon this subject — which we have elsewhere quoted —
348 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
express in beautiful and forcible language the high stand-
ard, the exalted dignity of Masonic duty.
The Committee of Foreign Correspondence of Wisconsin
seem inspired ^vith ^vhat we conceive to be the true spirit
of Christian Knighthood. They suggest that the combined
influence of the Knights Templar would be potential in the
restoration of peace. That is the key-note of an anthem
which may yet make our whole land echo with its glorious
chorus. Parties have divided and grown envenomed ;
churches have separated and become vindictive ; society
has been rent and is intolerant ; and if Masons, remem-
bering their obligations and avoiding personal bickerings
and reproaches, can meet in the bonds of fraternal love
and calmly reason together, it might prove the dawning
from the dark night of horror which has so long enveloped
us in gloom. But this must be the work of individual
Masons, and not of the corporate bodies. And to the end
that this individual influence may prove effective, we must
cultivate the spirit of charity in its noblest and most com-
prehensive sense. We must imbibe the spirit breathed into
the address of the K. E. Grand Commander of Kentucky,
as evidenced by the extracts heretofore quoted. . Those sen-
timents must find a cordial response in the breast of every
true and courteous Sir. Knight of our valiant and magnan-
imous Order. The duties and obligations of Masonry sit
very lightly upon us when all is peaceful and prosperous.
But it is in times like the present when men are tested, and
it is found whether our impulses, our passions and preju-
dices are stronger than our Masonic and Knightly vows.
To err is human, to forgive divine. And while we should
always condemn a brother's errors and combat his heresies
with all our power, we should still remember that the man
is our brother ; and we may fight his opinions while encir-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 349
cling him with the arms of Masonic love and throwing
over him the panoply of Knightly magnanimity.
If we are led by these lights, the pathway is sure and
leads to ultimate peace and joy ; all others are but ignes
fatui, luring into bogs and marshes only to destroy. Let
us steadfastly adhere to the principles and purposes of our
Order amidst all excitements. Then, when the tempest is
overpast, if so be the temple of our liberties should be
buried in the common ruin by its swoop, we can look with
grateful pride upon the pillars of our Order, unshaken by
the storm and rising in solemn grandeur amidst boundless
desolation. But, if — and God in mercy speedily grant it
may be so ! — when carnage shall cease and the smoke of
battle shall roll away, we see a constellation without one
wandering star, a Union undissolved, a people still enjoying
the priceless, blood-bought legacy of constitutional freedom,
then among Templars there will be no painful memory to
mar the universal joy.
Respectfully submitted.
James H. Hopkins,
Henry C. L. Crecelius.
Ninth Report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence,
read before the R. E. Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania,
by Sir James H. Hopkins, June, 1865.
To the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania :
Your Committee on Foreign Correspondence take great
pleasure in reporting the general and increasing prosperity
of our Order. We cordially tender to all other jurisdic-
tions our Knightly salutations, and beg leave to present for
your information our examination of their latest published
proceedings so far as they have been received by us.
30
350 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
CALIFORNIA.
The seventh Annual Conclave of the Grand Comman-
dery of this State was held in San Francisco on October
18, 1864. All the Subordinate Commauderies — seven in
number — were represented. R. E. Grand Commander
Hartley in his annual address speaks thus : " Though far
removed from the terrible fratricidal conflict in which our
country is involved, we have still duties to perform, impor-
tant and necessary. Be it our task to bend our minds in
solemn and serious earnestness to the promotion of fraternal
peace within our borders — to the allaying of all internal
discords which might tend to widen and deepen the strife —
to pray for wisdom from on high to guide us in our line of
duty, so that by good and wholesome counsel we may be
humble instruments in working out the great problem of
our nation's salvation, and aid in saving our beloved coun-
try from disruption and destruction." The address speaks
in fitting terms of the death of Sir James Horace Culver,
P. G. C. G.
The Grand Recorder of California has charge of the
Foreign Correspondence, and in compliance with his duty
E. Sir Lawrence Owen very ably reviews the proceedings
of fifteen Grand Commanderies. Our doings in 1862 and
1863 receive a brief notice. Sir Knight Owen throws life
and spirit into his report, frankly expressing his views upon
mooted questions, and enforcing them with marked ability.
We may have occasion to speak of some of them hereafter.
It was ordered that the portrait of R. E. Sir Henry How
Hartley, P. G. C, be procured and placed with the other P.
G. C.'s. This is a very gratifying tribute to worthy officers,
and is a useful and pleasing custom. The time of holding
the Annual Conclave is hereafter to be during the same
week that the Grand Chapter meets.
The returns show three hundred and fourteen Knights
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 351
Templar in the State, of whom twenty-two received the
Orders during the preceding year. We are very glad to
notice the evidences of such prosperity. Although thou-
sands of miles away, and separated by broad prairies,
sweeping rivers and gigantic mountains, our cause is the
same, our hearts and hopes, duties and aspirations are one.
Ever may the Beauseant be firmly planted on the sea-girt
shores of the land of gold, to gladden the vision of pilgrim-
warriors from the East and West.
Sir Wm. C. Belcher, of Marysville, was elected G. C. ; E.
Sir Lawrence C. Owen, of San Francisco, was re-elected
O.K.
CONNECTICUT.
The Grand Encampment of this State met in the beauti-
ful City of Elms, on May 12, 1864, and in a very short time
was transmuted into a Grand Commandery. Delegates
were present from six Subordinate Commanderies. The
address of K. E. Sir Wm. L. Brown, G. C, was very brief,
reminding the Sir Knights of the gratitude due the blessed
Immanuel, announcing the general prosperity of the Order
in the jurisdiction, and paying proper reverence to the
memory of Sir Isaac Tuttle, for many years G. S.
The committee appointed at the last Conclave, " on the
relations existing between this Encampment and the Grand
Encampment of the United States," reported in favor of
changing the name of their Grand Body and the titles of
its officers, &c., so as to conform to the requirements of the
Grand Encampment of the United States. The report was
unanimously adopted. We cordially congratulate our
brethren of Connecticut upon this exhibition of true mag-
nanimity. Knightly courtesy, and Christian spirit, that was
willing to make this sacrifice of memories, associations and
pride for the general welfare. We congratulate them also
upon the evidences of their prosperity. There were seventy-
352 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
six Companions Knighted during the year ; the total num-
ber of those who wear the cross and sword is not given, but
we know they form a valiant and faithful band, whose ears
are ever open to the demands and whose arms are ever
ready to defend the cause of destitute widows, helpless
orphans, innocent maidens, and the Christian religion. In-
stead of meeting biennially, as was proposed, the Grand
Commandery determined to meet semi-annually, thus giving
a gratifying demonstration that attempted revolutions often
re-act, and carry their projectors where they least expected
to stop.
Sir Wm. R. Higby, of Bridgeport, was elected G. C, and
E. Sir E. G. Storer, of New Haven, was elected G. R.
ILLINOIS.
The eighth Annual Conclave of the G. C. of this juris-
diction commenced its session in Chicago, on October 25,
1864. The twelve Subordinate Commanderies of the State
were all represented. R. E. Sir Wm. H. Turner, G. C,
delivered a very brief address. He recommends a volume
of tactics which has been compiled and published by the
Inspector General of the G. C. of Illinois, and has received
the approval of the M. E. G. M. of the United States. He
announces the organization of a new Commandery at Cairo,
being No. 13. This fact, in connection with the returns of
the other Commanderies, showing an increase of one hun-
dred and fourteen in the membership, and a total of five
hundred and fifty-seven, shows a satisfactory degree of pros-
perity. We are very glad to notice that while our Hoosier
friends have flocked so freely to the national standard, the
banner of the Cross has allured so goodly a number.
The report on Foreign Correspondence — a very good one,
by the way — embraces thirteen G. C.'s. In speaking of
Pennsylvania, the committee express surprise that at our last
Conclave ten of the Commanderies were represented by
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 353
proxies. We confess we are unable to explain the cause : it
is much to be regretted, for it indicates an indifference
which we are confident is not felt. We trust that all officers
and representatives will hereafter be promptly at their post,
since their absence has attracted the attention of foreign
bodies, and may subject us to unjust remark. The com-
mittee refer to the decision of our K. E. G. C, that it is
right and proper to confer the Orders of Knighthood on
any number of applicants at one and the same time. They
say : " We know of no law opposed to this ruling, but it
cannot be denied that the ceremonies lose much of their
impressiveness when more than one applicant is received at
a time." We feel inclined to concur in this. Our very
worthy R. E. G. C. simply decided the question of law : he
did not recommend the exercise of the privilege allowed.
It certainly should be adopted only when great press of
business or emergency should require it. The committee
protest against any further changes in the uniform ; and as
to the proposed change in the titles of officers, they forcibly
say, " We see no necessity to make any further alterations,
which must necessarily entail changes on all of us, except
Ohio."
The officers elect are, Sir Nathan Fay Prentice, of Free-
port, R. E. G. C, and, of course, E. Sir Henry Collings
Kanny, of Chicago, was very properly re-elected G. K.
He was also again appointed chairman of the Committee
on Foreign Correspondence.
INDIANA.
The Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery met in
Indianapolis on April 5, 1864. There were present repre-
sentatives from five Commanderies, but one failed to report.
R. E. Grand Commander Bayless delivered the annual
address in his usual practical and straightforward style.
Referring to the eftects of the war upon the exercise of
30 «f
354 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Masonic principles and duties, he says : " In many conflicts
upon the battle-field, and while many of our brethren have
been confined as prisoners of war, the heaven-born princi-
ples of the Masonic institution have been so verified as to
subdue the heart of a contending foe, and cause him to ex-
tend the helping hand and administer relief to the fallen
soldier." He recommends that the several Recorders fur-
nish the Grand Recorder with a list of all Sir Knights of the
respective Commanderies who have entered the military
service of the United States.
Again we are without a report from the Committee on
Foreign Correspondence. We trust our Hoosier brethren
will appreciate the importance of this exchange of courte-
sies ; for " a letter timely writ is a rivet in the chain of
affection." R. E. Sir Sol. D. Bayless was again elected
Grand Commander, but declined to serve. Perhaps he
should be allowed exemption as a veteran, but we trust he
has not been disabled in the service. His great experience,
Christian virtues and Knightly valor make him one whom
the Order could ill afford to lose. A committee was ap-
pointed to prepare a suitable testimonial to be presented to
him, in token of the high appreciation the Grand Com-
mandery entertains of his services and worth.
Sir William Hocker, of Shelbyville, was elected R. G.
Grand Commander, and E. Sir Francis King, of Indian-
apolis, was re-elected Grand Recorder.
IOWA.
On June 6, 1864, at Des Moines, a Grand Commandery
was organized for the State of Iowa, by virtue of a warrant
from the Grand Encampment of U. S. Three Comman-
deries were represented at the organization, and a charter
was granted for a fourth. Statutes and regulations, and a
form of installation ceremony were adopted. Sir Theodore
Parvin was elected R. E. Grand Commander, and Sir W.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 355
B. Langridge, Grand Recorder. The Orders of Knight-
hood were conferred on eight Companions. The returns
exhibit one hundred and thirty names upon the rolls of the
several Commanderies. Amongst them we recognize some
distinguished names, which give assurance of great pros-
perity and usefulness. Sir Knights Langridge, Swafford
and Tuttle were appointed the Committee on Foreign Cor-
respondence.
So Iowa, with burnished shield and glittering spear and
unfurled banner, falls into line — the last column in our no-
ble army. All hail, Iowa! With helmets raised and
swords presented, we salute you. We welcome you in the
flush and vigor of your youth — in the fullness of your new
zeal. In the West, with its soil teeming with wealth — its
air pure and free, unrestrained by hills or forests — its land-
scape luxuriant in beauty, and bounded only by the blue
heavens, with the severe discipline of its pioneer life, we
look for vigorous and manly action. May the standard of
our Order — the sacred Cross — be held aloft with firm and
steady hands, and upon the rolling prairies of Iowa may
many true and trusty Knights gather around and march
under it, winning victories in the name and for the cause
of the blessed Immanuel, and be crowned on earth with the
flowers of their own blooming plains, and hereafter with
life eternal !
KENTUCKY.
June 9, 1864, was the time, and Covington the place, fixed
for holding the seventeenth Annual Conclave of the Grand
Commandery of Kentucky. But the representatives of
only two Commanderies were present, and as no quorum
was had, an adjournment was inevitable. Although no
business was transacted, the Sir Knights present partook
of a banquet prepared by the hospitality of Covington
Commandery, and in social pleasures sought to forget for a
356 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
time the dire calamities which overshadowed the nation,
and made so many seats in the Grand Commandery vacant.
We again extend to the Sir Knights of Kentucky our sin-
cere sympathy, and assure them that at the altar our pray-
ers have continually gone up for them and all who suffered
with them, and for a speedy return of the reign of the
Prince of Peace, to whom and to whose cause we have all
taken the oath of allegiance and been mustered into service
for life.
A special meeting of the Grand Commandery was held
in Louisville on October 19, 1864, at w^hich six Comman-
deries were represented. R. E. P. H. Jeffreys, Grand Com-
mander, delivered a short address, encouraging the Order
to full discharge of its duty. He says : " To espouse the
cause of her who is deprived of her earthly support — to
care for the bereaved ones — to watch over the great stan-
dard of moral truth, and to be humble yet courageous, re-
quire faithfulness on the part of every Sir Knight. There
is much to be done. In these days of devastation many
objects present themselves to our charity ; let us alleviate
their sorrow, and aid, as much as in our power lies, the
miseries of the present calamities." Words full of wisdom
and the spirits of Christianity ! May they animate all
our hearts and be exemplified in all our lives ! E. Sir W.
C. Munger, on behalf of the Committee on Foreign Corre-
spondence, gives a succinct synopsis of the doings of four-
teen Grand Commanderies, including Pennsylvania for
1863. Our proceedings for 1864 had not reached him.
A fitting tribute is paid to the memory of E. Sir Jno.
M'Crackin, who, at the age of eighty-three, like a sheaf
full of fruit and years, was gathered into the garner of the
Lord. He was G. T. for fourteen years.
As there was no meeting at the regular time, of course
the old officers retain their stations. R,. E. Sir P. H. Jef-
i
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 357
freys, D.D., is Grand Commander, and E. Sir W. C. Hun-
ger is Grand Recorder.
MAINE.
The Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery of this
state for 1864 met in Portland on May 3d. All four of
the Subordinate Commanderies had representatives present.
The R. E. Grand Commander, Sir A. B. Thompson, gave
an account of his stewardship ; or — to speak more techni-
cally— reported the operations and condition of his forces.
From him we learn that the finances are in good order.
So, we presume, the commissariat is well provided, quarters
and equipments in good condition. Another Camp was
located and the banner of the Cross erected in Bath. May
many enlist under it, and fight a good warfare! The
Grand Commander directs attention to the existing dissat-
isfaction in relation to the Grand Encampment of the
United States. His remarks do not make it very clear
whether he thinks the position of Massachusetts defensible
or not. He also bears testimony that " individual instances
of kind offices, on battle-field and in prison, teach us that
the soldier of the Cross can never forget his obligation to
his vows of fraternity." The report on Foreign Corre-
spondence was presented by Sir Knight J. J. Bell, and was
in his usual masterly style. He pays his respects to thirteen
Grand Commanderies. In his review of the proceedings
of Ohio and Massachusetts, he leaves no doubt of his own
allegiance, for he chides them for their continued rebellion
against the highest Templar tribunal in the land. The
proceedings of our Grand Commandery for 1863 are briefly
reviewed. Sir Knight Bell, being about to remove from
the State, was excused from further services as chairman
of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence, and a vote
of thanks was presented for his services for ten years. We
greatly regret to lose so valued a correspondent, but trust
358 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
that his light will soon break upon us from some other
quarter.
Sir Timothy J. Murray, of Portland, was elected G. C,
and E. Sir Ira Berry was re-elected G. R.
A special meeting of the Grand Commandery was held
on December 28, 1864, at w^hich the work of the Orders
was exemplified in the presence of a large number of
Knights.
MASSACHUSETTS AND RHODE ISLAND.
The reticence of this jurisdiction has heretofore. been the
subject of much wonder and regret. In our last report we
turned our eyes eastward and looked longingly for light ;
and now, we are rejoiced to say, it has come upon us in rich
effulgence, baptizing in beauty, and enlivening with the
warmth of its genial rays. First, we have a very ably
written, interesting and valuable pamphlet from the pen
of R. E. Sir Wm. S. Gardner, G. M., containing a defence
of " the Grand Encampment of K. T. and appendant
Orders of Massachusetts and Rhode Island ; its history,
edicts, past and present Grand Officers, and organizations
of its Subordinates." In addition to this, we are furnished
(for the first time since 1840) with the printed proceedings
of the annual, semi-annual and special assemblies of the
Grand Body. This is for the year 1864, in which are two
addresses by the distinguished Grand Master. A consider-
able portion of them is devoted to a discussion of the rela-
tionship existing between, and the rights and duties of, the
Grand Body of Massachusetts and Rhode Island and the
Grand Encampment of the United States. We shall have
occasion to speak of these views presently ; but just here
we must accord to R. E. Sir Gardner our unqualified praise
for the great research and patient toil wath which he has
collected so much of the history of Templarism, and for the
forcible style and calm, courteous and Knightly dignity
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 359
with which he presents his arguments and defends his
cause.
By their Constitution, the Grand Encampment of Massa-
chusetts and Rhode Island meets in October and May of
each year ; in October for the election of officers and gene-
ral business ; and in May for the exemplification of the
work and ritual, and other necessary business. We com-
mend this custom to our own and other Grand Com-
manderies. The semi-annual assembly was held on May
5, 1864, in Providence. Twelve Commanderies were repre-
sented— two new ones having been instituted since the pre-
vious meeting. An address was delivered, the work was
exemplified, some local business was transacted, and the Sir
Knights, after adjournment, made a formal pilgrimage to
the tomb of that very eminent and immortal Mason and
Knight Templar, Sir Thomas Smith Webb.
A special assemby was convened in Boston on October
14, 1864, for the purpose of assisting the Grand Lodge of
Massachusetts in laying the corner-stone of the new
Masonic Temple. Seven hundred and fifty-five Knights,
representing fifteen different Commanderies, were present,
panoplied in full armor, with their appropriate standards
and Beauseants, and with seven bands of music. M. E. Sir
B. B. French, G. M. of the Grand Encampment of the
United States, was present in full regalia, as were other
valiant and distinguished Knights. The lines were formed,
the column marched to Boston Common, various evolutions
were performed, and a most satisfactory inspection and re-
view was had. The occasion was a grand one, the display
of Knights Templar successful, proud, and memorable, be-
yond anticipation. So the foundations of the new Temple
were laid amidst the glad rejoicings of the Craft. May
there be many a faithful Zerubabbel eager to work at its
rebuilcling ; may it rise in beauty and grandeur until it shall
360 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
" Shine in the lustrous air, like sonne bright dream,
Wove by gay fancy from the morning beam;"
and may the holy vessels and sacred mementoes be restored,
and may many a weary pilgrim on life's highway find there
a grateful tent to shelter and refresh him, and a hallowed
shrine at which to offer up his prayers and seal his faith.
May " the glory of this latter house exceed the glory of the
former."
The fifty-ninth annual assembly of the jurisdiction was
held in Boston on October 28, 1864, at which fifteen Sub-
ordinate Commanderies were represented. A committee
reported in favor of severe condemnation of the publication
and indiscriminate sale in New York of the ritual of the
Order of Malta. We most cordially concur in the expres-
sion of disapproval of this, and of all else that tends to
make the doings of our Order familiar to those who have
never assumed its obligations and cannot appreciate its
beauties. They who would know and enjoy must enter in
at the door, and not climb up by the window.
M. E. Sir B. B. French, G. M. of Templars in the United
States, paid the Grand Commandery an ofiicial visit, and
was received with becoming honors. He installed the offi-
cers elect, and delivered an address, kind and conciliatory
in its spirit, and calculated to bring about a correct under-
standing and good feeling between the Grand Body of
Massachusetts and Rhode Island and the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States.
In the admirable address of G. M. Sir W. S. Gardner,
we are gratified to read that " the year which we close this
evening has eclipsed all the others which preceded it in the
history of this Grand Encampment in the universal inter-
est which Masons have shown in these Orders of Knight-
hood. Three new Encampments have been constituted, one
established under dispensation, while the petition of a large
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 361
number of Knights for a dispensation has been refused.
The same prosperity has attended the several Encampments
in the jurisdiction."
Keports were read by the D. G. M. and the G. C. Ap-
propriate resolutions were passed relative to the deaths of P.
G. Masters Sirs Jno. Barrett Hammatt and Ed. A. Kay-
mond.
M. E. Sir Wm. Sewell Gardner, of Lowell, was again
elected G. M., and R. E. Sir Solon Thornton, of Boston,
G. E.
MISSOURI.
The Grand Commandery of Missouri met for the fourth
time in St. Louis, on May 16, 1864. Three Commanderies
were represented ; the one at Lexington continues disorgan-
ized. This is but one of the footprints of war's desolating
march. While its track is strewn with devastated fields,
neglected gardens, blackened and charred walls of former
homesteads, abandoned academies and unfrequented
churches, it would be strange if our Order should escape
unharmed. But we hope the fires will soon be rekindled
upon the altar of Lexington Commandery, and all others
where it has been permitted to die out, and that hereafter
and for ever will ascend the grateful incense of hearts puri-
fied by suffering. That such will be the effect may be in-
ferred from the address of K. E. G. C. Belt. He says :
" Misfortunes and bereavements, even more surely than
success and prosperity, call our wandering thoughts and
aflfections to that pure and exalted Being — the Rock and
the support of every worthy Templar who puts his trust in
Him. In these I can trace, to-day, an additional tie of
devotion to the great Exemplar of Knightly virtues., who
died that we might live."
E. Sir Knight O'Sullivan, G. R., made a report on
Foreign Correspondence. The proceedings of nine Grand
31 Q.
362 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Commanderies came under his notice. Our own for 1863
received brief mention. The committee regret that the
apron was not adopted as part of the uniform of Knights
Templar. It is argued that inasmuch as a number of Knights
found refuge in Masonic Lodges after the suppression of the
Order of Knights Templar in France and England, and that
as Templarism was introduced and nurtured in this country
by the Lodges, gratitude should prompt us to wear the apron.
The committee ask triumphantly, "Is not the triangular
apron more appropriate as part of the costume than
shoulder-straps?" In our last report we expressed the hope
that there would be no more higgling about dress. This
incessant querulousness makes us appear like a society of
Flora M'Flimseys — exercised more about how w^e shall
look than how we should feel and act. Ours is a quasi-
military Order, and we cannot appreciate the propriety or
beauty of a soldier wearing the costume or carrying the
implements of an artisan.
In the following remarks we concur most heartily, with-
out knowing or caring whose corns are pinched : " If the
vSir Knights who attend the meetings of the Grand En-
campment could be made to believe that an undue desire
for office is both unknightly and unmasonic, and that the
possession of high places no more adds to the knowledge of
the possessor than does the possession of a copy of the Holy
Scriptures make a Christian, there would be spared the pain
of hearing of the course sometimes pursued by Sir Knights
to obtain office, for which, in the estimation of their
brethren, they Avere disqualified."
R. E. Sir Geo. W. Belt, of AVeston, was re-elected G. C.,
and E. Sir A. O'Sullivan, of St. Louis, was again elected
G. E,. A faithful officer and justly a2)preciated.
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
"VVe have received pamphlets containing the proceedings
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 363
of the Grand Commandery of New Hampshire for the
years 1861, '62, '63 and '64, thus bringing up its history
from the organization in 1860 to the present year. In 1861
there were delegates from five Commanderies ; an address
w^as delivered by Sir Daniel Balch, E. E. G. C, and some
local business was transacted. In 1862, all the Command-
eries were represented, and another neat and flowery address
was delivered by K. E. Sir Balch. The usual routine of
business was transacted, and E. Sir Albert R. Hatch was
chosen G. C, and E. Sir Horace Chase, G. R. There were
then two hundred and forty-three Knights in the State,
thirty-six having been created during the previous year.
In June, 1863, the Grand Commandery met, with repre-
sentatives from all the Subordinate Commanderies. A very
admirable address was delivered by Sir A. R. Hatch, R. E.
G. C. It sought to inculcate the true spirit of Christian
Knighthood. He earnestly recommends frequent inter-
change of friendly visitations amongst the several Com-
manderies, as calculated to promote most strongly the feel-
ings of hospitality, kindness and courtesy. The Committee
on Foreign Correspondence made a well-digested report,
discussing the various matters of interest in the Order, but
giving no synopsis of the doings of the several Grand Com-
manderies. On June 9, 1864, the fifth Annual Conclave
was held in Concord. All the Subordinate Commanderies
were present by their officers, and there were quite a num-
ber of visitors from the various Commanderies. R. E. Sir
A. E. Hatch regaled the assembly with an address, or ora-
tion rather, in his usual brilliant, glowing and eloquent
style. He refers to the earnest life of the early Knights,
their self-sacrificing devotion, their open-handed hospitality,
and their unfaltering courage, and seeks to inspire all of
the present day with the same high-souled chivalry. The
Committee on Foreign Correspondence, through E. Sir
364 HISTORY OF TPIE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Horace Chase, presented an excellent report of the pro-
ceedings of ten Grand Commanderies for 1863. Brief
notice is made of Pennsylvania. The committee regret
that no uniform system has been adopted whereby full
statistics of the condition and growth of the State Com-
manderies can be presented each year. They think the
suspension or expulsion of a Sir Knight by the Lodge to
which he belongs should not affect his standing in the Com-
mandery. We differ from our friend Chase, and shall give
the reasons of the faith that is within us.
Sir Jno. S. Kidder, of Manchester, was elected G. C, and
E. Sir Horace Chase, of Hopkinton, was properly re-elected
G. K.
NEW JERSEY.
The sixth Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery
of this State was held in Trenton on Thursday, September
15, 1864. Three Commanderies were represented. St.
Bernard, No. 2, it appears, has been stricken from the roll.
We had hoped that by this time she would have assumed
her old position in the ranks. The cause of her dereliction
is not stated. The total number of Knights reported as
members of the three Commanderies was 84 — a small band,
but gallant and true. B. E. G. C. Wilnor delivered a very
neat and brief address.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence review the
proceedings of nine Grand Commanderies, including Penn-
sylvania for 1863, and express regret at not receiving later
tidings from us and others. We trust they shall have no
occasion for similar complaint hereafter. The committee
do not like a decision of our late G. C, in reference to the
effect of the suspension of a Sir Knight, and the means of
reinstating him. Of this hereafter. The report is from the
pen of Sir Knight T. J. Corson, who was again appointed
chairman of the committee as a mark of appreciation of his
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 365
merits and fidelity. The whole proceedings were finished
in one session. Rather too hurried, brethren. Take more
time to mingle together, and a greater interest will be felt
and manifested. Sirs Isaac S. Buckalew and A. G. Gilky-
son were severally elected G. C, and each declined. This
we think improj^er. We hold it as a Masonic principle that
no man should seek or refuse office.
Sir Samuel Stevens, of Jersey City, was elected G. C, and
E. Sir Thos. J. Corson, of Trenton, was again elected G. R.
NEW YORK.
The fifty-first annual Conclave of the Grand Com-
mandery of New York was held in Brooklyn, on Septem-
ber 13 and 14, 1864. Representatives from twenty-three
Subordinate Commanderies were present, and although
several failed to report, it would be incorrect and unjust to
infer that Knighthood is languishing in the Empire State.
On the contrary, all the proceedings indicate the most
gratifying prosperity. With a roll of 1858 names of gal-
lant Knights, sworn to defend the sacred emblem of our
Order, and full of zeal in behalf of its glorious principles,
and animated and inspired by the hallowed memory of a
De Witt Clinton, a Cozier and a Tower, and by the bright
example and abiding faithfulness of a'Barnum, a Lathrop,
a Simons and a Priest, we need have no fears of the cause
languishing in that jurisdiction. R. E. G. C. Sir Orrin
Welch delivered a very eloquent address, wise in sugges-
tion, chaste in style, and Christian in spirit. From it we
regret to learn that the icy breath of the King of Terrors
has extinguished several tapers that were wont to burn
brilliantly around the Templar triangle. The taking off
of the venerable Grand Prelate, Salem Town ; of Dep. G.
C. Sir Wm. H. Burtis, and of P. D. G. C. Sir J. B. Yates
Somers, shows how " Death loves a shining mark." The
address refers in beautiful terras to this bereavement. We
31 *
^jQ() HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
also learn that the Masonic bodies of New York propose
erecting a monument to the memory of Sir Salem Town.
This will be alike creditable to the fraternity, and just to
the public worth and private virtues of the deceased.
Amongst the decisions of the year was one that, although
there is no provision of law regulating the interval to
elapse between the reception of the different Orders, it is
earnestly recommended that, except in case of emergency,
but one Order should be conferred upon any candidate on
the same day. We concur most earnestly in this sugges-
tion, and think it should receive the sanction and be the
rule of every Commandery. Honors too easily obtained
are apt to be too lightly esteemed. That is always most
precious which is purchased by continuous labor and heroic
struggle. It is also decided that a reconsideration of a
favorable ballot may be had by any Sir Knight desiring it.
This is in direct conflict with a decision of M. E. Sir B. B.
French, G. M. of the Grand Encampment of the United
States, that after a clear ballot, nothing except direct and
undoubted testimony of unworthiness can interpose to pre-
vent the conferring of the Orders. If any Sir Knight, of
his own volition, can have a reconsideration of a favorable
ballot, the case would then stand as if no ballot had been
taken, and a single Knight, without assigning a reason, can
prevent the conferring of the Orders. ^In view of this con-
flict of authority, we may ask, "Under which king,
Bezonian ?"
To say that the report of the Committee on Foreign Cor-
respondence was from the pen of E. Sir Jno. W. Simons is
to affirm that in language, thought and feeling it is a model
production. It criticises with just discrimination — analyzes
with keen sagacity — reproves without bitterness, and ap-
proves without partiality. The proceedings of twelve State
Grand Commanderies came under review ; and we have
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 367
also a very interesting account of the proceedings of the
Grand Conclave of the Royal Exalted Religious and Mili-
tary Orders of Masonic Knights Templar, in England and
Wales, and the colonial dependencies of the British Crown.
The committee express their profound gratification at the
resolution of the Grand Commandery of Connecticut to
acknowledge its allegiance to the Grand Encampment of
United States — not so much because the act accords
with their views of right as because it manifests a spirit of
magnanimity, always commendable. Massachusetts is ex-
horted to follow the example of Connecticut, and Vermont
is rebuked for her apparent hankering after the flesh-pots
of secession. The committee make very kind mention of
the Chivalry of Pennsylvania. They say : " The report on
Foreign Correspondence by Sir James H. Hopkins is one
of the ablest we have ever seen — courteous, discriminating
and sound : its conclusions commend themselves to every
thoughtful mind." We would be guilty of ingratitude and
affectation not to feel and say that we are highly honored
by this handsome compliment. Its author makes it doubly
prized. The Grand Lecturer presented a report of his
doings, which shows him to be a faithful and efficient offi-
cer, and that much good is accomplished by his visits and
instructions. We would be glad to see our own Grand
Commandery select some one worthy and well qualified,
having the time and disposition, to visit each Commandery,
and exemplify the work and impart instruction in the drill.
A very pleasant episode in the proceedings was the presen-
tation of an elegant Patriarchal cross to E. Sir Zenas C.
Priest, P. G. M. The presentation speech by Sir Jno. W.
Simons was neat and appropriate, and was responded to in
fitting and feeling terms by the recipient. R. E. Sir Orrin
Welch, of Syracuse, is Grand Commander, and Sir Robert
Macoy, of New York, is Grand Recorder.
368 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
OHIO.
The twenty-second Annual Conclave of Knights Templar
of Ohio was held in Cleveland on October 13, 1864, with
representatives from thirteen of the fifteen Subordinate
Commanderies present. R. E. Grand Commander Sir
Kent Jarvis gave a detailed account of his decisions and
general supervision over the affairs of his jurisdiction. He
announces in aj^propriate and feeling terms the death of
the Grand Prelate, and several other eminent Sir Knights.
He furnishes a tabular statement of all the Subordinate
Commanderies — their officers, and number enrolled; and
also a list of those who have been, or now are, in the army
or navy of the United States, showing quite a lengthy roll
of honor. A committee was appointed to make suitable
preparations for the meeting of the Grand Encampment of
the United States, which is to be held in Columbus in
September next. From the well-earned fame of the Sir
Knights of the Buckeye State we have no fears of any
stinted hospitality ; we doubt not the commissary's and
quartermaster's departments will be efficiently officered,
and all who attend will find comfortable quarters and
abundant rations, and a banquet fit for princes and rulers.
The Committee on the Relations with the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States reported the result of the con-
ference held in Washington City, and expressed the hope
that " hereafter, by a becoming regard on the part of the
respective bodies — National and State — each for the rights
and authority of the other, all disturbing elements may be
sedulously excluded, complete harmony restored, and a
spirit of Knightly courtesy cultivated amongst the mem-
bers of the Orders." We rejoice with our Ohio brethren
at the prospect of a speedy and harmonious adjustment of
all difficulties that have interfered with the peace, unity
and welfare of our Order. A resolution was unanimously
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 369
passed, instructing the delegates to the Grand Encampment
to endeavor to obtain a change of the present costume.
" Still harping on my daughter." Is there to be no end to
this girlish eye for new clothes ? Verily, some Sir Knights
seem much more anxious to wear a mantle and a cocked
hat than to win their spurs by a true and earnest life and
gallant Templar bearing, which can be accomplished in
any costume. Let the milliners and mantuamakers, the
Beau Brummels and Count D'Orsays, exercise themselves
about the cut of the coat and the shape of the hat ; but let
us wield our swords in the cause in which we have enlisted,
and follow the symbolic banner which bears the inscription
which should animate us all. This view seems to be enter-
tained by the Committee on Foreign Correspondence, who
administer a sly rebuke to those who cry for change.
R. E. Sir Kent Jarvis, from the Committee on Foreign
Correspondence, reported upon the doings of the Grand
Commanderies of eleven States. Our proceedings for 1863
are commented on, and a lance is hurled at our then Com-
mittee on Foreign Correspondence for their remarks upon
the disloyal attitude of Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
For 1865, Sir Herman Ely, of Elyria, is R. E. Grand
Commander, and E. Sir J. D. Caldwell, of Cincinnati, con-
tinues as Grand Recorder.
VERMONT.
The Grand Commandery of Vermont met on January
12, 1864. AW the Commanderies in the State — four in
number — were represented. R. E. Deputy Grand Com-
mander Butler, in his address — w^hich is very chaste and
appropriate — pays a glowing eulogy to the character of R.
E. Sir Knight Needham, the Grand Commander of the
State, who, full of years and honors, laid aside the cross to
wear the crown. Two other venerable Sir Knights — Web-
ster and Rolfe — had also been summoned fo the Grand
370 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Asylum above during the preceding year. The young
Knights of Vermont must meet the responsibility which
the death of their leaders devolves upon them. They have
our cordial sympathy. The address deplores the existence
of our national troubles, and very properly says : " The
discussion of the causes which led to our present condition,
and the best measures to be used to restore peace, belong
to other places than the Asylum of Christian Knighthood."
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence comment on
the proceedings of ten Grand Commanderies, but we regret
to observe that Pennsylvania is not of the number. We
are glad to see that Sir George M. Hall was again ap-
pointed chairman of the Committee on Foreign Correspon-
dence. He wields the pen of a ready writer.
R. E. Sir Samuel S. Butler, of East Berkshire, was
elected Grand Commander, and E. Sir John B. Hollen-
beck, of Burlington, was re-elected Grand Recorder.
WISCONSIN.
The fourth Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery
of Wisconsin was held in Milwaukee on January 6, 1864.
Six Commanderies were represented. The R. E. Grand
Commander delivered no address. This is the more to be
regretted, because, when Sir Knight Palmer speaks, his
utterances are full of thought and wisdom.
Sir Knight James H. Magoffin, chairman of the Com-
mittee on Foreign Correspondence, presented a very elabo-
rate, interesting and able report. He reviews the proceed-
ings of nine Grand Commanderies for the preceding year,
including a brief notice of Pennsylvania. He descants
upon the allegiance due to the Grand Encampment of the
United States — upon the effect of the suspension or expul-
sion of a Sir Knight by the Lodge or Chapter of which he
is a member, and argues that he thereby forfeits his position
in the Commandery.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 371
R. E. Sir H. L. Palmer, of Milwaukee, was again elected
Grand Commander, and E. Sir W. T. Palmer, of the same
place, was re-elected Grand Recorder.
GENERAL REMARKS.
Among the objects of general interest which have been
under discussion in the various Grand Commanderies, is
the question how far the standing of a Sir Knight in the
Commandery is affected by his suspension or expulsion from
the Blue Lodge to which he belonged. So simple a ques-
tion, and one doubtless which frequently arises, it may be
thought should have been definitely settled. As it is of
considerable importance, and has a practical bearing upon
a case now pending in our own jurisdiction, we have de-
voted some time to its examination, and beg leave to report
the result of our investigations. In Illinois it is thought
that suspension for non-payment of dues in Lodge or Chap-
ter should not affect the standing of a Knight Templar in
his Commandery. New Hampshire thinks it would be
wrong to deprive a Sir Knight of his Templar standing
without a trial, and argues that it would be as unjust to
strike from the roll for non-payment of dues as it would
be to debar from Masonic privileges because a judgment
had been entered against him in a court of justice, and that
the record of his suspension by the Lodge could only be
received as prima facie evidence. New^ Jersey seems to
concur in this position, and contends further that after sus-
pension for non-payment of dues the simple payment of
arrearages will restore the delinquent to full membership.
This is in conflict w^ith the decision of our Grand Com-
mandery, and, as we view it, in conflict with law and reason.
Suspension is a penalty imposed by the Lodge, Chapter or
Commandery for a violation of its by-laws, or for other
infraction of Masonic duty, and it would be very anoma-
lous to hold that the person deemed guilty of dereliction
372 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
of duty could relieve himself of the penalty without the
assent of the body by which he had been adjudged. Ken-
tucky thinks that a Master Mason should not be suspended
without a trial, and that suspension or expulsion where
there has been no trial is of no force. In Illinois, there is
a resolution of the Grand Commandery that suspension or
expulsion of a Knight Templar by Lodge or Chapter is
sufficient cause for striking his name from the roll of the
Commandery without trial or notice. In 1863 the R. E.
Grand Commander recommended that this resolution be
rescinded. A committee recommended a modification of
the resolution, so as to give the suspended or expelled Knight
a trial in the Commandery. This the Grand Commandery
refused to do, so the resolution stands. New York regards
it as the settled law of this country that suspension of a
Knight Templar by his Lodge is, ipso facto, a suspension by
the Commandery. Wisconsin, Missouri, Maine, and Cali-
fornia concur in this opinion, and support it by appropriate
arguments. Massachusetts also holds to this view ; and we
learn that in that jurisdiction, upon a receipt of a certified
copy of the resolution expelling a Knight from the Blue
Lodge to which he belonged, the Grand Commander of the
State issues his proclamation declaring the condemned per-
son debarred from all the privileges and benefits of Knight-
hood. R. E. Sir W. S. Gardner gives a very able exposi-
tion of the law, for which we are much indebted.
In our own State, P. R. E. Grand Commander Parke
decided on September 21, 1857, that "it is not necessary to
membership in the Commandery that a Sir Knight should
belong to a Blue Lodge or Chapter in Masonry." And on
June 2, 1858, he decided that "suspension or expulsion by
Lodge or Chapter after trial will not affect the standing in
a Commandery of a Sir Knight." This would be binding
and conclusive upon all Commanderies in this jurisdiction
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 373
if there was no higher authority in conflict. But on exam-
ination we find a decision of the highest Templar tribunal
in the land, which is so unequivocal that we are surprised
that there should have been any recent discussion of the
question. We can only account for any disagreement now
by supposing that the authority to which we refer has been
overlooked. M. E. Sirs William Blackstone Hubbard and
B. B. French, of the Grand Encampment of the United
States, decided that " the action of a Blue Lodge in sus-
pending or expelling a Master Mason who is a Knight
Templar should affect his standing in the Conimandery, and
no Templar can hold Masonic intercourse with a suspended
or expelled Master Mason." This decision is in accordance
with the doctrine laid down by the standard writers on
Masonic law. In Mackey's Lexicon it is said, " Expulsion
from a Blue Lodge involves expulsion from all the higher
degrees." The editor of the Freemason's Monthly Mag-
azine says : " The expulsion by a Lodge is ample ; the
effect of that being to suspend all his Masonic privileges."
Moore's Masonic Review holds that " expulsion from the
Blue Lodge cuts off Masonic fellowship in all other bodies."
But in Chase's Digest of Masonic Law it is laid down that
"expulsion by the Blue Lodge, expels, without further
action, from all the Masonic bodies with which he may be
connected — Chapter, Council, or Encampment." This being
clearly ascertained to be the law, it becomes us of Penn-
sylvania, and all other Templars, whatever may be our
individual opinions, to conform thereto. It occurs to us
that there should be some formal action by the Comman-
dery to show that the Sir Knight suspended or expelled by
the Blue Lodge is thereby deprived of his Templar stand-
ing. Whether, as in Massachusetts, it should be by proc-
lamation or edict of the Grand Commander, or by resolu-
tion of the Commandery upon receiving a certified copy of
82
374 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the action of the Lodge, is the better practice, we are un-
able to say, in the absence of any authority upon the sub-
ject. We commend this to the consideration of the Com-
mittee on Jurisprudence.
Another subject of considerable comment is the relation-
ship existing between the State Grand Commanderies and
the Grand Encampment of the United States. The juris-
dictions of Massachusetts and Ehode Island and Ohio alone
refuse to conform to the requirements of the Grand En-
campment as to the names of their Grand Officers and the
title of their Grand Body; and deny the power of the
Grand Encampment over the subject-matter. This has
caused all the other Grand Commanderies to reproach
those States with disloyalty, and has elicited some unkind
words and unpleasant feelings. To vindicate her position,
Massachusetts has published two addresses and an elaborate
history of the cause of the controversy, by R. E. Sir Wm.
S. Gardner. With an earnest desire to reach the merits of
the case, we have examined this matter with care and
patience, and we have arrived at the conclusion that the
organization of Templar bodies in this country has been
after the model of our government. We have the national.
State and local bodies, each exercising its appropriate
functions and performing its given duties. The several
Commanderies have jurisdiction over the individual
Knights ; the Grand Commanderies have control of the
various Subordinate Commanderies, and the Grand En-
campment has general supervision of the State Grand
Commanderies. The Grand Encampment was created by
the State Grand Commanderies, and has only such powers
as were delegated to it ; and inasmuch as the Grand Com-
manderies retained their sovereignty, the National Grand
Body cannot interfere in the local administration. They
are several and yet united, " distinct as the billows, yet one
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 375
like the sea." The resolutions adopted by the joint com-
mittee on behalf of the Grand Encampments of the United
States and of Ohio, met to adjust the difficulty with Ohio,
recognize this position to the fullest extent. M. E. Sir B.
B. French, G. M. of the United States, in an address to the
Grand Encampment of Massachusetts and Rhode Island,
in 1864, said: "I am one of those who concede to State
Grand Bodies supreme power within their jurisdiction."
This being the case, we are constrained to admit that there
is cause for complaint when the power is assumed by the
Grand Encampment to dictate what shall be the titles of
the officers and what by-laws shall be adopted by the State
Grand Commanderies. As well might Congress declare that
all aldermen in the State should be called justices of the
peace, and that a city or borough ordinance for internal
police should not be enforced. It is true, provision is made
whereby the Constitution of the Grand Encampment may
be amended. But Massachusetts contends that there is a
limitation to this power of amendment, and that no amend-
ment which takes from the powers of State Grand Com-
manderies is valid, unless all the Grand Commanderies
assent to it. This is a strange doctrine to be uttered in
Massachusetts, but doubtless it is intended by those who
advocate it to limit its application to Masonic bodies. Be-
lieving thus, that State refused to recognize the amendments
made in 1856, by which the titles of the officers and the
style of the organizations of the State bodies were changed
by the Grand Encampment.
But while we thus do full justice to our friends on the
sea-girt shore, by admitting that their position is defensible
in law, we would suggest in all kindness that they have the
power to make Templarism more uniform, to perfect the
symmetry of our organization, by conforming to the names
so universally adopted. For the sake of harmony and the
376 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
general good of Knighthood, surely our gallant friends will
yield ; especially when they make no sacrifice of principle
or right by doing so. A charter is never lost by a legiti-
mate change of name of the corporation ; your old and
valued banners need not be destroyed ; your history cannot
be blotted out nor your identity lost. So, Sir Knights, may
we not hope soon to hear that w^e are all known by the same
name, as we all profess the same faith ? It may bethought
strange that Massachusetts should so strenuously object to
a change of names and titles, when it is remembered that
the Grand Body whose history she has so carefully preserved,
and in which she feels so much pride, has made no less than
five changes in its corporate name; and in 1816 changed
the title of several of its officers, and also that of the pre-
siding officer of Subordinate Commanderies from Grand
Master to Grand Commander. This little scrap of history
takes away somewhat from the pathetic affection with which
they profess to cling to and regard as unalterable the old
names and titles. But w^e leave the pretensions of Massa-
chusetts to the prestige of having the first Grand Com-
mandery organized in America, and the vindication of
Pennsylvania, to our own Historiographer, in whose ability
and fidelity our cause will not suffer.
It has been suggested in Illinois that there should be a
uniform time for holding the Annual Conclaves of the
several Grand Commanderies. This meets our cordial ap-
proval. There should be a regular Templar year, as there
is a Masonic year. It would greatly facilitate the foreign
correspondence, which now is very irregular ; it would keep
our statistics more accurate and satisfactory, and be greatly
to the advantage and convenience of the Order.
We cannot close our rejDort without congratulating all
Sir Knights, everywhere, upon the return of peace to our
too long distracted country. As the avowed followers of the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 377
Prince of Peace, we liail this event with peculiar joy.
Through the starless night of four weary years we have
been tossed and driven by the billows and storm of war, but
now the daylight dawneth, the clouds roll away, the winds
abate, the waves subside, we find a resting-place on a lofty
Ararat, and God's beautiful bow of promise is again thrown
across the heavens as a token and a pledge that we shall
have war no more. Again the tender buds of hope and
affection may burst into beauty and fragrance, unscorched
by the breath of passion and unchilled by worldly coldness.
The death-struggle of the nation is ended, and America
comes from the conflict, all bruised and scarred and bloody,
it is true ; but when the dust and smoke of the contest shall
be washed from her face, and her garments shall be cleansed
of the battle stains, we have no fear but she will again take
her place as the proudest queen amongst the nations of the
earth. This grand, auspicious, glorious event brings its
lesson and its duties. Throughout this broad land, alas!
how many hearts are bereaved, how many hearthstones
desolate ! On almost every door-post there is the stain of
blood; not, as with ancient Israel, to mark the houses where
death should not enter, but as the sad traces left by the
Destroying Angel as he hurried on his melancholy mission.
Here is a wide field for the exercise of the pure principles
of our holy Order. In humble imitation of our blessed
Immanuel, we should relieve the needy, dry the tears of
the mourning, bind up the wounds of the suffering, comfort
the disconsolate, and encourage the desponding, and thus
protect "innocent maidens, destitute widows and helpless
orphans." But our duty ends not then. The Christian re-
ligion is the especial object of our care. Its pure doctrines
are to be exemplified in our lives. It teaches gentleness
and charity and brotherly kindness. To be faithful to its
precepts, we must root out all malice from our hearts, curb
32 *
378 HISTORY OF TPIE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
our passions, and feel and manifest that charity of opinion
Avhich is nobler than mere liberality of purse, and " which
suffereth long, and is kind ; is not easily provoked ; thinketh
no evil ; endureth all things." It is not manly, not
Knightly, not Christian, to exalt over the humiliation of a
brother, or even to cherish the recollection of his errors.
Instead of irritating old wounds, let us rather pour oil into
them, and hope that they will so thoroughly heal as to leave
not even a scar as an ugly remembrancer of the past.
And now, as the emblem of our nationality is unfurled on
every breeze in unsullied beauty, without a stripe erased or
a single star obscured, let us stamp upon it the symbol of
our faith ; and with it as the banner of the Cross, let us
struggle and pray that America may soon accomplish her
mission in the evangelization of the world !
Courteously submitted :
James H. Hopkins,
For the Committee.
Tenth Report oj the Committee on Foreign Correspondence,
read before the R. E. Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania,
by Sir James H. Hopkins, Jime, 1866.
To the R. E. Grand Commander, Offi,cers and Sir Knights of
the Grand Commandery of the Knights Templar of Penn-
sylvania :
In our last annual report upon Foreign Correspondence
we took a welcome occasion to congratulate all those bound
to us in the bonds of Christian Knighthood upon the fact
that our Grand Commander, the Prince of Peace, was once
more waving His banner in triumph over all the land. We
have now a more realizing sense of the magnitude of the
event and of the especial pleasure it brings to us as Knights
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 379
Templar. The wall of fire with which the South was then
girt about, and which was an effectual bar to friendly
intercourse, has disappeared ; grim lines of fortifications
have been dismantled and abandoned ; bristling cordons of
bayonets are seen no more ; and Commanderies, Avhose
voices were silent or drowned by the w41d clangor of arms,
are now heard mingling with ours in the glad hallelujah to
our common Lord and Master. If the renewal of the friend-
ship of Darius and Zerubbabel was an event worthy of being
commemorated for ever, much more should this restoration
of fraternal intercourse be celebrated with becoming joy.
Your committee have endeavored to open communica-
tion with all the Grand Commanderies in this country, and
are much gratified, as a result of their efforts, in being able
to present for your consideration the following synopsis of
the doings of nineteen State Grand Bodies — being all in
existence but California — and also of the General Grand
Encampment of the United States.
ALABAMA.
Taking the Commanderies in alphabetical order, our first
salutation is wafted by a balmy Southern breeze from the
rich savannas that are washed by the distant Gulf. We
have been kindly furnished by E. Sir E. M. Hastings with
the proceedings of the Grand Commandery of Alabama for
the years 1862-3-4 and 5, thus bridging over the dark
chasm of four years. We don't propose to look closely into
past transactions, to criticise expressions or sentiments
induced by circumstances past and gone, but to see what
feelings are now entertained and to listen to the present
utterances. What may have transpired while clouds ob-
scured our view matters not now ; the eclipse is over, and
Alabama, as one of the stars in our Templar constellation,
shines and sparkles with beauty and brilliance.
The address of the R. E. Grand Commander opens thus :
380 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
" Since last we assembled great political events have tran-
spired ; the cloud of war, which overshadowed our country
for the last four years, and deluged our soil in the best
blood of the land, has passed away, and while we, in com-
mon with our countrymen, have suffered disappointment,
bereavement and loss, we may nevertheless rejoice in the
restoration of peace and the return of those happy times
when we may greet our brethren Sir Knights from whom
we have been so long separated by the iron hand of Time."
He recommends the appointment of a Grand Lecturer, for
the commendable purpose of establishing a uniformity of
work. He also recommends "The Templar's Tactics" by
Sir G. Wingate Chase. His remarks upon the proper
qualifications for the Orders show a due appreciation of the
dignity, honor and reputation of Knighthood. He says :
" Here the strictest morality and Knightly courtesy ought
to meet ; and any Companion who has appeared incapable
of these ought not to expect admission among us."
The proceedings and the returns of the Subordinate Com-
manderies indicate gratifying prosperity. Two new Com-
manderies have recently been established. We shall rejoice
to see all the waste places of the South blossoming with new
life, and the banner of our Order gathering the purest and
best under his folds.
co:nnecticut.
The address of the R. E. Grand Commander announces
the death of P. G. M. Sir Horace Goodwin, a veteran in
the Masonic army, whose steadfastness and fidelity are left
as a legacy to inspire us all. K. E. Sir W. R. Higby made
it his duty as well as his pleasure to visit all the Com-
manderies under his command, but one; and to inspect and
review the lines and exemplify the work. He objects to
the practice of conferring the Orders on two at the same
time.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 381
Sirs A, G. Mackey, of Charleston, and A. T. C. Pierson,
of St. Paul, visited the Grand Commandery during its
session, which was a pleasant episode in the routine of
business.
An amendment to the by-laws was adopted, prohibiting
the conferring of the Orders upon more than one candidate
at a time. AVe feel little, if any, inclination to oppose this,
although the practice in our own State is different. We
have heretofore remarked that much of the solemnity and
impressiveness of the ceremonies is lost by permitting more
than one to be received at a time. We doubt much
whether this should be departed from to accommodate
candidates. The true theory of Knighthood is, that it is
an honor to be won, and not to be demanded.
A by-law was adopted making the Royal and Select
Master degrees a prerequisite to the Orders. We consider
this an unauthorized requirement, not sanctioned by the
Grand Encampment of the United States.
The E. Grand Recorder, Sir E, G. Storer, presented a very
full, fair and frank report on Foreign Correspondence, con-
densing the proceedings of fourteen Grand Commanderies,
and making ample and friendly notice of us. He says
this is probably his last report. We hope not. His
pleasant and genial face would be much missed amongst
our ^^ foreign relatioiis." In speaking of changes of the
Ritual, &c., he very pointedly and truthfully says : " I
formed the opinion many years ago that what is new in
Masonry is not Masonry at all."
ILLINOIS.
The address of the Right Eminent Sir Nathan Fay
Prentice was very brief, announcing the death of Eminent
Sir W. W. Mitchell, Inspector General ; cautioning Com-
manderies against growing too rapidly ; and announcing
that he had granted dispensations to establish four new
382 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Commaiideries. The Committee on Foreign Correspond-
ence, of which R. E. Sir H. C. Ranney is chairman, pre-
sented an elaborate and able review of the proceedings of
seventeen Grand Commanderies. His views upon the im-
portance of maintaining the Grand EncamjDment of U. S.,
and of establishing a uniform system of tactics and drill,
are supported with earnestness and sound argument.
E. Sir C. B. Stebbius, of Peoria, was appointed chairman
of Committee on Foreign Correspondence.
INDIANA.
R. E. Sir Wm. Hacker delivered his address as Grand
Commander, which gives an account of his official acts,
interspersed with several paragraphs felicitating himself
and his Grand Commandery on the fact that they have
refused to comply vrith some of the regulations of the
Grand Encampment of U. S., and speaking very defiantly
of its authority. As a specimen of the style and spirit, we
extract his reply to the question, whether it is the duty of
the Knights of Indiana to equip themselves in the costume
adopted by the Grand Encampment of U. S. : " To this
inquiry I answered, No : the Grand Commandery of the
State of Indiana is the highest and only source of authority
in Templar Masonry within her territorial limits, and no
Subordinate Commandery, or any member thereof, can
know any other authority, except through her. The
Grand Commandery of Indiana having as yet taken no
action in regard to the new costume, the dress of the
Templar in this State remains as it always has been."
The report on Foreign Correspondence is by the same Sir
Knight, and every page of it bristles with lances, touched,
we fear, with venom, hurled at the mother of that Grand
Commandery. Of that, more anon. Two new charters
were issued, and the location of one Commandery changed.
A special committee, appointed on the suggestion of the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 383
Grand Commander, reported, amongst other things, that
should any one be found in Indiana teaching or practising
any other ceremonies or rituals than those authorized by
that Grand Commandery, he shall be promptly suspended or
expelled from the Order. The M. E. Grand Master of the
U. S. had better go around Indiana in his travels, or he
may be stripped of his spurs by the doughty Hoosiers.
A pleasing diversion from the proceedings was the pre-
sentation of a watch to P. G. C. Bayless by order of the
Grand Commandery.
The proceedings of sixteen Grand Commanderies pass
under the scalpel of R. E. Sir Wm. Hacker. In Illinois
he finds the bug-bear of innovation to vex him, and boldly
affirms that as to dress they of Indiana are perfectly uncon-
cerned what may be adopted, or how often it may be
changed ; they will adhere to their old Maltese ritual and
dress. To Maine he says that the Grand Encampment
falsely arrogates to herself priority of organization, and
claims to be the creator, when in fact but the creature, of
Grand Subordinate Commanderies, and defiantly declares
that they will not " become a mere vassal of such a vacilla-
ting organization." To Missouri he protests that they
will wear the apron : and " the more it is sneered at, the
more we will love it." In reply to the comments of New
Hampshire as to his treatment of the Grand Encampment,
he courteously says that he has '• taken the heast by the
beard, and often heard him bray fully as loud as he is now
doing from his fastnesses in the Granite Hills." Ohio fur-
nishes occasion for further ebullition of bile. He speaks
of the Grand Encampment as " arrogating," " dictating,"
of her " whims and caprice," " vacillating," " absurd as-
sumptions," &c. He tells Vermont that the Grand En-
campment is "superfluous." To Wisconsin the explicit
declaration is made, " We of Indiana claim that the State
384 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Grand Body is the highest and only source of authority
within its jurisdiction, and has the sole and only right to
make laws, regulations, &c., which those within the juris-
diction are bound to obey."
After all this we may well pause to ask if the Grand
Commandery of Indiana has a charter ? If so, what
authority granted it? Was R. E. Sir Wm. Hacker ever
installed as Grand Commander? If so, what obligation
did he take ? These questions frankly answered will dispel
all this vaporing which we have quoted.
Sir Knight Hacker thinks we did injustice to Indiana in
our report in 1864. We said of a report by a special com-
mittee, " They are glad that some of the decisions of the
M. E. Grand Master were suppressed ; glad that the costume
was changed, and yet don't like the change, don't like the
chapeau, prefer the three-cornered hat, don't like the buff
gauntlets, prefer black f I don't like the proceedings in re-
gard to the Order of Malta, although they admit that the
new arrangement corresponds with their own constitution
and custom. We fear our good friends are inclined to be
captious and querulous." In reply to this it is said, "With
the exception of what is inferred by what he says in regard
to the chapeau and gauntlets, the whole is a creature of his
own imagination. The committee of Indiana neither said
nor meant any such things as he has imputed to them.
That they could say, as they did, that they knew nothing
about the new ritual of the Order of Malta, and then * ad-
mit that the new arrangement corresponded with our own
constitution and custom,' is a stretch of imagination."
This serious charge we cannot pass in silence. We proceed
to prove our statements by extracts from the report referred
to : " Your committee are not much surprised to learn that
many of the decisions of the M. E. Grand Master on the
law and usage of the Order, as reported by him to the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 385
Grand Encampment, had been suppressed. . . . Your
committee are much pleased to learn that that excuse for a
Templar costume adopted in Chicago in 1859 was repudi-
ated. . . . The costume adopted in lieu of the one re-
jected your committee find but little to object to, except
that they do not like the chapeau ; we also prefer black to
bufi" gauntlets. . . . The Order of Malta having always
been recognized with us as a constitutional degree, your
committee hope it may ever remain so." Our remarks
upon the Order of Malta had no reference to the ritual :
simply to the position of this Order as following that of the
Templar. \V^e trust our Hoosier Fratres will be convinced
that we did them no wrong, and intended none ; and if our
comments seem harsh, take them in a Pickwickian sense ;
and take a box of Seller's Liver Pills, sugar-coated, to re-
move their surplus bile, and let us strive to cultivate
friendly and Knightly feelings, rather than worry ourselves
by fancied injuries and usurpations.
IOWA.
The address of G. C. Sir T. S. Parvin is very brief, but
from it we learn that Knighthood is taking root firmly and
surely in the rich prairies.
We are surprised to observe that the Dep. Grand Com-
mander is an appointed and not an elective officer, and that
he ranks below the Grand Captain General in Iowa. Our
Western brethren are clearly wrong in this ; the very title
of the office shows where the holder of it should rank. In
the absence of the Grand Commander his powers and com-
mand are deputed; his Deputy's orders would be obeyed by
Generalissimo and Captain General, and he should rank
them. We think also he should be elective — that the body
to be governed by him should have a voice in his selection.
The Grand Recorder, Sir W. B. Langridge, presented the
report on Foreign Correspondence, reviewing the doings of
33 B
386 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
fourteen Grand Commanderies, including a brief but com-
plimentary notice of us as we appeared in 1864. The con-
clusion of his report is very spicy and sprightly, and very
bold withal. The Grand Encampment of the United States
is unmercifully pummeled by her youngest stripling. He
wants the Grand Body abolished, and a resolution was
offered and passed instructing their representatives to vote
for a dissolution of said Grand Encampment. Verily, this
yearling had better tarry awhile at Jericho, until his beard
be grown, before he undertakes such an encounter. We
mean this in all kindness, friend Langridge. You must not
so soon forget your installation vows. Strive to remedy the
evils of the Grand Encampment, and we will aid you with
all our power, but do not undertake to overturn it.
We see that after an adjournment the Grand Command-
ery was called to labor, which is not Knightly : nor is their
practice of voting by ayes and nays.
KENTUCKY.
R. E. Sir P. H. Jeffreys, D.D., L.L.D., Grand Comman-
der, delivered a brief address, but it was full of grateful
acknowledgments to the Author of all good for the return
of peace and its attendant blessings — of wise admonition,
sage counsel, and hope-inspiring. Knightly sentiments.
The report on Foreign Correspondence is as usual from
the pen of E. Sir Munger, Grand Recorder. It is a
synopsis, very accurate and carefully prepared, of the pro-
ceedings of sixteen Grand Commanderies. The sentiments
and feelings which pervaded our Grand Commandery are
portrayed by copious extracts from the address of our
Grand Commander and from our report on Foreign Corre-
spondence for 1864.
AVe observe in the appendix Record monuments to three
Sir Knights whose pilgrimage, warfare and penance are
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 887
ended, but we find no mention of the fact in the proceed-
ings.
LOUISIANA.
The second Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery
of this State seems to have been a running one ; commen-
cing February 17, 1865, adjourning until the 26th, and
holding another adjourned meeting on March 3d.
Death has made inroads upon the limited number of
Knights, and carried away three of its valiant and honored.
E. Sir J. H. Holland, Grand Prelate, has gone to minister
at the altar washed by Siloam's brook. E. Sir William
Emerson has also gone to lay at the throne of Immanuel
his trophies won by fidelity and zeal in Lodge, Chapter,
Council and Commandery. Added to these, E. Sir Hosea
Edwards, Grand Treasurer, has been called to the settle-
ment of his final account. Appropriate reference is made
to these vacancies in the ranks by the R. E. Grand Com-
mander, and by resolutions adopted and by Record Monu-
ments.
There is no report on Foreign Correspondence, but the
Grand Recorder acknowledges the receipt of the proceed-
ings of many Grand Commanderies. Several of them,
how^ever, including those of Pennsylvania, are as old as
1860. We trust that long ere this our far-away friends
have received the subsequent chapters of our history.
An unpleasant difiiculty occurred between Indivisible
Friends Commandery and one of its members, w^hich has
been happily adjusted. It elicited from the Grand Com-
mander a decision that an Eminent Commander may call
meetings without notice to such members as he may deem
likely to prove unruly. We very much doubt the correct-
ness of this decision. The powers of an Eminent Com-
mander are great — great enough to prevent disorder and
punish the refractory when the offence is committed — but to
388 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
prejudge, condemn and exclude seems beyond the stretch
of his power.
We are glad to welcome Louisiana to the fold of the
faithful. Although widely separated, we feel closely bound.
The rills that dash from our mountain sides meet and min-
gle and roll into rivers, which, uniting at our Western me-
tropolis, bear away the products and handiwork of the
Keystone State and land them safely at the Crescent City ;
so the ties of commerce bind us closely, but the mystic tie
more closely still.
MAINE.
It is worthy of remark and of imitation that there were
full representations from all the Commanderies at the last
Annual Conclave of this State.
The address of R. E. Grand Commander Sir T. J. Mur-
ray was brief, pointed and business-like. He holds that
although an Eminent Commander may open his Comman-
dery for work with the aid of Sir Knights of other juris-
dictions, yet to transact business there must be present in
the Asylum nine members of the Commandery.
Charters were granted to form two new Commanderies,
showing a gratifying increase of interest and prosperity in
Templarism down near sunrise.
E. Sir J. H. Drummond, the very efficient chairman of
the Committee on Foreign Correspondence, presented a
well-digested review of the doings of thirteen Grand Com-
manderies. He writes clearly, cogently and pleasantly ;
his views are deliberately taken and ably sustained ; he is
opposed to any other change of titles, and in favor of en-
forcing obedience to the Grand Encampment. He is in
favor of making the Order of Malta a constitutional one,
and giving it the second place. He contends that all
amendments to the constitution of the Grand Encampment
should receive the approval of a majority of the Grand
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 389
Commanderies to make them binding. In all of these
positions, so ably supported, we cordially concur.
Sir John J. Bell was for many years the chairman of
Foreign Correspondence in Maine ; but like Elijah he de-
parted [we don't mean that he went up in a chariot of fire,
or went up in any other way, or went down, or any other
place, except that he went out of the State of Maine], and
his mantle has fallen on most worthy shoulders. From the
south-west angle we salute you, Sir Knight Drummond.
MASSACHUSETTS AND RHODE ISLAND.
We have before us an interesting pamphlet containing
an abstract of the proceedings of the Grand Commandery
of this jurisdiction at three special, the semi-annual and the
annual sessions for 1864-5. The special sessions were for
the purpose of constituting new Commanderies and install-
ing their officers, and each was the occasion of a very
instructive and entertaining address by R. E. Sir William
Sewall Gardner, all of which we would be glad to copy did
time and space permit.
The semi-annual session was held in Boston on May 5,
1865, that being the sixtieth anniversary of the organiza-
tion of their Grand Commandery. It was a most interest-
ing event in her history, and one calculated to awaken all
her pride as she looked back over threescore years of
vicissitudes, and through them all could see her banner
floating proudly without a stain. But the retrospect causes
emotions of grief at the vacant chairs — the extinguished
tapers. The R. E. Grand Commander laid a chaplet on
the tomb of E. Sir Isaac Decatur Gibbons, George A.
French, stricken down while in command, and P. Grand
Commander Sir J. R. Bradford, who, at the ripe age of
seventy-five, went to enjoy the rewards that await the faith-
ful Templar.
The annual Conclave was held in Boston on October 27,
33 *
390 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
1865. The address of R. E. Sir William S. Gardner
recommends that the title of Commander be changed, so as
to conform to the requirements of the Grand Encampment
of the United States. We hail this as a very auspicious
circumstance, and trust that it may be part of our good
brother's epitaph — not to be needed for many years to
come — that he was instrumental in perfecting the unity of
our Order.
The proceedings give us reports from the D. G. C, G. G.
and G. C. G., which show that those offices are not mere
sinecures.
They have no Committee on Foreign Correspondence,
which we regret ; and regret still more that they regard the
reports of such committees generally as " mischievous."
Those portions of the address of E,. E. Sir Gardner, which
labor so earnestly to establish the claim of Massachusetts
to the distinction of being the oldest Grand Body in the
United States, are so ably and satisfactorily answered by
our Historiographer that no further comments are needed
from us in this connection. But while our New England
friends are boasting of their antiquity, of the uniformity of
their -work, and their resistance to all changes, we remark
that " St. John's Encampment retains many old forms and
ceremonies, which have become obsolete in most, if not all,
the other Subordinates ;" that at Milford Encampment
" the ritual in use is somewhat different from our estab-
lished work," while the costumes adopted or used in the
various Subordinates appear to be regulated by the whim
or caprice of each. We heartily concur in all that our dis-
tinguished brother says against innovations, but where such
diversity exists there must be some change if we would
have uniformity. We like to see new recruits flocking to
our standard, but such an increase very properly calls forth
the suggestion from the Grand Commander that there
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 391
should be a limit put to the number of Knights a Com-
raandery may create in a single year, and to the number
upon whom the Orders may be conferred at one time.
MICHIGAN.
We have received from this State a pamphlet containing
the proceedings of its Grand Commandery for the years
1862-3-4-5. Heretofore we have been favored with
merely a printed slip containing the names of the Grand
Officers and a meagre outline of the transactions. We are
gratified by the interesting matter contained in this full
history of the Order in Michigan, as well as by the indica-
tion it gives of increased prosperity.
The address of R. E. Sir Benjamin Porter, G. C, at the
last Conclave, is very brief, but pointed.
It was resolved that hereafter all motions be decided by
yeas and nays, instead of the usual mode adopted by
Knights Templar. Better adhere to our peculiar and dis-
tinguishing practice, brethren : it is quite as convenient.
It was ordered that twenty-five dollars be appropriated
to purchase a suitable jewel, sword, silver pitcher, or pair
of goblets, for the P. R. E. G. C.
Charters were issued for the organization of three new
Commanderies.
The report on Foreign Correspondence expresses a sensi-
tiveness at our allusion to their omitting to print their pro-
ceedings. Our good brothers will accept the assurance that
our remarks were prompted solely by the regret we felt at
not hearing and knowing more concerning them. We are
very glad to see the treasury abundantly supplied, and hope
it may be inexhaustible.
MISSOURI.
The fifth Annual Conclave was presided over by V. E.
D. G. C, in the absence of the Grand Commander. The
302 ITLSTOr.Y OF THE KNIGHTS TP:MPLAII.
attendance was small and the proceedings meagre. No
annual address was delivered.
E. Sir A. O'Sullivan, G. R., presented the report on
Foreign Correspondence. The proceedings of only eight
States were received, and Pennsylvania was not one of the
number ; which we regret, and are unable to account for,
inasmuch as we certainly made our bow and sent our salu-
tations. In speaking of the Grand Encampment, Sir
Knight O'Sullivan discourseth thus : " It was an evil day
for Templar Masonry when Jesuitism was introduced into
the governing body which met at Hartford in 1856." He
adds some other remarks not in the best spirit, and whose
point we do not perceive.
We regret to notice that Lexington Commandery, No. 3,
has surrendered its charter. The hope we expressed a year
ago in reference to it has not been realized, and it is painful
to us to record the destruction of one of the lighthouses of
Masonry.
E. Sir A. O'Sullivan, G. R., of St. Louis, was again
appointed chairman of Committee on Foreign Correspond-
ence and Grand Lecturer. Our Missouri brothers make
the most of their good material.
NEW HAMPSHIRE
Does not send us her proceedings for 1865, but we have
a note from E. Sir Horace Chase, her G. R., informing us
that the proceedings for 1865 and 1866 will be printed
together after the Conclave in September next.
NEW JERSEY.
Our little neighbor across the Delaware has but a small
number of Knights, but many of them have zeal enough to
win our affections. The attendance at the last Conclave
was not as large as it should have been ; about half of the
Grand Officers were present, and half of the Commanderies
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 393
were represented. The Grand Commander delivered an
address decidedly ornate and rhetorical. Its spirit elicits
our warm approval, and its style our admiration. He
dwells at some length upon the obligations which a return
of peace have brought to all Sir Knights, and says : " The
work still to be done is one in which we may and ought to
participate ; the wound left in the hearts of the people, as
a result of the strife, cannot be too speedily healed for the
happiness of our brethren. In this blessed work we can
take a part. Let our words, then, be words of peace and
conciliation ; let our deeds be acts of charity and pure
beneficence." That is the key-note which will awaken
harmonious sympathy in every heart which realizes the
genius and spirit of Templarism.
One of the decisions of the Grand Commander, and only
one, we must take exception to ; that is, where he holds that
a Commander has no right to declare a second ballot, the
first being declared clear. He certainly has power, upon
proper cause shown, to refuse to confer the Orders upon an
unworthy person, who may, by inadvertence, have received
a favorable ballot ; and we think it equally clear that by
virtue of his high powers he may direct a re-ballot, so the
records will not show the election of an undeserving one.
The Grand Commander decided that a Commandery may
excuse a Sir Knight from voting, and that a petition may
be withdrawn before ballot. Both of these decisions were
dissented from by the Committee on Jurisprudence, and
were sustained by only a majority in the Grand Comman-
dery.
The drill and tactics of Sir Orrin Welch, of New York,
were adopted to be used in that State.
Our estimable friend E. Sir Thomas J. Corson compiled
the Foreign Correspondence, and of course did it secundum
artem. The Doctor is accustomed to dissecting, and he
R*
394 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
uses his literary scalpel with facility and skill. Eleven
Grand Commanderies came under his hand; he heals where
he can, and sloughs off where remedies are useless. Penn-
sylvania receives particular and very kind notice. We
hide our blushes while reading what he says of us as a
committee. He recurs to his visit at our last Annual Con-
clave ; dwells upon our hospitality, and makes the land of
peaches and sweet potatoes dry and hungry over the recital
of what he saw — not what he drank or ate? In his eyes —
or mouth rather — Jersey cider is milk-sop compared to
Pennsylvania malt. We are very glad that the visit of
himself and companions was so agreeable, and are very
sure it gave us equal pleasure. Sir Knight Corson pro-
mises, if alive, to be with us at the present Conclave. We
have inquired for him, and looked for his genial face in
vain. AVe hoped to have met him just here, where malt is
found in its virgin purity; where it flows from the hydrants
and gushes from the pumps. But he answers not to our
anxious call. Shall we write his epitaph; or shall we wait
another year and see him in our Western metropolis, where
also malt is abundant and excellent, and where Mononga-
hela was discovered by early explorers after treasures.
NEW YORK.
The opening address of R. E. Grand Commander Sir
Orrin Welch was in his usually happy vein. We cannot
find room for a single extract which fully and eloquently
expresses our duties in the present hour, and w^hich we
would gladly lay before you if we could. Amongst the
decisions it is announced that a Red Cross Knight, losing
an arm or leg, is not thereby debarred from receiving the
remaining Orders; that it is the duty of the E. C. to respect
the objections of a sitting member to the admission of a
visitor ; that the requirement of good standing necessary to
a candidate for the Orders does not imply active member-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 395
ship in Lodge or Chapter, but does imply that he shall be
under neither charges nor discipline.
We have an admirable review of the proceedings of
fifteen State Grand Bodies by K. E. Sir John W. Simons,
in which Pennsylvania receives ample justice. Our friend
wields a trenchant weapon, and woe betide the unlucky one
on whom it falls ! The Committee on Foreign Correspon-
dence of Indiana have excited his Masonic ire, and he thus
impales them : " Will he tell us when and where the Grand
Encampment has attempted the exercise of any power
specially reserved to the State Grand Bodies? Will he
inform us how it is that Indiana, being scarce ten years
old, managed to create a Grand Body, admittedly in ex-
istence for nearly half a century, and if she is independent
of the ' vacillating organization' of which he speaks so con-
temptuously, why do her sons accept office in that body,
and how do they reconcile it to their consciences, after hav-
ing pronounced the vow at installation, to make blatant
pretence of contempt for the body whose honors they wear?
The Grand Encampment is not and does not claim to be
infallible ; but when faults appear in her legislation, we
should all have sufficient of the spirit of our profession to
break a lance in the presence of our peers, instead of be-
moaning ourselves in the distance."
Sir J. B. Chaffer, Grand Lecturer, reported that he had
visited fifteen of the Commanderies, remaining with several
of them five and six days at a time, exemplifying the
work and instructing them in the drill — a most useful prac-
tice, which we again commend to our Grand Commandery.
Charters were granted to organize three new Comman-
deries, showing continued increase where there has been
always abundant prosperity.
The time for holding the Annual Sessions was changed
to the first Tuesday of October, with the view to establish-
396 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
ing a regular Templar year. We have heretofore advocated
this action.
M. E. Sir H. L. Palmer, Grand Master of Knights Tem-
plar in the United States, visited the Grand Commandery
during its session, and was appropriately received. He
performed the ceremony of installing the officers.
A complaint was made by one Commandery against
another for receiving petitions from, and conferring the
Orders upon, those residing beyond the jurisdiction of the
Commandery receiving them. The matter was referred to
a committee, who reported that where a Companion shall
apply for the Orders to any other than the nearest Com-
mandery, inquiries as to his character, &c., shall be made
of the Commandery within w^hose jurisdiction he resides,
and to that Commandery shall be remitted the amount of
fees which would have been charged had he applied for the
Orders there. While the committee argue that the Blue
Lodge rule of jurisdiction should not be binding in its
application to Commanderies, they recommend the — to us
— doubtful expediency of making a money compensation to
the Commandery whose territory has been invaded. It
occurs to us that a Commandery is benefited more by re-
ceiving w^orthy Companions into its Asylum than by the
mere dollars and cents which they pay.
An important amendment to the statutes and regulations
was offered and lies over for action, to wit : " The Order of
Ked Cross and Knight Templar shall not be conferred on
the same candidate at one and the same Conclave." We
are glad to see this disposition to check the too hasty mode
of hurrying candidates through, without intervening time
for study and meditation.
OHIO.
The last Conclave occurring while the Grand Encamp-
ment was in session at the same place drew a good many
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 397
visitors from various States. R. E. O. C. Sir Heman Ely
recommended a recision of the former action of the Grand
Commandery favoring a change of costume. This was
adopted, and we congratulate our Buckeye neighbors that
thus one bone of contention has been buried. The other
subjects of dispute were passed over in silence, which is a
negative virtue, and probably the better course, unless there
could be decided action to harmonize and cement us all.
The report on Foreign Correspondence is from the pen
of Sir Charles C. Kiefer, and reviews the doings and say-
insrs of thirteen State Grand Bodies. He thinks the terms
" arrogating" and " obstinacy," as applied by us to their
use of titles, &c., are not very courteous. We are willing to
plead guilty ; but will our friend acknowledge that the acts
intended to be described by those words are not any more
courteous ? The argument that those titles were received
from the Grand Encampment of the United States, and
hence Ohio is justified in retaining them, bears against
them ; because it recognizes the authority of the Grand
Encampment to give titles ; and if she may give them, has
she not power to change them ? But we will waste no more
words upon a subject which has been so often and so fully
discussed.
TENNESSEE.
We have before us a pamphlet containing the proceed-
ings of the Grand Commandery of Tennessee for 1861 and
1865. During the three intervening years her Beauseant
was draped and at half-mast ; her Knights obeyed not the
bugle call summoning them to the Asylum. But we have
here, in strange juxtaposition, the records of two dissimilar
epochs in her history — the gathering of the clouds of war
and the dawn of the sun of peace. In 1861 it was resolved
to dissolve the connection between the Grand Commandery
of the State and the Grand Encampment of the United
34
398 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
States, and to unite in forming a general body for the Con-
federate States. So far as appears in the printed proceed-
ings, these resolutions stand unrepealed. We would sug-
gest, in all kindness, that, at the earliest opportunity, the
minutes of the Grand Commandery of Tennessee be made
to conform to and express the spirit which now animates
its members, and that while the feeling of hostility has been
rooted out, the trace of it shall also be obliterated.
There was but a single session at the last Conclave, and
in it the election and installation of officers was all that
was done of general interest. We trust that abundant
prosperity will follow the reorganization in Tennessee, and
that our intercourse may be frequent, continued, pleasant
and profitable.
VERMONT.
R. E. Sir George M. Hall presented an address, very
gratifying in its statement of the condition and prosperity
of his command, wise in its suggestions, Knightly in its
spirit, and eloquent in its style. He lays an ivy wreath
upon the grave of each of the departed Knights, Dr. Baker,
Thos. H. Campbell, P. G. H. P., and Rev. Jos. Scott, D.D.
He congratulates the Knighthood on the cessation of war,
and justly felicitates his Grand Commandery on the fact
that uncontrolled zeal, under the guise of patriotism, never
induced them to pass political resolutions.
Sir Russell S. Taft offered the report on Foreign Corres-
pondence, covering seventeen Grand Bodies, our own re-
ceiving very kind and complimentary notice, and promis-
ing to visit us and inspect our commissariat, induced thereto
by the feeling remarks of Sir Knight Corson, of New Jer-
sey. The report is lengthy, interesting and able.
It was resolved to hold the Annual Conclaves hereafter
on the second Tuesday of June. We regret this change,
because it may deprive us of the promised pleasure of re-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 399
ceiving into our tents some weary pilgrims from the Green
Mountains. But we hope not. Come, Sir Knight Taft, and
if friend Corson could only partially tell what he heard
and saw and tasted, we promise that ere you leave you shall
be " too full for utterance." We are pleased to notice the
prosperity of our Order amongst the mountain peaks, and
hope their slumbers may not be disturbed by Fenian
marches, battles or skedaddles.
VIRGINIA.
We salute the gallant column of the Old Dominion as it
wheels into line, taking its once accustomed place in our re-
united army, and acknowledging allegiance to our Grand
Encampment. The spirit of Chivalry has often led true
Knights into Quixotic expeditions, which did not tarnish
the brightness of their escutcheon, whatever doubts they
may have suggested of the propriety or wisdom of the
Knights-errant. Through all the gloomy night, when war
ruled and slaughtered, we contended that the issues were
purely political, and that as citizens we might differ widely
and irreconcilably, yet as Masons and Templars we had a
common creed, and were bound in a common interest and
affection which no worldly dissensions should affect. This
seemed to be the almost universal feeling in our Order.
Where it did not prevail we incline to think it was because
of a resistless current of popular excitement or some
chronic ailment in individual cases. But it is useless now
to philosophize upon what is happily past and buried, never
to have a resurrection.
We simply mention, in order to complete our Templar
history, that in 1861 the Grand Commandery of Virginia
renounced its connection with the Grand Encampment of
the United States. In 1865 that action was reconsidered,
and the resolution of 1861 was rescinded. In alluding to
this cheering consummation, R. E. G. C. Gill says : " I trust
400 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPI.AR.
that hereafter the Grand Encampment of Virginia will be
found in the ranks of the Grand Encampment of the United
States, battling side by side with those of her sister States,
North and South, in the cause of ' Faith, Hope and Charity,'
united with ' Justice, Fortitude and Mercy,' knowing ' no
North, no South, no East, no West,' and all united in obey-
ing the teachings of the great Grand Master on high,
which require that we should do unto others as we would
that they should do unto us."
And thus nobly have our brethren of Virginia shown
that they possess that Knightly magnanimity which is the
jewel of our Order, and which will confess an error in spite
of opposing pride. No division under the banner of the
cross has more high-toned and chivalric bearing, more tried
and trusty valor than the Grand Commandery of Virginia ;
and hence we are especially glad to welcome her return.
WISCONSIN.
We have not received the proceedings of this Grand
Commandery for this year. On January 1, 1865, R. E.
Sir H. L. Palmer, who is now M. E. G. M. of the United
States, was G. C. Amongst other interesting matter con-
tained in his address, we learn that he decided that a Com-
panion having lost his right forearm, being in all other
respects unobjectionable,* cannot receive the Orders of
Knighthood.
The transactions of ten Grand Commanderies receive an
impartial review from Sir M. L. Youngs. His well-timed
remarks upon the tendency and danger of changes in cere-
monies, costumes, &c., will meet with the approbation of
all reflecting Knights. His kind mention of Pennsylvania,
and his flattering remarks upon our rei:)ort for 1864, sufluse
us with blushes, and leave us without appropriate answer.
A committee was appointed to prepare a form of installa-
tion service, and another committee on tactics and drill.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 401
We think both of these should be settled by the Grand
Encampment, so as to have the work uniform in all the
States.
GRAND ENCAMPMENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
The sixteenth triennial session of this august body was
held in Columbus, Ohio, commencing September 5, 1865.
Eepresentatives from seventeen State Grand Commanderies
and five immediate Subordinates were reported enrolled.
Thus they gathered from Maine to California, from
Minnesota to the Gulf, brought together from various pur-
suits, but all animated by the same high purpose. Public
devotional services were held, in accordance with a ritual
prepared by Sir K. McMurdy, D.D., L.L.D. A short,
neat and appropriate address was delivered by the Grand
Master, whereupon the procession reformed and marched to
the Capitol, where the private sessions were held.
The official report of the Grand Master is very volumi-
nous, covering twenty-eight pages, from which we learn
that dispensations have been issued for the formation of
three new Commanderies in Minnesota, two in Kansas, one
in Nebraska and one in Washington City, and to resuscitate
one in Charleston. Mention is made of official visits to
sundry places, and the kind reception at each, all of which
seem to have been very gratifying, and not the least so his
visit and entertainment at Philadelphia, in June, 1864.
Amongst the Grand Master's decisions we find that it is
improper to require an applicant for the Orders to be a
Royal and Select Master ; that a Grand Commandery may
confer the Orders without fee or petition, but should do so
only on extraordinary occasions ; that it is not necessary
that every member of a Commandery should vote [this de-
cision was reversed by the Grand Encampment, which held
that all must vote unless excused by the Commandery];
that, unless otherwise expressly provided, a majority of the
34 *
402 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
members of the Grand Encampment constitute a quorum
[this decision failed to receive the sanction of the Grand
Encampment]. The Grand Master recommended a change
of titles, to conform to the notions of Ohio and Massa-
chusetts, which we are glad was not done. Subsequently, a
motion was made to amend the constitution by changing
the titles, &c.; this lies over for future action.
We have no doubt on reading the proceedings that the
three days of the Grand Convocation were very pleasant,
for resolutions were passed thanking every person for their
hospitalities, &c. But we look through the pamphlet in
vain to find results of the meeting commensurate with the
character of the Grand Body of Knights Templar of
America. Its proceedings look very much like a labored,
and we may add successful, effort " how not to do it." The
committee appointed three years previously to prepare a
suitable devotional service, reported ; it was discussed and
laid on the table. The proposed amendment to the consti-
tution, limiting the eligibility of officers to one term, was
called up and referred to the Committee on Jurisprudence;
the committee reported that the subject was important(!),
and asked to be discharged, and thus that matter was dis-
posed of (?). A time was set apart to exemplify the various
systems of tactics and drills for Templars, " to the end that
a system may be adopted by this Grand Encampment which
shall be uniform throughout its jurisdiction." Sir Orrin
Welch was thanked for his exemplification, but with the
express qualification that his drill was not adopted. And
so we have a uniform drill ! ! The Grand Master decided
that in representative Masonic bodies a majority of all its
constituents is necessary to constitute a quorum. The Com-
mittee on Jurisprudence concurred ; their report was
adopted ; but lest something might be settled, this adoption
was reconsidered, and then the matter was tabled ; so we
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 403
know what a quorum is ! ! A proposition was made for a
universal convocation or Congress of Templars throughout
the world, and the capacious table received that also. One
thing was done; the constitution of 1862 was amended so
as to restore the Order of Malta to its position as a con-
stitutional degree.
In the Appendix, page 101, of the printed proceedings of
the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar of the United
States, a gross error has been committed, which we beg
leave to correct :
The register of Grand Officers omits the names of the
following Grand Officers of the Grand Commandery of
Pennsylvania, who were elected June 12, 1855 :
R. E. Charles E. Blumenthal, Grand Commander ; V.
E. Alfred Creigh, Dep. Grand Commander; E. Andrew
Patrick, Generalissimo; E. J. W. Hailman, Gr. Capt. Gen.
We hope the necessary correction will be made in the
next Grand Encampment proceedings of the United States.
Sir H. L. Palmer, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was elected
M. E. G. M., and V. E. Sir John D. Caldwell, of Cincin-
nati, Ohio, in consideration of his ability, fidelity and zeal,
was re-elected G. R. In the distribution of offices Penn-
sylvania was left out in the cold, which she certainly did
not deserve. The committee appointed to designate the
place of holding the next convocation reported in favor of
Philadelphia, but we were cut again, and St. Louis was
chosen. If we attend, we shall wreak our revenge on the
viands of our Missouri brethren.
There are several subjects of general interest which we
would like to discuss with our " Foreign Correspondents,"
but we have not the leisure more than to enter our protest
against so much tinkering at our Grand Constitution.
Every three years some one discovers, or thinks he dis-
covers, a screw loose, a bolt out, a rivet gone, some paint,
404 HISTORY OF THE KXIGHTS TEMPLAR.
polish or tinsel needed ; and each has his method of reme-
dying or perfecting it. We are tired of this. Too much
doctoring will kill any man, and too much tinkering will
ruin any machine, and too much meddling will destroy any
instrument. But we must forbear.
Our report has been prepared very hurriedly, and under
such embarrassing circumstances as to render it proper that
we should apologize for its imperfections.
Courteously submitted.
James H. Hopkins,
For the Committee.
Eleventh Report of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence^
read before the R, E. Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania,
by Sir James H. Hopkins, June, 1867.
To the R. E. Grand Commander, Officers and Sir Knights
of the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania :
Occupying an elevated look-out, and supplied with a
field glass, your signal corps are enabled to make their
annual report of the movements, achievements and present
position of the various divisions, brigades, regiments and
battalions of the army that bears the beautiful banner of
the cross. Not a single column has given away or faltered;
not a single fort or camp has been surrendered or aban-
doned ; nowhere has the Beauseant been lowered or soiled
by a disgraceful stain ; everywhere innocent maidens have
found chivalrous defenders, destitute widows and helpless
orphans have found sympathizing and beneficent friends,
and the Christian religion has found zealous and faithful
champions amongst those who hold aloft the symbolic stan-
dard, and have for their motto, "In hoc signo vinces .'"
We have the pleasure of presenting a review of the pro-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 405
ceedings of twenty Grand Commanderies ; and a prefatory
table which we have prepared at considerable trouble, owing
to the negligence in making returns in some jurisdictions,
and which, with all our care, we are conscious is by no
means entirely accurate.
ALABAMA.
The cordiality with which Alabama has been welcomed
to her whilom vacant chair by all her sisters is alike credit-
able to them and gratifying to her. It is no mere formal
bow and a cold touching of hands, but an earnest, warm-
hearted embrace. And yet our joy is subdued to sadness
when we look at her dim and drooping eyes, her wan cheek,
her emaciated form and haggard countenance, and listen
to the piteous wail of the starving thousands who look upon
our standard — the banner of the cross — to see if it is a
meaningless symbol, and to learn if our creed is "but
sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal." We trust that our
present Conclave will not terminate without " showing our
faith by our works." The address of Right Eminent
Grand Commander Knott at the last Conclave indicates
the high-toned, unselfish Christian gentleman and Knight.
While lamenting the calamities that have followed each
other in quick succession, he does not despond, and while
hearing of prosperity here and in other jurisdictions, he
does not grow envious. He says : " There are to be found
evidences of prosperity and happiness ; no gloom similar to
that which hangs over every effort of man in our State
prevails. We may well rejoice over the success, union,
plenty and peace which surround the habitations of our
brethren in their favored localities, and let us pray that no
adverse storms may ever approach to mar so fair a pros-
pect." He earnestly exhorts all Sir Knights in the present
destitution and suffering to manifest in their lives the prin-
ciples taught in our Asylums. Appropriate mention is
406 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
made of the death of Sir Hugh Parks Watson, Eminent
Grand Treasurer. The report on Foreign Correspondence
is done by Sir A. J. Walker, and very well done it is. It
reviews the proceedings of the Grand Encampment of the
United States and of fourteen Grand Commanderies. It
is quite eulogistic of the address of our Right Eminent
Grand Commander, of our Historiographer, and of our
last report.
CALIFORNIA.
We are glad again to shake hands across the Rocky
Mountains with the trusty and true Knights of the Golden
State. Last year they were the only absentees from our
table : their presence now makes the banquet complete.
Right Eminent Grand Commander Henry Holcombe Rhees
delivered a neat little address. He reported that he had
granted two dispensations to re-ballot on petitions of rejected
applicants for the Orders. We refer to this only to remark
that a dispensation was unnecessary. The Commander had
full authority to order a re-ballot if he deemed proper.
Eminent Sir Lawrence C. Owen, Grand Recorder, pre-
sented a careful analysis of the proceedings of eighteen
Grand Commanderies. To the great credit of that juris-
diction, he is able to state that "since the organization of
the Grand Commandery of California to the present date
not a single Subordinate has failed to transmit its returns
within the time prescribed by the statutes, and not one of
these returns has as yet contained an error of any kind."
We trust that all others will emulate this great merit of
promptness and accuracy. Pennsylvania is kindly con-
sidered "as far as heard from," which was only up to June,
1865. Satanti, or some other of the Order of Red Men,
may have captured our last epistle. If so, we hope Gen.
Hancock will soon retaliate on them. We hope soon to
mount the iron horse as he emerges from our stables, and
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 407
follow him as he goes snorting and prancing across the
prairies, and over the mountains and down the Pacific
slopes, until he brings us into closer intercourse with our
far-away brethren.
CONNECTICUT.
The Annual Conclave was opened with a very admirable
address by Right Eminent Grand Commander Sir F. J.
Calhoun. His report evidences the fact that he has been a
valiant Commander, having inspected the various camps
under his command, to see that the sentinels were at their
posts, the forces well drilled, and the Beauseant properly
displayed. He favors the appropriate celebration of Good
Friday by Knights Templar, a custom observed by the
Commandery at Hartford. He recommends that the Coun-
cil degrees shall not be requisite to admittance to the Com-
mandery. [The Grand Commandery failed to comply with
this eminently proper suggestion.] He deprecates too rapid
increase, and wisely says : " On no account should the full
and complete ritual of the Order be neglected in the hurry
to relieve anxious candidates. To make haste slowly is
generally to make haste surely."
A charter was granted for a n>iw Commandery at Water-
bury, being No. 7 in the State.
A committee on tactics and drill, of which Hon. Thos.
H. Seymour was chairman, presented a full report, and
concluded by giving preference to the system of Sir Orrin
Welch.
We heartily congratulate Eminent Sir E. G. Storer upon
the restoration of his health, and we congratulate his Grand
Commandery and all others that he still prepares the
Foreign Correspondence. His last report is able, interest-
ing and elaborate. He stoutly maintains the propriety of
requiring all candidates for Knighthood to first take the
degrees of Royal and Select Master, and that, too, against
408 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the decision of the Most Eminent Grand Commander of
the United States, We admire his pluck in not being over-
awed by high dignitaries, but question the correctness of
his position. He has another good-natured tilt with Sir
Gardner of Massachusetts, and all about the letter " S ;"
the great question being, Are ^ve Knights Templar, or
Knight Templars ?
Seventeen Grand Commanderies come within the scope
of his review, and no one is more kindly spoken of than
our own. For the compliments paid to Sir Knight Creigh
and ourselves he has our profoundest thanks.
His concluding remarks are full of the spirit of true
Christian Knighthood. Although he believes the Council
degrees should precede the Orders of Knighthood, yet, he
says, if any considerable number of Grand Commanderies
feel aggrieved, Connecticut will relinquish it ; thus showing
that he has read to some purpose : "If eating meat maketh
my brother to offend, I will not eat meat while the world
stands."
The Semi-annual Conclave was held at Bridgeport, Nov.
1, 1866, the chief business whereof seems to have been
attending a banquet at the Sterling House. We like that.
We would take pleasure in witnessing an exemplification
of that work.
GEORGIA.
We have endeavored to open a correspondence with our
Georgia Fratres, buj, have failed to elicit a response. AVe
learn through an indirect source that, at the Annual Con-
clave in 1866, the authority of the Grand Encampment of
the United States was recognized, and the Order started, as
we trust, on a career of uninterrupted prosperity.
ILLINOIS.
Eight Eminent Sir Henry C. Ranney was Grand Com-
mander of Illinois last year. His address at the last Con-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 409
clave shows him to be an efficient, active and sagacious
officer. He made a number of official visits and conferred
the Orders on several candidates. He granted dispensations
to form four new Commanderies, and refused two other
petitions, for just and prudential reasons.
He also decided quite a number of questions. Amongst
them, the most noteworthy are : The Grand Commander
has not the right to make a Templar at sight ; the candidate
must petition the nearest Commandery and be elected.
That a petition should not be received on the recommenda-
tion of the Commander, without reference to the Com-
mandery. That the Orders should not be conferred on
ministers of the gospel, in preference to others, free of
charge. That a member of a chartered Commandery, who
is also a petitioner for a new Commandery, is not required
to take a demit : he may select whichever Commandery he
prefers ; if it be the new one, a notice of that demits him,
if his dues are paid. He condemns the practice, too preva-
lent in all jurisdictions, of hurrying through the business at
the Annual Conclave, without proper deliberation and due
examination of papers, by-laws submitted to them and
questions raised for their examination and decision. He
suggests the propriety of naming new Commanderies by
some old, historic title, and not by the name of any living
person or modern place. This we think worthy of atten-
tion by all. It is much more appropriate to have the name
of some old Knightly warrior, battle-field or Asylum, sug-
gestive of the brilliant days and events of the Order. These
concluding words of this commendable address should be
written in letters of gold upou the walls of every Asylum,
and engraved upon the memory of every Sir Knight: "Do
not let us forget, however, in the unprecedented prosperity
and popularity of this Order, that our strength may prove
our weakness ; but let us be particularly careful whom we
35 S
410 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
admit into our peaceful Asylums. Be not afraid to exer-
cise your privileges whenever you think that the character
of an applicant will not come up to our standard. Admit
not the scorner, the intemperate, or the profane. Do not
look to numbers so much as to worth. Remember that the
internal and not the external qualifications should recom-
mend all of us for advancement."
On Sept. 6, 1866, five hundred and fifty fully equipped
Knights participated in laying the corner-stone of a monu-
ment to be erected to the memory of the lamented states-
man and Mason, Stephen A. Douglas.
There was a well-digested report of the proceedings of
fifteen Grand Commanderies, including our own, presented.
Charters were granted for forming four new Commander-
ies, and one was continued under dispensation.
INDIANA.
The address of the Right Eminent Grand Commander,
Sir William Hacker, was the chief event of the last Grand
Conclave in this State. It opens with a beautiful exhorta-
tion to charity and mercy ; announces in fitting terms the
sad death of Eminent Sir Francis King, Grand Recorder
of the State ; reports the condition of the Order as learned
by visits to most of the Commanderies, and says, with just
pride, that during the twelve years in which the Grand
Commandery of that State has existed, no matter of com-
plaint or grievance has ever been brought up for settle-
ment.
The Grand Commander is not pleased with any of the
systems of tactics and drill. He is still in a state of great
unrest upon the costume question, and chafes under the
new uniform like a young colt wearing his first harness.
He says some more cross things about the Grand Encamp-
ment. We are sorry the distinguished Sir Knight has not
taken our prescription of Liver Pills, and become more
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 411
amiable. He recommends that each Commandery have
but one representative in the Grand Commandery, so as to
reduce the expenses. [To accomplish this end without
diminishing the strength of the Grand Body, we would
suggest our practice of admitting the first three officers as
representatives, but allowing pay to but one.]
The Grand Commander acknowledges the receipt of the
proceedings of thirteen Grand Commanderies. We regret
to notice that ours was not received. We are at as great
loss to know the reason, and regret it as much, as Sir
Knight Hacker. We should be very sorry to have our
communication interrupted, for we have a high regard for
the abilities of the Eminent Sir Knight, notwithstanding
we are constrained at times to cross swords with him in
friendly encounter.
There is no report on Foreign Correspondence; and,
worse yet, the Grand Commander, in his address, says it is
the desire of the Grand Commandery that there shall be
none. AVhy is this ? Are our friends going to turn Chinese,
and shut themselves up from all communication with "out-
side barbarians ?" We hope not.
A special committee upon costume reported as follows :
"Eesolved, By this Grand Commandery, that a white lamb-
skin apron bound or trimmed with black, and a Knight
Templar's sword, are the necessary regalia of this Order ;
and that it is permitted Sir Knights to add thereto such
other regalia, not inconsistent with the orders on that sub-
ject, as their rank will allow. And that all Sir Knights
who have heretofore provided themselves with regalia
which was then in order be permitted to wear the same on
all proper occasions." And this was unanimously con-
curred in !
"Parturiunt monies, nascitur ridiculus mus !"
After all this fuss and flummery about costume, what has
412 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
been settled? Simply nothing. The uniform is prescribed
to be thus and so, but each one may wear what he pleases !
Falstaff's recruits were scarcely as well dressed, but they
had as much uniform as the Sir Knights of Indiana will
have when each is adorned according to his own fancy.
One page of the proceedings records the names of those
Sir Knights who, during the preceding year, have taken
their demits from the Commanderies here and entered the
Asylum above.
IOWA.
The opening address of Right Eminent Sir Theodore S.
Parvin is very ornate and eloquent. He attributes some
remarks of ours, in reference to Iowa, to our Grand Com-
mander. Of course, it was mere inadvertence. He recom-
mends an increase in the fees for the Orders to fifty dollars.
He favors a change of the time of meeting, so that Templar-
ism may not be hurried or jostled by the Grand Lodge.
A very good suggestion, which will be found to work to the
advantage of both Grand Lodge and Grand Commandery.
He says " there are two views of Templarism as to govern-
ment held in this country : one tending toward centraliza-
tion— the other to the independency of the separate Grand
Bodies," and implies that Pennsylvania and Massachusetts
hold these two antagonistic views. Our good brother is
mistaken. We do not favor centralization, nor do we know
any Grand Commandery that does. He would have stated
the case more correctly had he said : All of the Grand Com-
manderies but two recognize the Grand Encampment of
the United States as the supreme legislative body of Tem-
plarism in the United States, and respect its authority as
such ; not seeking to increase that authority, nor consider-
ing that it interferes in the slightest degree with the inde-
pendence of the several Grand Commanderies any more than
the Constitution of the United States creates a government
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 413
which destroys the independence of the States. The two
exceptional Grand Commanderies hold very anomalous
doctrines. They do and they don't; they will and they
won't.
Charters were granted for forming four new Commanderies.
Truly, the banner of the cross is fast gathering recruits in the
Prairie State.
The Foreign Epistle is written by Sir E. A. Guilbert, and
is very chaste and courteous in style. He is delighted with
the devotional service prepared for the Grand Encamp-
ment by the Kev. E. R. McMurdy, D.D., and thinks it
should be adopted and practised. He deprecates hurrying
through the session of the Grand Commandery, perform-
ing the drill with canes and laths, and appearing in un-
Knightly costume. He considers no degree higher than the
Master Mason except the degrees of Ancient and Accepted
Rite. And pray, why except them. Sir Guilbert? Surely
Templarism is older and grander than the Scottish Rite.
We should have been pleased to hear more from you. Sir
Knight, and hope that hereafter you will kick out of the
Grand Recorder's traces, and run at will.
Jewels and banners for the Grand Commandery were
ordered. Our little sister is adorning herself properly.
It was decided to hold a special session at Keokuk, to
constitute a new Commandery, dedicate its Asylum, and
receive instruction in the work and drill. The next
Annual Conclave will be held at Davenport on the third
Tuesday of October.
KENTUCKY.
The Sir Knights of this jurisdiction are burnishing their
armor and making ready for a vigorous campaign. No. 4,
which lost its furniture, banners and charter by fire some
years ago, has, phoenix-like, risen from its ashes. A new
Asylum has been opened at Maysville; and elsewhere
35*
414 III8TORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
through the State are seen pilgrim-warriors fighting for
their spurs of Knighthood.
The leading idea of the address of the Right Eminent
Sir H. H. Culbertson is to elevate the standard of Knight-
hood ; in enforcing which he quotes from Burke's beautiful
portraiture of Chivalry : " The generous loyalty to rank
and sex, the proud submission, the dignified obedience, and
that subordination of the heart which keep alive, even in
servitude itself, the spirit of an exalted freedom; that
sensibility of principle, that chastity of honor, which felt a
stain like a wound, which inspired courage whilst it miti-
gated ferocity, which ennobled whatever it touched, and
under which vice itself lost half its evil, by losing all its
grossness."
The drill of Sir Orrin Welch was adopted, and the
"Templar's Text Book," by Sir Jacob Ernest, of Cincinnati,
was recommended as a convenient and cheap monitor.
The usual routine of business was varied by a procession
to the M. E. Church under escort of the Masons of Ver-
sailles, where there was delivered an address by Sir Rev.
R. A. Holland, on " The Sword of the Knight Templar."
It is published with the proceedings, and we would be glad
to have every Sir Knight enjoy its perusal with us. The
Grand Officers were installed publicly. And then the
novel spectacle was witnessed of a procession of Knights,
Companions and brethren escorting their ladies to the
court house to participate in a banquet. We are not in-
formed who commanded that detachment of Sir Knights,
nor what evolutions they performed ; but we make no
question that the most acceptable command that could have
been given was ^^ Present Arms!^^
The banquet was given by the ladie-, and evoked the
unanimous benediction, "God bless them!"
It is needless to say that the Foreign Correspondence is
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 415
still conducted by that large-hearted and courteous Sir
Knight, W. C. Hunger. He holds the portfolio of that
department for life, unless Kentucky forgets her interests.
Seventeen Foreigners are inspected by him, and the result
of his examination reported. It is gratifying to know that
Pennsylvania receives the fullest and most flattering men-
tion. Copious extracts are taken from the addresses of our
Grand Commander and Historiographer, and from our
report of 1865. For the more than kind and cordial invi-
tation to us, personally, to enjoy a Kentucky welcome, Sir
Hunger, accept our grateful acknowledgments, and the
assurance that we know of nothing that would give us
greater pleasure. A Kentucky welcome implies all that
generous hospitality and high-toned chivalry and refined
culture and considerate kindness and genial society could
do to make a weary pilgrim forget the toils and struggles,
trials and temptations, selfishness and sorrow of life. Hay
we not hope to enjoy it ere our pilgrimage is ended ?
LOUISIANA.
There is nothing in the address of the Right Eminent
Grand Commander to attract special remark, except the
statement that but three dispensations had been granted to
waive the time required for petitions to lie over for action,
and the caution exercised in those few cases. This, we con-
sider, is a very important safeguard. With us, no dispen-
sation is required : each Commandery may create Knights
as sojourners on the same night their petitions are presented.
This makes the honor too easily obtained, and hence it is
apt to be too lightly appreciated. The same reasons incline
us to favor a by-law which was enacted at the last Con-
clave of the Grand Commandery of Louisiana, to the eifect
that no petition shall be received until the petitioner should
have been for six months a Royal Arch Hason. The chief
feature of the proceedings was a very able and exhaustive
41 G HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
report of the doings of sixteen Grand Commanderies, and
giving tidings of five more.
We are indebted to Sir James B. Scott, chairman of the
committee, for a knowledge of the fact that the Templar
banner has been again unfurled in Georgia and Texas.
After a full review of the controversy between Pennsylva-
nia and Massachusetts, Sir Scott concludes that Pennsylva-
nia is entitled to the claim of seniority. In his comments
upon Massachusetts and the ritual he touches the raw.
He administers a rebuke to some of the writers of Foreign
Correspondence for intemperance in language, and to others
for excessive adulation. This is the first report on Foreign
Correspondence from Louisiana ; and for judicious culling
from others, frank and sensible expression of opinion,
smoothness of style and Knightly courtesy, it deserves
all praise ; and we accord it, even at the risk of Sir Scott's
censure.
MAINE.
We know of no division of our Templar army better
oflicered and drilled, more active and efficient, than that of
Maine. At the roll-call every regiment responds. There
are no skulkers, sluggards, or hospital bummers. All are
fit for duty, and perform it nobly, " in the world's great
field of battle."
At the last Annual Conclave the Deputy Grand Com-
mander, the Grand G. and the G. C. G. presented
written reports of the achievements of their several com-
mands. In Maine those ofiices are not mere sinecures, or
positions to be filled once a year to make the symmetry of
the Asylum complete, but they have duties devolving
upon them of visiting, inspecting, reviewing and instruct-.
ing. All this is done under the direction of the Grand
Commander.
The annual address announces that but a single ripple
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 417
has disturbed the tranquil flowing of the stream of pros-
perity and peace. From it we learn the remarkable fact that
two Sir Knights who were elected to office declined to serve.
Verily, New England modesty is striking in. He reports
another matter, perhaps as unusual, but more worthy of
imitation: — that the Commanderies in that State are opened
in ample form, and the Orders are conferred in strict
accordance with the ritual. The Grand Commander does
not like the devotional service prepared by Rev. Dr.
McMurdy, Knight ; — thinks it smacks too much of the old
enemy of Rome.
Charters were granted for two new Commanderies ; a dis-
pensation was allowed for another, and a fourth petition
was refused. Thus proving circumspection, and that a
desire to increase in numbers is not the controlling motive
with them.
Amendments to the statutes ^vere offered, and are pend-
ing, specifying nine members as the number necessary to
be present at any Conclave to transact business. The re-
port on Foreign Correspondence is again from the polished
pen of that distinguished Sir Knight, J. H. Drummond.
It is a masterly criticism of the transactions of the Grand
Commandery of the United States and of thirteen Grand
Commanderies. Sir Drummond seems to have possession
of the spear of Ithuriel, by whose magic touch the truth
stands out clearly, severed from error. His style is pun-
gent, yet pleasant, logical and courteous. He exposes the
sophistry of Indiana's reasoning upon the powers of the
Grand Encampment, and gently reproves the assumption
of infallibility. In his controversy with Sir Gardner of
Massachusetts he shows that he wields a true Damascus
blade — keen and glittering — with the strength of a Titan
and the skill of a juggler. We extract : " In one particular
our discussion had different objects. We were discussing
418 HTSTor.Y or the knights templar.
the relation of the Grand Encampment to the State Grand
Comnumderies, and remarked in substance that we would
waive the conclusiveness of the record, although we might
insist upon it. But we say now, that after the record has
stood forty years and been acquiesced in by all during all
that time, we cannot go behind the record to ascertain the
powers, &c., of the Grand Encampment. But Sir Knight
Gardner was speaking of it as a matter of history. While
we admit that the historian is bound by no record, it is
equally true that the jurist, whether civil or Maso7iio, is
bound by his record. The historian may say the Grand
Encampment was formed in any way ; but the jurist must
follow the record. The historian may say that a certain
provision of the constitution was adopted with the mental
reservation that it should be inoperative; but the jurist
must construe it as he finds it in the record. The historian
may well question the truth of many of our traditions and
legends; but if the student of Masonic jurisprudence should
do so, would he not destroy the very foundation upon which
he w'as proposing to build ? But in our discussion last year
we expressly waived this argument."
Sir Drummond holds that a petition once presented
should not be permitted to be withdrawn. [So think we.
If a candidate cannot pass the ordeal where he is knowm,
do not put it in his power to smuggle himself in through
some other avenue.] In speaking of Sir Thomas J. Cor-
son, he says : " He very pleasantly recounts the history of
a raid made by some Sir Knights of New Jersey, under his
lead, upon Pennsylvania Templars, during which they
seemed to have learned a new ritual of Malt-a, and to have
been exceedingly ?n«7^-treated."
We appeal to you. Sir Drummond, whether raiders who
violate the laws of war should not prepare for their hier f
But the fact is, we think so much of Corson and of the New
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 419
Jorsey Knights that we wanted to keep [preserve] them,
and thought it could best be accomplished by having them
put in pickle, or corned.
The report also discusses the question of the number
necessary to constitute a quorum. As a specimen of the
way in which he drives an argument in, and clinches it on
the other side, as also for the purpose of showing how con-
clusively that question can be settled in a few words, we
quote : " A chartered Commandery can transact business
only when constitutionally formed. To be constitutionally
formed, it must have nine Sir Knights present. But a
visiting Sir Knight is no part of the Commandery. He has
no right to speak or vote. Only members can be counted
as a part of that particular Commandery. Hence nine
members must be present to transact business. In other
words, no Commandery can lawfully transact business until
that particular Commandery is constitutionally opened. It
is not sufficient to open a Commandery, but the Commandery
must be opened."
Sir Josiah, we hope to hear from you often, and would
be most happy to greet you in our marquee.
MARYLAND.
We are not advised whether a Grand Commandery has
yet been constituted in Maryland, but we can certify that
her Knights are valiant and magnanimous enough to con-
duct one with eminent success. On Tuesday, November
20, 1866, the corner-stone of the New Masonic Temple was
laid in Baltimore ; " all of which we saw, and part of which
we were." It was truly an occasion long to be remembered.
The sun shone brightly. All business was suspended. It
was a re2:ular Masonic Mardi Gras. There were thousands
of Masons and hundreds and hundreds of Sir Knights.
There were three Commanderies from Richmond, in the
quaint costume formerly worn here. The Grand Com-
420 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
niandery of Pennsylvania and the Subordinates from Pliila-
delphia and York were there in force with their rich uniform
and beautiful banners and Beauseants. The procession was
grand and imposing, and in it Pennsylvania was accorded
the post of honor. The ceremonies were full, solemn and
impressive ; the address of J. H. B. Latrobe, Esq., w'as
learned and eloquent, and the singing by a choir of about
one hundred ladies and gentlemen was ecstatic. Then
followed the most profuse display of hospitality. The Sir
Knights were escorted to the Front Street Theatre, wdiere
they " performed a most successful engagement." The par-
quette was floored over, and tables creaking with substan-
tial and luxuries filled all the area. The walls and tiers
were decorated with evergreens and flowers, and covering
the rear end was painted a mammoth Passion Cross, sur-
mounted with rays of light and the motto of our Order.
After the banquet there was a bountiful supply of toasts
and speeches. This w^as scarcely over when we W'ere
marched ofi'to another banquet at Concordia Hall. It was
the severest campaign w^e ever made. We thought we saw
in our dreams that night the ghosts of the grim old Knights
of centuries agone, inviting us to partake of their " coarse
diet, rough habits and severe duties." When we left the
scene of action old Father Time was toying with " the w'ee
sma' hours ayant the twelf" For events subsequent
thereto we refer to Sir Knights, our Grand Recorder or
Grand Treasurer, or to Sir Corson or Bechtel of New
Jersey. Let them tell — if they can !
MASSACHUSETTS AND RHODE ISLAND.
We take up the proceedings of this jurisdiction with
great interest and pleasure, notwithstanding the animated
contest between us as to whose hairs are the grayer and
whose brow bears the most wrinkles. This little volume
gives us more than the stereotyped routine of annual busi-
1
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 421
ness. On July 14th, 1866, the Grand Commandery met in
Boston and constituted a new Commandery, installed its
officers, and listened to a beautiful address by Grand Com-
mander Rev. C. H. Titus, in which he impresses upon the
minds of the new Commandery that " the lesson of Truth,
the foundation of every virtue, is here impressively taught
us. It may be stated, as the universal conviction of the
members of our Order, that, should we fully comply with
the wise precepts here presented, we should develop the
highest style of the true man. No manhood can be per-
fected which ignores the religious element; but this is
judiciously combined with the moral lessons enforced in the
instructions of Templar Masonry."
Another special session was held February 28, 1866, to
pay an official visit to De Molay Commandery. May 2
the semi-annual session was held in Providence, Rhode
Island, at which the work was exemplified. May 28
another special session was held in South Boston to consti-
tute a new Commandery. At the annual session a motion
was made by Sir Gardner to change some of the titles of
officers. It was passed in a modified form. If our Eastern
Fratres can consent to a partial change, why hesitate to
conform entirely to the almost universal custom in this
country? We could understand their reluctance to part
with time-honored names. But that cannot be the contro-
versy, else no alteration would be permitted. One of the
Commanderies of Massachusetts limits the number who
may receive the Orders, and proposes to restrict it still
further, and permit no more than eight to be Knighted
annually. We observe that the exercises of constituting
Commanderies and installing the officers are usually graced
by the presence of ladies.
The annual address of Right Eminent Rev. Sir C. H.
Titus recounts in an agreeable manner the transactions of
36
422 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the closing year. He expresses surprise at a remark of
ours in reference to the disloyalty of Indiana ; asks ^vith an
apparently triumphant air, " Does the writer suppose that
the Grand Commandery of Indiana exists by virtue of a
charter from the Grand Encampment of the United
States?" and admits, if this be so, that the charge of insub-
ordination is just. The estimable Sir Knight made an ad-
mission fatal to his cause in conceding so much. We do
hold that the Grand Commandery of Indiana exists by
virtue of a charter from the Grand Encampment of the
United States, and by virtue of nothing else. On April
24, 1854, a warrant was issued by the Grand Master of the
Grand Encampment of the United States " to form and
establish the State Grand Encampment of Indiana." The
various Subordinates in that State had previously been
chartered by the Grand Encampment, and at that time the
same supreme power breathed into the State Grand Com-
mandery the breath of life. It was formed and fashioned
by the Grand Encampment, and exists only by virtue of its
charter derived from that body. That being unquestion-
ably so, our courteous friend. Sir Titus, stands pledged to
recognize the fact that allegiance is due from Indiana to
the Grand Encampment of the United States. A little
frank discussion of the matters in dispute will, or should
ultimately, bring us all to a common standpoint.
Right Eminent Sir Titus should command the lines and
be the drill-master of the Commandery. Our reverend
brother surely belongs to the Church militant, to discuss
the drill and evolutions with such facility. He does not
like reports on Foreign Correspondence. More's the pity ;
we should like to drop him a line now and again.
The Sir Knights of Massachusetts often do clever and
generous things. Amongst the most recent we note that
Pilgrim Commandery, at Lowell, had painted a fine por-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 423
trait of their Prelate, and also presented him with a gold-
mounted cane; and Boston Comraandery presented a beau-
tiful watch and chain to one of its Past Eminent Com-
manders. The last report of our Historiographer was re-
ferred to a special committee of the ablest and best men in
the State : Sirs W. S. Gardner, C. W. Moore and Jas. Hut-
chinson. Their report exhibits great research amongst
musty records, and is a very interesting and valuable addi-
tion to Templar history and literature. It is written in a
dignified, high-toned and courteous style. It is an ingeni-
ous and able argument, free from acerbity ; and while with
commendable zeal striving to establish the precedency of
their own State, yet with Knightly magnanimity recognizing
our services in the same great cause. The subject under
discussion comes more properly within the scope of our
learned Historiographer's duties, and we feel no desire " to
pass the boundaries of his dominions." We have no doubt
he will make it necessary for the Massachusetts Knights
to go still deeper into the grave of buried events to find
older traces of Knighthood than Pennsylvania can pro-
duce, or a Grand Commandery that can outrank her.
MICHIGAN.
The Pight Eminent Grand Commander, Sir G. B. Noble,
gives expression to the following considerate and timely re-
marks : " Sir Knights ! As we proceed with our labors, let
us for one moment call your attention to the condition of
our Order without our own jurisdiction, especially in the
South. The smouldering embers upon the altar of Masonic
Knighthood, in many of the jurisdictions, will need our
kindly care to enkindle once more the flame of fraternal
love. Let us remember, then, that it becomes us, as mem-
bers of an institution founded on the Christian religion and
the practice of the Christian virtues, to extend to them that
glorious attribute of Deity — mercy : that our beloved in-
424 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
stitution in the South may arir^e again in beauty and
strengtli ; that we may again become one inseparable fra-
ternity, knowing no North, no South, no East, no West."
The death of Eminent Sir C. D. Howard was feelingly an-
nounced. He was aged seventy-two, and for thirty-eight
years a Mason. After so long a warfare he deserves all the
laurels that are being hung upon his tomb. His memory
and example still live, although
" The Knight's bones are dust,
And his good sword rust: —
His soul is with the saints, I trust."
Sir John Clark gives us a very brief report on Foreign
Correspondence. The little nibble is so palatable that we
long for more. We regret that Pennsylvania contributed
nothing to the guests at his table.
MINNESOTA.
On October 23, 1865, the Grand Commandery of Min-
nesota was duly constituted, and its officers were installed
by the Most Eminent Grand Master of the United States,
Sir H. L. Palmer. The first Annual Conclave was held in
St. Paul on June 25th, 1866, at which time a constitution
and regulations and a design for an official seal were
adopted, and officers were elected and installed. Thus was
launched as staunch and trim a craft as ever floated on the
stream of Time. A banner bearing the cross of Calvary,
streams for ever from her mast-head ; a skillful pilot stands
at the wheel ; an accomplished and efficient captain paces
the deck ; she is full-rigged, well-officered and manned, and
her bell has pealed a merry signal to loose cable, hoist
anchor and set sail for a cruise against infidelity, oppres-
sion and wrong. Last fall it was our great pleasure to visit
Minnesota, and while we were exhilarated by the sweetness
and purity of the atmosphere, delighted with the clearness
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 425
of her sky and the splendor of her sunsets, charmed with
the tranquil beauty of her multitudinous lakes, amazed at
the rapids of St. Anthony, at its thrift, industry and enter-
prise, and enchanted by the laughing music of Minnehaha,
nothing gave us more pleasure than to see the beautiful
symbol of our Order floating so proudly, to enter the tents
of the valiant Knights who guarded it, partake of their
hospitality, and witness their zeal and their Knightly bearing.
"When the hurly-burly's done,
When the battle's fought and won,"
may every Sir Knight of Minnesota have many trophies
of victory, and receive the approbation of the Grand Com-
mander above !
MISSOURI.
The address of Right Eminent Grand Commander Wan-
nail opens with a devout expression of gratitude that the
arrows of death had stricken none in the ranks of the
Grand Commandery since its organization. Yet, alas ! for
the vanity of all human calculations and hopes ! at that
very moment the grim Archer seems to have had his bow
bent, charged with a fatal missile ; for soon thereafter it
struck a shining mark, and one of the bravest and best of
Missouri's Chivalry fell to rise no more. Eminent Sir A.
O'Sullivan, the Grand Recorder, as true a Knight as ever
drew a sword, has been forgiven many years of his pilgrim-
age, and has been admitted to the Grand Asylum, where all
our typical ceremonies are terminated by the full fruition
of all his hopes.
The address gives a sad account of the effect of the late
civil war ; not alone upon the physical prosperity of the
sections most seriously affected, but the more lamentable
injuries done to the spiritual growth.
He recommends that any Sir Knight in a Subordinate
Commandery shall be eligible for the position of Grand
36 *
42 J HISTORY OF THE KNIOHTM TEMPLAR.
Commander, and an amendment to the statutes was adopted
to that effect. We very seriously question the policy of
this movement. Instead of diminishing, we should increase
the qualifications necessary to enable any one to hold that
high position.
Tlie time for holdino; the Annual Conclave has been
changed to the first Monday of October. During the ses-
sion of the Grand Commandery the funeral of Sir L. L.
Barrell took place, and the services were participated in by
the Grand Commandery.
In a tabular statement estimating the number of Knights
in the various States, Pennsylvania is set down at eight
hundred. This is very little, if any, more than half the
number on our roster.
The report on Foreign Correspondence was prepared by
Sir George Frank Gouley, now Grand Commander of the
State. It embraced a review of seventeen Grand Com-
manderies and the Grand Encampment of the United
States. It is written in a sprightly, dashing, and, at times,
caustic manner. While we fully concur with him in con-
demning the introduction of political topics in our Asylums,
where only peace presides, it occurs to us that our valiant
friend is rather too keen on the scent for this ground of
complaint. In the address of the Grand Commander of
Iowa he sees " the conversion of the Asylum into a recruit-
ing station." He thinks a portion of the address of the
Grand Commander of New Jersey " was written for the
hustings;" and that the chairman of Foreign Correspon-
dence " discloses the ill-fated heel of sectional hate." He
says the address of the Grand Commander of Ohio was
"entirely political and local." Parts of the address of
Grand Master French, at the Grand Encampment, " were
unnecessary, and greatly out of place." And the honors
paid by our Grand Commandery at Altoona to General
J
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 427
Grant also excited his ire. During the nation's troubles,
when every accidental or preconcerted assemblage, sacred
and secular, was ventilating its patriotism by formidable
resolutions, we expostulated against any such action or
expression by any Commandery, Grand or Subordinate.
We are as sensitive of the sanctity of our Order, and as
scrupulous for its harmony, as Sir Gouley can be, and we
beg simply to suggest that he shall not become so straight
as to lean on the other side. Altogether, his report indicates
a power of analysis, a clearness of perception, and a vigor
of expression that make him a welcome addition to our
Foreign Correspondents.
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
For two years we have been without the proceedings of
this State. A year ago Eminent Sir Horace Chose wrote
us that the proceedings for 1865 and 1866 would be printed
together after the Annual Conclave in September, 1866.
We wait with impatience to hear from the Granite Hills.
NEW JERSEY.
Unto Bechtel the Chancellor and Corson the Scribe, and
to the rest of his Companions that dwell in Newjersai, and
unto the rest beyond the River, Peace, and at such a time.
When we come to speak of this jurisdiction we are
obliged to put on a curb-bit, and draw a taut rein, lest we
run away into what might appear to be the extravagant
laudation of an adolescent lover. They have visited us
more, and we have met them oftener, than any other Sir
Knights, and have been grappled to them with hooks of
steel. In our last report we were about to write the epitaph
of Sir Corson, who had promised to be with us, if alive.
We commenced "Hie Jacet," but, thinking that we might
be deemed uncourteous, we quit. Since then we have met
hira twice — in Baltimore, at the laying of the corner-stone
428 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
of the Masonic Temple, and in New York, when we re-
ceived the Order of [K.'jmght of the North Pole. We can
vouch that he still lives, and
"Stands like a Draid of old, with voice sweet and prophetic —
Stands like a harper hoar, with beard that rests on his bosom!"
We welcome him and the other Sir Knights from New
Jersey to our present Conclave with open arms and — a cork-
screw. We welcome them especially because they have a
rare article of Silver with them ; and when they shall have
refreshed themselves in our tents with our native aqua vitce,
though they should live a hundred years — as we hope they
may — it can be said of each of them, "His eye was not
dimmed, nor his natural force abated."
We regret to learn that Right Eminent Grand Comman-
der Bechtel was unable to attend the last Annual Conclave
of New Jersey, on account of sickness. We are glad to
know he has long since recovered. The address which he
transmitted is fifty-seven seconds long, but we see nothing
that need have been added. A venerable Sir Knight,
Samuel Lennox, aged eighty-two years, attended the last
Conclave. He was Knighted in Ireland in 1805. We
may well suppose that he received the homage due to so
long devotion to our holy cause. Five doctors were elected
to various offices in the Grand Commandery. Alas ! New
Jersey I
" Not poppy nor mandragora.
Nor all the drowsy syrups of the world,
Can medicine thee to that sweet sleep
Which thou owedst yesternight?"
Five doctors ! AVell, we only expected to write an epi-
taph for Sir Knight Corson ; but now we may as well pre-
pare one for the Grand Commandery of New Jersey.
The Foreign Correspondence is still conducted by that
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAK. 429
valiant and distinguished Knight, Sir Thomas J. Corson.
Saying that much, it were surplusage to add that no better
reports are prepared by any man. He reviews the proceed-
ings of the Grand Encampment — finding therein nothing
specially to commend — and of thirteen Grand Commander-
ies, including a most genial and warm-hearted notice of
Pennsylvania — according to us the right of priority in the
United States — of the masterly address of our Historio-
grapher, and some personal remarks about our last report,
and our address at Lancaster, which we vow to resent by
retaliation as soon as we get a lick at the blarney stone.
He thinks it irreverent to speak of a continuance of our
unprofitable lives. We are not sure that we can concur
with him in his theology upon this point. But we can com-
mend his good-humored critique of Massachusetts and
Rhode Island. He mercilessly strips a Sir Knight of his
borrowed plumage, who used a quotation from Byron with-
out giving credit. Verily our brother is Argus-eyed. He
shows a true appreciation of his position in saying : " For
our part, we would rather be chairman of the Committee
on Foreign Correspondence than presiding officer of the
Grand Body," and the Grand Commandery of New Jersey
show^s its appreciation of him by continuing him in that
position.
NEW YORK
Always furnishes us a very interesting pamphlet when she
sends the proceedings of her Grand Commandery. The
address of Eight Imminent Grand Commander Pearson
Mundy is quite brief. He announces the death of, and
pays a chaste tribute to, the w'orth of Past Grand Com-
mander Le Roy Farnham.
He decides that any well-informed Sir Knight may confer
the Orders of Knighthood in a Commandery in presence
of the Eminent Commander or Council of the Commandery
430 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
while in session. We respectfully dissent from this. The
dubbing of a Knight is a royal act, not to be delegated.
In our judgment it can no more be performed by substitute
than the ordinance of baptism or the consecration of a
minister of the Gospel.
Our venerable friend, Sir John W. Simons, presented his
fourteenth annual review of Foreign Correspondence. He
opens with congratulations upon the general prosperity of
the Order ; but expresses the belief that Templarism is
being injuriously affected by " the desire for degrees and
distinctions; and in the greater number and show of foreign
rites, that zeal and attention, which ought to make the
Commandery the highest and most interesting branch of
Masonry, is directed to other channels and interests." [We
cannot understand this feeling. It seems to us that all
calm thinkers, as well as earnest and pure men, must be
impressed with the simplicity, beauty, consistency, impres-
siveness and elevating tendency of Templarism, above all
other degrees and Orders.] The report is an accurate and
faithful consideration of the doings of fourteen Grand Com-
manderies. He says : " Either let us require that the can-
didate shall be free from all blemish, or take the other horn,
and say that, bating the loss of his arm, or leg, or head,
minor defects shall make no difference. We favor the
latter rule because it could be enforced, while the more
stringent one never has been, and probably never will be.
In fact, we are unable to perceive why, as long as a good
Royal Arch Mason has enough body left to hold his soul,
he may not become a Templar. He could illustrate the
principles we seek to inculcate as well as a man with forty
legs; and if, by reasons of his infirmity, unable to make
himself known to others as a Templar, that would be his
loss, not ours." The illustration is strong. We concur
in thinking that the man with forty legs is quite as eligible as
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 431
the one without a head. But we would not like to vote for
either. He argues strongly that the Commander and eight
visiting Knights present can open a Commandery and
transact the business. We concur in his severe castigation
of skulkers who neglect to attend meetings and then com-
plain of the doings. And we admit that the transaction of
business by the one member present is no just cause of
complaint to the absentees. Yet we think it is a dangerous
doctrine and scarcely within the proper construction of this
canon.
Of Massachusetts he says : " The address of her Grand
Commander is unworthy of his polished pen." We failed
to see this in our reading of that document. His remarks
upon the attitude of the Grand Commanderies of Massa-
chusetts and Ohio towards the Grand Encampment of the
United States are much more deserved. His review of
Pennsylvania is full and flattering. He acknowledges the
cogency of the argument and facts proving that we estab-
lished the first Grand Commandery. He concurs heartily
with the views of our Historiographer as to the Order of
the Red Cross, and favors the striking it from our ceremony.
He extends Knightly sympathy to the sufferers by the fire
at Portland, and makes that sympathy practical and potent
by ofiTering a resolution to donate $100 to the relief of those
of our own household.
The Central City Commandery sent in a communication
tendering the free and permanent use of its Asylum, if the
Grand Commandery should locate. The Grand Com-
mandery was grateful, but, like poor Tom in one of
Dickens' novels, concluded to " move on/' We still advo-
cate the itinerancy, and think this " swinging around the
circle" does great good. The proceedings contain the
design of an elegant jewel to be presented to the Past
Grand Master, J. W. Simons. It is rich and costly, and
432 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
most worthily bestowed. A very important amendment to
the statutes was made to the effect that the Order of Knights
Templar shall not be conferred on any candidate in less
than one week after receiving the Order of the Red Cross,
except by special dispensation granted by the Grand Com-
mander, Deputy Grand Commander, Grand Generalissimo,
or Grand Captain General. A very judicious provision for
preventing inconsiderate haste.
A warrant was granted to establish a new Commandery
at Schenectady.
One hundred dollars w'ere donated to the widow of a
worthy Sir Knight, formerly an officer of the Grand
Commandery. One hundred dollars w^ere appropriated
to Sir J, W. Simons, chairman of the Committee on
Correspondence.
The drill was exemplified under direction of Sir Orrin
Welch, Past Grand Commander, the author of a very valu-
able little work on tactics and drill.
A banquet was given to the Grand Commandery at the
Globe Hotel by the Central City Commandery, and an
invitation given by Palestine Commandery to a Templar
reception on December 20, which was unanimously accepted.
In pursuance thereof, we received a beautifully printed
invitation to be present at Irving Hall, on December 20,
at the reception of the Grand Commandery of New York.
Anticipating a gorgeous affair, in company with a few Sir
Knights, including our gallant Grand Treasurer, we
buckled on our armor and repaired to the scene of action.
On the streets of the great city the mercury stood about 10°
below zero ; in Irving Hall it was full 30° beloy^. We
w^ere from the country and naturally modest; not much
accustomed to the splendor and etiquette of the metropolis ;
and from our then experience and observation we are boor-
ish enough to confess a preference for Western manners and
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 433
hospitality. We were strangers, yet we made the acquaint-
ance of one Sir Knight of Palestine Commandery, and to
him we introduced ourselves. It was a reception of the
Grand Commandery of New York, and but one officer of
that Grand Commandery was received. Of the courtly style
in which we were escorted to the banquet hall, of the con-
siderate kindness and attention, of the spicy toasts and witty
and eloquent responses which were to [and shouUT] have
been seen and heard, we forbear to speak. But for the
ladies — dear creatures ! — and our post-prandial meeting at
the St. Nicholas with the genial Knights of New Jersey,
we should have recorded the result of our trip as "too much
sugar for a shilling."
OHIO.
Right Eminent Sir Heman Ely, Grand Commander, in
his address expressed a regret that the Grand Encampment
had failed to act upon the proposed changes in the consti-
tution, whereby the differences between Ohio and the Grand
Encampment might be harmonized. But notwithstanding
this inaction, he recommends, with genuine Knightly mag-
nanimity, that Ohio shall make her devotion to the Grand
Body unmistakable, and, in compliance with that sugges-
tion, a select committee reported in favor of making all
chano-es in their nomenclature necessary to effect entire
conformity to the titles prescribed by us and others. This
concession for the general welfare and harmony deserves
the grateful acknowledgment of all Sir Knights. At the
next Conclave these amendments will certainly be adopted,
and then Massachusetts will be left "wrapped in the soli-
tude of her own originality." The address, of which we
were speaking before this digression, is a very practical and
sensible one. It recommends definite and positive legisla-
tion instead of meagre and wordy statutes. He pronounces
an appropriate eulogy upon two of Ohio's most distin-
37 T
434 HISTORY OF THE KXIGHTS TEMPLAK.
guished citizens and Templars, who have been summoned
to join the white-robed hosts above — Sir Thomas Corwin
and Sir William Blackstoue Hubbard.
'^Par nobile fratruvi !"
The time for holding the Annual Conclave has been
changed to the second Tuesday of January.
We discover a new face in charge of the Bureau of
Foreign Correspondence, and a right genial and pleas-
ant one it is. It belongs to Sir Robert Gwynn. He gives
a running commentary upon the transactions of eighteen
Grand Commanderies.
He strenuously argues that Connecticut is right in making
the Council degrees a pre-requisite to the Orders of Knight-
hood. Yet his own State does not do so. From his re-
proofs to Indiana and Missouri for disrespect to the Grand
Encampment, we conclude that he is aiding to bring the
Ohio brigade under discipline of the general head. He
contends with Tennessee that the Templar costume should
not be worn at funerals, but instead the plain dress of a
Blue Mason, that having more of humility and less of
ostentation. He thinks the devotional service prepared
by Rev. Sir McMurdy is too learned and cumbersome, and
suggests that a simpler service can be arranged from the
Book of Psalms.
TENNESSEE.
The Grand Commandery met without having its official
head present to open its deliberations. And in five days
after laying down the jewel of his office. Right Eminent
Sir Amasa S. Underwood had partaken of the last libation,
which is the cup of death. He met the great enemy, as all
Christian warriors should, with a calm, untroubled soul,
recognizing his temporary power, but fully conscious of an
inner principle that would turn an apparent victory into a
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 435
disastrous defeat. And hence he could sing that beautiful
song —
"One sweetly solemn thought comes to me o'er and o'er, —
I'm nearer heaven to-day than 1 ever have been before ;
iRearer the great white throne, where I'll lay my burden down,
Nearer leaving the cross, nearer wearing the crown."
His successor issued an order that each Subordinate Com-
mandery should be draped in black, and every Sir Knight
should wear crape upon the left arm and sword-hilt for
thirty days, and that measures be taken to perpetuate the
memory of the worthy dead.
A charter was refused to open a new Commandery at
Union City, out of considerate regard for Kentucky, the
location being so near the State line it was feared her juris-
diction might be invaded.
Right Eminent Sir Charles A. Fuller, the first Grand
Commander of the State, is chairman of the Committee on
Foreign Correspondence, and as such gives us a carefully-
prepared, judicious and interesting abstract from the pro-
ceedings of fourteen Grand Commanderies, interspersed
with copious extracts from the addresses and reports. For
the flattering manner in which you were kind enough to
speak of us, Sir Fuller, " we owe you one," and promise to
repay whenever we get hold of an address of yours. The
ambition of the Sir Knight was "to place before our readers
a fair and impartial analysis of the proceedings of sister
Commanderies." No one could have more satisfactorily
accomplished that laudable object.
TEXAS.
Star after star shines out through the obscurity of the
past few years, and adds to the splendor of the Templar
constellation. We know that Texas is again enrolled under
our common banner. We salute the Grand Commandery,
and hope to be placed upon her books for an " exchange."
436 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
V^ERMONT.
In our last rei^ort we gave the latest tidings we have re-
ceived from the Green Mountains. We have anxiously-
looked for a subsequent epistle, and, failing to receive it,
became apprehensive lest the chivalrous s})irit of the Sir
Knights and their fondness for the green had led them to
follow the banner of the shamrock into Canada. But we
learn that the time of holding their Annual Conclave has
been changed from January to June. The Grand Com-
mandery of Vermont is now in session. From this quasi
fiery furnace we extend them our warmest salutations.
VIRGINIA.
Except changing the constitution to conform with the
names and titles prescribed by the Grand Encampment of
the United States, there was no business done aside from the
usual routine. Right Eminent Sir E. H. Gill delivered a
very polished and rhetorical address. A great portion of
it is devoted to an account of the demonstration at the lay-
ing of the corner-stone of the Masonic Temple in Baltimore,
and the cheerful reunion at that auspicious occasion. He
says : " I mingled freely with the brethren and Sir Knights
assembled in Baltimore upon this occasion, and was rejoiced
to find that but one sentiment prevailed, and that was, that
the recollection of the past five years of strife should be ob-
literated, forgotten and forgiven, and that brotherly love
should prevail, and that we should again become one
mighty people. To accomplish this, the members of our
Order can do much. Numbering as they do, upwards of
one quarter of a million, united as they are by ties stronger
than those of consanguinity, representing as they do all
classes of society, from the highest executive officer to the
private in the ranks, and actuated as they should be by
fraternal love, love of right, of justice and of country, it is
their duty to extend the olive branch of peace, and to
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 437
spread the cement of brotherly love and kindness. I trust
in God that they will perform it, and then may we be able
once more to exclaim, in the language of David, * Behold
how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dw'ell to-
gether in unity !' "
Sir John Dove offered the report on Foreign Correspond-
ence, embracing sixteen Grand Bodies. As good a writer
and as sound a critic as Sir Dove should not draw on
Missouri to express his sentiments, as he does, by copying
largely from Sir Wannall's views of the various Grand
Commanderies. For himself he says: "We see much in
their proceedings to admire, to commend, to be thankful
for ; and for all expressions of fraternal kindness in them
tow^ard us we can assure them of a responsive throb in our
hearts ; for all objectionable criticisms of our course we
have nothing at present to offer but silence.'" We may add
he could offer nothing better. The representation of silence
Avith her finger on her lips should teach us not only to pre-
serve our secret mysteries inviolate, but also to suppress
and smother every syllable which, if uttered, would call
up an unpleasant memory or cause a pang in any heart.
WISCONSIN
Sends us this year a small volume of over a hundred pages,
containing, besides the proceedings of the Conclave, the
ceremonies for constituting and dedicating a Commandery
and installing its officers, the ceremonies for installing
Grand Officers, and the Templar burial service.
The Grand Commander, Right Eminent Sir Alvin B.
Alden, reports that he visited every Commandery in his
jurisdiction during the past year. No wonder the Order
is so prosperous there, w^hen its chief officer is so faithful
and zealous. He recommends that the fees be increased to
fifty dollars. He plants a sprig of acacia at the head of
the newly-made graves of three Sir Knights. He recom-
87 *
438 IITSTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
mended the making of some provision for imparting instruc-
tion in the ritual and drill to the Subordinate Commanderies.
And in pursuance of that suggestion a special committee, to
whom the matter was referred, reported the following reso-
lution, which was adopted :
" Resolved, That the Right Eminent Grand Commander
is required to visit each Subordinate Commandery in the
State at least once in each year, and devote at least one
day to the instruction of the officers and members thereof
in the ritual, tactics and drill of the several Orders of
Knighthood ; and that he shall receive as compensation for
such service five dollars per day for each day spent in
visiting and instructing any Commandery and actual
traveling expenses, to be paid by the Commandery visited ;
and in case the Grand Commander shall be unable to per-
form such duty, or shall otherwise deem it expedient, he
may appoint any other competent Sir Knight to perform
the same, in w^hicli case the Sir Knight so appointed shall
be entitled to the compensation above prescribed."
This most judicious improvement should be received with
especial consideration, because the Most Eminent Grand
Master of the Grand Encampment of the United States w^as
chairman of the committee which reported it.
The regular business of the Grand Commandery w^as
pleasantly interrupted by the presentation to Most Eminent
Sir H. L. Palmer of a very magnificent and costly silver
tea-set. The remarks of Sir G. C. Alden on the occasion
brought to notice the eminent services and abilities, zeal
and fidelity of the distinguished Knight who sowed the
seeds of Knighthood in the State, and watched and
nurtured its early growth, and now rests under its um-
brageous foliage.
Sir Emmons Taylor reviews the proceedings of eleven
Grand Commanderies, having a pleasant salutation for
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. '439
each. Pennsylvania receives by no means the least bland
and cordial greeting.
One evening last August, as the sunbeams were enjoying
their vesper dance upon Lake Michigan, a solitary individual
(a la G. P. P. James' heroes) might have been seen saunter-
ing through the streets of the beautiful city of Milwaukee.
He was a dusty and travel-stained pilgrim, " unknowing
and unknown." He saw the Templar banner fluttering on
the evening breeze, and turned into a tent to rest and re-
fresh himself. He expected a courteous greeting, but was
over\yhelmed with kindness. Most Eminent Sir H. L.
Pai&er, Sir M. L. Youngs and others, were so considerate
in their attentions as to convince this weary pilgrim that
their lovely home is called the Cream City, not alone be-
cause of the color of the brick, but rather because with
them all the milk of human kindness is the richest cream.
Until an opportunity offers for reciprocating their hospi-
tality, the recipient can do no less than make this poor
acknowledgment of his grateful appreciation of their genial
courtesy.
GENERAL REMARKS.
We have heretofore labored as best we could to produce
entire uniformity of ritual, drill, names of the organizations,
and the titles of the officers of our Order throughout the
United States. In furtherance of this same object, we con-
tend that there should be a nomenclature peculiar to Tem-
plarism, and which should be used by all jurisdictions. We
have a common cause, a common purpose, a common creed ;
and we should have a common language, a parlance estab-
lished, known and observed. The annual session of the
Grand Commandery is called " Conclave " by fourteen
States, " Assembly" in two. In two States the expression
" called from labor to refreshment," is used ; in one " from
labor to recess ;" in two " called off";" in one " called from
440 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
labor ;" in one " suspended labor ;" in four " adjourned ;"
in two " recess ;" and all to express the same act. In six
States it is said the Grand Conimandery " resumed labor ;"
in two it was " called to labor ;" in one it was " called from
recess to labor;" in one "from refreshment to labor;" in one
" from adjournment to labor ;" in one " called on ;" in one
" called to order," and in one " assembled," expresses another
act. And the Grand Encampment of the United States, as
if to make " confusion worse confounded," uses the words
"took a recess," "resumed labor," "adjourned," "recon-
vened," "adjourned," "resumed business." We object to
expressions which are applicable to popular meetings, legis-
lative bodies, or even to other branches of Masonry. " As-
sembly" indicates a public purpose, and may mean a collec-
tion of preachers, legislators or of individuals met for
amusement. " Conclave" implies a secret session, and
hence is the truest and best word to designate our periodical
meetings.
Remembering the origin, purposes and character of our
Order, it will strike any one that the expressions " called to"
or " from labor" are inappropriate. Ours is a Knightly
Order, having chivalrous duties to perform, but the nature
of its duties is military and religious. In the lower degrees
of Masonry we " labored " at the building of the Temple ;
but here we protect the shrine which renders the Temple
sacred, and defend the doctrines of Him who sanctified both
shrine and Temple.
In New York we read " on motion the Grand Command-
ery adjourned." It occurs to us that this also is objection-
able. A Commander issues his orders without suggestion
or motion from any one. He consults his own pleasure,
only, as to dismissing his command. Courtesy prompts
him to consider the comfort and convenience of his Knights,
but they have no right to ask it.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 441
In preparing this report we have performed a labor which
none can appreciate but those who have undertaken a simi-
lar task. We have sifted whole stacks of sheaves to reach
and preserve the kernel. We have gone through over eight
hundred pages of printed matter to cull what was interesting
and instructive. We have sought to present an accurate
and impartial analysis of the transactions of sister jurisdic-
tions, with our own views frankly and fully expressed.
"What is writ is writ:
Would it were worthier!"
To our " Foreign Correspondents" in each State, whose
annual visit to our table meets with so glad a welcome, we
owe more than we can pay for their universal kindness
and their many flattering compliments. Although we have
met but few of them in the flesh, they are familiar as the
dwellers under one roof. Should we meet any of them at
home or abroad, on the mountain's summit or the desert's
waste, on the blooming prairies or the rolling billows, we
could recognize and embrace them. They are as gallant a
set of Knights as ever buckled on a sword or won their
spurs by virtuous zeal, undaunted valor, and boundless
magnanimity. To them we must now say, "Hail and
Farewell !"
Courteously submitted.
James H. Hopkins,
For the Committee.
COSTUME AND JEWELS.
Sir Alfred Creigh, chairman of the Committee on Costume
and Jewels, presented the following report :
To the R. E. Orand Commander, Officers and Sir Knights
composing the Grand Commandery of Knights Temjjlar
of the State of Pennsylvania :
The undersigned committee, who were appointed at the
442 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
fourth Annual Conclave, upon the recommendation of the
R. E. Grand Commander, Sir W. W. Wilson, and by reso-
lution unanimously adopted, to report the Costume and
Jewels a2)propriate to, and in harmony with, the spirit
and character of our Order, respectfully and courteously beg
leave to submit the following as the result of their labors :
That your committee, feeling the great importance of the
subjects committed to their examination, entered upon the
discharge of the duty assigned them with the determination
to present a report based upon principles of history and
heraldry, /7'ee from all prejudice, and with the sole aim of ele-
vating Templar Masonry, and placing her in her true and
proper position, conforming as near as possible to her
ancient government.
In discussing the questions, necessarily of a complicated
character, which came before the committee, and upon
which we feel called to express our opinions, some of the
learned lights of Templar Masonry may imagine that the
Sir Knights composing the Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania should not thrust their opinions upon older Com-
manderies, whose experience should be a sure guarantee of
their promulgated opinions, and in the dissemination of
which they have been standard-bearers. It is true, our
Grand Commandery is but in the infancy of its being, and
we have the magnanimity to acknowledge the indebtedness
under which all Templars feel toward those who have con-
tributed to the general stock of Templar knowledge; yet your
committee feel that the principles for which we are about
contending are worthy of a contest in the great battle-field
of mind ; and if our report shall be sustained by adducing
facts and circumstances, historical and heraldic principles,
and logical deductions from authors learned in the subject,
and whose voluminous writings have been sanctioned and
sustained by all subsequent writers, then will your commit-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 443
tee feel persuaded that their labors have been abundantly
crowned with success, and the Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania have the credit of reporting a dress, uniform and
jewels adapted not only to the dignity and wants of the
Order, but appropriate to and in harmony with its spirit,
its origin, its principles, and its character.
To present the whole subject before this Grand Comman-
dery, your committee will narrate its history, for a proper
understanding of the question. At the triennial meeting
of the General Grand Encampment of the United States,
held in September, 1856, our M. E. Grand Master, Sir W.
B. Hubbard, uses the following language : " With the ex-
ception of the jewels for the principal officers of your Gen-
eral Grand Encampment, I am not aware of any statute or
rule having been adopted establishing a uniform dress for
the members at large and distinctive jewels for all Grand
and subordinate officers. It is believed that at the present
time there is a necessity for correct and permanent rules on
this subject." (Proceedings of 1856, p. 14.)
Our M. E. Grand Master also says: "I have been of late
frequently called upon to designate the appropriate dress
of a Knight Templar ; but knowing that within our juris-
diction there had been a decided departure from the more
ancient statutes, insomuch that little else than the sword
was to be seen in place, I concluded to defer the matter to
your better judgment, after you shall have inspected the
present not uniform dress, the ancient statutes regulating
the same, and finally dispose of the whole subject as you
in your wisdom may think proper." (Page 15.)
Again, our Grand Master says : " The request in regard
to clothing and official jewels was intended as a basis for
the official action of your honorable body. It was the cus-
tom of our predecessors, when assembled in Chapters or
Conclaves, for each to be dressed in the appropriate cos-
444 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
tume of the Order, and wearing the badge and jewel of
his office." (Page 14.) This part of the Grand Master's
address, in regard to clothing and jewels, was referred to a
special committee, consisting of Sir Knights Mackey,
Simons, Starkweather, Raymond, and B. F. Smith. (Page
28.) Subsequent to their appointment, Sir Knight Mackey
made a report on the subject of dress as a part of the con-
stitution (page 36), which was postponed for consideration
until the triennial meeting in September, 1859 (page 66),
and ordered to be printed in the proceedings.
Your committee would now add the statutes relative to
dress, which were postponed; and give our objections to
such parts as are not in accordance with the more ancient
statutes of the Order, and our reasons for the same :
"Article 1. The costume of a Knight Templar shall con-
sist of a full suit of black, dress coat and pantaloons, white
cravat, black gloves, boots and gilt spurs, and over all a
white surcoat, on the left breast of which shall be embroi-
dered a red cross; an undress military cap, and on the front
a Templar cross ; a cross-hilted sword, the scabbard of black
leather, suspended from a black velvet or leather baldrick ;
a short dagger on the left side ; a black velvet apron of a
triangular form, having on the centre a Patriarchal cross,
and on the flap a skull and cross-bones, all in silver. The
edging of aprons and collars shall be of gold for Grand
Bodies, and of silver for Subordinate Commanderies. Every
Knight will also be permitted to wear on all occasions the
Templar's badge, namely, a Patriarchal cross, enameled
red and edged with gold, suspended from the breast by a
red ribbon or gold chain. He shall also be permitted to
wear on the index finger of his right hand a gold ring, or-
namented with the Templar cross, between the letters P. D.
E. P., and inscribed on the inner side with the name of the
wearer and date of his initiation; and it is recommended
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 445
that the Commander present to every Templar such a ring
on creation.
^'Article 2. The great standard of the Order is the Beau-
seant, which consists of alternate pales or vertical stripes
of black and white, with the red Templar cross over all,
which must be borne in all public processions.
''Article 3. All Knights Templar, when signing Masonic
documents, shall prefix to their signatures the sign of the
cross ; Grand Officers and Past Grand Officers of Grand
Commanderies shall prefix the Patriarchal cross ; and
Grand and Past Grand Officers of the Grand Encampment
shall prefix the double Patriarchal crosses; and when this
can be conveniently done, the cross should always be made
in red ink.
"Article 4. The jewels of the Order shall be those now
used, with this regulation : The jewels of a Commandery
shall be of silver; those of a Grand Commandery of gold,
suspended within a double delta or triangle ; and those of
the Grand Encampment of gold, suspended within a circle."
These are the general statutes on the subject of costume,
jewels, &c., which are to be considered before the triennial
meeting of the Grand Encampment of the United States,
in September, 1859. As an integral part of that Grand
Body, we are interested in these general statutes ; and it is
our duty, as well as our privilege, firmly to dissent from
such views as, in our opinion, are not in consonance with
the ancient statutes. Your committee have no doubt but
that the w^ords of our M. E. Grand Master, which we have
quoted in the former part of this report, gave to our now
P. G. Commander (Wilson) the idea of suggesting in his
last address, " the appointment of a committee to report, at
our next Annual Conclave, costume and jewels appropriate
to, and in harmony with, the spirit and character of our
Order. This report should recommend, first, the costume
38
446 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
and insignia to be worn within our Asylums ; second^ such
as is proper to be worn on public occasions." (Fourth Ann.
Proc. p. 11.) The idea was happily conceived — worthy of
the head and heart of our valiant and magnanimous Past
Grand Commander ; and it shall be the duty of the com-
mittee to carry out his suggestion in accordance with the
ancient statutes and regulations ; the committee premising,
however, that where any discrepancies arise it shall be our
object to make them conform as near as possible to what
Templar Masonry requires in America, Your committee
are induced to make this remark from the fact that Sym-
bolic, Capitual, Cryptic, and Chivalric or Templar Masonry
have all, more or less, undergone such changes — that each
has respectively become Americanized. Your committee
and this Grand Commandery, therefore, have but one horn
of the dilemma to choose — either to take Templar Masonry
as Americanized, or restore it, with all its ritual, its cere-
monies, and its teachings, to that as practised by the Tem-
plars of England and Wales, who claim to be the legitimate
descendants of the valiant Hugh de Payens and his asso-
ciates. The fact need not now be disguised that parts of
the work have been expunged, and our ritual is not full,
complete and perfect. Shall we leave it as it is, or restore
it to its pristine beauty ?
With these remarks, your committee would give their
views upon such parts of the general statutes which to
them are objectionable ; and the first sentence which arrests
our attention in Article 1 is couched in the following words:
"And over all a white surcoat, on the left breast of which shall
he a red cross."
If we carefully examine Article 1 of the proposed general
statutes, we find that a Knight Templar in full costume
would be completely harnessed ; and, like the Knights of
olden time, the dress would be too cumbersome, and would
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TE^IPLAR. 447
necessarily occasion both inconvenience and trouble. On
this part of the report your committee would observe that
but two questions arise : first, the use and form of the SUR-
COAT ; second, the cross.
In an examination of the standard works of heraldry, it
is affirmed that the " three principal signs of honor " for
distinguishing, diiferencing and illustrating persons, are the
surcoat, the ensign, and the shield, upon which the individ-
ual arms are represented or painted.
It is not the province of this committee, in this report, to
inquire at length into the application and adaptation of
heraldry as applied to Knighthood ; a single remark must
suffice our purpose at this time. Without a perfect and
thorough knowledge of the science of heraldry, and a full
investigation of its principles, no Sir Knight can arrive at
fair and reasonable conclusions without acquiring ideas and
truths from heraldic authors, wdiich in itself is so valuable
that the greatest men in all ages have thought it worthy
their study and application.
Thus believing, your committee deemed it both right and
expedient to incorporate some heraldic facts into this report,
and Avhich have a direct bearing upon the issues now before
this Grand Commandery. Nisbett (page 10) says that the
surcoat w^as a thin, loose, light taffety coat used by military
men over their armor, upon which their arms were painted
or embroidered, that they might be distinguished in battle;
and at page 290 adds that the surcoat appears to have been
intended to protect the polished armor, and the devices
thereon to render the bearer known when engaged in the
ranks of the army. This being, therefore, its use, we now
proceed to the form.
In the revised statutes of the Grand Conclave of Knights
Templar of Scotland, in the chapter treating of the costume
of Knights, is a full description of what is alleged to be the
448 IIISTOIIY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
same as that worn by the ancient Templars, and which we
therefore embrace in this report as a matter of history.
The surcoat or mantle is made of white woolen, to reach
the knee in front and taper away to the ankle behind,
fastened with white cord and tassels ; and a white woolen
tunic reaching to about three or four inches above the knee.
A red cross patee is placed on the left shoulder of the man-
tle and left breast of the tunic. The mantle of a Knight
Commander is fastened with red silk cord and tassels ; and
instead of the red cross patee on the tunic, an elongated
cross is placed in front, extending from about two inches
from the collar to within three inches of the bottom.
The statutes of Knights Templars of England and Wales
require the cloak or mantle to be of white camlet, with a
cape or hood ; on the left shoulder the cross, in red silk.
The cross on the mantle worn by present and past officers to
be ten and a half inches long ; while the cross patee on the
mantle worn by other Knights of the Order to be nine and
a half inches in diameter.
The Grand Commandery of New York — a Commandery
whose motto is " Excelsior," who justly pride themselves,
and are deservedly acknowledged, as a model Grand Com-
mandery in Templar Masonry — prescribes as a part of the
uniform of a Knight Templar that the surcoat shall be of
white merino, with loose hanging sleeves ; the body of the
coat to hang loosely from the shoulder, and to extend three
inches below the knee ; on the left breast a red velvet Temp-
lar cross, six inches in diameter ; the surcoat to be worn
over all.
With regard to the cross worn on the surcoat, your com-
mittee would add that the testimony of all authors who
have written upon this subject establishes the fact. Suther-
land says these soldiers of the pilgrims wore a white mantle
over their chivalric harness, according to the statutes drawn
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 449
up by St. Bernard, as their peculiar habit ; to which Pope
Eugenius III. (says Vertot, vol. i. p. 46) added a red cross,
emblazoned on the left bi'east, and placed over the heart,
as the symbol of martyrdom and a mark of their profes-
sion. Their helmet, in token of humility, had no crest, and
their beards were suffered to remain uncut.
Newton, in his work on Heraldry, says fpage 222) that
after the Christians had established themselves at Jerusa-
lem, about A. D. 1100, these brothers Hospitalers took
upon themselves military habits, and assumed as their her-
aldic insignia the peculiar form of a cross having eight points,
called after their name, but subsequently denominated the
Cross of Malta. It derives its name cross patee from the
Latin word i)atidus, and implies " spread or opened," and
has its extremities ending broad, for which we say patee.
It has also allusion to the opening wings of a bird, who
covers her young and thereby protects them from injury.
It also represents the opening virtues of the Christian
soldier, who has shielded the weak and innocent from op-
pression and injury. And it also represents the eight beati-
tudes mentioned in Matthew, chap. v. from 3d to 13th verse.
(See Drawing No. 1.)
How appropriate, then, to place upon the white surcoat
this ancient and honorable badge — ancient, as having been
adopted when the very principles of our institution were
brought into existence — and honorable, because it has been
preserved as one of our ancient insignia, whether we regard
it in its origin by the Knights of the Order of St. John of
Jerusalem, A. D. 1099, or afterwards by the Knights of
Khodes, in 1310, or the Knights Templar or Knights of
Malta, in 1522, from which place this cross has now the
name of Cross of Malta.
Your committee cannot imagine that any Knight could
for one moment suppose that crosses were not sewed upon
38*
450 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the surcoats of pilgrim-warriors. If there sliould be one,
Ave wish to remove that doubt by saying that there is not
one solitary writer upon this subject but establishes the fact.
And Randal Holmes, an old and distinguished writer, in
his Academy of Armories, says " that a cross was carried
by those that enrolled for the voyage to the Holy Land,
about the year 1187, aiM was sewed on the left side of the
garment, right against the heart : the French wore it red,
the English ivhite, the Italians yellow, the Flemings green,
and the Germans black ^
Your committee, therefore, from all the testimony, are
unwilling that the plain cross, or, as it is rightly termed, the
Cross of Passion (see Drawing No. 3), originally worn by
Crusaders on their shoulders, or sewed on their garments,
should be substituted for that of the cross with eight points.
Let us recapitulate the facts. Ashmole says: "The Order
of St. John of Jerusalem, Knights of Malta, or Knights
Hospitalers of St. John of Jerusalem, was instituted A. D.
1099, and that King Baldwin I. conferred on them large
privileges, permitting them arms, and instituting them to
be Knights, A. D. 1104. But that Pope Gelasius II., A. D.
1120, confirmed their rule of living ; that on the breast of
their habit (being black) they wore at first a plain cross of
white cloth, which afterwards was changed to one with
eight points, to represent the eight beatitudes ; but in war
they used a red cassock, bearing the white cross upon it, and
in their banners or ensigns they wore a crimson or red coat
of arms with the said white cross upon it; but in their
monasteries they wore the black garment only." (Nisbet,
iv. p. 131.)
It is necessary for Templars to remember the distinction,
that the Crusaders wore the plain cross on their garments,
while the Knights assumed the cross of eight points as a
perfect and unmistakable distinction in dress. We, as the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 451
descendants of those Knights, adopt not the plain cross, but
that of Malta for our surcoat.
Your committee therefore propose to harmonize all these
various difi'erences, by reporting the form of surcoat to be
worn within the Asylum and provided at the expense of
the Commandery, and the other for public occasions to be
purchased by each Sir Knight ; a' full and minute descrip-
tion of which will be given at the conclusion of this report,
it being the intention of your committee to combine neat-
ness and plainness without extravagance.
Your committee would now call the attention of this
Grand Commandery to the following sentence in the pro-
posed statutes: "An undress military cap, and on the front
a Temjylar ei'oss.'^
The proposed change of the helmet to something less
cumbersome will meet the approbation of Sir Knights
generally. The head being the noblest part of the human
body, the helmet was consequently considered the noblest
part appertaining to the exterior ornaments of arms. This
opinion of an ancient writer being true, we should substitute
something more appropriate than an undress military cap.
It speaks of nothing, it tells of nothing, nor have we any-
thing, however remote, by which we can give a forced con-
struction for its use in Templar Masonry.
As your committee remarked in a former part of this re-
port, our Order has become Americanized, and hence we
feel persuaded that it is our duty not only to recommend
but to urge upon the representatives of the Sir Knights of
Pennsylvania the propriety, the necessity and the expe-
diency of substituting for the helmet or the cap the three-
cocked Revolidioyiary hat.
Every Sir Knight adorned with this military hat would
feel his heart throb with those patriotic feelings which actu-
ated our Revolutionary fathers, as they bared their breasts
452 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
and nerved their arms in a contest which eventuated in our
freedom, and gave birth to American liberty.
Reminiscences of this kind would recall to the mind of
every Knight the deeds, the actions, and the exploits of the
Revolutionary patriots ; and while even now assembled in
Grand Conclave as Knights Templars, in the city of Phila-
delphia, under the very shadow of the old State House
where the Declaration of the inalienable rights of man was
first promulgated to the people, and the famous old bell, on
the 4th of July, 1776, rang to the people its prophetic in-
scription, " Proclaim liberty throughout all the land and to
all the people thereof," we instinctively inhale the very
atmosphere of this sacred place, as in imagination we gaze
upon the freemen of America rallying under the standard
of liberty, and fighting shoulder to shoulder to crush out
and for ever destroy tyranny. That immortal band of
patriots — the Continental army — w^ere neither clothed with
cumbersome helmets nor undress military caps, but the
three-cocked hat ornamented their persons and spoke to
them of military prowess and immortal fame, and the
waving of the hat, in the heat of battle, urged them to
deeds of valor at the bayonet's point.
Sir Knights, let us, as the descendants of the most illus-
trious and valiant patriots that ever graced the earth,
assume as our head-dress neither the helmet nor the undress
military cap, but the glorious, time-honored and ever-to-be
revered three-cocked Revolutionary hat, adorned with the
Templar's cross. And while the one shall tell us of the
chivalric scenes of old, when the Sir Knight, clad in armor,
fought the infidel sword in hand, in defence of the innocent
maidens, helj)less orphans, destitute widows and the Christian
7'eligion, the other will speak to our hearts of American
glory, American fame, and that deathless immortality
which is destined to tlie patriots of our American Revolu-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 453
tion — aye, more destined to our American patriots than the
historic fame which now surrounds the valorous deeds of
the Christian warriors w^ho marched to the Holy Land to
rescue the sepulchre of our Saviour from the hands of the
infidels. Let us in this consecrated city — the city of
brotherly love — breathing the very atmosphere of freedom,
such as our ancestors breathed when they appealed to high
heaven for the justice of their cause, and upon the altar of
the Temple of Liberty swore an abiding union of head, of
hearts and of hands for the defence of their rights, — let us,
too, "proclaim this day an indissoluble union between the
Templar cross and the Revolutionary hat — a union eternal
as the existence of civil liberty, and immortal as the prin-
ciples of the Christian religion."
Your committee would call the attention of this Grand
Commandery to the following words of the proposed stat-
utes : " A black velvet apron of a triangular form, having on
the centre a Patriarchal cross, and on the flap a skull and
o^oss-hones, all in silver."
As Knighthood in its vows and ceremonial usages and
customs, in its unmistakable principles of truth and honor,
and in its adherence to the defence of the Christian religion,
can be considered in no other light than a religious and
military institution, your committee are free to confess
that they cannot perceive the connection that exists, neces-
sarily requiring an apron as any part of military costume,
and with which we should adorn our persons. We are
fully satisfied that our ancient Knights, while serving on
the tented field, never used aprons, and hence we discard
them from the costume as both unnecessary and unknightly,
but have no objection to the emblems which are usually
placed on aprons to be transferred to the sash, a description
of which will appear in the reported costume of a Knight
Templar.
454 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Your committee have taken some pains to investigate
"" that part of Article 1 of the proposed statutes which reads
in the following language: "Every Knight will also be per-
mitted to wear on all occasions the Templar's badge, a
Patriarchal cross, enameled red and edged with gold, sus-
pended from the breast by a red ribbon or gold chain."
The Grand Commandery of New York uses similar lan-
guage, but defines the size of the badge, viz. : one inch and
three-quarters.
Your committee dissent both from the proposed statutes
and the endorsement thereof by the Grand Commandery
of New York, and to establish our dissent we must neces-
sarily refer to history.
It cannot be doubted or questioned but that the Patri-
archal cross was the badge of the Knight Templar from its
inauguration in 1118 to the year 1319, when the Knights
Templar w^ere suppressed by Pope Clement V., and their
lands were confiscated by order of a general council at
Vienna, and were conferred on the Knights of the Order
of St. John of Jerusalem, afterwards called Knights of
Khodes, and now Knights of Malta. The Hospitalers, or
Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, shortly after their de-
parture from the Holy Land, dispossessed the Turks of the
island of Rhodes and maintained it with great bravery, but,
being unassisted by the Christian kingdoms, they deter-
mined, in 1523, to retire to the isle of Malta. From this
circumstance these Knights were denominated Knights of
Malta. They claim that they have retained their original
insignia, a cross of eight points, and now commonly called
the Maltese cross. They insist that it was worn by the
Knights of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, which
Order was instituted by King Baldwin in 1104; and Carter,
in his ancient work on this subject, says : "That the son of
a Moor was not to be admitted, nor of a Jew or a Moham-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 455
medan, though the son of a prince, and a Christian him-
self; and they Avere sworn to fight for the Christian faith,
do justice, defend the oppressed, relieve the poor, persecute
the Mohammedans, live virtuously, and protect widows and
orphans."
Your committee would again repeat that after the
Knights Templars were suppressed, their lands confiscated,
they betook themselves to the island of Malta ; and their
chivalrous exploits, whether viewed as Hospitalers, Tem-
plars, or Knights of Malta, acquired for them great fame
during the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth centuries; but
throughout all their trials and difiiculties they retained
their original insignia, " the cross of eight points, argent"
(subsequently called the Cross of Malta), upon a sable
ground, and in the centre of the cross a crown — " o?-" — was
represented with an eagle displayed of the first if the bearer
was a German, or a ^' fleur de lis" if a Frenchman. The
same was carried by each individual Knight, pendant from
a black ribbon hung round the neck, or as a star before the
breast.
Your committee, therefore, from the facts of the case, as
deduced from history, recommend the Maltese cross as
more significant and appropriate; and while the Germans
and the French have their peculiar marks of honor placed
upon the centre of the Maltese cross, let us, as American
Knights, wear as the Templar's badge the Maltese cross
with eight points, having in the centre the cross and the
crown, as the accompanying drawing will show. (See
Drawing No. 2.) Then each Sir Knight, as he views the
insignia of the Order, will recall to mind not only the
eight beatitudes as delivered by our Saviour on the Mount,
but the principles of Knights Templars and the achieve-
ments of the Knights of Malta ; and as he gazes and
meditates on these things, the crown and the cross will
456 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
attract his pensive eye, and in the joy of his heart he will
exclaim :
"Sign of my faith, seal of my hope,
Pledge of God's love to wandering man !
Beaconed by thee, no more I grope
Dimly the way of truth to scan :
And ever when life's billows toss,
Tho' whirlwinds sweep and storm-clouds frown,
Faith o'er the cloud shall see the cross,
Hope o'er the cross shall see the crown.
While on the reverse side each individual Sir Knight
may have engraved his mark, and the number of his Chap-
ter or his coat of arms, according to the laws of heraldry.
Your committee would respectfully and courteously sub-
mit their views upon Article 3 of the proposed statutes, in
regard to prefixing the sign of the cross, the Patriarchal
cross, and the double Patriarchal crosses to all Masonic
documents.
Your committee propose to simplify this article by abol-
ishing the double Patriarchal crosses, and using for mem-
bers of the Order the sign of the cross (see Drawing No. 3),
while for present or past officers the Patriarchal cross (see
Drawing No. 4).
The committee feel called upon to express their views
upon the double Patriarchal crosses, as the committee of the
Grand Encampment of the United States seem to designate
it. It is called by the Grand Conclave of England and
Wales, the Triple cross of Salem; by j^opes, archbishops and
bishops of Pome, the pope's cross staff; but in Protestant
America it assumes the name of double Patriarchal crosses.
Your committee are decidedly opposed to using, as an em-
blem in Templar Masonry, the pope's C7'oss staff, which rep-
resents the Pope as the supreme dignity and sole monarch
among Roman Catholics throughout the world. By the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 457
laws of heraldry he is entitled to it, and let him enjoy it.
It would be nothing less than presumptive vanity to assume
an insignia or emblem which teaches universal dominion,
not over a country, but over the whole world.
Your committee made inquiry of the Grand Registrar of
Canada on the subject of the triple cross, and he writes
thus: "The triple cross of Salem belongs to the Pope.
Formerly, the Knights Temj^lar and Knights of St. John,
united as Masonic Knights, wore the Maltese cross, which
designated the union of the two Orders, which was red
within and luMte without. The same jewel was worn by
all ranks, diifering only in size and ornamental additions.
Why the Grand Conclave altered this we have never been
able to learn. The triple cross as worn by the Eminent
Commander is decidedly objectionable on account of its
being the symbol of the ecclesiastical sovereignty of Rome.
The innovations in these degrees are to be discu.-ped at the
ensuing Grand Conclave." The Grand Registrar also adds
that the word Conclave and the Papal cross are a portion
of the novelties of French origin.
Your committee approach the consideration of jewels of
the Commandery, and beg leave to make a change in that
of the Prelate, and instead of the tri2:>le triangle, as now in
use, to substitute the Crosier. (See Drawing No. 5.)
The questions which naturally present themselves to the
minds of the committee are : first, its form and shape ; and
second, its original and present use.
All writers agree that the crosier is a tall staff of gold or
silver, curved at the upper end, and that it was originally
a shepherd's crook ; and while these propositions are abund-
antly sustained, it is also demonstrated that the crosier is
carried before bishops, abbots, &c., as an emblem expressive
of their dignity while they are exercising the functions of
their office. When bestowing the blessing upon the peo-
39 U
458 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAK.
pie, they take the crosier into their own hands. We would
further add, that the investiture of the bishop is indicated
by the delivery of the crosier. St. Isadore says that
bishops bear the staff because they have the right to
control the erring and the duty to support the weak.
For these reasons, your committee believe that the triple
triangle should be changed, and the crosier substituted
among the jewels ; and in addition thereto they would
recommend that each Commandery be required to procure
a suitable crosier, which the Prelate shall carry when ex-
ercising the duties of his office.
Your committee, therefore, in conclusion, would recom-
mend the following statutes of dress, jewels, &c., to be in-
serted among the statutes of this Grand Commandery:
1. COSTUME AND INSIGNIA TO BE WORN WITHIN THE
ASYLUM.
Cap. — Black velvet cap without front piece, six inches
high, with a Cross of Passion in front. (See Drawing
No. 3.)
Sureoat — To be of white merino, with loose hanging
sleeves; the body of the coat to hang loosely from the
shoulders, and to extend six inches below the knee. On
the left breast a red cross patee, six inches in diameter.
(See Drawing No. 1.)
Sword. — To be cross-hilted, with black scabbard, for
members, and yellow for officers (past or present); the
pommel formed to represent a skull.
Baldrkh or Belt. — To be of black patent leather, and
clasped in front with a square metal clasp of silver, having
a cross patee in the centre.
Gauntlets. — Of black velvet, six inches deep, bordered
with gold or silver, according to rank, with the Patriarchal
cross in the centre. (See Drawing No. 4.)
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 459
2. COSTUME AND INSIGNIA TO BE WORN ON PUBLIC
OCCASIONS.
Dress. — The uniform of a Knight Templar shall consist
of a full suit of black, frock coat and j)antaloons, white
cravat, boots, and gilt spurs.
Hat. — Three-cocked Revolutionary hat, without bind-
ing ; fan or back part seven inches, the front or cock six
inches, each corner six inches. Knights to have black rib-
bon on the two front sides; officers or past officers, black
silk cockade, ornamented with a Cross of Passion (see
Drawing Xo. 3), made of silver, two inches long.
Plume. — Officers will wear a black plume drooping from
an upright stem, feathered to the length of eight inches.
Sash. — A black silk velvet sash, four inches wide, lined
with green, and worn over the left shoulder, w^ith a small
silver dagger attached thereto, resting on the right thigh.
The sash to be bordered with gold or silver lace, according
to rank ; if a member, of silver ; if an officer (past or pre-
sent), gold. The sash to be ornamented with the following
emblems, of silver:
The nine-pointed star, with the Passion Cross in the cen-
tre, of gold, surrounded by the motto, " J?i hoc signo vinces."
A paschal lamb, carrying a crossed staff wnth a banner, to
remind us of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the
world.
A dove, to remind us of the Almighty Comforter, w^hich dc
scended in a bodily shape on Christ at his baptism, where-
by his divine mission was indicated to St. John the Baptist.
The cock, as the monitor of the Order, to remind us at
early morn of our duties as Knight Templars, and to ask
assistance to preserve us through the coming day.
And the skull and cross bones, to remind us of the
uncertainty of our earthly existance, and teach us to be
prepared for the closing hour of our mortal career.
460 IirSTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
No. 1. Cross of Malta.
No. 2. Tempt.ar's Badge.
Templar's Badge. — A Maltese cross, two inches square,
made of gold, in the centre of which shall be a circle, em-
bracing the cross and the crown. On the reverse side, the
mark of the individual Knight, with his name, number of
his Chapter, or in lieu thereof his coat of arms, according
to the law of heraldry. This badge shall be suspended from
the left breast by a gold chain or a red watered ribbon,
three-quarters of an inch wide.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
461
No. 3. Cross of Passion.
No. 4. Patriarchal Cross.
No. 5. Crosier. No. 7. Pilorim's Scrip. No. 6. Pilgrim's Staff.
• Crosier. — A staff five feet long, four inches in circumfer-
ence, mounted with the Cross of Passion, and used by the
Prelate.
Pllgrwi^s Staff. — To be five feet long, with a ball on the
top, surmounted by a Cross of Passion, a hook eight inches
39*
4G2
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
IVom the ball to hang the scrip upon, and pointed at the
lower end. History tells us that these staves had a hook
at the upper part to hang the scrip upon, and were pointed
at the lower end for the convenience of being stuck into the
ground while the pilgrim performed his devotions.
Pilgrim's Scrip. — To be sable, but the tassels and buckles
to be yellow.
O^VS, SCO
No. 8. Standard of the Order.
The great standard of the Order is a white banner of
woolen stuff, having in the centre a cross 'patee alisee, with
the outer sides curved inward, so as to make the eight points
more conspicuous, and surrounded by the motto, " Non
nobis, Domine, non nobis, sed nomine tua da gloriamy On
the reverse, the title of the Commandery.
No. 9. Beauseant.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 463
The Beauseant or battle-flag is an oblong square in form,
the upper half black and the lower white; described in
heraldry as ''party j^er Jesse, sable et argent,'' and signifying
"white and fair to Christians, but black and terrible to
their enemies."
The other banners remain unchanged.
EiNG or Profession.
Every Knight may wear, as a symbol of his perpetual
union with the Order, a gold ring, on which is enameled on
a white ground a Patriarchal cross, gides, fimbrated with
gold. On the inside of the ring the name of the Knight
and the date of his admission should be engraven.
All of which is respectfully and courteously submitted.
Alfred Creigh,
R. A. Lamberton.
With exception of so much of the report as relates to the
dispensing with the apron, I fully agree.
John W. AVright.
On motion of Sir A. E. Stocker,
Resolved, That the report be accepted and spread on the
minutes.
CHAPTER III.
PUBLIC ADDRESSES.
Installation Ceremonies of the Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania, held in Reading, June, 1860.
Masonic Temple, June 23, 1860, 3 o'clock P. M.
The Grand Commandery met pursuant to adjournment, K. E. Sir
Wm. H. Allen in the East.
The Grand Commandery, having formed in due order, retired
from tlie Asylum, and formed into line at the west end of Penn
Square, with the right resting on Fourth street. The procession of
Knights Templar, in their new costume, marched up Fourth to Wal-
nut, up Walnut to Fifth, down Fifth to Penn, up Penn to Eighth,
down Eighth to Franklin, down Franklin to Sixth, down Sixth to
Spruce, down Spruce to Fifth, and up Fifth to St. James' Church,
where the following ceremonies took place :
INSTKUMENTAL MUSIC.
PEAYEK.
BY REV. SIR BEVERLY R. WAUGH, GRAND PRELATE.
ANTHEM.
OPENING ADDRESS BY THE GRAND COMMANDER,
R. E. Sir W. H. ALLEN, LL.D.
Ladies and Gentlemen :
The military and religious Order of Knights Templar, whose cere-
monies of installation you are about to witness, has existed in orga-
nized form since the year of our Lord 1118, when Hugh de Payens
was elected first Grand Master. Its origin dates some half century
after Jerusalem had been wrested from the Saracens by the Cru-
saders, and its primary object was the defence and protection of
Christian pilgrims who visited the holy places. Like most great
societies, it had a small beginning. Nine valiant Knights, who had
fought and triumphed in the wars of the cross, united in a brother-
hood, and bound themselves with a vow to clear tlie highways and
tlie defiles of the mountains of tlie infidels and robbers wlio h-*'^
4fit
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 465
long infested tlieni, and who plundered and murdered many pil-
grims while passing through them on their way to the holy city.
Subsequently, when the number of Templars increased, the sphere
of their operations was enlarged. They became the defenders of
Jerusalem and the Oriental Church from the attacks of the Moham-
medans, the protectors of destitute widows and helpless orphans, and
the champions of wronged and insulted innocence. With their
Beauseant — the great standard of the Order — vnifurled to the breeze,
half white, half black, fair to the friends of Christianity, but dark
and terrible to its enemies, they became objects of admiration to the
armies and sovereigns of Christendom, and of terror to their Mo-
hammedan foes, into whose ranks they had frequently cari'ied con-
fusion and dismay.
The Order continued to flourish for one hundred and eighty years,
under twenty-five successive Grand Masters, until the avaricious and
unscrupulous Philip the Fair of France became jealous of its power
and greedy for its vast wealth, and conspired with Pope Clement V.
to overthrow it and seize its property. De Molay was at that time
Grand Master, and, in the persecution which ensued, this illustrious
Templar, with three of the chief dignitaries of the Order and fifty-
four noble Knights, suflfered martyrdom at the stake. By the union
of the political power of the King and the spiritual power of the
Pope, the Order Avas suppressed. But, though prostrated, it was
not destroyed. Its members continued to practise their ancient
rites in secret, and to inculcate those sublime precepts of religion
and virtue to which the Order has always continued steadfast through
evil report and good report.
From the martyrdom of De Molay to the present time, a period
of five hundred and forty-six years, there has been an uninterrupted
succession of Grand Masters in Europe, each holding office for life.
The first Encampment of Knights Templar in England was estab-
lished at Bristol by the Knights who returned with Eichard I. from
Palestine. It is named Baldwin Encampment. It still preserves its
organization and holds its regular meetings. A second was subse-
quently formed at Bath, and a third at York. From these three
have descended all the Encampments now existing throughout the
British dominions and the United States of America.
The Grand Encampment of the United States is an independent
organization, owing no allegiance or fealty to similar organizations
in Europe, nor to their Grand Masters. While American Knight-
hood preserves the ancient mysteries and landmarks of the Order, it
has adapted its usages and principles to the political and religious
institutions of this country; and in loyalty to these its members
yield precedence to none of their fellow-citizens.
It has been fiequently alleged that the connection which exists
between Kniglithood and Freemasonry was formed at the time when
Templarism Avas driven by persecution, like the primitive Chris-
tians, into dens and caves of the earth. This is an error. Templar
Knighthood, at its origin, was a branch of the universal Masonic
fraternity. There can be little doubt that the Knights who founded
the Order had been initiated into Masonic mysteries as practised in
466 ITTSTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
the secret societies of Syria and Palestine at the time of the Cru-
sades. It was one of the accusations which were brought against
the Tenrph'irs by their enemies, that they practised Masonic rites in
secret. Tliis alone, of the multitude of charges against them, they
never denied ; and the Church of Kome, which has been the per-
sistent foe of all secret societies, except such as were devoted to its
own aggrandizement, has pursued the Order with the same hatred
which other branches of the Masonic family have so liberally
shared.
Equally erroneous is the opinion that Freemasonry was first in-
troduced into Europe by the Templars. There is historical proof
that a Comnuuiication of Freemasons was held at York, in England,
on a summons from Prince Edwin, one hundred and thirty-nine
years before the commencement of the first Crusade, and more than
two centuries before the organization of the Templar Order was
completed under Hugh de Payens.
But, after all, admitting the glorious past of the Order, we are
asked what is its utility in the practical present? Now that the age
of chivalry is past, and a new civilization requires new principles
and agencies, w^hy preserve the forms of a dead and buried institu-
tion? We are told tliat Knighthood is obsolete, and that, like every
other organization which aims to unite the dead past with the living,
breathing, working j)resent, it must languish and dissolve, or petrify
into an inert mass. AVe admit that, in one aspect of the case, the
age of chivalry is past. No armies of Crusaders are now marching
to rescue the holy sepulchre from the infidel; Saracen and Turk no
longer threaten to destroy Christians and Christianity together. The
swords which we wear will never be wielded literally to hew in
pieces the enemies of our religion ; but these swords are visible
symbols of moral and spiritual weapons, which are as necessary at
the present moment to combat the subtler forms of infidelity that
assail our faith as the keen blades of the old Knights of the Temple
and of Malta to repel the invaders who sought to exterminate the
Christian powers of Europe. The warfare now is ''not against flesh
and blood, but against principalities and powers, against the rulers
of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high
places."
Christian Knighthood obsolete, dead, and buried! When faith,
hope, and charity shall be obsolete ; when justice, fortitude, and
mercy shall be obsolete ; when courtesy, magnanimity, and valor shall
be no longer approved or desired among men; wdien there shall be
no longer a helpless orphan to protect, nor a destitute widow to com-
fort and sustain, nor an innocent maiden to defend against insult
and wrong, nor one opjiressed and down-trodden child of humanity
to cheer and succor, tlien, and not till then, Avill Christian Knight-
hood be obsolete. However its rites and ceremonies, which are but
external forms, may change with the ages, its principles are immu-
table ; and so long as the cross shall suggest to the Christian soul
the precious name, "Immanuel, God with us," so long will that
sacred sign in which we shall conquer be emblazoned on our
banners.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 467
INSTALLATION ODE.
Air — " Rule Britannia.''^
When earth's foundation first was laid
By the Almighty Artist's hand,
'Twas then our perfect law was made,
Established by Ilis strict command.
Hail ! mysterious, Hail, glorious Masonry !
That makes us ever great and free.
In vain mankind for shelter sought.
In vain from place to place did roam,
Until from heaven they were taught
To plan, to build, to fix their home.
Hence came the Mason's noble Art,
And stately piles in beauty stand;
But Faith, Hope, Charity impart
New glory to the Templar band.
Blest be the mystic tic that holds
Fraternal hearts in sweet accord ;
Love, Truth, and Friendship it enfolds,
While Mercy tempers Valor's sword.
Our actions still by virtue blest.
And to our precepts ever true,
The world admiring shall request
To learn, and our bright paths pursue.
INSTALLATION OF OFFICERS.
INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC.
TEMPLARS' SONG.
Air — '^3fount Vernon."
Christian warriors, to the pealing
Of the solemn vesper bell.
Round the triform altar kneeling,
Whisper each, Immanuel.
When the watch and ward are over.
Guarding the Asylum well,
Smiles of peace around them hover
At thy name, Immanuel.
When the matin notes are ringing
Cheerfully fi-om mount and dell,
Strength for warfare still is spi'inging
From thy name, Immanuel.
468 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
"When some deed of noble daring,
Such as old traditions tell,
Prompts each Knight to danger sharing,
'Tis for thee, Immanuel.
When the war-clouds darkly lower
On our pathway fierce and fell.
Knights heroic will not cower,
Cheered by thee, Immanuel.
When death's chilly damps are stealing,
And is breathed the last farewell !
All the brighter world revealing,
Thou shalt come, Immanuel !
CLOSING ADDRESS BY THE GRAND COMMANDER,
R. E. W. H. ALLEN.
Right Emixent Grand Comman-dkr and Eminent Sir Knights,
Officers Elect of this Grand Commandery :
To yonr fidelity and administrative capacity the interests of Ma-
sonic Knighthood in this great Commonwealth are committed for
the ensuing year. The duties which will devolve on you will require
the exerci^^e'of all your prudence, industry, and ability, as well as a
competent knowledge of the mysteries of the Order and the princi-
ples of Templar Law. These have been handed down to us partly
by printed monuments, which I commend to your careful study, and
partlv by oral tradition and ancient usage, which you will learn by
practice in the meetings of your Subordinate Commanderies, or
from the lips of those who may be qualified to impart the mforma-
tian and to speak with authority. Be not driven about by every
wind of doctrine bv those who claim to be wise above what is writ-
ten and who presume to teach without having first learned. _ Un-
authorized teachers are the bane of the Order, going about to intro-
duce innovations, and destroving the uniformity of the work and the
nreci'^ion of the ancient discipline. I counsel you to heed them not.
In all subjects of doubt, the Grand Oflicers will have recourse to the
Grand Commander of the State for information, and he will refer
such questions as he may not be prepared to decide to the Graijd
Master of the United States— the highest source of authority in
American Knighthood. i j • ^
Your brethren will not only look to you for counsel and instruc-
tion but also for examples of all Knightly and Christian virtues.
See to it that vou be prepared to impart the former wisely and to
exemplify the' latter with clean hands and pure hearts Unlortu-
natelv in this, as in all other societies, there will be found unworthy
members, whose vices vou will endeavor to correct and whose morals
you will strive to purify. There is no flock, however diligently
guarded, into which the wolf in sheep's clothing wi 1 not sometimes
stealthily creep. There is no church into which the sly hypocrite
HISTORY OF THE KXIGHTS TEMPLAR. 469
does not sometimes make his Avay and "steal the livery of heaven
to serve the devil in." The little chosen band of our Saviour's dis-
ciples contained one apostate and traitor. Whenever you find that
such as these are among you, admonish, reprove, and rebuke them
with all long-sutFering and meekness; and, if they will not be re-
claimed, let them be to you as heathen men and publicans were to
the Jews. Even if they be as a right hand or a right eye, cast them
from you.
While your first duty is to the Order and its individual members,
whose prosperity yovi are to promote and whose happiness you are
to increase, do not suppose that your duty begins and ends with
these. You are members of the great brotherhood of humanity,
and while you are to love the members of this limited fraternity
more, you are to love the universal brotherhood no less. Let your
benevolence and philanthropy extend beyond the avenues of your
Asylums, wherever there is a worthy son or daughter of misfortune
to comfort and protect ;
*' And while the widow's tears you dry.
Or raise a stricken brother from despair,
Or hush the homeless orphan's bitter cry,
May Love's expanding care
Embrace Humanity."
And when your term of office shall have expired, whether you are
to ascend to a higher grade of usefulness and honor, or return again
to the ranks, may you be able, in the spirit and with the honest
boldness of the upright judge of Israel, to challenge all censure, and
ask : What duty have we neglected while we went in and out before
you ? Whom have we defrauded ? Whom have we oppressed ? Of
whom have Ave taken a bribe to blind our eyes? And may all your
brethren rise up and say : Ye have neglected no duty. Ye have de-
frauded no man. Ye have oppressed no man. Ye have not taken
aught of any man's liand.
And when your warfare of life shall be ended, and you are about
to enter upon higher rewards than any which await the valiant
Templar in this world, may your eyes still rest in foith upon that
sacred emblem around whicli is written, " In hoc signo vinces,"
and, having waited with patience and perseverance,
" May you ungird the champion's sword,
To bear the conqueror's palm."
Sir Knights, Members of the Grand Commandery,
AND Visiting Knights :
I greet you in this public presence as worthy members of our
ancient fraternity. You come up hither from different parts of this
Commonwealth, and you represent almost every industrial interest,
almost every religious denomination, and opposite shades of political
opinion. But here, on this neutral ground of Christian Knighthood,
40
470 PIISTOKY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
you assemble in peace and mingle in fraternal council. No preju-
dice or rivalry of occupation, sect or party intrudes to disturb you
here. The only emulation which our Order recognizes as legitimate
is the noble emulation who shall contribute most to its prosperity
and honor, who shall best discharge the duty assigned him, what offi-
cer shall be most prompt at his post, and what Knight shall be most
efficient in executing the commands of his superiors. Abroad, we
mingle, like the rest of our fellow-citizens — as is the right of free-
men—-in the competition of business and the keen encounters of
politics; but within the walls of our Asylum we wipe the sweat of
life's common higliAvay from our brows,*and its dust from our gar-
ments, and apply ourselves to the study of those models of heroic
virtue, those illustrious men who exemjjlified the noblest traits of
human nature, and sealed their fidelity with their blood. Our
Order does not ignore the past, but draws from it lessons of wisdom
and warning to guide us in the present, and to prepare us for the
exigencies of the future. While it is not a blind worshiper of an-
tiquity, it believes that "whatever good the old time had is living
still," and maybe applied to excellent use now and evermore. It is
a lover of our country and of its institutions; and its members are
willing to labor, and, if need be, to suffer, for the glory of the one
and the perpetuation of the other. While churches and political
parties have been rent asunder by sectional jealousies and conflicting
view^s of domestic and public interests, our Order has preserved its
unity in multiplicity. No centrifugal force has driven the State Com-
manderies from their orbits; but each moves in harmony around the
Grand Encampment of the United States as its centre of attraction.
In American Knighthood the North has not vexed the South nor
the South defied the North. The West has not been envious of the
wealth of the East, nor has the East been jealous of the growing
power of the West. What an example to reckless and desperate
men, who are determined to ruin, if they cannot rule, the Kepublic;
and who would fan to a flame the embers of sectional strife, to make
a holocaust of our glorious Union ! In their selfish aspirations they
would kindle fires which a deluge of fraternal blood shall not be
able to quench. Let us stand fast to our integrity, Sir Knights, and
firmlv at our posts; for if our country is to be saved from "anarchy
and disunion, the influence of the Masonic Orders, with the blessing
of God, will be the most potent agency in that salvation ; and while
American Knighthood will stand foremost in her defence, it will be
the last to leave her naked to her enemies.
Sir Knights, before we separate I must ask your indulgence to a
few observations, the last which I shall have the honor to make to
you officially, on a subject of vital importance to our Order.
Masonic Knighthood presents itself to our minds in a fourfold
aspect: as a military, a beneficial, a moral, and a religious institution.
As a military organization, its order, subordination, discipline, and
drill, when properly observed and executed, are beautiful and inter-
esting. As a beneficial order, its alms to the destitute, its relief of
the distressed, and its protection of the defenceless aflxird daily
proofs of benignant usefulness. As a moral instructor, its inculcation
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 471
of courtesy, magnanimity and honor, with all other qualities which
we expect to find in a gentleman, in the best sense of that word, can-
not but exert a healthful influence upon all who enlist under its
banners with suitable preparation of heart. As a religious society,
its observances and ceremonies are tlie most grand and impressive
that the human mind can conceive, and its ritual will compare favor-
ably, in pathos and beauty, with any that has ever been written.
But is it not to be feared that too many of us regard its moral pre-
cepts as something to be approved by the understanding, rather than
as designed to purify the life, and its religious observances as mere
ceremonies, which are to be performed with decorum and solemnity,
but which are not expected to touch the heart?
If this be so, we fall far behind our professions and far below our
privileges. Our Order must stand or fall by the character of its
members as citizens, as Christians, and as good men and true.
Founded as it is on the Christian religion, recognizing the Unity in
Trinity, as symbolized in its sacred triangle, believing in Immanuel
— God li-ith us — and looking forward to the resurrection of the dead
and the life everlasting, it ought to exert a hallowed and purifying
influence upon all its votaries. None but good men can be good
soldiers of the cross ; and every member of our Order who does not
strive to keep his heart pure and his hands clean, is a personified
inconsistency. He cannot but feel the aAvkwardness of his situation,
and, so far as he may have influence, he will be likely to use it to
depress the Order to his own moral standard, or settle down himself
into indifference and apathy.
Then guard well the avenues to your Asylums against the approach
of the unworthy ; and if any such have unfortunately gained admit-
tance there, and refuse to listen to fraternal admonition, withdraw
your fellowship from them. No increase of your numbers, no addi-
tion to your pecuniary resources, can compensate for the mischiefs
which the admission of unworthy members will inflict upon the
Order.
And now, Sir Knights, farewell !
"A sound that makes us linger; yet — farewell!"
And may the God of all grace protect you from falling, and preserve
you unto everlasting life!
K. E. Grand Commander, I now resign this station in the East to
you, my worthy successor, with entire confidence in your ability and
skill. Be tholi faithful unto death, and Christ shall give thee a
crown of life.
DOXOLOGY.
From all that dwell below the skies
Let the Creators praise arise :
Let the Redeemer's name be sung
Through every land, by every tongue.
472 HISTORY OF the knights templar.
Eternal are Thy mercies, Lord,
And truth eternal is Thy word;
Thy praise shall sound from shore to shore,
Till suns shall rise and set no more.
BENEDICTION.
BY BEV. M. C. LIGHTNER, E. GRAND PRELATE.
The line was tlien formed, and proceeded up Fifth to Penn, and
down Penn to the hall.
Altoona, June 14, 1865, A. O. 747.
The Grand Comniandery assembled this morning at the hour of
9 o'clock, in full costume, to receive Gen. U. S. Grant, and pay their
respects to him, as the Grand Comniandery of Knights Templar of
Pennsylvania. Upwards of two hundred full-dressed Knights Tem-
plar, clothed in their magnificent regalia, were formed into proces-
sion, under the marshalship of P. G. Commander Turner. At the
depot the Knights formed into double column, extending from that
point to the Logan House.
After the committee had entered the car and informed the General
of the reception which awaited him, he made his appearance on the
platform, when the band struck up "Hail to the Chief." He was
welcomed with the wildest enthusiasm.
He was then received at the head of the column by V. E. Sir
Wm. H. Strickland, D. G. C, who addressed him in the following
words :
Gen. Grant :
It is with extreme pleasure that the members of the Grand Com-
niandery of Knights Templar of Pennsylvania, now holding their
Annual Session in this place, avail themselves of this opportunity
to manifest their fervent admiration of your distinguished service
and heroic devotion to our government during the dark period when
armed rebellion strove to destroy the beautiful temple of liberty
erected by the wise and patriotic founders of our republic. We feel
that it is mainly to your ability, and your "constancy and courage,"
that we are indebted for the restoration of peace, with "liberty and
union" still inscribed on our banners.
Having faith in the justice of your cause, you had reasonable hope
of success, and obtained it by a firm and consistent adlierence to the
principles on which our beneficent government is founded ; and your
noble magnanimity to the fallen foe commends you especially to
the admiration and sincere respect of our Order.
Accept, General, the assurance of the courteous regard of all
Knights Templar, more especially of the Grand Comniandery of
Pennsylvania, and their earnest desire for your continued prosperity
and usefulness.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 473
After returning thanks for this distinguislied mark of so dignified
and enlightened a body as the Grand Coiumandery of Knights
Temphir'of Pennsylvania, he passed between the lines, with hat
in hand, supported by Sir Knight Strickland on the one side, and
Sir E. H. Turner on the other, the Sir Kniglits having formed the
Arch of Steel, to welcome the brave defender of our country's rights.
The column remained in line until the Creneral and his staff
had taken breakfast, when he passed out between them as he had
entered.
The presence of this great military chieftain — the magnificent
display made by the Knights Templar — the unsurpassed beauty of
the ladies — the" inspiring music of the band, and the soul-stirring
cheers which animated every heart, Avill never be forgotten.
Address of E. Sir James H. Hopkins, Grand Senior War-
den, to the Gh^and Commandery of Pennsylvania, in the
City of Lancaster, June, 1865.
A prayer was offered up by the Grand Prelate, Kev. J. E. Dimm,
and the band played for a short time, after which E,. E. Sir William
H. Strickland, Grand Commander, introduced E. Sir Knight
Hopkins, who with great eloquence delivered his
ORATION.
Italy had slept. The fires of poetry and song, that once lighted
up that fairest portion of the earth, had lost their wonted brilliancy.
She had drank deep from Lethe's silent stream, and seemed to have
forgotten all her former grandeur, all her former glory. Rome had
iiillen, and from the seven hills of the Eternal City there went up
the last sad requiem to her departed splendor. The echoes of her
matchless eloquence had gone to sleep amidst the mouldering ruins
of her desolated forum. The poet tales and epic heroes of her
Augustan age were stilled, as the pulse-strings of the mother of
nations. A night of centuries, starless, dark, impenetrable, pressed
with crushing weight upon the minds and souls of men. But,
although no smile from heaven broke through the overhanging
gloom, Jehovah slumbered not, nor slept. While Rome's pride of
power and Greece's arrogance of learning had received that humi-
liating chastisement of being compelled to grope in feebleness and
ignorance, and while the pagan and idolatrous world were being so
severely taught the utter vanity of all their gods, the Almighty did
not for one moment design to withdraw His face for ever from the
earth, nor that the truths once planted here, should refuse to yield
their fruit. To you, brothers in the mystic tie, it is needless to say
how those sacred truths were guarded and preserved through all
40 *
474 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
fhanires of government and vicissitudes of circumstances. All
otiiers may be content to know that in due time the welcome morn
dawned, aiid the long night slowly gathered its black mantle around
it and reluctantly departed.
The Order in whose interests we are this day assembled, and
under whose banner we all march with glad hearts and ready step,
was one of the first and best fruits of that dawn that followed the
l)assing away of the dark ages. It was begotten in the East, whence
comes all our physical and spiritual light, and was the legitimate
ofrs[)ring of that "ancient Masonry instituted by Solomon. Its birth-
place was upon Mt. Moriah, hallowed and historic ground. Here
was the threshing-floor of Oman the Jebusite, where David met the
destroying angel and appeased his wrath, and erected on the spot
an altar of worship to the true God. Here was the site of Solo-
mon's magnificent Temple, unequaled in splendor by the most
gorgeous dream of poetic fancy. Here, too, the Calif Omar erected
that superb mosque which has ever been the boast of Saracen archi-
tecture, and from whose lofty dome the crescent proudly waved to
mock the builders of the first and second Temple— the Jews and
Christians alike. Surrounded by scenes, all made for ever sacred by
the footprints of the Redeemer, it was a fit place for the organiza-
tion of an Oixler such as ours. It was the natural outgrowth of that
feeling of devotion and chivalry which filled the hearts of the good
and brave in the morning twilight of the eleventh century. _ The cir-
cumstances and motives which led to it, and the purposes it sought
to accomplish, are familiar to every student of history.
The third day after the crucifixion witnessed the first pilgrimage
or visit of the faithful to the tomb of the Lord. It Avas composed
of a few devout and strong-hearted but tearful women, who came at
early dawn with sweet spices and ointment to anoint Him. From
that day to this, through the long lapse of more than eighteen cen-
turies, Christian hearts have turned longingly towards Jerusalem,
and have reverently pressed forward to enjoy the elevating influence
of silent worship amidst those hallowed scenes. It was not mere
superstition that prompted such visits to holy places. It sprung
from the noblest feelings and aflfections. It was associated with the
tenderest recollections and holiest thoughts. There is but little
religion left in the soul and but feeble patriotism in the heart of
that man who has no veneration for the tombs of martyrs, and who
can look with indifference on the mounds, battle-grounds, and monu-
ments of his country's glory. Feelings of reverence for the illus-
trious dead are natural and praiseworthy among all nations; and
much more powerful in their influence when stimulated by a
" heart-searching religion." The philosophy of this emotion needs
only to be suggested to find a proper appreciation by all who visit
the' last resting-place of their loved and lost. "Where is the man
of any holy aspirations, of any tender sympathy, of any love for
the good and great, and for things sublime and beautiful in the
natural or moral world, who does not wish — even in this, our day-^
to visit the land of Palestine, muse over ruins of such historic
grandeur, and like the palmers and Crusaders of old, bend his knee
HTSTORV OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 475
at the Holy Sepulchre ?" Standing amidst the comforts, conveni-
ences, and "securities of travel, and the enlightened civilization of
the present time, we can scarcely realize the difficulties and dangers
which beset that journey in tlie earlier ages. The hardships and
persecutions of the pilgrims were aggravated and intensified when
the Arabs conquered Judea, and the fanatical followers of Mohammed
were unchecked in their wild barliarity. But when the Suljuk
Turks came swarming from the Caucasus and the Caspian Mountains,
overrun Arabia and seized upon the Holy City, the Saracen govern-
ment seemed merciful in comparison with their savage brutality.
The story of these atrocities spread rapidly amongst all the Chris-
tians of the world, and " a nerve was touched of exquisite feeling,
and the sensation vibrated to the heart of Europe." All the emo-
tions of piety that had lain dormant were roused into lively action
by a recital' of the wrongs inflicted by the barbarians who held
dominion over Palestine. The wild enthusiasm of the Hermit,
Peter, and the fiery eloquence of St. Bernard sent a clarion blast
ringing through Alpine passes and Switzer vales, from the vine-
clad liills of France to the snow-carpeted plains of Scandinavia.
They had a glowing, thrilling theme with which to play upon the
heart-strings of the people. "The Turk's proud foot spurned the
dust once pressed by the meek footsteps of Christ. Jerusalem was
captive. Through her courts and palaces a Moslem strode in de-
fiance and reigned without rebuke. The Saracen's insulting heel
was upon the sepulchre of their Lord." Broken-hearted pilgrims
who came from afar with faith and humility to gaze upon those
hallowed scenes, were buffeted, scourged, and pierced, brained, be-
headed, and crucified ; their religion profaned, their temples
polluted. With these facts firing his own heart with indignation,
and with his lips touched with a live coal from off the altar of elo-
quence, the zealous anchorite hurried from place to place, from
hamlet to city, from court to court, with the touching story of the
suffering pilgrims, until every Christian prince and potentate was
electrified, and all Europe was vocal with the battle-cry of the
Crusaders. The Moslem war-drum, the taunting clash of the
Turkish cymbals and the shout of the haughty Saracen gave an
answering echo from Lebanon's cedar heights and Palestine's sacred
mounts, baptized in the glory and blood of incarnate Deity. The
impetuous valor of Europe's chivalry, doubly armed and animated
as they were with religious enthusiasm, could not long be resisted.
The victory was won ; Jerusalem delivered ; the polluting infidels
driven from the holy tomb, and tlie Musselman crescent made to
trail beneath the floating standard of the cross. Then came the
pilgrims in inci'eased numbers, of both sexes, all ages and condi-
tions in life. But the Saracens still held many cities and fortresses,
the sea-shores of Palestine were infested with robbers, and prowling
Arabs haunted the dens and forests. To guard the honor of the
females, and to furnish escort and protection to them and to all other
pious pilgrims, about the opening of the twelfth century nine noble
Knights, illustrious for their deeds of valor at the siege of Jerusa-
lem, united in a brotherhood under the banner of the cross ; bound
476 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
themselves by solemn compact to devote their lives to the protection
of pilgrims and the defence of the faith. Such, Sir Knights, was
the small beginning of our Order, whose achievements brighten the
pages of history, and whose muster-rolls for more than seven
hundred years have borne the names of the bravest and the best.
Ever since the patriarchal age Jerusalem has been a place around
which have clustered the most momentous events in sacred history.
She has been unmistakably marked out as a centre whence should
radiate light and civilization. There reigned the Poet King of
Israel, whose psalms of praise have come down to us freighted with
unequaled devotion and adorned with unrivaled imagery. There
Solomon held his splendid sway, and kings and queens came to pay
him tribute, to look with admiring Avonder on his gorgeous grandeur,
and to listen with reverential awe to his amazing wisdom. And
then, after four thousand years had gone to mingle with the mourn-
ful gloom and starry grandeur of the past, that was stilly to be the
focal point of light. For you remember the commission of_ our
arisen Lord to His disciples Avas, to preach the Gospel to all nations,
but beginning at Jerusalem. And so too it was ordained that our
illustrious Order, with its elevating and ennobling principles, should
scatter light and civilization to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem.
There is a peculiar significance in these coincidences in history which
mav be studied and pondered with profit.
There has been much speculation as to the origin of the connection
of Freemasonry with Templaristn. But I think there can be no
doubt that Hug-h de Payens and Godfrey de St. Aldeniar, the found-
ers of this Order, were first made Masons, and in establishing this
institution were but adapting Ancient Masonry to the practical work-
ings of Christian civilization. The historian 'Lawrie says: "'We
know that the Knights Templar not only possessed the mysteries,
but performed the ceremonies and inculcated the duties, of Free-
masons." And Adler, who wrote an account of the Druses on Mt.
Libanus, says that the Knights Templar were actually members of
the Syriac fraternity, which existed during, and long after, the
Crusades. It was no accidental thing that the first Asylum of the
Order was a portion of a church which had been erected by Jus-
tinian upon the ruins of Solomon's Temple. And in after years,
when they were hunted and persecuted, they found a welcome and
safe refuge in the Lodges of Europe, which proves that they had the
talismanic mysteries which caused both doors and hearts to be
thrown open for their protection.
The Roman Catholic was the prevailing creed of the Christian
religion when our Order was instituted, and hence it numbered
among its members and patrons, priests, bishops and popes. It is
a religious as well as a military organization, and the first code of
statutes for its government was framed by St. Bernard, the Holy
Bishop of Clairvaux, whom Gibbon says was the oracle of Europe
and the founder of one hundred and sixty convents. These regula-
tions may, in our dav, seem peculiarly unsuited for the camp, the
march and the battle-field. But they strikingly portray the severe,
stern piety of those war-scarred Iieroes. The strictest system of
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 477
religious exercises, prayers, matins, vespers, self-denial and fasts
were enjoined. Rules for diet, sleep and clothing were prescribed;
worldly amusements were prohibited ; charity and liberality of senti-
ment commanded; silence and implicit and prompt obedience to the
Master's orders were enforced. But the 72d Rule would, I doubt
not, be regarded by many present as the severest of all. I quote it
at length :
" We hold it dangerous to all religion to gaze too much on the
countenance of women ; and therefore no brother shall presume to
kiss neither widow, nor virgin, nor mother, nor sister, nor aunt, nor
any other woman. Let the Knighthood of Christ shun feminine
kisses, through which men have very often been drawn into danger,
so each with a pure conscience and secure life may be able to walk
everlastingly in the sight of God."
Those fierce Knights, who could bear the shock of battle, the
gleaming scimitar and the piercing lance without a tremor, quaked
beneath the glance of beauty's eyes and trembled at her smile. We
don't much wonder, for they are more potent, not to say fearful,
than Paixhan, Armstrong, Dahlgren, or Rodman's 20-inch. But,
Sir Knights, it becomes a serious question how to reconcile our civil-
ized inclinations with this semi-barbarous rule. I have meditated
much upon this, and I know you will thank me for relieving you
from observing this tyrannical regulation. The prohibitory clause
contains two negatives, which grammarians teach us are equivalent to
one affirmative. So then, to construe this decree by the laws of
syntax, instead of reading, No brother shall kiss no widow, virgin or
other woman, Ave read the command, " All brethren shall kiss all
widows, virgins," &c., provided they can, and the kiss be pure.
The alacrity with which the early Knights submitted to the rigid
discipline prescribed by those statutes shows the self-sacrificing
spirit which led to the formation of our famous Order. They were
the stuff of which heroes are always made, and right well did they
prove it. No dreamy story that fancy ever conjured up, no high-
wrought fiction that the imagination ever conceived, half equals the
brilliant reality of the achievements of the Knights Templar. The
history of every battle fought with the infidels to recover or retain
possession of the Holy Land and the thrice-hallowed sepulchre de-
rives its thrilling interest and imperishable glory from the daring
deeds of those chivalrous Knights. "Wherever a column faltered or
the lines gave way, thither with impetuous and irresistible fury
rushed the brave chargers of the Templars, and then, above the din
of arms, was heard the fierce battle-cry of Beauseant ! filling the
heavens with its echoes; and then the terror-stricken Saracens had
as well resisted the course of a crushing avalanche as attempt to
stand before the assault of heroes such as those. At the storming of
Lilion, at the attack of Ascalon, at Bisan, at the capture of Csesarea,
at Pilgrim's Castle, Safitza and A.cre, monuments more enduring
than brass were carved to their fame by their own strong arms. Go
search the volumes of history! turn over their musty pages! and
find me, if you can, a record that will compare with the defence of
Acre in dauntless intrepidity, fearless, daring, individual prowess,
478 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
and the costliness of its liolocanst to undying fame. When others
fled the Temphirs stood unmoved ; their breasts made living ram-
parts in the streets; they stoutly held the place against eight times
their number, "and only yielded it -sviien their glorious banner fell
from the hands of the last expiring Templar." Nor -were those
exhibitions of valor contincd to the excitements and impulse of
battle, nor to the stimulating rivalry of arms. They displayed a
moral courage even more wonderful in its calm decisiveness than the
tiery impetuosity of the conflict. No oppression, persecution or
torture, no, nor "death itself, could drive them to apostasy. At the
battle of Tiberias two hundred and thirty of these noble Knights
were captured. They were otlered life and liberty if they would re-
nounce Ciiristianity. On the one hand, the terrors of a painful
death stood gaping, grim, relentless ; on the other, floated Moham-
uied's ensign and symbol of his creed. Submit to it, and life with
all its charms was theirs; refuse, and their doom was for ever sealed.
Plere was a momentous issue. The historian briefly records the
result: "Not a man was found base enough to deny his Lord, and
each died a (Jhristiau Knight." Oh ! glorious martyrdom ! Thrice
peaceful be your slumbers, illustrious dead ! Thrice brilliant be
your immortality !
"Their spirits wrap the dusky mountains;
Their memories sparkle o'er the fountains ;
The meanest rill, the mightiest river,
Rolls mingling with their fame for ever."
For two hundred years the Templar's bugle echoed over the plains
of Palestine, and the banner of the cross floated proudly on the
Syrian breeze. But the fall of Acre took away their last stronghold,
and the sepulchre they had rescued and adored, the land they had
baptized with their blood, must be abandoned, Avitli all its melancholy
grandeur. But although the crescent again waved over the temple
and from the battlements of Jerusalem, and INIohammedans strode
with defiant and undisputed sway throughout the Holy Land, the
deeds and fame of the Knights of the Temple continued to rise as
grateful incense to the vault of heaven. Godfrey, Tancred and Ri-
naldo each stands a model,
" Whom every man in arms should wish to be."
Their memories have an imperishable record in Tasso's immortal
verse, to whom they gave the theme and inspiration of his divinest
songs ; while the lofty soul and generous nature of Richard of the
Lion Heart have received faithful portrayal by Sir Walter Scott.
The sword of De Payens lay beside him in his grave, and the lance
of De Puis had fallen from his nerveless grasp, and the Templars
were driven from Asia and forced back to their estates in Europe.
Li passing from the scenes so resplendent with their glory, we pause
not to defend much that was wortliy of censure. "Their laults were
the faidts of their age their virtues all their own." Their motives
and results furnish a mantle to cover all their errors. After the Cru-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 479
sades, Science relit lier lamp ; Art tipped her brush in richer colors ;
the harp of Poetry, that had so long hung unstrung and silent, was
tuned to more enchanting strains. The richness of Asiatic scenery,
the niagnifience and splendor of Oriental princes, the pomp and
grandeur of contending armies, the gorgeous pavilions, the display
of shining banners, and the many deeds of chivalry, all blended
into harmony and thrilled the poet's soul. Such were the Crusades,
such some of the effects of those holy wars.
While the Templars were in the zenith of their glory, while they
were courted by kings and consulted by popes, they had acquired
immense and valuable possessions. The nobility, the crowned heads
and ecclesiastical authorities vied with each other in making them
generous donations. Hence when they abandoned Palestine they
wei'e still powerful and opulent. Their estates were scattered through
Germany, Greece and Sicily, France, Spain and Portugal, Holland,
Italy and England. Addison numbers forty distinguished places in
France where the Templars dwelt ; the ruins of the Temple Ruet
and other chateaux, castles and temples still remain as melancholy
monuments to departed splendor; and of many places in Europe
which were once castles, churches and abodes of Templars nothing
now remains, save
"Gray, but leafy walls, where ruin greenly dwells."
In Castile they had twenty-four bailiwicks ; and the towering fort-
ress of Miravel, in Estremadura, still stands as a grim and gloomy
sentinel over the river Narboan. At Pome, the Grand Prior of Italy
resided in grandeur; at Bologna, Perugia, Lucca, Placentia and
Milan there were convents, towers and temples of magnificence.
In Holland the Oi'der had many costly possessions. Addison men-
tions twenty-one of their buildings as worthy of note ; and Broverus
speaks of the temple at Luxemburg, the refectory, church and stone
wall covered with paintings; while the ruins of tlie preceptories at
Treves, at Dietrich on the Soure, still remain as monuments of their
attachment to the royal art. And in England, too, Templarism had
laid its foundations deep and strong, and reared thereon castles,
chapels and priories of historic grace, beauty and elegance. At the
time of which we speak the income of the Order was estimated at
the enormous sum of thirty millions of dollars.
Such vast possessions could not escape the cupidity of the avari-
cious, and such immense power could not but excite the envy of the
ambitious. Philip, king of France — misnamed the Fair — had set
his heart upon the destruction of this Order of Knighthood. An
opportune vacancy occurred in the Pontifical chair at Rome, and
Philip controlled the choice of the successor. He found a supj)le
tool in Bertrand, Archbishop of Bordeaux, whom, under the name
of Clement V., he invested with the sceptre and chair of St. Peter.
Philip imposed seven conditions as the price of this advancement ;
six he named, but the last was not then disclosed. And yet the
weak, unscrupulous prelate made this rash, blindfolded contract, so
eager was he to sell his soul for a tiara. That secret seventh con-
480 HISTOKY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
dition came to be disclosed in time; and then Church and State united
in the disgraceful conspiracy to crush an Order which had so greatly
benefited both. The infatuy of the olyect was only equaled by the
shameful perfidy by which it was accomplished. The genius of his-
tory must have blushed to leave on record for all coming ages the
disclosure of conduct so base and vile. Jacques de Molay was then,
and for ten years had been, Grand Master of Knights Templar. He
was invited by the Pope to meet him in France, and he, without sus-
picion, with full faith in the pretended Vicegerent of God, promptly
embarked from Cyprus. While he w'as being deceived by the hypo-
critical profession of regard by Clement at Poitiers, the co-conspi-
rator was doing his part in the atrocious partnership of treachery
and guilt. Knights Templar, wherever found, were suddenly seized
and hurried into prison. The rest of the sad story is so well told
by one of the most popular writers of modern times that we will
let him speak: "The temple house at Paris, whence had issued forth
a glorious stream, a host of heroes to defend the Holy Land, was
again crowded with gallant Knights, but they were no longer armed
for the defence of the sepulchre. The sword was no longer draw-n
for the fight; the battle-horse bore them no more to the charge.
Captives to their fellow-Christians, in the power of their enemies,
more pitiless than Saracens, they lay in chains, each in his silent
cell, loaded Avith base accusations and expecting death. All their
immense possessions were gone. Their wealth, the gift of pious and
admiring friends, filled the coffers of a tyrant or swelled the purses
of his minions ; and no one retained sufficient to pay even a hired
advocate to plead his cause before the judges. The Grand Master
of the Temple himself had not four sous to buy him bread, and bread
was often wanting, for no sort of torture was forgotten."
In order to give a color of reason and right to these iniquities,
false, groundless, and absurd charges were preferred against the
Templars ; but the color given was only a deeper shade of infamy.
They were accused of heresy, idolatry, sorcery, and mockery of the
cross of Christ. Think of it! These men all battle-scarred in
defence of that sacred symbol, Avhose blood had dyed the sands of
Syria in support of their faith, charged with a Avant of re\'erence
for the banner under Avhich they had bled and suffered so often and
so much ! Remember Tiberias ! Peraember the rack, the faggot,
and the torch, and all the hellish implements Avhich Avere bravely
Avithstood by Templars refusing to renounce their faith in Chris-
tianity ! Remember that in all the list of sufferers and martyrs not
a single Templar recanted ! and then have patience, if you can, Avith
this pretended accusation of apostasy. But tyranny, bribery and
corruption Avere united, and the devilish purpose must be accom-
plished. On one day fifty-four Knights, as gallant, braA^e, and true
as ever wielded a sword or hurled a lance, wa^re burned to death in
Paris. Not one renounced, not one faltered in his faith ; but in the
midst of their torments and angtiish they called upo)i their God and
ours, and Avith a shout of triumph that rang out clear and strong
above the crackling and hissing flames, they Avent up to the Grand
Asylum of peace.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 481
Yet the Grand Master was still allowed to live, but chained to his
dungeon and subject to tortures too shocking even to mention.
vSeven weary years dragged their slow lengths along, and the aged
Templar, full" of years and honors, without a single stain upon his
bright escutcheon, is brought to his execution, or rather to his sac-
rifice. He was one of the last survivors of the immortal cavaliers
who for two hundred years had fought for the tomb and the faith of
tlie Redeemer. But what of that? He bore many an ugly gash to
testify to his presence and courage in the deadly breach. But what
of that? His head was white with the frosts of many winters, and
nature was fast pouring out the few remaining sands in the hour-
glass of his life. But what of that? There was the pile of lighted
faggots ; there on the scaffold stood the Grand Inquisitor and his
helpless victim. A solemn mockery of an indictment was read, and
the prisoner was begged, in the face of death, to confess some crime
and justify his murderers. "But," says Yillani, "that magnani-
mous Knight, shaking his chains, advanced, with a countenance full
of resolution, to the edge of the scaffold, and, raising his voice, ex-
claimed: 'It is but just that in this terrible day, and in the last
moments of my life, I should expose the iniquity of falsehood and
make trutli to triumph.' " Here was another Zerubbabel asserting
at the peril of liis life, ''Magna est Veritas et prmvalehit.'^ The immo-
lation of tlie Grand Master proceeded ; he was tied upon the pyre,
and from that funeral altar, as his body writhed in agony, liis great
soul in calmness and serenity spoke its creed — Spes mea in Deo est —
and with his eye fixed upon the home of his hope, the great Temp-
lar died. "The tears of the people,'' says Mezeray, "watered the
warrior's ashes, Avhich were carefully gathered up and treasured as
a martyr's dust." Despite all the efforts of king and pope to
blacken his name, it may be written as his epitaph,
" This Molay hath borne his faculties so meek.
Hath been so clear in his great office,
That all the angels will cry, trumpet-tongued,
Against the deep damnation of his taking off."
We pause over this, one of the foulest blots upon the pages of his-
tory, to mention that the infamous pope died after a seven years'
pontificate of storin and blood ; and the no less infamous Philip
died of a lingering and unknown disease, wracked with physical
and mental anguish — all his schemes thwarted, his nobility unfaith-
ful, his subjects rebellious, and domestic wretchedness among his
children. Thus does the Almighty work out His righteous
retribution.
After the martyrdom of Molay, systematic and persistent persecu-
tions of the Order were carried on through Europe and England,
and wherever the pope's power could be felt or Philip's influence
could reach. Some of the houseless Templars took refuge in Scot-
land, and at the famous field of Bannockburn, fought on St. John's
day, they did yeoman's service under the banner of the patriot
Bruce — there and thus proving that their impulses accorded with
41 V
482 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
their early teachings, that wherever cast, and amid whatever sur-
roundings, they were ever ready to draw their swords in a just and
virtuous cause; and when drawn to use them with undaunted vah)r.
Although the political power of the Templars was broken by the
fierce ]>ersecution instituted by Philip and Clement, the Order was
not extinct, for its destruction was beyond the scope of human
power, however bold and daring.
"Truth, crushed to earth, will rise again:
The eternal years of God are hers ;
But Error, wounded, writhes in pain,
And dies amidst its worshipers."
So this Order, in whose ante-chamber we are taught the almighty
force and importance of truth, recovered from its partial paralysis
and again grew in strength and vigor until now its beautiful banner
floats proudly upon every breeze, and gathers under its folds once
more the brave, the generous, the noble of every nation. The age
of cliivalry may have gone to blend with the mysterious tide of old
eternity, but the spirit of chivalry still lives. We, of this age, have
no lordly castles, no ricli cathedrals, no grand preceptories, no vast
estates ; we have no such severe duties and rigorous discipline ; but
there are achievements as great and victories as brilliant. During
the four years that the war-cloud hung in gloom over our country
and blackened its history, there was evoked as unselfish emotion,
and there Avas displayed as brave and gallant and heroic bearing, as
were ever witnessed upon the plains of Syria.
I have given you. Sir Knights, a brief, hurried and imperfect
sketch of the origin and objects of our illustrious Order, and of the
greatness and glory, the sufferings and sacrifices of its founders and
its early members. The moral is manifest, the application easy.
Good men's memories are precious, and it is well at times to hold
them up, that all the world may see and venerate and imitate. With
their generous impulses, their noble thoughts, their acts of valor and
deeds of magnanimity fresh in our minds, let us drink in new inspi-
ration and aspire to a liigher and holier life. Remembering what
they endured to prove and perpetuate their faith, let it stimulate
our hearts and nerve our arms to suffer and sacrifice in the holy
cause. Let us be ever ready to give unmistakable evidence of our
faithfulness ; whether it be by donning the pilgrim's weeds and lean-
ing on his staff to test our patience and perseverance ; or with sword
and helmet rushing to the tented field to battle for the right and
prove our courage and constancy ; or by reverently bowing before
Imraanuel's tomb, and then looking to His throne on high, to show
the depth of our humility and the loftiness of our faith.
To you, as Masons, it is needless to say that all these outward
ceremonies are but symbols of the inner life. Let the seed of the
pure principles of our Order find a genial lodgment in our hearts,
and yield abundant fruitage in our daily walks and ways. No
higher, holier, or more ennobling objects could animate the soJils of
men than those to which we have pledged our lives. To champion
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 483
the cause of virtue and Christianity, to protect the helpless, the
friendless and the destitute, not only wins the thankful glance from
beauty's beaming eye, but causes the grateful incense of the widows'
and the orphans' prayer to ascend to heaven, and find easy entrance
through the pearly gates, and bring back the answering benediction
of Jehovah's smile. Then, Sir Knights,
" So live, that when your summons comes to join
The innumerable caravan that moves
To that mysterious realm, where each shall take
His chamber in the silent halls of death,
You go not, like the quarry slave at night,
Scourged to his dungeon ; but, sustained and soothed
By an unfaltering trust, go ye, like those
Who wrap the drapery of their couch about
Them, and lie down to pleasant dreams."
Address of Rev. Sir R. H. Pattison, D.D., in the city of
Pittsburg, June 1867, at the iiistallation of the Grand
Officers of the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania.
Arrangements having been made previously for the installation
of the Grand Officers and a public address on the subject of Chris-
tian Knighthood, the Grand Officers of the Grand Commandery,
with the Sir Knights, proceeded to the Academy of Music for this
purpose, under the marshalship of Sir E. H. Turner, assisted by Sirs
George Neeld, William D. Spiking, David M. Watt and Isaac
Broome, assistant marshals.
The following exercises were had :
1. An apjDropriate Ode.
2. Prayer by the Be v. J. R. Dimm.
3. Address by the Eev. R. H. Pattison.
ORATION.
Obedience is a lesson taught within the sacred enclosures of Ma-
sonry ; I arise to obey the order of our Commander, yet it is with
diffidence I enter upon the work committed to my hands, surrounded
as I am by so many bright and honored Knights, wlio, by their zeal,
energy, intelligence and well-directed labors, have shed so much lus-
tre upon our annals. But I remember. Eminent Sirs, another lesson
which you have been taught, with so much earnestness, and doubt-
less practised; obedience is mine — charity is yours to-day.
There is a beautiful tradition connected with the site on which
the Temple of Solomon was erected. It is said to have been owned
in common by two brothers, one of whom had a family, the other
had none. On the spot was sown a field of Avheat. On the evening
succeeding the harvest, the wheat having been gathered in separate
484 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
sliocks, the elder brother said unto his wife : " My younger brother
is unable to bear the burden and heat of the day ; I wi 1 arise take
oti^ my shocks and place them with his without his knowledge. 1 he
younger brother, being actuated by the same benevolent motives,
said within himself, "My elder brother has a family, and I have
none; I will contribute to their support; I will arise take otl my
shocks and place them with his without his knowledge. Judge
of their mutual astonishment when on the following morning thev
found their shocks undiminished. This course of events transinred
for several nights, when each resolved in his mind to stand guard
and solve the mvstery. They did so, when on the following night
tliev met each other, half-way between their respective shocks, witli
their arms full. Upon ground hallowed by such associations as
these was the Temple of Solomon erected— so spacious and magnih-
cent, the admiration and wonder of the world.
How truthfullv does this simple tradition tell the story ot Ma-
sonic teaching! 'Principles as pure as those that fell from the lips
of the Great '"Master are the pillars and bulwarks of this ancient
Order, and lessons as lovely as those found in the oracles ol trutJi
divine are taught in all the work of the Craft.
What is Masonry ? What are its principles ? W hat its lessons ?
When the spirit" of God moved upon the lace of the waters; when
the Great Jehovah ordained the creation of the world; when the
first sun rose to greet with its beams the new morning, and the
august command was uttered, "Let there be light,' the lips of Deity
breathed Masonrv into existence, and it must live ior ever, for trutli
is eternal, and the principles of truth are the foundation of Masonry
What is it but the pursuit of truth, the practice of virtue, and the
teaching of those sublimer doctrines which bind the whole lamily
of man in fraternal union. _ . ,
It is not to present to the world the vain show of useless ceremo-
nies that Masonry exists ; it is not for the purpose of creating high-
sounding dignitaries, for the purpose of covering tliemselves with
brillianf insignia, or to march, baton and mitre at the head, in glit-
tering array ; it is not for the service of any sect, ancient or modern,
to avenge the illustrious dead, nor to establish extinct Orders. Nei-
ther is it to revive the Crusades; but to teach wisdom, forgiveness
of our enemies, harmony and fraternity in the whole iamily of man
and constant resistance to evil and oppression; to crush tyranny and
oppression, whatever may be the form they assume ; every where to
prOtect th^ weak and innocent, and guard the portals of eternal
''The relationship between Christianity and Masonry, particularly
the hi-her Orders thereof, is most intimate; indeed, it is difficult to
ell hSw a true and courteous Knight Temp ar can help being a
fnll-grown Christian, giving evidence in a 1 his movements of the
life and power of God's noblest work, a Christian Knight, clad in
the T)anoply of truth eternal and divine.
It^ is not my purpose on the present^occasion to de am you with
the military history of the Order of Knights Templar, a h stoiy
full of noble daring and generous deeds-but during the centuries
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 485
in which tliis Order has existed in an organized form, their ranks
have been honored by many of earth's noblest sons, or rather many
of the world's best men have been honored by an association with
this Order.
How beantiful the land in which this Order originated! Its moun-
tains and valleys are sacred in history; its towns and cities are noted
in the movements of the past. How lovely in song and marked in
sacred and profane history is Jerusalem, the metropolis of Palestine !
It was here the patriarchs walked with God, the prophets com-
muned with Jehovah. It was here the Great Masters exercised
their authority. Within the walls of the city of our God stood the
grand temple, unequaled for grandeur and magnificence.
It was here the Saviour of the world was born and the events of
his life transpired. Will the village of Bethlehem be forgotten?
Can Nazareth be erased from the pages of history ? the little town
of Bethany, who can fail to associate with it the tears of Jesus ? and
tlie city of Jerusalem with its sacred shrines and holy altars will be
remembered by the last-born son of Adam, and perpetuated all along
the ages of eternity, as we walk the gold-paved streets of the New
Jerusalem, robed in white and crowned with glory.
Can we ever forget the Jordan, with the battles fought at its
passes, and the many wonderful events that transpired upon its
shores; or the sea of Galilee, with its fishermen, who became the
preachers of righteousness ; and every mountain side and summit
has been hallowed by the footprints of the Master and by being
pressed by the knees of the Redeemer of the world bending in
prayer before His Father. W^ho thinks not of Tabor and Calvary
and Olivet? Or who can fail to remember the garden where the
Saviour plead with so much earnestness and agony, ''Father, if it be
possible let this cup pass from me, but not my will. Thine be done?"
or will the new-made tomb of Joseph, where the form of Jesus was
laid, ever pass out of the recollection of the children of men ? Why,
sirs, every spot in that land is sacred.
Is it any wonder that pilgrims love to visit that land ? to stand
where the wise and great have stood ? to linger for a while where
the cross was planted, or go and sit at the entrance of the sepulchre?
W^hy, sirs, it doth seem to me, in this far-ofl" day, that my highest
ambition would be gratified if I could but make a pilgrimage to
that land with a company of Christian Knights; walk with them
through the village of Bethlehem and see the star of the East; go
with them to Nazareth and tarry for a little period in the carpenter
shop of Joseph, and see the lad who, at twelve years of age, had as-
tonished the doctors of the law ; go to the beautiful lake Gennesa-
reth, whose bold and mountainous shores had been the scene of so
many of the Saviour's miracles; march with them thi'ough the
streets of Jerusalem, stopping to worship in the temple at the holy
altar, stand with them on Calvary's hill, and hear the words "It is
finished" fall from the lips of Jesus ere he gives up the ghost.
Tarry with them at the sepulchre, and hear the angel say, "He is not
here, he is risen ;" and gaze with them from Mount Olivet after our
ascended Lord, and hear from the clouds, " He shall in like manner
41 *
486 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
return again." It would be grand, it would be soul-inspiring, if we
could return from such scenes witb new energy to battle aeainst
lying vanities and deceits of this world.
When tiiese pilgrims are hindered or i)ut to death on their way
to the holy city, is it surprising that some noble men are found to
stand in the mountain passes for their protection and guard them
Mcross the plains? We might well be ashamed of our nature and
blush for our manhood if in such an exigency none were found to
defend the right.
The first aim and only object of Knights Templar in their origin
was to protect these poor pilgrims in their journey back and forth
from the sea-coast to Jerusalem.
To alleviate the dangers and difficulties to which these pious pil-
grims were exposed, to guard the honor of the saintly virgins and
matrons, and protect the gray hairs of the aged, nine noble Knights,
to their glory be it said, formed a holy brotherhood in arms, and
entered into a solemn compact to aid one another in clearing the
highways of infidels and of robbers, and in protecting the pilgrims
through the passes and defiles of the mountains to the holy city.
They united devotion and valor, and exercised them for the safety
of pilgrims on their way to the holy sepulchre.
The Order rapidly increased in numbers and wealth, but they
maintained their devotion and valor. The unconquerable spirit
with which they were animated was manifested in many a well-
fought battle.
In the great battle of Tiberias, fought on the 4th of July, 1187,
between Saladin and the Templars, which decided for a time the
fate of Jerusalem, their heroism and intrepidity are spoken of only
with admiration. The Templars that Avere taken prisoners Avere
called upon to deny their Lord and Saviour, and to choose Mecca
for their temple, the Moslems for their brethren and Mohammed for
their prophet. To a man they refused and were put to death. They
fight like good men and true, and die like Christians.
The flower of the nobility of Europe aspired to wear the cross
and profess the vows of this Order.
Kead the history of the battle of Acre, and it tells of the same
undaunted valor.
William de Beaujen, the valiant Grand Master of the Templars,
a veteran warrior of a hundred fights, took command of the garri-
son, and his military skill and personal heroism were conspicuous
throughout the siege.
Day by day the numbers of the garrison were thinned, while in
the enemy's camp the places of the dead were constantly supplied
by fresh warriors from the deserts of Arabia.
The Grand Masters of the Temple and the Hospital fought side
by side at the head of their Knights, and for a time successfully re-
sisted all the efforts of the enemy. They engaged hand to hand (in
the fight) with the infidel, and pressed like the humblest of the
soldiers m the thickest of the battle. But as each Knight fell be-
neath the keen scimitars of the Moslems, there were none in reserve
HISTORY OF THE K NIGHTS TEMPLAR. 487
to supply his place, while the vast hordes of the infidels pressed on
with untiring energy and perseverance.
The Marshal ot" the Hospital fell covered with wounds.
The Grand Master of the Temple was also stricken down by the
darts and arrows of the enemy.
Three hundred Templars, the sole survivors of their illustrious
Order in Acre, were now left alone to withstand the shock of the
victorious enemy. In a close and compact column they fought their
way, accompanied by several hundred Christian fugitives, to the tem-
ple, and shutting their gates, they again bade defiance to the advan-
cing foe.
Their obstinate resistance obtained from the Sultan the promise
of a free and honorable retreat. When the Red Cross Knights is-
sued from their fortress on the faith of this assurance, they were
assailed by the lawless insults of the Musselman hosts; they impa-
tiently renewed the contest, and most of their number were slain on
the spot. The few who escaped forced a passage through the
Mameluke lines, fled into tlie interior of the country, and even there
resumed tiie war, until they were ultimately driven again to the
coast, and made their escape by sea to Cyprus.
The same spirit was manifested by De Molay, one of the Grand
Masters, in after years, who, with three of the chief dignitaries of
the Order and fifty-four noble Knights, suffered martyrdom at the
stake. A spirit that could not be destroyed. An eye-witness of the
conduct of the Templars in the field tells us they were always fore-
most in the fight and the last on tlie retreat, that they proceeded to bat-
tle with the greatest order, silence and circumspection, and carefully
attended to the commands of their Master. When the signal to
engage had been given by their chief, and the trumpets of the Order
sounded to the charge, then they sang the psalm of David, "Non
nobi.s, Domine, non nobis, sed nomine tua da gloriam," and placing
their lances in rest, they either break the enemy's lines or die.
As evidence of their interest in and devotion to each other, let me
give you but one of the many rules by which they were governed :
" Above all things, a most watchful care is to be bestowed upon sick
brothers, and let their wants be attended to as though Christ him-
self was the sufferer, bearing in mind the blessed words of the gos-
pel,/was sick and ye visited me. These are indeed carefully and
patiently to be fostered, for by such is acquired a heavenly reward."
Christian Knights are and ought to be true to their God and to
each other, and faithful in all the relations of life.
Eminent Sirs : Will you allow me to refer to the Jbeautiful and ex-
pressive Emblems of Knighthood? I would not tread on forbidden
ground, or utter that which is not lawful to speak. You may say
that these are only symbols or emblems, if you please, but is there no
power in emblems?
Is there an American heart, true to his country and his God, that
does not feel the impulse of patriotic love as he looks upon the flag
of his country, the emblem of liberty? That flag tells him that he
is a sovereign. W^hy, men fight and die for the principles repre-
sented by that noble old flag, and couiit it the highest honor if at
488 HISTORY OF the knights tempi.ar.
the last they may but be wrapped in its beautiful folds and laid away
in the silent fijrave. It tells the whole world of " the land of the
free and the home of the brave," and the asylum of the oppressed.
Is there no power in that emblem to fire the youthful heart, and
constrain the old man to wish he was young again when the princi-
ples it represents are endangered?
The Cross and the Crown, the Square and the Lamb, the Level
and tiie Triple Triangle, the Eagle and the Sword are emblems in
Christian Knighthood. How much of truth, what mighty princi-
ples are symbolized in these? Who can tell?
Is there no power in the cross — that beautiful cross — are there no
principles symbolized there?
Its silence is true eloquence and real power.
Its utterances are tender and lovely, grand and sublime.
It speaks of forgiveness — "Father, forgive thera, they know not
what they do."
And then it utters words of majesty — "To-day shalt thou be with
me in Paradise."' Why, it opens the portals of glory to a dying
penitent.
And again it speaks o{ filial love — Woman, behold thy son. John,
behold thy mother. How tenderly, how touchingly it speaks to our
hearts !
Yet again, "It is finished!" What! the ransom paid — the
anger of offended Deity is appeased, the work is done, man's re-
demption is secured. No power in that emblem ? Why, it bridges
the dark gulf of eternal death and we pass over to the regions of
eternal blessedness.
The cross surmounted by rays of light ! how suggestive, each ray
pointing to the crown and throne of glory awaiting the valiant
Knight.
We are pilgrims, weary and worn, often by the roughness of the
way, but with staff in hand journey on.
" Our cradle is the starting-place,
In life we run the onward race,
And reach the goal,
When, in the mansions of the blest,
Death leaves to its eternal rest
The weary soul."
We are pilgrim-warriors ; the weapons of our warfare, what are
they ? The svjortl of the spirit, the shield of faith, the girdle of truth,
the breastplate of righteousness, the sandals of preparedness, the helmet
of salvation — weapons that are ours from the forge of the Almighty
Jehovah, prepared to our hands in the great workshop of the.
Eternal. It is ours to seize them and to use them with the force of
true manliness, strengthened by the consciousness that our cause is
just. With these battle against error; break down and sweep away
all the barriers of truth ; with these triumph, and the triumph will
be beautiful ; coming up as pilgrim-Avarriors from the battle-fields
of our sin-cursed world to be crowned with glory and immortality.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 489
Thou believest, sir, in ilie mortality of the body and in the immor-
tality of the soul.
"Be strong, quit you like men, show thyself a man," ever and
always ready to stand for tfie defence of the cross.
Bivet your armor about you ; nail your banner to the standard ;
draw your sword for the right and throw away the scabbard, and go
forth to certain victory. The cross will take the world. The last
kingdom will soon be overcome ; the last castle stormed and taken ;
the last foe conquered, when the army, marshaled by our Captain,
will encircle this earth, and the shout of victory echo from pole to
pole.
We gather sometimes around the festal board — coming over the
hills, through the mountain passes, along the dusty travel of the
lovely valleys, or from the crowded thoroughfares of trade and
the quiet village. We come as pilgrims, worn and tired; or as
pilgrim-warriors, with well-earned laurels from manv of the battle-
fields of life. And as we greet each other of homeland the loved
ones there, each is apt to think his is the dearest spot on earth, but
will you not allow a fellow-pilgrim, with his finger pointed heaven-
ward, to remind you there is the happiest land.
How appropriate and expressive the language of one of our Past
Grand Commanders !--" Christian Knighthood obsolete, dead and
buried ! When faith, hope and charity shall be obsolete ; when justice,
fortitude and mercy shall be obsolete ; when courtesy, magnanimity
and valor shall be no longer approved or desired among men ; when
there shall be no longer a helpless orphan to protect, nor a destitute
widow to comfort and sustain, nor an innocent maiden to defend
against insult and wrong, nor one oppressed and downtrodden child
of humanity to cheer and succor,— then, and not till then, will Chris-
tian Knighthood be obsolete. However its rites and ceremonies,
which are but external forms, may change with the ages, its princi-
ples are immutable, and so long' as the cross shall suggest to the
Christian soul the precious name ' Immanuel, God with us,' so long
will that sacred sign in which we conquer be emblazoned on our
banners."
Life is real ! Life is earnest !
And the grave is not its goal :
Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
Was not spoken of the soul.
Not enjoyment and not sorrow
Is our destined end or way,
But to act that each to-morrow
Find us farther than to-day.
In the world's broad field of battle,
In the bivouac of life,
Be not like dumb-driven cattle;
Be a hero in the strife.
490 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Trust no future, howe'er pleasant !
Let the dead past bury its dead ;
Act, act in the living present !
Heart within, and God o'erhead.
Lives of great men all remind us
We can make our lives sublime,
And, departing, leave behind us
Footprints on the sands of time —
Footprints, that perhaps another.
Sailing o'er life's solemn main,
A forlorn and shipwrecked brother.
Seeing, shall take heart again.
Let us, then, be up and doing,
With a heart for any fate ;
Still achieving, still pursuing.
Learn to labor and to wait.
After the above address, the Grand Officers elect were duly in-
stalled into their respective offices, and their installation proclaimed
by the Marshal.
The ceremonies being concluded, the Grand Prelate pronounced
the Lord's Prayer, all the Sir Knights repeating. After which the
benediction was pronounced, and the Sir Knights returned to the
Masonic Temple.
CHAPTER IV.
VIRGINIA AND PENNSYLVANIA.
Circular of M. E. Sir B. B. French, Grand Master of the
Grand Encamj^ment of the United States, on the Rebellion,
dated April 18, 1861.— T/ie reply of R. E. Sir E. H.
Gill, G^^and Commandery of Virginia. — The rejwrt of the
committee of the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania on
the Circulars.
The E. Grand Recorder read the following comminiications, which
had been forwarded to him in his official capacity — the one from the
M. E. Sir Benjamin Brown Frencli, Grand Master of Knights Tem-
plar of the United States, and the other from E,. E. Sir E. H. Gill,
Grand Commander of the Grand Commandery of Virginia, through
Sir John Dove, Grand Recorder :
Office of the Grand Master of Knights Templar \
OF the United States of America. j
BENJAMIN BROWN FRENCH,
Grand Master of Knights Templar of the United Stntes of America,
To ALL True and Patriotic Templars:
Brotherly Love, Peace, Honor.
An awful fratricidal conflict seems to be impending. He alone
who rules the destinies of nations can prevent it. He works through
human instruments. I implore every Templar Knight on the Con-
tinent of America, after humbly seeking strength and aid from on
High, to exert all the means at his command to avert the dread
calamity which to human vision seems inevitable.
Let each Templar to whom tliis may come remember how often
we have stood at each other's side and raised our voices in prayer
for tlie prosperity of a common country and a common cause. Let
all call to mind how the Knights of Virginia, mingling in fraternal
brotherhood with those of Massachusetts, pledged themselves to
each other on Bunker Hill only a few brief years ago ; and when
anotlier year had passed away, the same noble bands stood together
in the city of Richmond, in the State of Virginia, the birth-place
of Washington, and with mutual vows bound their souls in an ever-
491
492 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAIt.
lasting covenant! Let them remember these things, anrl, with liearts
on fire with love for each other and for their countrvnien, go forth
among those countrymen and implore the arbitrament of peace in-
stead of tiiat of the sword. '
I ask no one to surrender a principle that has become dear to his
heart; but I ask every one to labor and to pray that such counsels
may take place between the contendiiig parties, who have for so
many years acted with a common impulse, as to restore harmony and
kind feeling, and avoid the curse of having fraternal blood crving
to heaven from the ground, and bringing down its maledictions on
our children's children through all future time ! Labor and pray
that hostilities may be suspended until the mild counsels of peace
can be appealed to, and that the appeal may not be in vain.
Casting aside every political feeling, everv political aspiration,
and asking every Templar to do tJie same, let' us, as one man, unite
in one grand efibrt to prevent the shedding of fraternal blood, and
to inaugurate here that blessed result which our Lord and Master
initiated — "Peace on earth and good will to men."
Teniplars ! you count in this land by tens of thousands. Each one
has his influence in the circle about him. Never, no never was
there an op{X)rtunity to exert that influence in a more holv cause,
or to a more sublime purpose. Forward, then, to the rescue of vour
country from fratricidal war !
But, if war must come — which dread calamity mav God in his
infinite mercy avert!— then I call on every Knight Templar to per-
form that sacred duty, which so well becomes our Order, of binding
up the wounds of the afilicted and comforting those who mourn.
Dated at the city of Washington on this eighteenth dav of April,
m the year of our Lord 1861, and the year of our Order 743.
B. B. Fre>xh,
— Grand Master.
JUSTICE.
Office of the Grand Master of Knights
Templar of Virginia.
Lynchburg, Va., April 27, 1861.
Hon. B. B. French, Grand Master Grand Encampment Knights
Templar of the United States :
M. E. Sir Knight— Your circular of the 18th inst., relative to the
"awful fratricidal conflict which seems to be impending" between
the citizens of the North and the South, has been received ; and as
the people of the South are merely acting on the defensive in this
conflict, those of the North, regaVdless of that " brotherlv love,
peace and honor," alluded to in your circular, having trampled
upon their constitutional rights, and" being now about to invade their
soil, their homes, and their firesides, and" to desecrate their altars, I
am at a loss to understand why you should send such a circular to
the Knights Templar of Virginia.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 493
Residing as you do at Washington, yon cannot be ignorant of the
fact that Virginia has exhausted every honorable means to avert
this conflict. "Casting aside every political feeling, every political
aspiration," she has plead to prevent the "shedding of fraternal
blood," she has plead for "Peace on earth and good will to men,"
and she has plead that her constitutional rights and those of her
sister_ States of the Soutli should not be trampled upon ; but her
pleadings have been disregarded, and, conscious of the justice of her
cause, she now appeals to the "God of battles," confident that Heaven
will smile approvingly upon her efforts in resisting unto the death
this Cain-like and marauding attack of the Vandals of the North ;
and I thank God that the valiant Knights Templar of Virginia
unanimously participate in this feeling of resistance, and are pre-
pared to welcome their invaders "witli blood-stained hands to hos-
pitable graves," designated by no " sprig of evergreen."
For the reasons stated, I now, as the Grand Master of the Grand
Encampment of Knights Templar of the State of Virginia, give you
notice that that body is no longer under the jurisdiction of the Grand
Encampment of the United States, and will no longer regard or obey
any orders or edicts emanating from it or its officers.
E. H. Gill,
Grand Master,
OrricE OF THE Grand Commandery of
Knights Templar of Virginia,
Richmond, May 1, A. D. 1861, A. O. 743.
V. E. Companion, Sir Alfred Creigh :
I am instructed by the M. E. Grand Master of Knights Templar
of Virginia, Sir Edward H. Gill, to lay before you the followiog
correspondence. Comment is unnecessary: the jjapers explain them-
selves, particularly the Knightly, bold '^and defiant one written by
our M. E. Grand Master.
In Knightly bonds, yours, &c.,
John Dove, Gromd Becorder.
On motion,
Resolved, That the correspondence read by the Grand Recorder be
referred to a select committee, consisting of Sir Knights Creigh,
Cooper and Pitcairn.
Sir Knight H, R. Hawman offered the following resolutions:
Resolved, That the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of
Pennsylvania, deeply deploring, as they do, the dread calamity of
fratricidal war, which the rash counsels and mad ambition of politi-
cal leaders have brought upon our beloved country, whereby the
"brotherly love" that has heretofore bound the members of our
Order together in North and South, as Knights and citizens of a
conamon Union, has been turned into enmity, and the "peace" for
which we are taught always to strive and pray has been disturbed ;
nevertheless, in obedience to the paramount dictate of "honor," and
to the sacred obligation of loyalty to the land of our nativity and
42
494 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
adoption, we regard it our clear and imperative duty to stand by the
lawfully CDUPtituted government of the United States, and to aid it
in all constitutional efforts to protect and possess the federal prop-
erty, to maintain its authority and enforce the laws. And we here
solemnly pledge our influence, our prayers, and, if need be, our
swords, to the preservation of the Union, one and inseparable.
Resolved, That we cherish patriotism as one of the highest virtues
of the Christian Knight, and the cause of defending the constitution
and flag of our country, which has been handed down to us as a
consecrated legacy from the sages and soldiers who hazarded their
lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor in the grand work of
achieving our freedom and independence, as holy and sublime as
that which impelled the Knights Temi)lar of old to the Crusades
again.st the infidels for the rescue of the Holy Sepulchre from their
impious hands ; and that, after the example of the heroic founders
of our Order who followed the banner of the cross whicii was borne
by Constantine at the head of his legions, we too will rally around
the American flag, as the symbol of American nationality, and at
the call of our country will follow it to the field of battle, and, if
honor and duty demand, to death, trusting that the God of hosts
will verify our holy legend — "/n Hoc Signo Vinces .'"
On motion of Sir W. P. Thompson,
Resolved, That these resolutions be also referred to the same select
committee.
Sir Alfred Creigh, chairman of the Select Committee on the Cor-
respondence of the Hon. B. B. French, Grand Master of Knights
Templar of the United States, and Sir E. H. Gill, Grand Commander
of Virginia, made the following
EEPORT.
That they entered upon the discharge of the special and delicate
duty assigned them with the prudence and caution which the cir-
cumstances required, being both chary and circumspect with regard
to the momentous questions at issue, so that not one Avord should be
committed to paper in this report which Avould not eternalize tlie
loyalty of Knights Templar to their obligations, and condemn in un-
equivocal terms the leprosy of treason which seems at the present
time to veil the hearts and consciences of some who have the repu-
tation of being brave, loyal and magnanimous Knights.
It will require your committee to inquire into the past history of
Knighthood in Virginia, the sayings and doings of the R. E. Grand
Commander Gill, as well as the action of the Grand Commandery
of that State itself, before we can arrive at fair and honorable de-
ductions; and, after we shall have given you abundant evidence
that the principles assumed by him are unknightly and unloyal, we
trust that this Grand Commandery will, with that independence
which has ever characterized her deliberations, condemn the wrong
and approve the right.
As early as 1819 the Encampment of Knights Templar at Rich-
mond, Va., uses the following courteous language : " Many brave Sir
Knights have been enrolled on our list who are willing to guard the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 495
passes leading to the Holy Temple, thereby promoting the benign
religion of the Prince of Peace, whose standard yve bear and whose
divine principles we wish to inculcate."
This was the courteous, soul-inspiring language of our fathers in
Knighthood in Eichmond almost half a century ago, all of whom
nearly have passed to the spirit-land ; but only the siiadow of the
shade of their mantle has fallen upon the present E. E. Grand Com-
mander, who in his circular utters the unknightly, disreputable and
unbecoming words, " I thank God that the valiant Knights Templar
of Virginia unanimously participate in this feeling of resistance,
and are prepared to w'elcome their invaders ' with blood-stained
hands to hospitable graves,' designated by no 'sprig of evergreen.'"
In 1850, the General Grand Encampment of the United States
held its triennial session in Boston, and among the many States
represented, Virginia had the magnanimous and true-hearted (but
now deceased) Sir Knight Morgan Nelson, of Wheeling, as repre-
sentative. The records show that the G. C. of the G. Comm.andery
of Massachusetts welcomed this General Grand Body, and the M. E.
Sir W. B. Hubbard, G. G. M., replied in eloquent and appropriate
terms, and concluded his remarks with a pledge "that every Knight
Templar would resist any attempt to overthrow the Union of the
United States of America," which Avas received wath a spontaneous
outburst of applause from the large and respectable audience present;
aye, even the blade of the sword of Virginia's noblest son (Sir Nel-
son) leaped from its scabbard at the glorious sentiment.
Eleven years afterward, the R. E. Commander of Virginia says,
''that Virginia has exhausted every honorable means to avert this
conflict." Your committee would inquire what Templar conflict
now exists? P. M. E. Grand Master Hubbard, in his address, uses
this language: "United firmly and permanently under one head,
powerful enough to secure the honor and maintain the landmarks
of the Order inviolate, every State possessing its Grand Commandery
(subordinate to the paternal head), embracing in each a cluster of
well-drilled and fearless Knights, gathered under their folds as their
subordinates, all prompt in duty at the call of the Trumpet and the
lead of the Beauseant."
As Masons and Templars, we cannot recognize political conflicts,
because every Masonic Templar is solemnly bound "to be a peace-
able subject, and cheerfully to conform to the laws of the country in
which he resides ; he is not to be concerned in plots and conspiracies
against the government, but patiently submit to the decisions of the
supreme legislature, and to pay a proper respect to the civil magis-
trate, and act honorably by all men."
Then away with such canting, hypocritical and farcical language
as the R. E. Gill uses when he says that Virginia has plead to pre-
vent the shedding of fraternal blood ; that Virginia has plead for
peace on earth and good-will to men ; that Virginia has plead for her
constitutional rights, and those of her sister States of the South.
Has the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar of the United
States, or has any State Grand Commandery by their action, urged
the shedding of fraternal blood ? We answer emphatically, No !
496 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TE:MPLAR.
Oiir duty, our obligations, our humanity slnidders at the thought of
sucli a charge. Have any Templar bodies attempted to deprive
Vi)-ginia of iier constituted rights? Never I But our honored
Grand Master French says: "I ask no one to surrender a principle
that has Ix'corae dear to his heart, but I ask every one to labor and
to pray that such counsels may take place as to avoid the cause of
having fraternal blood crying to heaven from the ground, and bring-
ing down its maledictions on our children's children through all
future time." Has any Grand Templar body endeavored to prevent
Virginia from disseminating peace on earth and good-will to men?
Certainly none. For, by reference to a speech made by Sir French
in May, 1853, Sir E. H. Gill and two other Sir Knights were ap-
pointed a committee to procure the address for publication, because,
by the precepts and admonitions therein contained, if practised upon,
we would be better prepared for that spiritual building, that " house
not made with hands, eternal in the heavens."
In the speech alluded to, Sir French says: "That man who enters
our Asylum for the first time, dedicates himself in a manner as im-
jiressive as a cause worthy of the most exalted aspiration of the
human heart; and if he takes upon him in good faith all the duties
of a Knight Templar, with a view to perform faithfully those duties
and if he pursues in after life the profession he then makes, he can-
not go far astray from the path of rectitude and honor, and he cannot
fail to be more useful to his fellow-beings." Could language be
stronger, more simple and comprehensible, teaching us those duties
which make life pleasant and agreeable? Then, a word, a look, a
speech from Sir French could command "personal entreaties for a
copy of his admirable address." But no\i\ on the reception of the circu-
lar of the 18th, Sir Gill discovered by his imaginative powers that the
North was about to invade their soil, their homes, their firesides,
and to desecrate their altars, and is at a loss to understand why you
(French) should send such a circular to Virginia. He sent that
official circular as the highest officer in the United States ; he sent it
to Virginia and to Pennsylvania, and all the other States; and
Marvland too, aye, to Baltimore, where the massacre took place on
the iOth of April.
Call you this trampling on constitutional rights, and those of your
sister states of the South, for a Southern city to massacre in cold
blood Massachusetts soldiers? Aye, Massachusetts soldiers! Did
you ever hear the name Massachusetts? and does not the very name
tell you of broken vows, of violated faith? Hear the Grand Master
(French) on this point: " Let all call to mind how the Knights of
Virginia, mingling in fraternal brotherhood with those of Massa-
chusetts, pledged tliemselves to each other on Bunker Hill, only a
few brief years ago, and when another year had passed away, the
same noble band stood together in the city of Richmond, in the State
of Virginia, the birth-place of Washington, and with mutual vows
bound their souls in an everlasting covenant!"
Where was the union, and what were the circumstances? We
shall let Sir PI H. Gill speak as Grand Commander of Virginia:
'On the 24th of June, I accompanied the Richmond Coramandery on
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
497
a pilffrimage to the tomb of Warren ; tlie parade at Providence,
Kliode Island, and Boston, Massachusetts, reflected great credit upon
the institution, and the various addresses, imbued as they were witH
pure Masonic and patriotic sentiments, tended to strengthen our love
for the Order and for our country, and to waken up old memories—
memories cheering and tender-carrying our historic recollections
back to the davs of chivalrv, and the dark day when the sons ot Vir-
ginia Massachusetts and Rhode Island stood in the foremost rank ot
bravery and battle ; and also to illustrate and conhrm the fact that
the Masonic needle, although it nuiy indicate the East as the source
of light and knowledge, points neither North, South, East, nor West.
Its pole is the true Masonic heart." . ^.-r i i
But now Sir Gill ha? discovered that there is a North, and ex-
presses himself about the loyal, patriotic citizens of the North, thou-
sands of whom are Templars. He says, " Virginia, conscious of the
instice of her cause, now appeals to the God ol battles, contident
that heaven will smile approvingly upon her efforts in resisting unto
the death the Cain-like and maurauding attack of the V andals ot the
North." ^. , ,. i. .1 AT
Vandals of the North, forsooth ! Was it \ andalism for the Mas-
sachusetts Knight Templars to welcome Sir Gill and his Comraan-
dery " at Boston to their homes and their hearths, with all the priv-
ilec^es of Templars," even to that disinterested friendship and un-
bounded hospitalitv which have always characterized our Order?
Surely, surely not.' For Virginia's Grand Master replied that he
hoped '" we should be permitted at an early day the pleasure of recip-
rocating your hospitality, kindness, attention and brotherly love, and
of tendering to vou a good old Virginia welcomer Whether that old
Virginia welcome was to receive Templars with "blood-stained hands
to hospitable graves, designated by no sprig of evergreen,'' your
committee have not the power of determining ; but from the mliam-
matorv circular issued by the K E. Sir E. H. Gill, G. C, breathing
out devastation, war, destruction and death, and endorsed by the G.
R. Sir John Dove, as Knightly, bold and defiant, we are satisfied
that this Knightly Grand Master, and even his Grand Recorder,
would believe thev were doing God service by trampling under loot
Masonic obligations and breaking Templar covenant vows._ With
this act we do not believe that the Templars of Virginia will coin-
cide. Nor that they will sanction this edict, wherein he says that the
Grand Commanderv of Virginia is no longer under the jurisdiction
of the Grand Encampment of the United States, and will_ no longer
regard or obey any orders or edicts emanating from it or its officers.
If^treason has manifested itself against the government, it has also
raised itself against the Grand Encampment of the United States
bv this unconstitutional act. and virtually declares itself independent
oif its superior, which is palpably a violation of the obligation of a
Knight Templar, and puts it out of existence.
Under all the circumstances of the case, with hearts torn and
lacerated for the present position of our government, and with the
obligations and vows resting upon us as Masonic Templars, your
committee would offer the following preamble and resolutions :
42 *
498 UrsTORY OF TITE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Whereas, Tlie patriots of our common country, discarding an
imaginary line dividing the North and the South, united together to
form themselves into a national family ; and whereas, that family
has grown to the full stature of manhood, diffusing the benefits of
free institutions, and protecting all men and all States in their just,
legal, and equitable rights, under the constitution of our country;
and, whereas, the Masonic Templars, a portion of this national fam-
ily, have carefully and prayerfully abstained, as such, from counte-
nancing this fratricidal conflict wliicii is waging; but, through lier
chief officer, the M. E. Sir Benj. B. French, did issue a circular
enjoining upon all Knights to perform the sacred duty of binding
up the wounds of the afflicted and comforting those who mourn ;
therefore,
Reifolved, By the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of the
State of Pennsylvania, in Annual and solemn Conclave assembled,
that in tlie patriotic circular which has been issued by the M. E.
Grand Master French w^e find those qualities of heart and mind
which eminently fit him to discharge the delicate and arduous duties
of his office ; and trust that every effort he may make in support of
tlie Union will not only have the united support of every Templar
in the land, but that God will abundantly bless his efforts to prevent
the shedding of Christian and fraternal blood.
Resolved, That we unhesitatingly condemn the circular of the K.
PI Sir E. H. Gill, Grand Commander of Virginia, because it contains
doctrines inimical to the principles of our Order, is at war with
Masonic obligations, justifies treason, and in unmistakable language
derogates from our character as men, as Masons, as Templars, and as
Christians.
Resolved, That as a Grand Commandery we have an abiding faith
in the government of our country — the land of our choice; and that
whatever betides it, for weal or for woe, we shall adhere to the des-
tinies of our country : with her we will live, with her we will act,
and with her we will die; and if, perchance, blood-stained hands
shall place our bodies in inhospitable graves, and these graves shall
be designated by no sprig of evergreen — and when our disembodied
spirits are adjudged by Immanuel — God with us — we shall have the
satisfaction of not having our souls stained Avith the leprosy of
treason, nor our consciences corroded with eternal remorse, nor our
hearts seared by broken vows, violated faith, and perjured prin-
ciples.
All of which is respectfully submitted.
Alfred Creigh,
S. B. Cooper,
RoBT. Pitcairn.
On motion of Sir George S. Bethell, the report of the committee
was accepted, and the committee discharged, and the report ordered
to be spread on the minutes.
The (question recurring on the resolutions, Sir Henry R. Hawraan
offered as an amendment the resolutions which had been read in
Grand Commandery, and referred to the Select Committee (see pages
493, 494). The vote being taken, the amendment was lost.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 499
Rev. Sir W. H. Locke ofiered a resolution to strike out the last
paragraph in the last resolution, commencing at the words "and if
perchaiice," etc., etc. The vote being taken, the amendment was lost'
V. E. Sir John A. Wright offered the following resolution as a
substitute for the resolution :
Resolved, That the Grand Commanderv of Pennsylvania do hereby
most cordially approve of the circular oV Hon. B.B. French Grand
Master, and condemn the circular of Sir E. PI. Gill as unkni't^htlv
After peace was restored, the R. E. Sir E. H. Gill in his Snnual
address, in 1866, forgetting the past, uses the following language
and triumphantly shows that the duty he owes to his country and
the obligations of Templarism are infinitely superior to party spirit
which engenders political strife and fratricidal war : -^ -^ >
" You were invited by the R. W. Grand Lodge of Maryland to be
present at the laying of the corner-stone of the new Masonic Tem-
ple in Baltimore, on the 20th ultimo. The invitation did not reach
me as soon as it should have done ; but on receiving it I requested
our very prompt and zealous Grand Recorder to forward to each of
you a copy, to which several of you responded, and were present on
the occasion, as were also Richmond Commanderv, No. 2 De Molay
Commandery, No. 4, and Appomattox Commanderv, No. '6 number-
ing in all about ninety Sir Knights from this jurisdiction, who by
their excellent drill, appearance and deportment, added crreatly to
the pageant, which, composed as it was of about eight hundred
Knights lemplar and seven thousand Master Masons, presented a
grand and imposing Masonic appearance, seldom before witnessed
In the ranks were assembled distinguished brethren and Sir
Knights from almost every State in the Union, and when this vast
procession halted at the site of the temple and intermingled, brother
recognized brother 'by that great unerring law which none but
Craftsmen ever knew,' and the warm hand of fellowship was ex-
tended without regard to the place of nativity, whether it was North
South, East or West, the torrid or the frigid zone. Each brother felt
at Jiome, and that he stood upon a time-honored platform— the plat-
form upon vyhich Noah, 'who was a just man and walked with God '
stood when he constructed the ark of safety, and at the termination
ot the deluge, influenced by the benign teachings of our Order he
sent forth the dove as a harbinger of peace and of good-will to' all
mankind.
1. r Ti'^ platform upon which Jacob reclined when in his vision he
beheld the ladder extending from earth to heaven, with the angels
of God ascending and descending upon it,' the three principal
rounds of which we designate 'Faith, Hope and Chadty,' the
greatest of which is Charity. ^' «
"The platform upon w-hich 'Solomon, King of Israel, our ancient
Grand Master," Hiram, King of Tyre, our ancient Grand Master,'
and Hiram Abiff; the widow's son, who lost his life in the defence
of lus integrity,' assembled when they designed and erected the
most perfect architectural edifice the world ever beheld— the first
temple— and that, too, without any discordant sound of chisel or of
hammer.
500 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
"The i)latf()nu that 'Franklin, the playmate of the lightning;*
that Warren, whose heart's blood nurtured the cause of liberty ;
tiiat Wasiiington, our country's Washington ; that Lafayette, the
apostle of liberty; tliat Marsluili, the jurist, and that Clinton, the
statesman, occupied when they acquired a knowledge of those essen-
tial requisites in Freemasonry, self-control and self-government, and
were taught practically to observe them ; and never, if it could be
avoided, to offend a brother, however humble; never to yield to a
wrong-doer, however powerful ; and never be tempted to compromise
honor or duty, through fear, favor or affection ; and always to keep
in view, *as a cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night,' that
golden rule which teaches us to do unto others as we would that tliey
should do unto us.
" I mingled freely with the brethren and Sir Knights assembled in
Baltimore upon this occasion, and was rejoiced to find that but one
sentiment prevailed, and tliat was, that the recollection of the past
five years of strife should be obliterated, forgotten and forgiven, and
that brotherly love should prevail, and that we should again become
one inigiity people. To accomplish this, the members of our Order
can do much. Numbering, as they do, upwards of one quarter of a
million ; united, as they are, by ties stronger than those of consan-
guinity ; representing, as they do, all classes of society, from the
highest executive officer to the private in the ranks ; and actuated,
as they should be, by fraternal love, love of right, of justice and of
country, it is their duty to extend the olive branch of peace, and to
spread the cement of brotherly love and kindness. I trust in God
tliat they will perform it, and then may we be able once more to ex-
claim, in the language of David, * Behold how good and how plea-
sant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity.' "
CHAPTER V.
CLAIM OF PENNYSLYANIA AS BEING THE FIRST GRAND
ENCAMPMENT IN AMERICA, AND REPLY OF SIR W. S.
GARDNER.
The circumstances Avhich gave rise to the following discussion
were elicited by an address delivered by Sir William Sewall Gardner,
M. E. Grand Master of the Grand Encampment of Massacliusetts
and Khode Island, at their semi-annual meeting held in Boston,
May 5, 1865. In this address, Sir Gardner uses the following lan-
guage : "This day completes the sixtieth year of our existence as a
Grand Encampment, and marks an epoch in our history." — Page 3.
* ** * ^ * * *
" On the 6th of May, 1805, Sir Thomas Smith Webb, of Provi-
dence, Sir Henry Fowle of Boston, Sir Jonathan Gage, of Newbury-
port, with other'Templar Masons, assembled in the Masonic Hall at
Providence and formed this Grand Encampment."— Po^e 4.
"There they assembled and laid the foundation of Templar Ma-
sonrv, as Ave recognize it to-day." — Page 5.
" This Grand Encampment was the germ of Templar Masonry as
now organized in the United States, and the ritual as adopted here
has been taken as the true Templar work throughout the jurisdiction
of the Grand Encampment of the United States. I am aware that
in Pennsylvania there was a Grand Encampment in the early part
of this century, and that it professed to confer the Order of the
Temple. It is impossible to tell now what its ritual was, but there
is evidence tending to show that it was entirely diflerent from that
taught by this Grand Body." — Page 6.
" Perhaps no person in the United States had more to do Avith the
formation and renovation of this ritual than Sir Henry Fowle. His
judgment, therefore, upon the ritual as exemplified by the Grand
Encampment of Pennsylvania in 1816, in his presence, is of great
weight, and leads to tlie conclusion that the work as used by that
Grand Body, Avherever it originated, Avas entirely different from that
in use in this jurisdiction." — Page S.
" We have then for our gratification, not only the fact, Avhich is
now universally conceded, that this Grand Encampment is the oldest
Grand Body of Masonic Knighthood upon this continent, but also
601
502 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
that it has furnished the ritual which is now used in all tiie bodies,
both Grand and Subordinate, within the United States. It would
be an interesting inquiry to follow out the history of this ritual." —
Page 9.
"The English Order, //•077i ivhich our fathers in this Grand Encamp-
ment derived the elements of our ritual, is termed the 'Masonic Knight
Templars' Conclave,' in open and avowed confession of the depen-
dence of the Order upon the Masonic institution. I need but allude
to the ritual to convince you that it was built upon Masonry, and
that the form and manner of our work is eminently Masonic. In
its teaciiings and its ceremonials, this Order of the Temi)le which we
confer is but Masonry Christianized ; a complete acknowledgment
of, and a full belief in, the divine mission of the risen Messiah, en-
grafted upon the Masonic forms, precepts and ritual." — Pages 10, 11.
"It is worthy of notice that,/ro»i the establishment of thii^ Grand
Encampment to the present time, it has been one of the most con-
servative bodies of Knighthood in the United States. We have not
been lovers of change and novelty, but we have been satisfied with the
Orders as given to us by our fathers. However much other Grand
Encampments and Commanderies may depart from tiie ancient land-
marks, let it ever be considered our solemn duty to remain true and
faithful to the Orders as we received them. Let us set our faces
rigorously and sternly against all changes and modilications, and go
on in the patli which for sixty years this Grand Encampment has
undeviatingly trodden. As the Mason admits that it is not in the
power of man, or any body of men, to make innovations in the body
of Masonry, so let the Templar vow equal constancy to his Order.
I would urge upon every Knight in the jurisdiction that our only
safety is in adhering to tlie ancient landmarks of the Order. Re-
member that it is not a question of choice with us, or a matter of
taste. We are to take the Orders as we receive them, and carefully
cherish them. An inventive and fertile imagination might make a
more effectual ritual and fill it with startling dramatic incidents.
But this is not for our consideration. Our only inquiry should be
for the ancient landmarks of the Order. I desire to enforce this
conservative principle as forcibly as I can, and to imbue you with
the same spirit of veneration for what is ancient and prescribed in
our Grand Encampment which I know yon all as Masons breathe.
Resist every attempt, come from what source it may, to swing you
away from the safe anchorage where you have so safely laid for the
last sixty years. Let an enthusiastic pride stimulate you to be true
and faithful to the traditions of the fathers of this Grand Encamp-
ment, and not to depart from the teachings and examples they have
given us. If you remain true and constant, you ivill fimdly prevail,
and you will by and by, I hope before many years, find those bodies
of Knighthood which are drifting about without rudder or compass,
returning from their useless wanderings to the same position which
this Grand Encampment proudly holds to-day." — Pp. 11, 12, 13.
These are all the extracts bearing on the question at issue, which
I transcribe, in order that the reader may have a correct understand-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 503
ing of the question at issue, and which is freely argued in my reports
to the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania in the years 1866 and
1867.
It is easily to be understood that tlie E. E. Sir W. S. Gardner
does not pretend to claim the Templarism of Massachusetts and
Ehode Island prior to 1805; for he says on page 3 that the Grand
Encampment has "this day (4th May, 1865) completed^ the sixtieth
vear of her existence;" and on page 4, that certain Knights in 1805
''formed this Grand Encampment;" and on page 5, that they ''laid
the foundation of Templar Masonry as (we) they recognize it to-
day."
If it is true, therefore, that the foundation was first laid in 1805 —
when the Grand Encampment was formed — is it not equally true
that these Sir Knights who formed this Grand Encampment, in the
language of Sir Gardner, "swung away from the safe anchorage of
their fathers;" for it is conceded by the learned Knight in his ad-
dress, "That the ritual then adopted in 1805 has been taken as tlie
true Templar work throughout the jurisdiction of the Grand P]n-
campment of the United States." He also adds that "no person in
the United States liad more to do with the formation and renovation
of the ritual than Sir Henry Fowle," who declares that the work
as exemplified by the Grand Encampment in Pennsylvania in 1816
was not the same as that of the jurisdiction of Massachusetts. The
question may readily be asked, why is not the ritual the same? Sir
W. S. Gardner answers the question by two replies ; first, that their
Grand Encampment derived the elements of their ritual from the
English Order, and second, that Sir Henry Fowle assisted in the
formation and renovation of the ritual. Is it therefore strange that
when Pennsylvania declared in 1816 that it was not in the power
of man, or any body of men, to make innovations into the body
either of Masonry or Templarism, tliat Fowle and his associates
should not be able to recognize the old English work, which with
cruel hands they hewed and cut, and with remorseless consciences
they cast aside an ancient and established ritual to build up the
reputation of the Grand Commandery of Massachusetts and Khode
Island ? Hence it is that an appeal is made to the Sir Knights of
that jurisdiction "to be true and faithful to the traditions," not of
ancient Templarism, not of English Templarism, from which they
acknowledge they manufactured the present ritual — but " to be true
and faithful to the traditions of the fathers of the Grand Encamp-
ment of Massachusetts and Ehode Island," who can only claim an
existence, both of constitution and ritual, from 1805, while they ad-
mit that the first Grand Encampment ever constituted in America
was organized in 1797; and that even in 1816 their own bright lights
had so far formed and renovated the old English work that they
could not recognize the lineaments of the sire.
We shall let the articles speak for themselves.
504 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
First report, made June, 1866, by E. /SiV Alfred Creigh,
HUtoriographer to the JU. E. Grand Commandery of Penn-
sylvania, on the claim of pjriority to organization as the first
Grand Encampment in America, and the evidence of the
Templar work now in use being manufactured by Webb and
others.
The E. E. Commander, Sir W. H. Strickland, announced that, at
his request, the Historiographer, Sir Alfred Creigh, had prepared an
historical statement in reply to certain strictures upon Pennsylvania
by the R. E. Grand Commander of Massachusetts and Rhode Island
and would call the special attention of the Grand Commandery to
the same, whereupon Sir Alfred Creigh, Historiographer, presented
the following document :
To the R. E. Grand Commander, Officers and Sir Knights, of the
Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of Pennsylvania:
^ The history of Templarism in Pennsylvania is one of peculiar
interest to every Sir Knight of the Order, whether enrolled under
our banner, or waging war in sister jurisdictions in defence of inno-
cent niaidens, helpless orphans, destitute widows, and the Christian
religion. To Pennsylvania, and Pennsylvania alone, are we indebted for
the FIRST Grand Encampment which was ever constituted in the United
States. She, therefore, has no competitor for the honor, the glory, and
the immortality which is emblazoned upon her Templar history ;' and
the 12th day of May, 1797, when the Convention met in PhiJadeltDhia
composed of delegates from Nos. 1 and 2 of Philadelphia, No. 3 of
Harrisburg, and No. 4 of Carlisle (whose respective organizations
took place from 1793 to 1797), should beheld as sacred as the 4th of
July, 177G— the one having given birth to the Orders of Christian
Knighthood, and the other to our political existence. It required
sober thought, sound judgment, mature reflection, discriminating
mind and far-seeing perception in the Sir Knights composing that
convention, as they were about to inaugurate a system of Christian
Ethics, which would have an influence for weal or for woe upon the
dissemination of the principles of Christian Knighthood. The idea
was happily conceived, and the Sir Knights who risked their Masonic
and Templar reputation upon its success have rendered the name
of Pennsylvania eternal in tiie annals of Templarism. Let us there-
fore, as the descendants of an honored and illustrious ancestry, render
that day immortal by printing upon all documents issued by this
Grand Body the Latin woixh Anno Equitum Or dinh Pennsylvania', in-
stead of the words Anno Ordinis, which is a general term, and aj)plie8
to any Order or religious association : hence it would be written A.
E. O. P. 69. Other State Grand Commanderies date their origin
from the constituting of their first Grand Body, and to me it appears
reasonable and just that we should do the same, so that instead of
issuing to the Templar world our present annual proceedings with
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 505
the 13th Annual Conclave thereupon, it should read the 69th. Jus-
tice to the Founders of our Order — BigJit sanctified by usage — nay,
Gratitude, demands the immediate action of this Grand Body upon
this important question.
In order that we may liave some light upon a question of so much
importance, it sliall be my pleasure as well as my duty to demonstrate
to you that the fireof Templarism, whicli was lighted upon our altar
in Philadelphia as early as Feb. 14, 1794, which is the oldest record
in her possession, has never been extinguished, not even in the per-
secuting days of Antimasonry, altliougli it is true, the light shone
dimly, and its rays were occasionally obscured, yet amid all the un-
hallowed and unholy convulsions of the human heart, baptized as
they were with the feelings of jealousy, envy, hatred, religions and
political bigotry, yet when our altars were assailed, the principles of
our Order were kept pure in faithful breasts, and the light of the
altar erected in their individual Templar hearts was preserved intact ;
and after the unholy fires of persecution had ceased, the Templarism
of Pennsylvania came forth conservative in its character, pure in
its development, undestroyed and unsuppressed. To demonstrate
this, let facts be submitted for your inspection and approval.
It is beyond dispute, and settled by all Masonic Avriters as well as
Antimasonic historians, that the first Grand Encampment of Knights
Templar of the United States was instituted May 12, 1797, in Phila-
delphia, although a constitution was not adopted until the 19tli of
the same month. This Grand Body at its organization had four
Subordinates — Nos. 1 and 2 in Philadelphia, No. 3 in Harrisburg,
and Xo. 4 in Carlisle.
Colonel John Johnson, then residing in Cincinnati, but lately
deceased, wrote me some time since that in 1797 he was admitted to
the K. T, degree in Carlisle in No. 4, and that the Commander's
name was Eobert Leyburn, and that in 1799 he removed to Phila-
delphia, and visited the Encampments in that city. This testimony
therefore establishes the existence of these four Subordinates prior to
1797, but we find from the published By-Laws of Nos. 1 and 2 of
Philadelphia, that on the 27th December, 1812, these two Subordinates
united as No. 1, and from this Encampment and also No. 2 of Pitts-
burg was formed a second Grand Encampment on the 16th February,
1814, with the addition of Delegates from Kising Sun Encampment,
No. 1, of New York, Washington Encampment, No. 1, of Wilming-
ton, Delaware, and Baltimore Encampment, No. 1, of Baltimore, Md.
The style of the second Grand Encampment was the "Pennsylvania
Grand Encampment with Masonic jurisdiction thereunto belonging."
This second Grand Encampment existed until thelOth of June, 1824,
or at least its Grand Master, Sir Anthony Fannen, exercised his
authority as such, for on that day lie issued a Dispensation to the
officers of St. John's Encampment, No. 4. which was instituted June
8, 1819, " to dub and make John E. Schwarz a Sir Knight of our
most illustrious. Order of Knights Templar." This No, 4 is still in
existence, and of which we will treat hereafter more particularly, as
being more intimately connected with the Temjjlarism of Pennsyl-
vania than any of our Subordinates.
43 W
506 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
The original No. 1 of 1794 kept up a complete and unbroken or-
ganization until June 13, 1824, although No. 2 was merged into it
on December 27, 1812. AVe now retrace our steps to St. John's, No.
4, and we find, that after tlie parent body had ceased in 1824, she
still continued to exist, recognizing as her superior the source of all
Masonic authority within our State, the R. W. Grand Lodge of
Pennsylvania. It was upon this rock that the delegates of the Penn-
sylvania Grand Encampment of 1814, and the delegates of the New
England States, which assembled in convention on the 16th of June,
1816, in Philadelphia, split, and the Pennsylvania Grand Encamp-
ment charged the other delegates with seceding from the convention,
while the New England delegates (consisting of Sir Knights Webb,
Fowle and Snow) reported that the reasons why Pennsylvania would
not enter into the Union for a General Grand Encampment, were :
1st. "That the encampments in Pennsylvania avow themselves as
being in subordination to and under the Grand Lodge of Master
Masons," and 2d, "Their unwillingness to the arrangement or order
of succession in conferring the degrees," as practised by the New
England States, "especially objecting to the Mark and the Excellent
Master as unnecessary and'not belonging to the system of Masonry."
The delegates of the New England States then adjourned to meet on
the 20th of June, 1816, in New York, and there formed the present
General Grand Encampment of Knights Templar of the United
States. , . ^ J -r>
After the disagreement the Pennsylvania Grand Encampment
still preserved her existence until 1824, after Avhich those in other
States, which acknowledged her authority through the Antimasonic
persecution, ceased to exist, or became members of their State Grand
Bodies, and thereby recognized the General Grand Encampment of
the United States. This was particularly the case with Rising Sun
Encampment of New York, which afterwards became Columbia En-
campment, No. 1, and is still in existence— thereby giving another
argument in favor of the light which emanated from our Pennsyl-
vania Templar altar, and which has never yet become extinct.
After the second Pennsylvania Grand Encampment had ceased in
1824, it was natural that St. John's Encampment, No. 4 (the only one
in existence in Pennsylvania), should look up to the R. W. Grand
Lodc^e of Pennsvlvania for its countenance and support; and the
principles which she maintained in 1797 and 1816 were carried oul
in 1824, and continued in St. John's, No. 4, until February 12, 1857.
In Mav, 1852, St. John's, No. 4, Philadelphia, No. 5, Union, No. 6,
and De Molay, of Reading, established a Grand Encampment under
the authority of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania; but the Grand
Lodge, on the 16th of February, 1857, resolved that they had no
autlK)rity over the degrees of Knighthood, but that its legitimate
sphere was the primitive degrees of Ancient Craft Masonry. A union
therefore was effected, and both Grand Encampments of Pennsylva-
nia since 1857 acknowledge as their legal head the Grand Encamp-
ment of Knights Templar of the United States.
Thus we have demonstrated that from 1794 to 1824, Teraplarism
was preserved in No. 1 ; and from 1819 to 1847 (the date of the in-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 507
troduction of Templarism into Pennsylvania by the G. G. E. of the
United States), St. John's Encampment, No. 4, kept it alive npon
its altar ; and to this very day we turn our eyes to the altar of St.
John's, No. 4, as pilgrims to their shrine at Mecca — consecrated by
the teachings of nearly half a century — Avith Sir Knights jealous
and envious of their ancient altar, their landmarks, their glory,
their long list of good and true Sir Knights, and the heritage of
their fothers. We give these facts to convince the most prejudiced
that beyond the possibility of a doubt the position we first assumed,
that we are entitled to use the phrase A. E. O. P. to all our Templar
documents, is both true and consistent. If we are the most ancient
in the United States — and who can doubt it? — we are certainly entitled
to all the honors which antiquity can give us. We detract not from
the merits of others, and we trust we have none of that spirit within
us; but if in the respective organizations of sister jurisdictions they
cannot place upon their brow the mark of manhood, we shall ever
treat them as loving and dutiful children; but never, never will we
permit any State Grand Encampment to detract from our antiquity
or our merits, and build their hopes and their fortune upon our
ruins. With all her faults, with all her errors, we love the noble
old Keystone State, which has perpetuated Masonry for one hundred
and thirty-three years entire and continuous, and Templarism for
sixty-nine years unbroken, entire and uninterrupted.
We have been forced to make these remarks from the fact that
the ]M. E. Sir William Sewall Gardner, Grand Master of the Grand
Encampment of Knights Templar of Massachusetts and Rhode
Island, in his address of May 5, 1865, uses the following language :
" We have then for our gratification, not only the fact, which is now
iniiversally conceded, that this Grand Encampment {Massachusetts and
Rhode Island) is the oldest Grand Body of Masonic Knighthood upon
this continent, but also that it has furnished the ritual which is now used
in all the bodies, both Grand and Subordinate, in the United States."
I trust. Sir Knights, I am not deviating from my duty as Historio-
grapher of this the most ancient Grand Body of Knighthood in
America, Avhen I say that in all the relations of life, as an accom-
plished and Christian gentleman, a true and courteous Knight,
faithful to his friends and devoted to the interests of his State, Sir W.
S. Gardner has no superior. The highest eulogiura I can possibly
pronounce upon so distinguished a Sir Knight is, that God made
him in his own image and endowed him with the highest mental
fiiculties, and we feel honored when we hail him as our brother ; but
sometimes State pride, local interests and a desire of immortalizing
our own State, warps our better judgment, and unfortunately we
publish our thoughts (intended only for our Asylums) to the world.
By this test let us examine the address, and decide whether the
Grand Encampment of Massachusetts and Rhode Island is the
oldest Grand Bodv of Masonic Knighthood in the United States.
The M. E. Gardner says: "On the 6th of May, 1805, Sir Thomas
Smith Webb of Providence, Sir Henry Fowle of Boston, Sir Jona-
than Gage of Newburyport, with other Templar Masons, assembled
in the Masonic Hall at Providence and opened this Grand Encamp-
508 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
ment," eight years after the Pennsylvania Grand Encampment had
been opened.
Again, "Tliis Grand Encampment was the germ of Templar Ma-
Konrv as now organized in the United Slates" (eleven years after our
(irand Encampment), "and the ritual as adopted here has been
taken as the true Templar work throngliout the jurisdiction of the
Grand Encampment of the United States. I am aware (he adds)
that in Pennsylvania there was a Grand Encampment in the early
part of this century, and that it professed to confer the Order of the
Temple. It is inipossible to tell what its ritual was ; but there is
evidence tending to show that it was entirely different from that
taught bv this Grand Body."
As Sir Thomas Smith \Vebb appears to be the moving spirit in
this matter— the head and front, the centre and circumference— the
Alpha and Omega of this, "the oldest Grand Body of Masonic
Knighthood upon this continent," under what State organization,
pray, did he receive his degrees of Knighthood, and where did he
vow that he would never permit innovations to be made upon our
landmarks, rites, ceremoraies and customs? Let Massachusetts and
Khode Island reply. Sir James Salsbury, of Providence, says : " I
am informed that Thomas S. Webb received the Orders of Knight-
hood in Philadelphia ;" and th6 Kev. Paul Dean, in his eulogy on
Webb, says: " Bro. Webb aided in organizing a Chapter and En-
aimpment in Albany, and the degrees of the York Rite were worked
from E. A. through'all the degrees of Symbolic, Capitular and Chi-
valric Masonry, up to Knight of Malta. But Webb had taken all
these degrees previous to his removal— he received them in Phila-
delphia."
Webb, therefore, must have received the degrees in Philadelphia
prior to 1802, for in that year we find him at the head of the St.
John's Encampment of Providence, Rhode Island, and three years
PRIOR to the organizatfon of the Grand Encampment of IMassachu-
setts, which chums to be the oldest Grand Body of Masonic Knight-
hood on the continent. Will the learned Sir Knight inform us how
and by what authority St. John's Encampment of Providence, Rhode
Island, was instituted ?
Take tlie entire history of Knighthood in Pennsylvania, from
14th February, 1794, to the present time; the reception of Thomas
Smith Webb "in Philadelphia prior to 1802; the testimony of Sir
James Salsbury, and that of Rev. Paul Dean, and it will not do
in this enlightened age to endeavor to ignore and blot out the his-
tory of Knighthood in Pennsylvania, and upon our ruins erect a
Grand Encampment, because, forsooth ! it happens to be located in
the HUB of the Universe. It will not do to present so naked and
bald a proposition, unsuppported by facts and reasoning, as the
learned Sir Knight would have us believe, and ask us to subscribe
to a doctrine and principle at variance with the plainest facts and
most reliable liistoric Masonic truths.
Thus far, with regard to the claim of antiquity of the Grand En-
campment of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, whereby we have
demonstrated that all honor is due to the Keystone State, not only
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAK. 509
for its introduction into the United States, but for having preserved
upon our Templar altars the fire which was lighted on the 14th of
February, 1794, the rays of which have penetrated, through the in-
strumentality of the Grand Encampment and State Grand Comman-
deries, into every State of our glorious Union and many of the Ter-
ritories, destined eventually to extend throughout the length and
breadth of America.
With regard to the second assertion, that "the Grand Encampment
of Massachusetts and Khode Island has furnished the ritual which is
now used in all the bodies, both Grand and Subordinate, within the
United States," it is true ; and it is equally true that that prince of im-
postors, innovations and new-fangled theories, not understanding the
great and glorious principles of our Order, and on purpose to secure
to himself a name not only at the "hub of the universe," but else-
Avhere, resorted, in conjunction with Sir Knights Fowle and Snow,
to establish Ancient York Masonry as Americanized ; which we will
demonstrate by New England testimony. Unfortunately for the
ancient rituals of our Order, they succeeded, but it was at the ex-
.pense of broken vows, of violated faith, of perjured principles. Do
you ask the proof? P. G. Master Fowle, in his autobiography, gives
an account of a meeting of Webb, Snow and himself, making a visit
to Philadelphia, on lltli of June, 1816 (being appointed delegates),
and met witli the Knights Templar of Philadelphia in convention,
to etiect a coalition of all Grand Encampments in the United States
under one general Grand Encampment ; but they found the Knights
of Philadelphia averse to a coalition, because they were under the
control of the Grand Lodge, and several of the members were candi-
dates for office in the Grand Lodge, and dare do nothing which
would curtail her revenue, lest they should not be elected to office,
and as it respected the Orders of Knighthood, they were ignorant as
mules. He adds: "Finding them (the Philadelphia Grand En-
campment) incorrigible, the committee gave them up and prepared
for their return."
Unwilling that so slanderous a document as the autobiography of
Sir Snow should go to the Masonic world as a reflection upon our
Templar fathers who have passed into the spirit world, and to pre-
serve their memories in our hearts for their devotion to our princi-
ples and our Order, I am forced to pronounce his declarations as the
ravings of a garrulous old man, who, jealous of the notoriety of
Webb, as well as himself and Sir Snow, wished to place a feather in
his own cap, and ask the Masonic world to pronounce them a worthy
trio, not in deeds of noble daring, but in the infamy of interpolating
the ancient I'ituals of the Order, and surreptitiously using some of
tlie degrees of the Ancient and Accepted Rite, and from these man-
ufacturing the Order of Knight of the Red Cross. If sacrificing
truth, principle and honor could gain for them such a distinction,
they have truly earned it. But before we decide let us investigate
the case.
Webb, in his report to the Grand Encampment of Massachusetts
and Rhode Island, on 25th June, 1817, ^ays, "That after several
days spent in deliberation, they found that the mode of array and
43 *
510 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
system of work differed in many points so essentially from what is
customary in the P:ncami>ments hitherto in connection with this Grand
Encampment, that they could not feel justified in making conces-
sions, such as were required by the delegates from Pennsylvania
particularly. Among the reasons were, subordination to the"^ Grand
Lodge, and their unwillingness to incorporate the Mark Master and
Most Excellent Master."
We haye now given you Mr. Fowle and Mr. Webb's testimonv ;
let me quote from the records: June 11th, 1816, the Pennsylvania
Grand Encampment appointed a committee to report upon the estab-
lishment of a General Grand Encampment, and ihev gave it as their
unanimous opinion that the establishment of a General Grand En-
campment for the United States would greatly tend to promote
union, and order, and strength amongst Knight templars; and they
appointed Sir Knights McCorkle, Hamilton, Edes and Ireland dele-
gates, clothed with full powers to carrv the same into effect. Is it
not therefore false that the Pennsylvania Grand Encampment was
averse to a union ? Had proper terms been proposed, a union would
have been eflected, but not at the expense of violated obligations.
The Pennsylvania delegates met in convention with the delegates
from the Grand Encampments of New England and New York, and
in their report they state, '' That it was impossible to carry their
designs into execution without making a sacrifice upon the part of
this Grand Encampment and its Subordinate Encampments, which
was considered to be unimrranted hy every principle of Masonry, which
was made a sine qua non by the delegates from New England, Avho
having seceded from the convention, it was of conseq'uence dis-
solved."
We now have given the facts— indisputable facts— that the secetZers
went to New York, and then and there organized the General Grand
Encampment. Pennsylvania, however, true to her teachings, true
to primitive Masonry, which is based upon the Old Testament, would
not consent that the old work which she had received from the hands
of her i\ithers, should become interpolated or amended, and there-
fore regarded the Webb work as a New England heresy, requirino-
the degree of Mark Master as a prerequisite for all Knights Tem"-
plar. One principal reason why Pennsylvania refused to acknow-
ledge the work of Webb and his associates was that they had in the
Mark Degree connected two events which transpired at a distance
of ten hundred and twenty-five years from each other, one happen-
ing at the time of King Solomon, at the erection of the Temple, and
the other during the mission of our Saviour while on earth— the one
under the Jewish, the other under the Christian dispensation. But
another insuperable objection was the degree of Knights of the Red
Cross, formed, fashioned, manufactured for New England and its
dependencies, and our illustrious brother has well said that the
Grand Encampment of Massachusetts and Rhode Island has fur-
nished the ritual which is now used in all the (Templar) Orders in
the United States. Let us examine into the character of the Red
Cross Order, and see if it is not as foreign to the Orders of Chris-
tian Knighthood as the parable of Christ is to the ))uilding of the
HISTOKY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 511
Temple in the Mark Degree. And while upon this part of the sub-
ject, it will he proper to remark tliat the same inconsistency is in-
augurated by Webb in introducing Pagan and Jewish ceremonies in
the Christian Orders of Knighthood, as was engrafted by him and
his associates into the Royal Arch. In this sublime degree we have
the divine call of Moses, the erection of the tabernacle in the wil-
derness, the sack of Jerusalem, the carrying away of the captives
into Babylonish captivity, the proclamation of freedom, the journey
back, the various incidents of the reconstruction of the Temple,
occupying ten hundred and twenty-five years, being a perfect and
complete medley, calculated to mystify the Masonic student in his
inquiries after truth; hence we agree with the Provincial Grand
Commander of Knighthood in Canada, where he says, "We question
the purity of Webb's teaching, not only in tlie Orders of Knight-
hood, but in the degrees of Masonry proper."
Let us for a moment examine into the history and ritual of this
degree of Knight of Bed Cross. The times and circumstances de-
mand it of us as intelligent Sir Knights, although Pennsylvania
Sir Knights, in the autobiography of Snow, have been characterized
" as ignorant as mules." In Scotland and Ireland the right is not
insisted upon as a pass to the Templar Order. In Canada, by per-
mission of the Grand Conclave of England and Wales, they impart
as much information as will secure tiie admittance of their members
into tlie Encampments in the United States. They regard the Red
Cross as only a continuation of the Royal Arch degree, commemora-
ting the dangers encountered by the Jews in building the second
Temple, and consequently is a Jewish and Pagan Order, and has
no connection whatever with the Christian Orders of Knighthood,
as based upon the birth, life, death, resurrection and ascension of
our Saviour.
Do you ask me, then, from whence is the degree of Knight of the
Red Cross derived ? I reply, it was manufactured by Webb and his
associates from the Knight of the East or Sword, Knight of the East,
and Knight of the East and West, degrees of the Ancient and Ac-
cepted Scottish rite.
The testimony of the learned Col. Moore, P. G, C, of Canada, is
important on this j)oint. lie says: I have carefully examined the
rituals of the Red Cross, used in the United States, as also that of
the Knights of the Sword, East, East and West, as given in the
Templar Encampments of Ireland, and in the Royal Arch Chapter
of Scotland, being the same degree as that of the fifteenth of the An-
cient Scottish Rite and sixtii of the Frencli. But he adds, the third
point of the Knight of the Sword must not be confounded with the
seventeenth of the Ancient and Accepted Rite bearing the same
name, and I consider that the ritual used in Ireland and Scotland the
one best adapted for us, it being the original from which that of the Red
Cross of the United States is taken. In the Red Cross of the United
States there are inconsistencies and inaccuracies, and it has been
much altered from the original.
A learned Sir Knight of Massachusetts writes rae, April 19, 1865,
that our Red Cross was taken from the " Irish Knights of the East
512 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
and Sword ;" nay, lie fiirtUer, adds: " our Templar Ritual was made
by Fowle and (ileason ; Webb devoted his attention mostly to the
Chapter degrees ; Fowle was a very able man naturally, but had little
education ; Gleason was graduated at Harvard University and was
a refined scholar."
From the same source 1 learn from my vahied correspondent, that
he himself does not know where the General Grand Encampment
obtained the Rituals for the Orders of the Red Cross and of the
Templar; but, he adds, I have no doubt they were obtained from
Henry Fowle, deceased. The Maltese Ritual originated in Boston
Encampment, at Boston. About twenty years ago this ritual was
adopted by our Grand Encampment, and has been used by our Sub-
ordinates ever since. I think, indeed know, it was made arbitrarily,
and that it icas not taken from any other Bitual.
I am satisfied, says my learned correspondent, that the English
Ritual was not in the possession of the Boston Encampment, and
that, if it had been, the work would have been different from what
it now is. The ritual then prepared was more to fill up a vacuum
and supply a want than any other purpose.
Ten years since, when the Grand Encampment met at Hartford,
Connecticut, the Maltese Order was stricken out through the influ-
ence of Sir Robert Morris, and we speak that we do know, when we
say that the reason for so doing was, that Sir Morris might present
one of his own ; for the why and the wherefore it will not become us
to say.
Thus, Sir Knights of Pennsylvania, you will perceive that a dis-
cussion of vast and great importance has been unceremoniously
thrust upon us. It may be that as a kind Providence put it into the
hearts of our fathers sixty-nine years ago to establish the First Grand
Encampment, so He intends that we shall be the humble instruments
of bringing light out of darkness and harmony out of chaos. We
have proven that the Ritual of the Orders of Knighthood, as prac-
tised, and taught, and enforced, is not the old Templar work of
England, which our fathers brought with them, some of whom came
to this country as early as 1784 in possession of the Templar degrees,
and which did not embrace that strange, heterogeneous Order, Knight
of the Red Cross, composed of Jewish and Pagan ceremonies, mixed
together and thrown in by way of ballast to keep steady the Orders
of Christian Knighthood ! To demonstrate the impracticability of
the Red Cross Degree in the Order of Christian Knighthood, may I
not with great truthfulness say that tlie Jew and Mohammedan, who
take the Royal Arch Degree, can, with equal propriety, receive
the Red Cross Degree. We have the acknowledgment of one
of Massachusetts' most distinguished oflicers. We have the action
of the General Grand Encampment of the United States in 1856,
wherein in Art. 4, vSec. 2 of the constitution, it reads: The rule of
succession in conferring the Ordens of Knighthood shall be as fol-
lows: 1st. Kniglit of Red Cross; 2d. Knight Templar; thereby
ignoring the Order of Knight of Malta. AVe have the testimony of
the lamented Hubbard in his address in 1856, that the "intercalary
degrees" were formerly unknown to our Order as essential to the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 513
obtainment of tlie Order of Knight Templar. We have the testi-
mony of Past Grand Master Frencli in 1862, stating that a material
change Avas ordered in tlie conferring of the Order of Knight of
Malta, and he said, I can see no reason why the regnlar work in con-
ferring of that Order should not be adopted, as it is in some, if not
alt of thofie in Massachusetts; that on September 4, 1862, it was enjoined
by the Grand Encampment of the United States upon all State Grand
Bodies and Subordinate Bodies under the jurisdiction of this Grand
Body, to use the Eitual, a copy of which is in the possession of the
M. E. Grand Master, being the same which is in use in the jurisdic-
tion of Massachusetts.
In the Freemason's Magazine of December, 1865, published by
that distinguished Mason, Sir Charles W. Moore, whose name of
itself is sufficient authority in everything pertaining to Masonry,
is the following significant language :
"In 1797 the Chapter (St. Andrew's) united in the organization
of a grand Chapter for the Northern States." In the record of this
year we find the following:
"Voted, that the Knights of the Ked Cross by Brother Benjamin
Hurd, Sr., be and they are hereby permitted to"^make their records
in the books of this Chapter."
Sir Moore says, "At this time the degree of Bed Cross had no connec-
twn ivith the Order of the Tem;£le, and was conferred like that of the
Templars as an honorary degree."
Hence it is self-evident that our rituals have been tampered with,
altered, changed, modified to suit the whim and caprice of individual
Sir Knights. As Pennsylvanians, therefore, let us make a united and
decided eflfort to restore the old Ritual of the Order, the Ritual which
was in use before the establishment of the Grand Encampment of
Pennsylvania, in 1797, and the Ritual used by the Baldwin Encamp-
ment at Bristol, of Antiquity Encampment at Bath, the Observance
Encampment at London, which Encampments existed from time im-
memorial, in the latter of which the Dukes of Kent and Sussex
received the Orders of Knighthood, it being the same Ritual used
by the Duke of Kent on the 24th of June, 1791, and by his succes-
sor, the Duke of Sussex, 6th Aug^ust, 1812, and by his successor, the
present Grand Commander, Wm. Stuart, since May 10, 1862. This
oM Ritual discards the Knight of the Red Cross, and confers, 1st.
Knights Templar, 2d. Knights of St. Paul or J\rediterranean Pass, Sd.
Knights of Malta, and upon those who have been elected E. Com-
manders the degree of Past Commander. Of the correctness and
authenticity of these degrees, we have a certified copv transmitted
Irom the Grand Conclave of England and Wales to S^ir Col. W. J.
B. McLeod Moore, Prov. Grand Commander of Canada, with a
patent dated 11th May, 1865, conferring upon your Historiographer
tlie title of Past Deputy Provincial Grand Commander and Grand
Prior, "with full power and authority to perform and exercise all
and every the duties and functions vested in me by such rank " and
for so doing "this patent shall be sufficient authority." ■ '
The question, therefore, recurs, what will the G. C. of Pennsylva-
nia do ? We answer, unhesitatingly and boldly, that it is our im-
514 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
perative duty to return to the ancient work and not remove the
landmarks of our fathers. We cannot but prochiim these truths to
the Tem])h'ir work], wliioli we have enunciated, when an attack is
made upon us and the work of our fathers. We ask all Templars
and all kState (irand Commanderies to assist us in the gkn-ious work
of restoring Teniplarism to its original Eitual, as that practised by
tlie Grand Conclave of England and Wales, and which has legiti-
mately descended to them through the Encampments at Bristol, Bath
and London, and now in our possession. W'hen this change is
efiected the whole Templar world will then be united as a powerful
family, bound together by the same Eitual, the same landmarks, the
same i5rincii:)les, acknowledging and worshiping the same Redeemer,
and having inscribed upon our ancient and venerated banner the
glorious living and dying sentiment of every Sir Knight,
Non nobis, Domine ! Non nobis, sed Nomine, tua da Gloriam!
To assist the Masonic student in his inquiries after truth, and in
order that he may have facts before him which cannot be controverted,
I have carefully prepared a full statement of all the Subordinate
Commanderies holding Charters from and by authority of the Grand
Encampment of Knights Templar of Pennsylvania, and Masonic
jurisdiction thereunto belonging, since 1794 :
Whole
No. Present t^t i t i- Date of -rv ^ *• ^i *
since No. Name and Location. Dispensation. Date of Charter.
1794.
1 ... Philadelphia Feb. 14, 1794
2 ... Philadelphia 1795
3 ... Harrisburg 1795
4 ... Carlisle 1796
5 ... Pittsburg Feb. 2, 1814, Mav 2,1814
6 ... Baltimore, Marvland 1790, May 2,1714
7 ... Rising Sun, Ke'w York 1808, May 3,1814
8 ... Washington, Wilm'gton, Del Mav 17, 1814
9 ... Philadelphia Mar. 18, 1816
10 4 St. John's, Philadelphia June 8,1819
11 ... Wivanda, Towanda July 20, 1826
12 ... Holv and Undivided Trinitv,
'Harrisburg '...Nov. 22, 1826,
13 1 Pittsburg .\ May 13, 1847, Sept. 16, 1847
14 2 Philadeiphia May 25, 1849
15 3 Jacques(leMolay,Wash'gton.Sept. 12,1849, Oct. 24,1850
16 5 Hubbard, Waynesburg Nov. 10, 1851, Sept. 12, 1856
17 7 St. Omer's (Uniontown),
Brownsville Sept. 16, 1853
18 9 De Molav, Reading Feb. 7,1854
19 8 St. John's, Carlisle. June 13, 1854
20 ... Kevstone, Philadelphia A pi. 23, 1855,
21 () Union, Philadelphia May 10, 1S55
22 10 Blumenthal (Mountain),
Altoona Sept. 18, 1855, June 11, 1856
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 515
Whole
No. Present Name and Location. Di^n^nttL Date of Charter,
since No. Dispensation.
1794.
23 11 Parke, HarrLsbiirg Dec. 15, 1855, June 11, 1856
24 12 Crusade, Bloomsburg Mar. 5, 1856, June 11, 1856
25 13 Columbia, Lancaster Apl. 10, 1856, June 11, 1856
26 14 Palestine, Carbondale May 1, 1856, June 11, 1856
27 15 Jerusalem, Pottstown May 5, 1856, June 11, 1856
28 16 Northern, Towanda Oct. 3, 1857, June 22, 1858
29 17 Cceur de Lion, Scranton Apl. 22, 1858, June 22, 1858
30 18 Kedron, Greensburg Mar. 19, 1860, June 23, 1860
31 19 Hugh de Pavens, Easton Apl. 12, 1860, June 23, 1860
32 20 Allen, Allentown Apl. 21, 1860, June 23, 1860
33 21 York, Y'ork Jan. 19, 1865, June 14, 1865
34 22 Baldwin XL, Williamsport June 13, 1866
All of which is respectfully and courteously submitted.
Alfred Creigh,
Historiographer.
Second report and reply of E. Sir Alfred Creigh, Historio-
grapher, made to the H. E. Ch^and Commandery of Penn-
sylvania, on the respective claims of Pennsylvania and Mas-
sachusetts to priority of date of organization, June, 1867.
In accordance with the request of the E. E. Grand Commander,
Sir Kobert Pitcairn, the Historiographer, E. Sir Alfred Creigh, read
his reply to the committee of Massachusetts and Rhode Island :
Templars of Pennsylvania:
As the immediate representative of this R. E. Grand Comman-
dery, I am about entering upon a discussion of facts and events
which have occurred in the Templar history of our own State, and
which necessarily involves the relative merits of the question now
at issue between the Grand Commandery of the States of Massachu-
setts and Rhode Island and that of Pennsylvania. It is a question
of vital importance, because it involves the origin of Knighthood in
the United States. From Philadelphia, the birth-place of freedom,
and from which were proclaimed the eternal principles of civil and
religious liberty on the ever memorable 4th of July, 1776, to make
glad all the nations of the earth, so our Masonic fathers, actuated
by the holiest impulses of the human heart, from this consecrated
city of brotherly love also, on the 12th day of May, 1797, laid upon
the altar of Templarism \i^ first convention, iii^ first constitution, and
the principles of Christian Knighthood. This was the nucleus of
Templarism in the LTnited States, and from this point the principles
of Knighthood, which are now disseminated throughout the States
516 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
and Territories of our widely-extended Union, have been derived
and disseminated.
In entering, therefore, upon this important question, we feel proud,
but not dismayed— proud that we have single-handed to enter the
arena against three true, tried, worthy and magnanimous Templars,
whose intellectual qualities place them, like Saul among the proph-
ets, far above their equals, and who "feel like Knights of old, athirst
for glorious war." But yet we are not dismayed, because we have
truth and justice on our side, and "old, unstained escutcheons, which
are ever seen among our banners." The contest, therefore, will
necessarily he an intellectual one, which will be gained, not at the
expense of blood, carnage and death, but in the mental field of bat-
tle, where mind will strive against mind, and the God of truth smile
upon and award the victory to him who advocates and defends posi-
tions based upon historical truths and warranted by incontrovertible
facts. With such principles, and with the banner God and our rirjht,
Pennsylvania for ever, I enter the contest, determined
by all imagined ways
To spread her glory and exalt her power."
It shall be our province to follow the learned committee of Mas-
sachusetts step by step in the investigation of every question calcu-
lated to throw light upon our Templar history, and demonstrate, by
facts and reasoning and logical deductions, that every position we
assumed was honest and truthful, and the result of unwearied and
laborious investigation. Neither will we suffer ourselves to be led
away by side issues or special pleading, but confine ourselves closely
to the reply of the committee.
This committee, composed of Past Grand Masters Sir AVilliam S.
Gardner, Sir Charles W. Moore and Sir James Hutchinson, truly
state that the object of the historical statement, as prepared by the
Historiographer of Pennsylvania, was to show that the Grand En-
campment of Pennsylvania is entitled to outrank the Grand Encamp-
ment of Massachusetts and Khode Island, and date its origin from
the 12th day of May, 1797. It seems from their own records, that
they were cognizant of this fact; for in the historical sketch prepared
by the Grand Encampment of Massachusetts and Ehode Island in
1864 there appears the following statement:
''In 1797 a Grand Encampment was formed in Pennsylvania,
which had exclusive jurisdiction over that State. This Grand Body
faded aioay, so that in 1814 (as appears by documents on file in the
archives of the Grand Encampment of Massacliusetts and Khode
Island) another Grand Encampment was formed, having Subordi-
nates at Wilmington, Delaware, and at Baltimore, Maryland." (To
assist the committee, I will add, at New York also). ^
Here, then, we havfe the acknowledgment that a Grand Encamp-
ment was organized in Pennnsylvania in 1797. Was there in any
of the States of the Union a Grand Encampment of Knights Tem-
plar formed prior to this period? We answer unhesitatingly no;
and every intelligent Sir Knight must respond in the negative, be-
cause Webb and every Masonic writer gives it as a matter of history
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 517
uncontradicted. Hence it is clear, intelligible, manifest and nnmis-
takable that the first Grand Encampment ever organized in the
United States was established in Philadelphia on the 12th day of
Mav, 1797. ' ^. ...,,. t.
It was ort^anized bv representatives from Philadelphia Ji^ncamp-
ments, Nos.^1 and 2," No. 3, of Harrisburg, and No. 4, of Carlisle.
From whence did thev derive their authority ? I reply, that under
a Blue Lodge Warrant they had the authority, and they also exer-
cised the power, to confer every Masonic Degree ; in fact, the pre-
amble to the bv-laws of tliose early Encampments speak verysignif-
icantlv when thev use this language: "The undersigned Knights of
the Temple, being desirous of participating in those glorious rights
and privileges enjoyed by our valiant ancestors from time immeviorial,
have resolv'ed to form an Encampment for that purpose, being duly
authorized and commanded to do so by the Sublime Warrant under
which we work." What warrant? The warrant of the Lodge. As
early as Februarv, 1779, we find that Col. Thomas Proctor, W. M.
of Lodge No. 2, was Knighted on account of his eminent military
and Masonic services, under the Charter of Lodge No. 2, and that
Col. Park, P. M. of a Lodge in Connecticut, addressed a Masonic
ode to Col. Proctor as a Knight Templar. Year by year we have
the evidence of the Orders of Knighthood being conferred under
Lodge warrants until 1797, when the Grand Encampment of Penn-
sylvania was organized. Under the old system, the Worshipful
Master " had the right and authority of calling his Lodge, or con-
gregatinrj the members into a Chapter." Hence Masonic degrees
were conferred under a Blue Lodge Warrant.
We shall now retrace our steps to the Subordinates under the
Grand Encampment of 1797, and inquire into the evidence of their
From the records (Creigh's Hist. Knights Templar, First Series,
pp. 53 and 82) we learn that Nos. 1 and 2 continued to exist, and have
the evidence of the names of those who were Knighted from 1797 to
December 27, 1812, when a union was effected by No. 2 being merged
into No. 1, which very Encampment was the moving spirit which
brought into existence the Grand Encampment of 1814.
No. 3 of the Grand Encampment of 1797, located at Harrisburg,
sent delegates to the organization of this Grand Body ; but the record
of this Subordinate was destroyed by the fire of 1803, which destroyed
the Masonic Hall in Philadelphia. Of No. 4, however, of Carlisle,
we can speak more particularly, because we have the evidence m
our possession, a letter written by the Sir Knight himself in his
eighty-fifth vear, testifying to some important and interesting facts.
Col. John Johnston Avrites to me that he was admitted into the Tem-
plar Lodge in 1797, in Carlisle, and that the Commander's name
was Eobert Levburn ; that he received both the Arch and Templar
Degrees under the Charter of Lodge 56, and that he visited the En-
campment in Philadelphia about the time of Washington's death,
for he was Secretarv of a Lodge in Philadelphia at that time. Sir
Robert Leyburn referred to 'is the grandfather of Sir Robert L.
Muench, Esq., of Harrisburg, in whose possession are the records
44
518 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
to establish the fact of his grandfather being a Knight Templar,
having received it in Ireland in 1784, before he emigrated to America.
Thus, beyond the possibility of a doubt, have we triuujphantly
established the creation of the Grand Encampment of 1797 (the
first in America), but have continued the existence of Knighthood
to the formation of the Grand Encampment of 1814, through at
least Encampments Nos, 1 and 2; the latter being merged into No.
1 in 1812.
The Historical Sketch prepared for and published by the Grand
Encampment of Massachusetts says that the Grand Encampment
of 1797 faded avsay, so that in 1814 another Grand Encampment was
formed. Hov/ exceedingly appropriate the expression faded aivay !
The committee would not risk their Masonic reputation upon the
words, died out, disappeared, annihilated, or became extinct. Oh no !
Looking squarely into the face of the facts, they discovered that
Truth was a divine attribute, and they concluded to mystify the
subject by permitting the Grand Encampment of Pennsylvania
peacefully and quietly to fade aivay. But how could it fade away
when its children, brought into existence by itself, and bearing
upon themselves tlie unmistakable evidence of their own i)aternity,
still exist? Men rise to eminence in this life, and acquire for their
name an immortality as deathless as eternity itself; their children
prize the name of their father, and because the father fades aicay as
a flower, does it follow that the name of the child dies out? Cer-
tainly not. So it was with the Grand Encampment of 1797. Siie
acquired an imperishable .fame, an immortal renown, a deathless
immortality by instituting the first Grand Encampment in the
United States ; and her Subordinates, to honor her memory and to
enshrine the sacred principles of defending innocent maidens, helpless
orphans, destitute widoics, and the Christian religion in the affection of
her membership, united together under one common name, as one
great family, in the city of Philadelphia, and invited their sisters in
New York, Delaware and Maryland to assist them in their God-like
errand of mercy and of love. These loving sisters responded to the
call of No. 1 (which was organized as such under the Grand En-
campment of 1797), and in February, 1814, organized "the Penn-
sylvania Grand Encampment, with Masonic jurisdiction thereunto
belonging."
Whatever errors (if any) were committed by the Subordinates of
1797, they were legalized by the Constitution of the Pennsylvania
Grand Encampment of 1814. The Constitution (Article 1st, Section
6) provided that Charters of Recognition should issue to the En-
campments in the States of Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware and
Maryland, and also (Section 4), that no Encampment within these
States should be deemed legal without a Charter from the Pennsyl-
vania Grand Encampment.
From the records we learn that Charters of Eecognition were
issued to five Subordinates, viz: on the 2d of May, 1814, to Phila-
delphia Encampment, No. 1 (the original Nos. 1 and 2 of 17y7), to
Pittsburg Encampment, No. 2, and to Baltimore Encampment, No.
1 ; on the od of May, 1814, to Rising Sun Encampment, No. 1, of
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 519
New York, and on the Vith of May, 1814, to Washington Encamp-
ment, No. 1, of Wilmington, Delaware.
Tiie preamble to the Charter reads thus : " Whereas, by the Con-
stitution of the said Pennsylvania Grand Encampment of Knights
Templar it is provided that the several Encampments which were
represented in the Grand Convention at the establishing of the said
Grand Encampment should be furnished with Charters of Ilecogni-
tion." Then follows the authority to confer the Orders, elect officers,
with continuance to their successors in office and members for ever.
By the acceptance of these Charters every act of these five Subor-
dinates was constitutionally legalized.
Having demonstrated the existence of Knighthood in Pennsyl-
vania from 1797, through Nos. 1 and 2, to 1814, when the second
Grand Encampment legalized the acts of five Subordinates, did this
Grand Encampment charter any other Encampments? On the 16th
of February, 1810, it granted a Charter to Philadelphia Encamp-
ment, No. 3, and on the 8th day of June, 1819, to St. John's En-
campment, No. 4, of Philadelphia. The Pennsylvania Grand En-
campment, during her existence from 1814 to 1824, had seven Sub-
ordinates— four in Pennsylvania, one in New York, one in Delaware,
and one in Baltimore.
No. 1, of Philadelphia, existed from Feb. 14, 1794, to June 13,
1823.
No. 2, of Pittsburg, existed from Feb. 2, 1814, to June 26, 1815.
No. 3, of Philadelphia, existed from Feb. 16, 1816, to May 8, 1821.
No. 4, St. John's, of Philadelphia, existed from June 8, 1819, and
still exists.
No. 1, Eising Sun, of New York, existed from Dec. 30, 1799, to
May 15, 1817, and became a Subordinate of New York State Grand
Commandery, and is still in existence as Columbia Commanderv,
No. 1.
No. 1, Washington Encampment, of Wilmington, Delaware, ex-
isted from Feb. 15, 1814, to May 18, 1822.
No. 1 Encampment of Baltimore existed from 1790, to May 5,
1816, but on Dec. 8, 1832, it became a member of the General Grand
Encampment of the United States, and is still in existence.
Thus three of the Subordinate Encampments which originally
derived Charters of Recognition from the Pennsylvania Grand En-
campment are still in existence, under the authority of their respec-
tive State Grand Bodies, but yielding homage and obedience to the
General Grand Encampment of the United States. Is it not there-
fore a pleasant reminiscence to remember that through the instru-
mentality of the first Grand p]ncampment of 1797 in Pennsylvania,
we can boast of three legal, constitutional Encann)ments, whose date
of organization is even anterior to the General Grand Encampment
itself?
It is beyond dispute, therefore, that the Pennsylvania Grand En-
campment of 1814 was legally organized. Its legality not being
questioned even by the learned committee of Massachusetts, every
and all its acts were legal and constitutional. It had an absolute
right, inter alia, to change, alter and modify the Constitution, to grant
520 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Charters, to establisli the fees and dues, &c., &c., and no other State
Grand Encampment conld interfere with its constitutional and ap-
propriate sphere of action in Pennsylvania, New York, Maryland
and Delaware.
With these fiicts and overwhelming testimony, the magnanimous
committee of Massachusetts, finding that an assertion is better than
argument, and in a spirit by no means courteous, says:
•'In 1823 this Grand Encampment, such as it was, expired, and
St. .John's Encampment, No. 4, the only one in existance in Penn-
sylvania, lingered on until 1835, when its existence ceased, and
Templar Masonry expired in Pennsylvania."
In analyzing the above sentence, we will discover some strange
ideas, some inconsistent thoughts, some far-fetched theories, thrown
together to build up the claim of Massachusetts and Rhode Island
at the expense of the reputation of the Grand Encampment of 1814
and St. John's, No. 4, of Philadelphia.
We desire that this learned committee will explain the difference
between the Grand Encampment of 1797 fading aicay, and the Grand
Encampment of 1814 expiring. The committee were very choice in
their terms. In the former, the Grand Encampment of 1797 was a
decline from a greater to a less vigor or strength, for such is tlie
meaning of the words /ac/e aivay ; but in the Grand Encampment of
1814 were all the attributes which constitute death, viz: the last
breath, the last agonies and the death-rattle, and the relinquish-
ment of life. Such is the idea intended to be conveyed by the word
expire. We shall try the question by these terms.
At what precise period the Grand Encampment of 1797 faded away
it is beyond the reach of any Sir Knight to declare, because the
memory of man runneth not so far back, and the records of that
Grand Body were destroyed by fire in the Masonic Hall of Phila-
deli)hia in 1803. But it certainly survived this event, because Sir
Samuel Maverick was Grand Commander of Rising Sun Encamp-
ment, No. 1, of New Y^ork, in 1807, and was in the same year Cap-
tain General of the Grand Encampment of Pennsylvania. The
declaration, therefore, of this committee in now asserting that the
Grand Encampment of 1797 only faded away is a triumphant argu-
ment in favor of its life and constitutional acts, more especially as
these were ratified by the Constitution of the Grand Encampment
of 1814, by the granting of Charters of Recognition, to which 1 have
already referred.
With regard to the Pennsylvania Grand Encampment of 1814, we
have a word to say in reply to the uncourteous and ungenerous re-
mark, " In 1823 this Grand Encampment., such as -it was, expired." Why
attempt to cast a reproach upon a body wliich embraced the mag-
nanimous Knights of the States of Pennsylvania, New York, Dela-
ware and Maryland? Why, by insinuation, sneeringly reflect upon
the Sir Knights who organized and those who maintained it ? Have
the committee forgotten who they were, their character and their
world-wide Masonic reputation? If they have, I shall refresh their
memories by recalling the names of Rev. Sir Knight James Milnor,
D. D., Sir knights William McCorkle and George A. Baker, of
HISTORY OF TPIE KNIGHTS TEMPLAE. 521
Pennsylvania ; of Sir Knights James McDonald, Archibald Bull
and Samuel Maverick, of New York ; of Sir Knights Archibald
Hamilton, George Eeid and Thomas Stockton, of Delaware, and of
Sir Knights Philip P. Eckel, Samuel Cole and Henry S. Keatinge,
of Maryland, representative men of the Sir Knights of their respec-
tive States, Avhose character, whose standing, whose influence, whose
mental qualities and whose Masonic abilities will compare favorably
with the Sir Knights of any State or country ; and yet this noble
array of Sir Knights, we are to be told after half a century, did not
come to the status required by the Grand Encampment of Massa-
chusetts and Ehode Island. Who made this committee Judges in
Israel, that they shall cast a reflection, " such as it iras," upon our
Templar Fathers, who claim an existence even prior to the Grand
Encampment of Knights Templar of the United States, and from
which they derived the very principles which govern Knighthood
in this country ? What an anomaly in nature for a General Grand
Body to have within its fold three of the very Subordinates which
derived Charters of Recognition from the Pennsylvania Grand En-
campment in 1814, and yet doubting their constitutionality ! We
would have supposed that the lapse of time itself would iiave legal-
ized the Grand Encampment of 1814, " swc/t as it was.'' But "the
history of St. John's Encampment, Xo. 4, of Philadelphia, from its
organization in 1819, the history of Rising Sun Encampment (now
Columbia, No. 1), of New York", from 1799, and the history of Bal-
timore Encampment, No. 1, of Maryland, from 1790, is a triumph-
ant refutation of the reflection, ''such as it v-as." The only surprise
to Templars must be that when so astounding a reflection was made
— so odious a reproach cast upon the memories of the old Sir Knights
who have long since passed to the spirit land — that they did not,
*' Like Knights awakening, raise their jointless arms,
And from beneath the winding-sheet glare forth
Eyeless and fleshless"
on the committee.
We shall now examine the declaration, "And St, John's Encamp-
ment, No. 4, the only one in existence in Pennsylvania, lingered on
until 1835, Avhen its existence ceased and Templar Masonry expired
in Pennsylvania."
If the learned committee could strike from the annals of Tem-
plarism the history of St. John's Commandery, No. 4, of Philadel-
phia, what an unbroken history would Massachusetts and Rhode
Island present! But, like the angel which was placed at the garden
of Eden "with a flaming sword to keep the way of the tree of life,"
so the history of St. John's, No. 4, stands an eternal barrier to pre-
serve the olden memories, and frown down all attempts to destroy
the history of the past, or cast injurious imputations upon the Penn-
sylvania Grand Encampment of 1814, which brought it into exist-
ence, legally, constitutionally and in accordance with the forms and
ceremonies of Templar Masonry.
We give the committee great credit for retracting thus publicly
44 *
522 HISTORY OF THE KXTOITT.S TEMPLAR.
all their former opinions with legard to tlie illegality and unconsti-
tutionality of Temi)hirism in Pennsylvania from 1797 down to 1835,
when they declared that Templar Masonry expired in Pennsylvania.
If it only expired at that period, it certainly must have existed in
some form. Although it may \m\e faded away, yet it would occasion-
ally burst forth, and certainly continued in uninterrupted succession
from 1797 to 1835, wh(^n Templarism expired, as the committee
assert, in Pennsylvania. Did Templarism expire in Pennsylvania
in 1<S35? We answer, unhesitatingly, ISO.
This is the great desideratum whicli the committee of Massachu-
setts desire to substantiate, and if sophistical reasoning and fine-spun
tlieories, and chaste and beautiful language and copious extracts
upon the illegal Grand Encampments formerly under the authority
of the K. "W. Grand Lodge, will succeed in blinding the Templar's
eye to constitutional autliority, then truly have they reached the
acme of their desire, and, like the philosopher's stone, everything
is changed to suit their purpose. But before a decision is made, let
us carefully examine into the merits of the question.
Let us, to a right understanding of this subject, reassert some
points which are settled beyond the i)Ossibility of a doubt:
St. John's, 'So. 4, of Philadeli)hia, was legally constituted June 8,
1819, and continued to work until 1835, when she adjourned to meet
on the call of the E. Grand Master.
Philadelphia Encampment, No. 1, organized under a Blue Lodge
Warrant in 1794, and closed in 1823. Pittsburg Encampment closed
in 1815. Rising Sun Encampment withdrew in 1817, to attach her-
self to the New York State Grand Encampment, and is in existence
as Columbia Commandery, No. 1. Washington Encampment, at
Wilmington, closed in 1823. Baltimore Encampment withdrew and
was received under the General Grand Encampment in 1832. Phil-
adelphia Encampment, No. 3, closed in 1821. Thus, from various
causes, all the Subordinates, except St. John's, No. 4, had either
closed or became members of their own State Grand Encampments,
leaving the Grand Encampment of 1814 with but one Subordinate,
viz: St. John's, No. 4. The Grand Encampment itself, finding that
it could not support herself without Subordinates, also closed, leav-
ing No. 4 alone in the State of Pennsylvania, not only as the repre-
sentative, but as the depository of the arcana and landmarks and
principles of Templarism, How far she has maintained her fiduci-
ary trust, her history, her membership and her imperishable renown
will demonstrate.
We must again call to your minds the declaration of the commit-
tee of Massachusetts and Ehode Island, that St. John's Encampment,
No. 4, the only one in existence in Pennsylvania, lingered on until
1835, when its existence ceased and Templar Masonry expired in
Pennsylvania. We have admitted that St. John's Encampment,
No. 4, ivas the only one in existence in Pennsylvania from 1824 to
1835. The learned committee does not question its legality nor its
acts after the Grand P]ncampment of 1814 had ceased in 1824, but
asserts that it died after a lingering death in 1835, and then Templar
Ma-sonry expired in Pennsylvania.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 523
Our Massachusetts and Ehode Island Sir Knights would gladly
perform the solemn funeral ceremonies of the Order over St. John's
Encampment, No, 4, and quietly ajid peacefully consign it to the
tomb, and mourn over its loss as the last representative of a noble
sire, as the lone descendant of those valiant and magnanimous
Knights who introduced Knighthood into the United States through
the instrumentality of the Grand Encampment of Pennsylvania of
1797. Although our Massachusetts Sir Knights may desire to bury
Knighthood in Pennsylvania in 1835, yet we trust they will permit
the Constitution of the Grand Encampment of 1814, the very body
which created St. John's Encampment, No. 4, and from which it
derived the present Charter under wliich they are now governed, to
speak.
This constitution was amended in June, 1823, by adding the fol-
lowing words ; "Every Encampment neglecting or refusing to make
such return for two years, shall forfeit all the privileges of their
Warrant, if the return be not made within six months after their
being notified to such efiect by the Grand Kecorder, unless a reason-
able excuse be given for such neglect."
Here, then, are two constitutional provisions to work a forfeiture
of Charter: 1st, that the returns are required to be made within two
years : and 2dly, six months' notice is required to be given by the
Grand Recorder, and even then a reasonable excuse would exonerate
the Subordinate. The records of the Grand Encampment show that
No. 4 made regular returns until 1824, when the Grand Encamp-
ment ceased. Hence the Charter of No 4 was valid, although the
creator had died, and she had an absolute right to meet as an En-
campment, because the Charter contains the following language:
" With full and adequate powers to confer the Orders of Knight-
hood, with continuance to their successors in office and members for
ever."
St. John's Encampment, No. 4, had the unquestionable right to
continue as an Encampment, because by the constitution itself she
had performed no act to work a forfeiture of Charter ; and secondly,
her Charter authorized and empowered her officers and members \o
confer the Orders, not for a limited space of time — not until 1835 —
but/or ever,uT as long as the members had the desire to continue and
the ability to work. But we must again refer to the constitution to
place the position of No. 4 beyond all doubt or peradventure.
The 18th Section of the constitution of the Grand Encampment
of 1814 was also amended in June, 1823, and to which was added
these words, in reference to Subordinate Encampments: "Andean
also meet on its oicn adjournment, or at the call of the Eminent Grand
Master:'
It is evident, therefore, that the constitution recognized the power
of a Subordinate to suspend labor, and we hazard nothing in the a.s-
sertion when we declare that no other interpretation can be placed
upon this constitutional provision than that we have quoted.
Under what circumstances, therefore, did St. John's Encampment,
No. 4, suspend labor? The widespread and desolating curse of
Antimasonry spread itself throughout our whole country, and the
524 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
public mind was agitated and convulsed. Proscription and perse-
cution ran wild in Churcli and State. Lodges, Chapters, Councils
and Commanderies suspended labor under tliis unhallowed excite-
ment to appease tlie public mind. But it will be remembered that
in suspending labor they did not return their Charters and Jewels
to the various Grand Bodies, but retained them in their own pos-
session. This was the case witli St. John's Encampment, No. 4, and
when it constitutionally assembled in 1848, at the call of the Eminent
Grand Master, evenj Sir Kniyht ivho uns present at the ^mssage of the
resolution in 1835 to suspend labor, assembled at the call of the Eminent
Grand Master in 1848 to resume labor, except one, who was summoned
to the Spirit-land. From these facts, I confidently appeal to every
Sir Knight and ask him, if it is true that St. John's, No. 4, lingered
from 1824 to 1835? If it is true that St. John's, No. 4, ceased to
exist in Pennsylvania? If it is true that Templar Masonry expired
in Pennsylvan"ia in 1S35? We reply, that the fire which lay con-
cealed upon the altar in 1835 again shot forth its rays in 1848, and
from that time to the present the unwavering, enthusiastic and zeal-
ous Sir Knights of No. 4 labored incessantly for the defence of inno-
cent maidens, helpless orphans, destitute widows, the Christian re-
ligion, and the glory which surrounds the principles of Knighthood,
as handed down to us for seventy years.
St. John's Encampment, No. 4, does not even work under a re-
vived Charter, for, at the union of the two Grand Encampments in
Pennsylvania in 1857, the Subordinates were to be renumbered,
according to the date of their Charters. This arrangement necessa-
rily made No. 4 number one in the present Grand Encampment ;
but with that magnanimity which has ever characterized St. John's
Encampment, she modestly declined the proffered honor, preferring
to retain her old number and her old Charter. Half a century of
years are upon her brow and she bears no marks of old age, but the
fire of youth and the vigor of manhood are her chief supporters.
She can triumphantly boast that through her instrumentality
Templarism was preserved in Pennsylvania in the dark and perse-
cuting days of Antimasonry, when the Church and State were both
arrayed against it, but our principles being eternal, triumphed, for
" Truth, crushed to earth, will rise again,
The eternal years of God are hers ;
But Error, wounded, writhes in pain,
And dies amidst its worshipers."
We believe we have demonstrated that by the constitution St. John's
Encampment, No. 4, had the absolute and constitutional authority to
reassemble, and by thus reassembling assume her former standing.
Exclude the doctrine that St. John's Encampment, No. 4, was not
lawfidly reconstituted, and you will destroy the history of nearly
every institution in our country, for every institution has her bright
days^)f prosperity and her sad days of adversity. Even St. Andrew's
Cliaiiter (the boasted Chapter of Massachusetts), which was insti-
tuted in Boston in 1769, almost one hundred years ago (and of which
HISTOEY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 525
at least one of the committee, Sir Charles W. Moore, avIio condemns
St. John's Encampment, No. 4, is a member), has a hiatus in her
history, wliicli reads thus :
''January 31, 1771. There is no further election of olhcers re-
corded, untU the 21st of October, 1790, and no record of any meet-
ings between March 26, 1773, and March 20, 1789, a period of six-
teen years. The difficulties immediately preceding and during the
American Kevolution, no doubt, interrupted and prevented the
regular meetings of the brethren."
If St. Andrew's Chapter has a right to lay dormant for sixteen
vears because a political revolution was in existence, by the same
reasoning had not St. John's Encampment, No. 4, the same rightto
suspend labor for thirteen year^? In the one case the probabilities
of the cause of not assembling is given, whilst in the other they re-
assemble under a constitutional provision. If time permitted, we
might quote instances upon instances to prove that the same course
ha? been pursued in nearly all Grand and Subordinate Bodies; but
among the most prominent is the re-establishment of the Grand
Lodge of Vermont.
In the remarks we have thus made we desire neither to gratily
State pride, nor rouse the feelings of jealousy, nor to wound the feel-
ings, nor say an unkind word against the unblemished character and
the world-wide reputation of the committee, Sir William S. Gardner,
Sir Charles W. Moore and Sir James Hutchinson, and the magnani-
mous Knights they so ably represent ; but we would be doing gross
injustice to the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania did we not
protect and defend St. John's Encampment, No. 4, which^ has been
the connecting link between the present and past generations of il-
lustrious Knights, between the immortal dead and the present living,
from the assault made upon her for the purpose of building up the
reputation of the Grand Encampment of Massachusetts and Khode
Island. Pennsylvania willingly accords to her an existence Irom
1805 ; but she never can surrend'er her claim as being the first Grand
Encampment ever organized in the United States, nor that she has
preserved an unbroken history through the various Grand and Sub-
ordinate Encampments whicli have from time to time existed under
her constitutional authority, nor that St. John's Encampment, No. 4,
from the date of her Charter in 1819, is the brightest gem in our
Templar coronet, because through her instrumentality Pennsylvania
boasts of a continued and uninterrupted existence for seventy years.
May not each Knight truly say —
" Long, long be my heart with such memories filled,
Like the vase in which roses have once been distilled;
You may break, you may ruin the vase if you will,^
But the scent of the roses will hang 'round it still ?"
With regard to the acts of St. John's Encampment, No. 4, in the
formation of the Grand Encampment of Pennsylvania under the
authority of the P. \V. Grand Lodge, and to which the committee
of Massachusetts and Ehode Island have taken exceptions, I may
526 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
add, that the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania, under the au-
thority of tlie General Grand p:ncampiuent of the United States, as
well as myself, in all our writings never doubted the legal existence
of No. 4. They contended that the R. W. Grand Lodge was the
source of all Masonic authority in Pennsylvania, and as late as 1849
the Grand Lodge, on the recommendation of Past Grand Masters
Newcomb, Chandler and Perkins, the Committee on Landmarks
adopted the following resolution : '
'' Resolved, That the Grand Lodge approve of the action of
Franklin Lodge, No. 134, regarding the use of their Warrant to
open an Encampment of Knights Templar."
On the other hand, many of us believed in the General Grand
Encampment of the United States as the true source. We argued,
tliat the General Grand Encampment having taken possession of
Pennsylvania in 182G, by the establishment of a Subordinate in
Harrisburg, by the terms of the Constitution this State could not be
invaded by any other power; and on this base we fought the ques-
tion. We were then, as now, battling for the right, and were pre-
eminently successful ; and whatever may have been our individual
differences, we buried them in the tomb of oblivion. Grand Master
"'^a^^'^'"^^' ^" speaking of this union, thus eloquently writes:
"That all the Subordinate Commanderies in Pennsvlvania and all
the members thereof are in courteous, fraternal and Knightly fel-
lowshij) with each other, and all in common owing allegiance to the
Grand Encampment of the United States, have the same faith and
are all under the same solemn vows of allegiance and fealtv to the
same and only governmental head, the Grand Encampment of the
United States."
_ We cannot close without adverting to one important fact contained
in the report of the Massachusetts committee, and in which they
seeni to doubt whether an P^ncampment was instituted in Harrisburg
on November 22, 1826, because no allusion is made to it in the records
of the General Grand Body.
On Sept. 19, 182G, the M. E. De Witt Clinton was elected G. G.
Master of the General Grand Encampment of the United States,
and on tlie evening of the same day it adjourned. The next meeting
was held on the 14th of Sept., 1829. During the interim, or on the
22d of Nov., 182(), a Dispensation was granted bv De Witt Clinton for
its establishment. The Dispensation reads thus:
"De Witt Clinton, General Grand Master of the General Grand
Encampment of the Knights Templar, with the appendant Orders,
for the United States of America, to the Rev. Gregorv T. Bedell,
John de Pui, Rev. John B. Clemson, Rev. Benj. Allen, 'Theophilus
Keckeler, Rev. Robert Piggot, John Neilson, Rev. William Henry
Rees, James de Pui and Norman Nash, Greeting:—! do hereby con-
stitute you and your associates, a Council of Knights of tiie Red" Cross
and an Encampment of Knights Templar and of Malta, by the name
of tlie Holy and Undivided Trinity Encampment, and autho-
rize you to form the same at Harrisburg, in the Countv of Dauphin
and State of Pennsylvania, with full power to create Knights Tem-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 527
plar, and also to confer the Appendant Orders, and with all the other
rights, privileges, powers and authorities to such institution properly
appertaining.
"And I do hereby appoint the Eev. Gregory T. Bedell the first
Grand Master; John de Pui, Esq., Generalissimo; the Eev. John B.
Clemson, Captain General ; the Rev. Benj. Allen, Standard-Bearer ;
Samuel F. Bradford, Esq., Chancellor; the Rev. Robert Piggot,
Treasurer ; John Neilson, Esq., Recorder ; the Rev. William Henry
Eees, Sword-Bearer, and Theophilus Keckeler, Herald.
" This Dispensation to be in full force until the next stated meet-
ing of the General Grand Encampment.
"In witness whereof, I have hereunto set ray hand and seal at
arms, at the city of Albany, this 22d day of November, An. Dom.
1826.
"DeWitt Clinton." [l. s.]
This Encampment met and adopted by-laws on the 15th of Feb-
ruary,_1827. Sir De Witt Clinton having suddenly died before the
triennial meeting in 1829, no record of any papers whatever is made
of having been delivered to the Grand Encampment, and the proba-
bilities are the Antimasonic feeling prevented the records from being
kept as perfect as they should have been.
The Dispensation establishes the fact, but in addition thereto, we
will add tiie testimony of living witnesses, from whom I received re-
plies in answer to letters addressed to them :
The Rev. Sir William Henry Rees, D.D., under date of Mav 13,
1867, says : " Of one thing I am very confident (no doubt Dr. Clem-
son can corroborate), I have seen the Dispensation or Warrant as
procured by Mr. J. de Pui, who went to Albany for it, and bore the
signature of De Witt Clinton, then Governor of New York, and rep-
resented to be the principal officer of tiie Grand Encampment of
Knights Templar; the cost of the same was one hundred dollars.
The Dispensation or Warrant designated all the officers of our En-
campment; myself as Sword-Bearer. This I read."
Rev. Sir Dr. Clemson writes to me, May 20, 1867 : "In the early
part of my ministerial life I was settled "in Harrisburg, and while
there this Encampment existed by Dispensation of the General
Grand Encampment. I am fiilly satisfied that evervthing con-
nected with the Encampment was based on right, regular and legal
grounds."
Rev.Sir James de Pui says: "I was knighted in Philadelphia
(Oct. 25, 1826), and attended an Encampment at Harrisburg, at ray
brother's house, in 1827."
Sir William G. Scott writes: "I was admitted a raeraber of the
Encampment at Harrisburg, which met at Bro. John de Pui's
house, and received the degrees, and recollect the dress, imple-
ments, &c."
Thus have I given the testimony of four living witnesses, all tes-
tifying to the f-Act of the organization of the Encampment under
the authority of the General Grand Encampment of the United
States, and of the Orders being conferred under that Disi)ensation ;
528 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
proving absolutely and unequivocally that the General Grand En-
campment did enter and take possession of the State of Pennsylva-
nia on the 22d dav of November, 1826, by virtue of the authority
vested in her bv th'e Constitution, which disproves the allegation of
our learned committee of Massachusetts, that " the General Grand
Encampment of the United States first entered Pennsylvania in 1847."
But the committee, in their own peculiar way of settling questions,
at least satisfactorily to themselves, say: "The records of the Gen-
eral Grand Body contain no allusion to Holy and Undivided Trinity
Encampment being constituted at Harrisburg, Nov. 22, 1826."
We are not at all surprised at that feet, because the very imper-
fect manner in which the earlier records of our Templar bodies
were kept exhibit but meagre and scanty records. Even in Massa-
chusetts, where we should suppose all perfection should exist, and
that "line upon line" was written, so that all might read and under-
stand in their own records, "claiming to be the oldest Grand Body
of Knighthood upon this continent," a discrepancy occurs which
cannot be reconciled. Learned lawyers cannot harmonize the prob-
lem, and it has now become a matter of history. On the one side
we have the testimony of the M. E. William B. Hubbard, General
Grand Master of the" General Grand Encampment of the United
States, claiming that this General Grand Body was constituted by
delegates from Councils and Encampments of Knights Templar, and
that not a State Grand Encampment appears upon record. On the
other side we have the very talented and learned Sir William S.
Gardner, as Grand Master of Massachusetts and Khode Island in
1864, proving from the records of Massachusetts also that Boston
P^nciimpment (one of the Encampments mentioned by Grand Master
Hubbard) did not send any delegate or delegates to the Convention
in 1816. Who shall decide now wlien doctors differ? To our
minds it must be overwhelming and convincing that our early
records were imperfectly kept. Hence we account for it that no
allusion has been made to the constituting of the Encampment at
Harrisburg in 1826.
On this important question I desire to introduce a witness whom
we all love and honor, and whose testimony will settle the question
as to the very imperfect manner in which the records of the General
Grand Body were written. That witness is the distinguished Knight
of Massachusetts, Sir William S. Gardner. In his history of the
Grand Encampment of Massachusetts, prepared by himself as
Grand Master in 1864, he says:
" Maine Encampment was represented in Grand Encampment in
the years 1824, 1825, 1827, 1828, 1845. It ceased to be under the
jurisdiction of the Grand Encampment of Massachusetts and Rhode
island October 10, 1849." When Most Eminent Sir Benj. B. French,
Grand Master of the Grand Encampment of the United States, was
Grand Recorder of that body, he thus spoke of Maine Encampment:
"Tliis Encampment appears for the first time in the General Grand
Recorder's Register in 1847. I can find nothing to show when it
was chartered." Sir William S. Gardner says it was chartered
March 17, 1821. Thus we have the evidence of a body existing in
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 529
Maine, under the jurisdiction of Massachusetts and Khode Island,
for twenty-eight years, and from the date of its Charter in 1821 to
1847, a period of twenty-six years, first appearing on the General
Recorder's Eegister,
The mind of man is fallible, but it appears the written records are
equally so ; hence we should carefully scrutinize the facts and cir-
cumstances, and not arrive at hasty conclusions for the purpose of
building up imaginary theories. We feel free to confess that
throughout the whole range of the learned committee's reply they
had but two governing, all-absorbing ideas. The first was to destroy
the validity of St. John's Encampment, No. 4, of Philadelphia, and
the second to prove that no such Encampment as Holy and Un-
divided Trinity Encampment ever was constituted at Harrisburg;
the object bein'g to blot out Templar Masonry in Pennsylvania, in
order to sustain their own Grand Body as the oldest Grand Body of
Knighthood upon this continent.
Valiant and magnanimous Knights of Massachusetts, attempt
not to surmount impossibilities. AVhen your Grand Body shall
have the foith and the power to make the year 1805 go back on the
sun-dial of time eight long years, or anterior to the year 1797 — when
beauty, virtue and innocence soften the heart of death — when
"the subtle srbost
Of vain philosophy, and wordly hope,
And sweet lipped, hollow-hearted flattery,"
cease to be pursued by men — when the human heart ceases to open
her fountains of charity and brotherly love — when you attempt
" To satisfy the ocean with a drop ;
To marry Immortality to Death,
And with the unsubstantial shade of Time
To fill the embrace of all Eternity,"
then may the learned and talented committee of Massachusetts and
Rhode Island claim those honors for Massachusetts which of right
belong to Pennsylvania.
We again reiterate our solemn conviction, based upon truth,
history and facts, that Pennsylvania organized the first Grand En-
campment in the United States on the r2th day of May, 1797 ; that
no State Grand Commandery can legally claim to be her peer or
equal in this respect; and that consequently she is pre-eminently
entitled to all the honor which should be awarded to her for intro-
ducing a system which has been followed by all her sister States.
Having* removed the foundation upon which the committee of
Massachusetts and Rhode Island erected an imaginary building, it
follows that the superstructure therefore has toppled down and the
whole fabric is in ruins. The idea that the '' Knights of Pennsyl-
vania trace their genealogy through the Grand Encampment of the
United States to the Grand Encampments of Massachusetts and
Rhode Island and of New York," provokes a smile, more especially
when we remember that Sir Thomas Smith Webb, who is honored
45 X
530 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
with being *'tlie first among his equals," received the Orders of
Knighthood in Pliiladelpliia prior to the organization of tlie Grand
Encampment of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and that New
York was a territorial dependency of Pennsylvania, she having re-
ceived a Charter of Recognition from Pennsylvania. How, then, can
we trace our genealogy to Massachusetts and Rhode Island 'and
New York?
The committee admit that the "first mention of Knights of the
Red Cross in America was Feb. 8, 1797." From whence it came,
and how it originated, "they have no certain knowledge," but "tiiis
IS its first introduction into the Masonic world of America."
The committee also admit the charge which I made in my report
last year, viz. : That our rituals have been tampered with, changed and
modified to suit the whim and caprice of individual Sir Knights. They
say that Webb, Fowle and Gleason's "attention was early directed
to the Templar ritual then in use, and it appeared to them 'necessary
for its success that it should be modified and arranged in such a
manner as to adapt it to the use of the Encampments. They accord-
ingly revised it, each doing his share of the labor. That part known as
the 'Soliloquy,' was prepared by Gleason, and was entirely new.
Webb and Fowle had more to do with arranging the work and
details. Both being accomplished, effective workmen, and knowing
what was required, they were able to give to the ritual all that was
needed in these particulars. When the work was completed, the
lectures were prepared. Thus originated the Templar ritual in use
throughout the United States."
Here, then, we give the evidence— clear, conclusive and satisfactory
—from over the signature of the committee themselves, that the En-
glish Templar ritual was changed, modified and revised ; again sus-
taining and supporting the very principle for which we have so
earnestly contended in Pennsylvania— a change, a modification and
a revision, in which antagonistic and heterogeneous principles are
introduced, as the Red Cross Degree, which has no connection what-
ever with the Orders of Knighthood— the one Pagan and Jewish,
and the other purely and entirely Christian.
We add the views of our sister Grand Comraanderies, endorsing
the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania:
ALABAMA.
An historical essay was read to the Grand Commandery (of Penn-
sylvania) by the obviously learned Sir Knight Alfred Creigh, which
is evidently the work of high Masonic intelligence and the result
of much research. He asserts the claim, and seems to demonstrate
it, of his Grand Commandery to the highest antiquity of all similar
bodies on this continent. He contends, on authority of historic inves-
tigation, that the present ritual generally received in the United
States originated in Massachusetts, and is neither correct nor consis-
tent with ancient custom and usage, and that the Degree of Knights
of the Red Cross does not properly belong to the Christian Order
of Christian Masonry. This Degree, he argues from authorities
exhumed from the dust of the past, was "manufactured by Sir
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 531
Knight Webb and his associates from the Knight of the East or
Sword, Knight of the East and Knight of the East and West De-
grees of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite." While space
will not allow us to copy this document, we commend its perusal
to the Sir Knights, It is worthy of study and examination.
ILLINOIS.
Sir Alfred Creigh, Historiographer, made an interesting report,
devoted principally to establishing the claim of Pennsylvania to
being the first Grand Encampment that was ever constituted in the
United States, and also as to the Order of Ked Cross, as conferred in
our Coramanderies at the present time, being an innovation.
NEW JERSEY.
Sir Alfred Creigh. the distinguished Masonic scholar and Histori-
ographer, presented a very learned and interesting dissertation upon
the early history of Templar Masonry in the United States, in which
he shows that the Grand Encampment of Pennsylvania was organ-
nized in 1797, thus demolishing the claim for priority which has
been somewhat arrogantly set up by Massachusetts, whose age,
according to Sir Creigh, is somewhat eight years less than that of
Pennsylvania. The Bay Staters will have to take a back seat now
among us juveniles.
NEW YORK.
Sir Alfred Creigh, Grand Historiographer, presented an historical
statement in reply to certain strictures upon Pennsylvania by the
Grand Commander of Massachusetts, in which he shows that in
Pennsylvania was established the first Grand Encampment in the
United States, its organization having been effected on the 12th day
of May, 1797, which effectually disposes of the principal argument
of Massachusetts in support of her recusancy to the Constitution of
the Grand Encampment of the United States. We never could
understand, and do not now, what priority of organization has to do
with the matter, for that was distinctly waived when allegiance was
acknowledged to the National Body ; but we submit that Massachu-
setts is now worsted at her own argument, and driven to stand upon
"her own sweet will" to justify her attitude of non-compliance.
Passing on to the ritual which Massachusetts claims to have origi-
nated within the lines of her own dominions, he admits her claim,
saying: "Let us for a moment examine into the history and ritual
of this Degree of Knight of the Red Cross. In Scotland and Ire-
land, the right is not insisted upon as a pass to the Temple Order.
In Canada, by permission of the Grand Conclave of England and
Wales, they impart as much information as will secure the admit-
tance of their members into the Encampments in the United States.
They regard the Red Cross as only a continuation of the Royal
Arcii Degree, commemorating the dangers encountered by the Jews
in building the second Temple, and consequently as of Jewish and
Pagan origin, and has no connection whatever with the Christian
532 HISTOPvY OF THE KXTGHTS TEMPLAR.
Orders of Kniglitliood, as based ui)on the birtli, life, death, resurrec-
tion and ascension of our Savionr."
" Do you ask me, then, from whence tlie degree of Knight of the
Red Cross is derived? I reply, it was manufactured by Webb and
his associates from the Knight of the ]Last or Sword, Knight of the
East, and Knight of the East and West Degrees of the Ancient and
Accei)ted Scottish Rite."
In which he (Sir Creigh) is undoubtedly correct.
We have long entertained and often expressed the opinion that
the Order of the Red Cross is simply an interpolation in the Templar
system, having no connection with, nor allusion to, the real teach-
ings of the Order. To be consistent, we should drop the Red Cross,
and insert in its place a degree in which the ceremony of creating a
Knight should be the leading feature. Having passed through this,
the candidate would then be in a position to appropriately receive
and understand the Order of the Temple and others. It being
patent that the Oi'dersas now conferred owe their existence to Webb,
who spent the best part of his life in the manufacture of rituals,
with an occasional job of "busheling," we see no reason why we
should not adopt the English system as infinitely more in accord-
ance with the ideas history furnishes us of the true Templars, and
thus get rid of the anachronism of the Red Cross. We therefore
fully concur with Sir Knight Creigh when he says:
"The question therefore recurs, What will the Grand Commandery
of Pennsylvania do? We answer, unhesitatingly and boldly, that it
is our imperative duty to return to the ancient work and not remove
the landmarks of our lathers. We cannot but proclaim these truths
to the Templar world, which we have enunciated, when an attack is
made upon us and the work of our fathers. We ask all Templars
and all State Grand Commanderies to assist us in the glorious work
of restoring Templarism to its original ritual, as that practised by
the Grand Conclave of England and Wales, and which has legiti-
mately descended to them through the Encampments at Bristol, Bath
and London, and now in our possession. When this change is
effected, the whole Templar world will then be united as a powerful
family, bound together by the same ritual, the same landmarks, the
same principles, acknowledging and worshiping the same Redeemer,
and having inscribed upon our ancient and venerated Banner the
glorious living and dying sentiment of every Sir Knight: ^' Non
nobisy Domine ! non nobis, sed Nomine, tua da Gloriam /"
OHIO.
Sir Knight Creigh presented a detailed report of his labors (as
Historiographer of Knighthood in Pennsylvania) thus far, and en-
dorses the Grand Commandery of New York. But, in speaking of
Webb, who is styled the "Prince of American Innovators," the
Grand Commandery of Ohio says : To this your committee most
heartily respond. Amen ! and would take occasion to say that in their
opinion it cannot be right, in any case or undei—nny circumstances,
to perpetuate error knowingly. If the ritual of England is the true
ritual, and as free from the anachronisms, incongruities and un-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 533
pardonable errors of our present system, why tlien, in the name of
all we profess, let us, regardless of consequences, place ourselves right,
and that at the earliest possible moment. Magna est Veritas et prce-
valebjt, is a good motto and one in which we all profess to have faith.
Let it be our guide in this, as well as in a more professional sense,
and we need have no fear of consequences.
It is in our opinion high time that the pretensions of the Prince of
Innovators should receive the attention of Masons of every grade, and
the great evils entailed by him upon our institution should be erad-
icated.
The committee then quote "so much of the record establishing
the organization of the Grand Encampment of Pennsylvania as far
back as the 12th of May, 1797," and conclude thus :
" Your committee would gladly quote Sir Knight Creigh's truly-
valuable and interesting report entire ; but must, for obvious reasons,
forbear. Enough has, however, we hope, been laid before the Sir
Knights of Ohio to enlist their attention to the importance of the
subject, and awake them to a sense of their duty in aiding in the
suppression of error when and where it is known to exist. We ad-
vise the perusal of Sir Knight Creigh's report by every Sir Knight
of the Order, and that those of Ohio may enjoy the opportunity of
so doing we commend its publication entire by the Grand Encamp-
ment."
TENNESSEE.
A very interesting and lengthy report, detailing the history of the
Order in the Keystone State, was made by Eminent Sir Alfred
Creigh, Historiographer of the Grand Commandery, and also Grand
Eecorder. It seems to be the aim of the Sir Knight to refute the
claim of the Grand Encampment of Massachusetts and Rhode Island
to be the oldest Grand Encampment in the United States, Sir Knight
Creigh asserting the present session to be the sixty-ninth since its
first organization. We do not in the least doubt the array of "facts
and figures" presented by either party ; but, really, neither can justly-
lay claim to an uninterrupted succession.
VERMONT.
Eminent Sir Alfred Creigh, Historiographer of Pennsylvania
Knighthood, made a report, which charges the Grand Commanderies
with using work into wliich innovations had crept, the same being
introduced by Thomas S. Webb, and that he has a correct copy of
the genuine work, which he received from England.
WISCONSIN.
Sir Alfred Creigh read a very interesting historical paper, the ob-
ject of which is to prove that Pennsylvania is entitled to the glory
of having held the, first Grand Encampment which was ever consti-
tuted in the United States ; the same having been held on the 12th
day of May, 1797. This document bears evidence of laborious re-
search, pointed investigation and great good. We commend it to
all, as a paper of great historical value to our Order.
45*
534 HISTORY OF the knights templar.
After a survey of the whole ground, we are pleased and gratified
that Pennsylvania takes no backward step in tiie cause of Truth,
Justice and Honor, but desires to preserve the old landmarks of her
fathers. That glorious old Beauseant, which was first waved in 1099,
and has at all times and in every age of the world been the first at
the assault and the last in the retreat — whether before the walls of
ancient cities, or in the open field, or on great battle-grounds — that
glorious old Beauseant was first waved over the first Grand Encamp-
ment ever constituted in tbe United States, in the city of Philadel-
phia on May 12, 1797. Her fame as sucb, like the Knights of old,
is spread both far and wide for deeds of charity and more exalted
usefulness, and as the immediate descendants of an illustrious line
of noble Sir Knights who adorn the pages of history, we yearly
unfurl that cherished Beauseant, and with " willing hearts, strong
arms and keen sabres support and defend" its glorious history — its
unrivaled fame — its untarnished glory — its ever-to-be-revered motto,
" Magna est Veritas et jirssvalebit."
Alfred Creigh,
Historiographer.
CANADA.
At the annual assembly of the Provincial Grand Conclave of
Canada held at the city of Ottawa, August 14, 1867, the Provin-
cial Grand Commander, Sir W. J. B. McLeod Moore, made the fol-
lowing remarks in reference to the ritual now used in the United
States :
"Negotiations for a Convention with the Grand Bodies in England,
and Ireland are now pending, and the most friendly and cordial re-
lations are entertained with the Templars of the United States. It
is to be sincerely hoped that ere long the whole Templar Order will,
as of old, be united and bound together by the same ritual, the
same landmarks and Christian principles, because the ceremonies
adopted in the United States Commanderies have for a number of years
exhibited so many departures from the original ritiial, as extant in
Europe, that their only safety is in returning to that fountain-head where
those ceremonies have so long continued xincorrupted and undefiled. To
this desirable end Frater Alfred Creigh LL. D., Grand Kecorder and
Historiographer of the Grand Coramandery of Pennsylvania, and an
Honorary Past Deputy Grand Commander of this Provincial Grand
Conclave, has been witii his pen ably advocating the adoption of the
English ritual in all the Commanderies of the United States ;
clearly pointing out in his history of the Order, lately published,
that the ritual in use with them is not the original one brought
from England, and that the innovations, in fact total change of the
ceremony of reception, was made by Frater Thomas Smith Webb
and other innovators at the commencement of the present century.
He agrees with me that the degree known as the Ked Cross in the
United States, and so much insisted upon as the preliminary one to
the Templar, is another innovation of Webb's, taken from degrees
in the Ancient and Accepted or Scottish rite, and has no connection
HISTOKY OF THE KXTGIITS TEMPLAR. 535
whatever with the Christian Orders of Knighthood. As such it is
nnknown and ignored in the Encampments of England, although a
knowledge of its peculiar ceremonies is admitted in Canada, to pre-
vent any difficulty in visiting the Commanderies in the United
States."
KEPORT AND CIRCULAR.
The committee to whom was referred the Templar Work, made
the following report :
To the R. E. Grand Commander, tlie Grand Officers, and
the Sir Knights eomjyosing the R. E. Grand Command-
ery of Pennsylvania :
The undersigned committee, having the honor to represent the
Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of the State of Pennsyl-
vania, and in obedience to the expressed and unanimous vote of
said Grand Commandery, would courteously and fraternally address
this circular to the serious consideration of the officers and members
of the Grand Encampment of the United States, to tlie officers and
members of State Grand Commanderies, and to the individual Sir
Knights, in their individual and collective character, scattered
throughout the United States, to each and all owing allegiance to
the governmental head, the Grand Encampment of Knights
Templar of the United States. The questions now submitted by the
Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania (the first Grand Encampment
in America) are of vital importance, of momentous interest, and
of serious consideration — questions which uproot cherished theories
and destroy modern innovations — questions whicli, however, if
adopted, will restore to the Templars of the United States the an-
cient ritual of the Order ; and which has been transmitted from
time immemorial through legally constituted authority. In enter-
ing, therefore, upon these questions, with their many complications,
your committee would remark that we disclaim all feeling, all pre-
judice, all geographical lines; recognizing the unity and principles
of the Order of Christian Knighthood as one and indivisible
throughout the world, as worthy of the combination of our united
effort to protect and defend Christian Knighthood in its pristine
beauty and its onward course.
Your committee have arranged the various subjects under appro-
priate heads, in order that each of the various questions may be
more easily understood.
THE CAUSE OF THE APPOINTMENT OF THE COMMITTEE.
At the fourteenth Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery of
Pennsylvania, R. E. Sir Robert Pitcairn, Grand Commander, used
the following language :
"It is a matter of doubt with some Avhether the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States, which is the source of American Templar
authority, is in possession of the true work. In fact, after the peru-
536 HTSTOP.Y OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
pal of the report of our Historiographer (E. Sir Alfred Creigh) at
our last Annual Conclave, there seems to be proof positive that we
have not ; and to strengthen this opinion, we have the report of the
coniinittee of the Grand Coinniandery of Massachusetts and Rhode
Island, in reply to the Historiographer, admitting the fact, but doubt-
ing the proprietv of attempting a change.
" One thing is certain : there is no authority for modernizing Ma-
sonry, no matter how applicable, locally, may be the change. If
there is one vow more binding than another, it is that binding us to
cling to and keep sacred the ancient landmarks of our fathers.
Modernize Masonry, or change any part of the edifice, and you de-
stroy the beautv, strength and harmony of the building.
"I would earnestlv recommend the propriety of appointing a
committee of competent Sir Knights, who shall be authorized to
l)repare a report on the subject preparatory to our next Annual
Conclave, and in time for the action of the Grand Encampment of
the United States, which will hold its triennial meeting in Septem-
ber, 1868." , ^ ^ ^.
After the reading of the address by the Grand Commander, Sir
AVilliam Lilly, Eminent Commander of No. 23, offered the following
resolution, which was unanimously adopted :
Resolved, That the Historiographer, with the E. E. Grand Com-
mander and the Past Grand Commanders, be and they are hereby
appointed a committee in accordance with the recommendation of
the R. E. Grand Commander (Sir Robert Pitcairn), relating to the
ritual of Christian Knighthood,
The committe, under this resolution, is composed as follows :E.
Sir Alfred Creigh, Historiographer, chairman ; R. E. Sir Jeremiah
L. Hutchinson, G. C, and Sir Anthony E. Stocker, Sir Benjamin
Parke, Sir Wm. Henry Allen, LL.D., Sir Christian Frederic Knapp,
Sir John A. Wright, Sir Edmund H. Turner, Sir H. Stanley Good-
win, Sir Wm. H Strickland and Sir Robert Pitcairn, Past Grand
Commanders of the Grand Commandery of Pennsylvania.
It is important, also, to state that the address of the Grand Com-
mander was referred to the Committee on the Doings of the Grand
Officers, who reported the following resolution, which was unani-
raouslv adopted:
Resolved, That it being an established and conceded fact that the
Templar work, as now used, is not the true work, and as this Grand
Commanderv has appointed the Historiographer, the R. E. Grand
Commander' and the Past Grand Commanders a committee to pre-
pare a circular upon the subject, your committee would most cheer-
fully adopt the recommendation.
IMMEMORIAL ENCAMPMENTS.
Your committee believe that the Order of Knights Templar was
instituted in the vear 1118, for the defence of the holy sepulchre and
the protection of" Christian pilgrims; that from that period to the
present time it presents an unbroken history, showing upon its every
page the solemn and avowed determination of the Sir Knights, m
everv countrv, to maintain the honor of religion and the principles
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 537
nf Knighthood, for chivalry was ever considered not only as a
sacred ordinance, but as a sacerdotal engagement; and a violation of
any of the solemn vows of the fraternity was the highest reproach,
and the offender received condign punishment. Hence the ceremo-
nies of the reception of a candidate, through the instrumentality of
a well-prepared ritual, were of the most impressive character. The
Prelate administered the vow, and the Grand Master during the
investiture deducing religious and moral truths from the Knightly
arms, cross, mantle, &c., &c.
The ritual has been transmitted through the secret archives of
the Order by the instrumentality of the ImmemoriaL Encampments.
Tliese Encampments consisted of the Baldwin Encampment at
Bristol, the Antiquity Encampment at Bath, the Observance En-
campment at London, the Ancient York Conclave of Redemption
at Hull, and the Mount Calvary or Early Grand Encampment at
London. These Encampments are styled Immemorial, having ex-
isted prior to the formation of the Grand Conclave of England and
Wales.
The learned Dr. Mackey, in his Lexicon, says : The Encampment
of Baldwin was established by the Templars who returned with
Richard I. from Palestine, and still continues to hold its regular
meetings; and is believed to have preserved the ancient costume and
ceremonies of the Order. From these Immemorial Encampments
have emanated the existing Encampments in the British Islands
and in the United States, so that the Order, as it now exists in Britain
and America, is a lineal descendant of the ancient Order.
In confirmation of this opinion, and \vhich has a very important
bearing on the subject, your committee Avould call your attention to
the fad, that at the triennial meeting of the Grand Encampment of
tlie United States in 1856, a committee, consisting of Sir Gourdin
of South Carolina, Sir Tucker, of Vermont and Sir Tracy of Geor-
gia, learned and distinguished Sir Knights, were appointed to report
on the feasibility of producing an accurate history of the Order of
Knights Templar. In the circular they issued they state that the
English Templars may be divided into three classes:
1. The Knights of "Baldwin, who assert that their Encampment
at Bristol wasestablished about the time of the return of Richard
I. from the Holy Land, and that it has been in operation ever since.
2. The Templars who owe allegiance to the Grand Conclave of
England. This Grand Conclave claims to be the legitimate head of
the Order in England, Wales and Canada.
3. The Templars of the United States.
These derive their origin from the three original Encampments
at Bristol, Bath and York, and are styled Immemorial Encamp-
ments,
In connection with this interesting subject of the antiquity of
Knighthood, and the source from which we derive our origin, it
should be observed that the Knights of tlve Ancient York Conclave
of Redemption, held from time immemorial in the city of York,
upon uniting with the Grand Conclave of England in May, 1864,
said, " We are descended from the Knights of olden time, and shall
X «
538 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAK.
endeavor to imitate those virtues of order and discipline by whicli
they were characterized. The vow which each and every Templar
was recpiired to subscribe to was in these words: Do you promise
to maintain and cause to be maintained the ancient laws, rules and
ceremonies, handed down to us by our sainted predecessors, with
fidelity, piety and zeal ?"
THE CLAIM OF THE ENGLISH RITUAL.
The existence of the ritual of England runs far back in the his-
tory of time. We have no definite means of ascertaining its pre-
cise date, but it is sufiicient for our purpose only to know of its
existence prior to the establishment of the first Grand Encampment
in America, which was instituted in Philadelphia, in May, 1797.
The Grand Conclave of England was formed on the 24th of June,
1791, and derived their ritual from the Immemorial Encampments
of which we have spoken. Tlie Constitution and ritual were also
confirmed April 10, 1809, bv the Duke of Kent, the Grand Patron
of the Order. From Aprii, 1809, to August 6th, 1812, Sir W. K.
Wright was Grand Master. From August, 1812, to April 13, 1846,
the Duke of Sussex was Grand Master. From April, 1846, to May
10, 1862, Col. Sir C. K. K. Tyute was Grand Master, and from 1862
to the present time vSir Wra. Stuart has been the Grand Master of
the Grand Conclave of England, Wales and Canada ; and during this
whole period the ritual, as derived from the Immemorial Encamp-
ments, and approved in 1791, has been pertinaciously adhered to as
the (jennine and correct uvrk of our fathers. The English ritual, there-
fore, as now used, and which our fathers brought to America, has
been traced to have had an existence before Grand Conclaves, Grand
Encampments or Grand Commanderies existed. This being true,
Sir Knights, the only remaining question for your examination is:
Has this ritual been changed ?
THE CLAIM OF THE GRAND ENCAMPMENT OF MASSACHU-
SETTS AND RHODE ISLAND.
Your committee are free to confess that the ritual of the Order
has been completely and entirely changed and revolutionized, and
from a military character transformed to that of a Masonic cast; and
that although We derive our origin through the Grand Conclave of
England, yet it is presented to us in a new garb, unlike that from
which we derive our lineage.
To demonstrate this, let focts be submitted to the Templar world:
In an address delivered before the Grand Encampment of Mas-
sachusetts and Rhode Island on the 5th day of IMay, I860, the M.
E. Sir William Sewall Gardner, Grand Master, used the following
language :
''Ou the 6th of May, 1805, Sir Thomas Smith Webb, of Provi-
dence, Sir Henry Fowle, of Boston, Sir Jonathan Gage, of Ne\y-
hurvport, with other Templar Masons, assembled at the Masonic
Hail, at Providence, and formed this Grand Encampment. . . .
There thev assembled and laid the foundation of Templar Masonry
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 539
as ive recognize it to-day. . . . This Grand Encampment was
the germ of Templar Masonry as now organized in the United
States, and the ritual as adopted here has been taken as the true Templar
work throughout the jurisdiction of the Grand Encampment of the
United States. . . . Immediately after the formation of the
General Grand Encampment of the United States, Sir Henry Fowle
was employed by that Grand Body to establish Subordinate Encamp-
ments and as an instructor of tlie Templar ritual Per-
liaps no person in the United States had more to do with the forma-
tion and renovation of this ritual than Sir Henry Fowle. . . .
We have then for our gratification that this Grand Encampment
(Massachusetts and Kliode Island) has furnished the ritnal which is
now used in all the bodies, both Grand and Subordinate, within
the United States."
The Grand Master, Gardner, also asserts (and in corroboration of
the principles for which your committee so earnestly contend) that
" the English Order from which our fathers, in this Grand Encamp-
ment, derived the elements of our ritual is termed the Masonic
Knights Templar Conclave."
But your committee desire to add more proof, both convincing and
overwhelming.
The M. E. Sir Wm. Sewall Gardner, in 1864, as Grand Master,
prepared tlie history of the Grand Encampment of Massachusetts
and Khode Island. In tliis history he says : Fortunately, it can be
determined with almost absolute certainty that that convention (June
20, 1816, which organized tlie General Grand Encampment of the
United vStates) was composed of hnt four Knights, Sir Thomas Smith
AVebb, Sir Henry Fowle, Sir John Snow, delegates from the United
States Grand Encampment (so called), established at Providence,
Rhode Island, 1805, having an acquired jurisdiction over Massa-
chusetts and Rhode Island, and Sir Thomas Lowndes, delegate from
the Grand Encampment of Xew York. ... It was considered
necessary not only to establish the General Grand Encampment, but
to make it a living, active body, which should exert its power and
influence over all the territory of the United States. In this attempt,
one difiiculty was apparent — the convention consisted of but four members.
They agreed that it would be impolitic for them, in inaugurating a
body of such extensive powers as the contemplated Grand Encamp-
ment, to give their names to the Templars of the United States as its
founders. They considered it would be arrogant and presumptuous
in them, as individuals, to ask the Templars of the United States to
submit to their dictation, and to compel them to come under the
jurisdiction of this body , formed by the sole action of four individual
KnightsJ'
In addition to the history of the organization of the present Grand
Encampment of the United States, so strangely and so wonderfully
brought into existence, and whose extreme modesty only withheld
the names of the originators themselves from the Masonic public,
we now give the history of the present ritual.
540 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
THE PRESENT RITUAL.
In October, 1866, a committee, consisting of Sir Wra. Sewall
Gardner, Sir Ohas. W. Moore, and Sir James Hutchinson, inter aha,
said: It 'must be remembered that, in 1816, the ritual of Massa-
chusetts and Khode Island had been in use more than fifteen years,
and that it was as well determined then as now. . . . Sir Charles
W. Moore obtained the following facts from Sir Benjamin Gleason :
While Gleason was in college, at Providence, he became deeply in-
terested in Masonrv, and was advanced to the degree of Knight
Templar. He then became acquainted with Webb and I^owle.
Their attention was earlv directed to the Templar ritual then in
u^e and it ajypeared necessary for its success that it should be modified
and arranged in such a manner as to adapt it to the use of Encamp-
ments. They accordinglv revised it, each doing his share ol the
labor. . . . That part known as tlie " Soliloquy" was prepared
by Gleason, and was entirelv new. Webb and Fowle had more to
do with arranging the work and details. Both being accomplished
and effective workmen, and knowing what was required, they were
able to give to the ritual all that was needed in these particulars.
When the work was completed the Lectures were prepared.
i^^Prepared and adopted, this ritual superseded the old work.'^'^
Thus originated the Templar ritual in use throughout the United
States.
MALTESE RITUAL.
In examination of this ritual, another innovation of the Grand
Commandery of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, your committee
would only call vour attention to a resolution unanimously adopted
by the Grand Encampment of Massachusetts and Rhode Island,
October 12, 1840: . , i
Whereas, The Order of Knights of Malta, founded on events re-
corded in the Scriptures, embodying in its history and emblems that
which is well calculated to enforce truths of great weight and
solemnity, has been heretofore conferred on initiates with too little
ceremony, deteriorating from the effect which should be impressed
on the mind of the recipient ; and as the Boston Encampment oj
Knights Templar has, with good taste and judgment, devised appropriate
ceremonies for the degree; therefore,
im^ Resolved, Thiit this Grand Encampment approve and sanc-
tion the manner of conferring the degree of Knight of Malta, as
proposed bv the Boston Encampment.^^^S
l^ie address of Sir Gardner says: The Grand Encampment ot
the United States,/ortt)an«o/an2/, has adopted the brief ceremonial
used in this jurisdiction. ... It remains for the Grand En-
campment (of the United States), at some future triennial convoca-
tion, to examine into its merits, and if, upon calm and careful delib-
eration, it should be adopted, it is to be hoped that it will be uni-
versally acquiesced in throughout the jurisdiction.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 541
RITUAL OF THE RED CROSS.
Your committee feel no hesitancy in declaring, from their own
knowledge, as well as from reading, this ritual was manufactured by
Webb and his associates from kindred degrees not of this Order. It
requires no argument to demonstrate that this degree has no connec-
tion whatever with the Orders of Christian Knighthood, nor never
should liave been incorporated into an Order Avliose sublime teach-
ings are of Jesus as tlie Kedeemer of the world — in His mediatorial
character, as the Way, the Truth and the Life.
GRAND ENCAMPMENT OF KNIGHTS TEMPLAR OF THE
UNITED STATES.
Christian Knights of the United States :
Our vows of fealty are due to the Grand Encampment of the
United States. Acknowledging her Constitution and Edicts as su-
preme, and from which we all (directly or indirectly) derive our
charters authorizing every State and Subordinate Commandery to
comply with her laws, Ave cannot run counter thereto. But we have
the privilege, nay, the right of asking her, as the governmental
head of Knighthood in the United States, to redress grievances
whenever or wherever they exist, and to suffer no innovations to be
made on the usages, ceremonies or ritual of Templar Masonry,
but alwcq/s adhering (as the constitution says) to the ancient Innd-
marks. The questions therefore recur : Have innovations been
made ? Have the ancient landmarks of our fathers been removed ?
Has the ritual of the Orders of Knighthood remained intact since
promulgated to tlie Grand Conclave of England, in 1791, by the
Immemorial Encampments? — and from whom we derive our line-
age, and to whom Pennsylvania is indebted for the Orders of
Knighthood. Step by step have we demonstrated these things, as
the result before you proves. Your committee has studiously and
laboriously examined the whole question, and have been careful to
present, in a concise view, both sides of the question, to enable you,
as members of your State Grand Commandery and of the Grand
Encampment of the United States, to determine the fact that innova-
tions not only have been made, but that these very innovations
were made by the acknowledgment of the Grand Master of the
Grand Encampment of Massachusetts and Hhode Island, through
Sir Wm. Sewall Gardner, M. E. Grand Master.
Your committee cannot, for one moment, believe that either
Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, New York, or any other State Grand
Commandery of the Union, has a right to make innovations into the
body of Templarism, nor change and modify her ritual, thereby
changing the ancient ritual of our fathers.
It is a question, however, how far each State, in its sovereign capa-
city, is bound to follow such palpable innovations, when they are
satisfied a fraud has been perpetrated and the ancient landmarks
removed. It must be apparent to every intelligent Sir Knight that
rules and ceremonies have been ruthlessly sacrificed, obligations
46
542 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
wantonly set at naught, and the interests of Knighthood, founded on
Truth and the New Law of our Kedeemer, jeopardized by a depar-
ture from original principles and ancient landmarks.
Your committee do not design to impugn the motives of any Sir
Knight in defence of the present heterogeneous ritual, but we would
be distinctly and unequivocally understood as declaring that our duly
to ancient Knighthood — to its ritual, rules and ceremonies — to the
memory of our fathers — to ourselves — to posterity, and, above and
beyond all, to our solemn vows, — all, all require that we should aban-
don a ritual which was manufactured in Massachusetts by Webb
and his associates, and foisted upon the General Grand Encamp-
ment in 181G, at its organization, by the very Sir Knights who manu-
factured it. If, during the half century which the Grand En-
campment of the United States has existed, error has been perpe-
trated through ignorance, it is to be regretted ; but when light be-
comes manifest, and darkness itself shines through the light, our
duty — our Knighthood — our obligations compel us to claim from the
Grand Encampment of the United States a return to the ancient
ritual — the ritual now used, and which had been used by the Imme-
morial Encampments even before the organization of the Grand
Conclave of England in 1791, and transmitted to the present period.
Sir Knights of the United States, the questions are now before
you, and we confidently rely on your intelligence and respect for the
ancient landmarks to give this subject the consideration which its
importance demands, and instruct your representatives to vote for
a return to the ancient ritual.
Alfred Creigh, Chairman.
Jeremiah L. HutchIxNson, G. C.
Anthony E. Stocker, M. D., P. G. C.
Benjamin Parke, P. G. C.
William Henry Allen, LL.D., P. G. C.
Christian Frederic Knapp, P. G. C.
John A. Wright, P. G. C.
Edmund H. Turner, P. G. C.
H. Stanley Goodwin, P. G. C.
Wm. H. Strickland, P. G. C.
Robert Pitcairn, P. G. C.
CHAPTER yi.
CONTAINING THE CONSTITUTION OF 1865, BURIAL SER-
VICE ADOPTED BY THE GRAND ENCAMPMENT, AND
THE CEREMONIES UPON CONSTITUTING AND DEDICA-
TING A COMMANDERY.
Constitution of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar
of the United States of Ainei'ica,
With the latest Amendments, adopted at the meeting at Columbus, Ohio,
1865.
ARTICLE FIRST.
OF THE GRAND ENCAMPMENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
SECTION 1.— How Constituted.
The Grand Encampment of Kniglits Templar of the United States
is constituted as follows: 1. The Grand Master. 2. The Deputy
Grand Master. 3. The Grand Generalissimo. 4. The Grand Cap-
tain General. 5. The Grand Prelate. C. The Grand Senior War-
den. 7. The Grand Junior Warden. 8. The Grand Treasurer. 9.
The Grand Recorder. 10. The Grand Standard-Bearer. 11. The
Grand Sword-Bearer. 12. The Grand Warder. 18. The Grand
Captain of the Guard.
Likewise: 14. All Past Grand Masters. 15. All Past Deputy
Grand Masters. 16. All Past Grand Generalissimos ; and 17. All
Past Grand Captains General of the Grand Encampment of the
United States.
Likewise : 18. All Grand Commanders. 19. All Past Grand Com-
manders. 20. All Deputy Grand Commanders. 21. All Grand
Generalissimos ; and 22. All Grand Captains General of each State
Grand Commandery that acknowledges the jurisdiction of the United
State-s Grand Encampment.
Each of the individuals above enumerated shall be entitled, when
present, to one vote in all the proceedings of the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States.
Likewise: 23. The first three officers of each Commandery that
543
544 HrSTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
holds its Charter immediately from the Grand Encampment of the
United States.
These, or as many of them as may be present at any meeting of
the Grand Encampment of the United States, shall be entitled col-
lectively to one vote.
All officers of the late General Grand Encampment shall rank and
have all the privileges of members of equal rank as provided for
herein.
No person shall be eligible to any office in the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States unless he shall be at the time a member
of some Subordinate Commandery under the general or immediate
jurisdiction of the Grand Encampment of the United States.
SECTION 2.— Proxies.
The first four officers named in section 1 of this Article ; likewise
the first four officers of all State Grand Commanderies ; likewise the
first three officers of all Subordinate cliartered Commajuleries held
jinder the immediate jurisdiction of the Grand Encampment of the
United States, may appear and vote by proxy ; said proxies being at
the time of service members of Subordinate Commanderies and pro-
ducing properly authenticated certificates of their appointment.
SECTION 3.— Titles.
The title and designation of the Grand Master of the Grand En-
campment of the United States is Most Eminent Grand Master of
Knif/hts Templar ; that of the Deputy Grand "Master, Bif/ht Eminent ;
of the remaining officers of the Grand Encampment, Very Eminent.
SECTION 4.— :Meetings.
The stated meetings of the Grand Encampment of the United
States shall occur triennially, at such time and place as may have
been previoui?ly designated by the standing committee (see Article
IV. section 4, rule 4) and approved by the Grand Encampment of
the United States.
Special meetings may be called by the Most Eminent Grand
Master at his discretion. And it shall be his duty, upon the requi-
sition of the majority of the State Grand Commanderies, to him di-
rected in writing, to call special meetings of the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States.
The Grand Officers shall hold their respective offices until their
successors shall be duly elected and installed.
At the stated meetings of the Grand Encampment of the United
States there shall be reviewed and considered all the official reports
of its officers, and of the State Grand and Subordinate Commande-
ries, for the preceding three years; they shall proceed to elect by
ballot the several officers of the Grand Encampment of the United
States, save and except the Prelate and Captain of the Guard, who
shall be appointed by the Grand Master at the opening of the trien-
nial se.«si()ns (see Art. 1, Sec. 5) ; to adopt such rules and edicts as
niav be necessary for the good of the Order ; to examine the ac-
counts of the Grand Treasurer and Grand Recorder ; to supervise
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 545
tlie state and condition of the finances, and adopt such measures in
relation thereto as may be neces^-ary to increase, secure and preserve
the same, and also to insure the utmost punctuality on the part of
everv accounting officer in the safe-keeping and paying over the
funds and property of the Grand Encampment ; to grant or withhold
warrants, dispensations and charters for all new State or Subordinate
Commanderies (see Art. II., Sec. 1, and Art. III., Sec. 1); for good cause
to revoke pre-existing warrants, charters or dispensations; to assign
the limits of the State Grand Commanderies, and settle all contro-
versies that may arise between them ; and, tinally, to consider and do
all matters and'tliings appertaining to the good, well-being and per-
petuation of the principles of Templar Masonry.
No business shall be transacted at the called meetings save that
which was specified in the original summons.
At every meeting all questions shall be determined by a majority
of votes, the presiding officer being entitled to one vote.^ This
Grand Encampment being a legislative body, acknowledging no
superior, admits an appeal to be taken by any member from the de-
cision of the chair on any question under-^onsideration therein:
Provided, however, that siich appeal shall not be maintained unless
two-thirds of all the members present shall vote therefor. That
right is adopted for this Grand Encampment alone, and is not to be
construed as establishing a precedent for the guidance of any other
Miisonic Body.
SECTION 5. — Duties of the Officers.
1. The Grand Master.
It is the prerogative and duty of the Grand Master generally to
exercise, as occasion may require, all the rights appertaining to his
high office, in accordance with the usages of Templar Masonry.
And as a part thereof, he shall have a watchful supervision over all
the Commanderies, State and Subordinate, in the United States, and
see that all the constitutional enactments, rules and edicts of the
Grand Encampment are duly and properly observed, and that the
dress, work and discipline of Temi^lar Masonry everywhere are
uniform.
Among his special duties and prerogatives are the following:
To appoint the Prelate and Captain of the Guard at the triennial
meetings of the Grand Encampment. (See Art. I., Sec. 4.)
To call special meetings of the Grand Encampment of the United
States. (Art. I., Sec. 4.)
To visit and preside at any Commandery, Grand or Subordinate,
in the United States, and give such instructions and directions as
the good of the institution may require, always adhering to the
ancient landmarks.
To cause to be executed, and securely to preserve and keep, the
official bonds and securities of the Grand Treasurer and Grand Ke-
corder. (See Art. IV., Sec 3.)
To grant letters of dispensation during the recess of the Grand
Encampment for the institution of new Commanderies (see Art, III.,
Sec. 1), such Dispensations to be in force no longer than the next
46 »
546 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
triennial meeting of tliat body, and promptly to notify the Grand
Kocorder of the issuing of said letters of dispensation.
To approve and grant warrants dnring the recess of the Grand
Encampment for tiie institution of State Grand Commanderies in
States, Districts or Territories where the same have not been here-
tofore established. (See Art. IT., Sec. 1.)
To manage and control the contingent fund. (See Art. IV., Sec. 1.)
2. The Deputy Grand Mauler.
The Deputy Grand Master, in the event of the death, removal or
physical incompetency of his superior, shall act as the Grand Mas-
ter. At all other times he sliall perform such duties as may be
assigned him by the Grand Encampment or the Grand Master.
3. The Grand Generaliftsimo and Grand Captain General.
In the absence of their respective superiors, the Grand Generalis-
simo and Grand Captain General shall severally act as Grand Mas-
ter, in order, according to rank. At all other times they shall per-
form such duties as may be assigned them by the Grand Encamp-
ment, or such as are traditionally appropriate to their respective
stations.
4. The Grand Treasurer.
The Grand Treasurer, unless otherwise directed by the Grand En-
campment, shall invest from time to time all such moneys as may
come to his hands, belonging to the Grand Encampment, over and
above the sum of three hundred dollars, in such way as he may judge
most to the interest of the Grand Encampment, but subject to call
on thirty days' notice. And tlie same shall be at his command on
the first day of September preceding the triennial meeting of the
Grand Encampment. He shall render to the Grand Encampment,
at its triennial meetings, a true and perfect account of his doings in
this respect, together with an account of all moneys received, the
earnings thereon accrued from investments, and the amounts dis-
bursed by him during the vacation ; likewise a copy of the same, to
the Grand Master by the first day of September preceding the tri-
ennial meeting, to the end that the Grand Master may make such
suggestions on account thereof as he ma:y deem necessary.
He shall pay all drafts drawn npon the contingent fund by the
Grand Master. (See Art. IV., Sec. 1.)
He shall carefully preserve, and render from time to time as
ordered, an inventory of all property belonging to the Grand En-
campment entrusted to his keeping.
5. The Grand Recorder.
The Grand Recorder shall collect and receive all the revenues of
the Grand Encampment, and i)ay over the amount to the Grand
Treasurer whenever it reaches the sum of one hundred dollars. He
shall render annually to the Grand Master and to the Grand Treas-
urer copies of his accounts of all moneys received and expended by
him, naming the sources from which they were received, ))ringing
up said accounts to the first day of September; likewise to the Grand
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 547
Encampment, triennially, a general account of the same. He shall
forward to each newly-constituted Commandery, immediately upon
receiving official notice that a dispensation has issued, a copy of
this Constitution, together with whatever rules and edicts are in
force.
He shall report to the Grand Encampment, on the second day of
each triennial meeting, the names of those Commanderies working
under the in:i mediate jurisdiction of the Grand Encampment which
have not complied with the requisition (see Art. III., Sec. 4) to fur-
nish him with its full triennial historical and financial returns for
the use of the Grand Encampment.
^ He shall report annually, on the first day of September, to the
Grand Master, the names of those Commanderies working under
the immediate jurisdiction of the Grand Encampment which have
not complied with the requisition (see Art. III., Sec. 4) to furnish
him with its full annual historical and financial returns for the use
of the Grand Master.
He shall open and keep a "Book of Templar Masonry," in which
shall be entered, in appropriate columns, the following subjects :
A. — A Register of Commanderies, to contain —
1. The date of issuing every warrant, dispensation, and charter
for a Grand or Subordinate Commandery, granted by authority of
the Grand Encampment since its origin. '
2. The roll of ofiicers of the Grand Conclave of the Koval, Exalted,
Eeligious, and Military Order of Masonic Knights Templar in Eng-
land and Wales, together with the roll of Encampments, officers and
members of the Provincial Grand Conclave of Canada.
B. — A Begister of 3Ieiaber ships, to contain —
1. The roll of oflficers of the Grand Encampment, with their terms
of service, etc., etc., since the origin of the same.
2. The roll of ofiicers and members of each Grand and Subordi-
nate Commandery now working under the jurisdiction of the Grand
Encampment, with all the current changes resulting from removals,
dismissions, suspensions, expulsions and deaths.
C— Historical Bates, tending to lighten up the history of Templar
Masonry in the United States.
Like\yise, to collect, and in orderly volumes bind, a copv of all the
proceedings of the Grand Encampment since its organization, to-
gether with copies of by-laws, impressions of seals, proceedings' of
State Grand Commanderies, etc., etc., and to make a triennial report
of his official acts.
6. The Bemaining Officers.
The duties of the remaining officers of the Grand Encampment
are such as are traditionally appropriate to their respective stations
or such as may be assigned them by tiie Grand Encampment. '
The Grand Master, the Deputy^ Grand Master, the Grand Gen-
eralissimo, and the Grand Captain General are severally authorized
to visit and preside in any Commandery of Knights Templar through-
548 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
out the jurisdiction of the Grand Encampment, and to give such in-
structions and directi(ms as the good of the institution may require,
always adliering to the ancient hmdmarks.
In the event of the absence of all the four principal officers of the
Grand Encampment, the Past Grand officers, according to rank and
seniority of service, shall be empowered to preside.
The Grand Treasurer and the Grand Recorder shall severally give
bond and security, in such form and to such an amount — but not less
than double the estimated triennial receipts by either — as shall from
time to time be determined by the Grand Master, who sliall judge
and approve the sufficiency of such bonds and securities, and who
shall keep and preserve the same.
Any Grand officer — save as above excepted — coming into the
receipt of moneys or property belonging to the Grand Encampment,
shall forthwith remit the same to the Grand Recorder.
ARTICLE SECOND.
OF THE STATE GRAND COMMANDERIES.
SECTION 1. — How Constituted.
Whenever there shall be three or more Subordinate chartered
Commanderies instituted or holden under this Constitution in any
one State, District or Territory in which a Grancl Encampment has
not been heretofore formed, a Grand Commandery may be formed
after obtaining the approval of the Grand Master or the Grand En-
campment. Its jurisdiction shall be the territorial limits in which
it is holden.
A State Grand Commandery consists of the following members:
1. The Grand Commander. 2'. The Deputy Grand Commander. 3.
The Grand Generalissimo. 4. The Grand Captain General. 5. The
Grand Prelate. 6. The Grand Senior Warden. 7. The Grand
Junior Warden. 8. The Grand Treasurer. 9. The Grand Recorder.
10. The Grand Standard-Bearer. 11. The Grand Sword-Bearer.
12. The Grand Warder, and 13. The Grand Captain of the Guards.
^Likewise: All Past Grand Commanders [and Grand Masters].
15. All Past Deputy Grand Commanders [and Deputy (Jrand Mas-
ters]. IG. All Past Grand Generalissimos; and 17. All Past Grand
Captains General of the same Grand Commandery so long as they
remain members of the Subordinate Commanderies under the same
territorial jurisdiction.
Likewise: 18. The Commander. 19. The Generalissimo; and
20. The Captain General of each Subordinate Commandery, work-
ing under the same Grand Commandery.
Likewise: 21. All Past Commanders, of the Subordinate Com-
nianderies, working under the same Grand Conananderies, so long
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 549
as they remain members of Subordinate Commanderies under the
same territorial jurisdiction.
Each of the individuals enumerated in this section shall be en-
titled when present to one vote in all the proceedings of the State
Grand Commanderv.
No person shall be eligible to any office in a State Grand Cona-
mandery unless he shall be at the time a member of some Subordi-
nate Commandery working under the same Grand Commandery.
The Grand Commandery of Massachusetts and Rhode Island is
recognized as holding jurisdiction over both these States.
SECTION 2.— Proxies.
Any officer specified in Section 1st of this Article, save and ex-
cept Past Commanders, may appear and vote hy proxij, said proxy
being at the time of service a member of the same Subordinate
Commandery as his principal, and producing a properly authenti-
cated certificate of his apointment.
SECTION 3.— Titles.
The title and designation of the Grand Commander of a State
Grand Commandery is Right Eminent; that of Deputy Grand Com-
mandei-, Very Eminent; of the remaining officers of the Grand
Commandery, Eminent.
SECTION 4.— Meetings.
The stated meetings of a State Grand Commandery shall occur
annually, at such time and place as said Grand Commandery in its
discretion may direct.
Special meetings may be called by the Grand Commander at his
discretion.
The several Grand Officers shall hold their respective offices
until their successors shall be duly elected and installed.
At the stated meetings of each Grand Commandery there shall
be reviewed and considered all tiie official reports of its officers and
of the Subordinate Commanderies within its jurisdiction for the pre-
ceding year. They shall proceed to elect by ballot the several of-
ficers of the Grand Commandery (see Art. II. Sec. 1). To adopt
such rules and edicts, subordinate to the Constitution of the Grand
Encampment of tlie United States, as may be necessary for the good
of the Order. To examine the accounts of the Grand Treasurer
and Grand Recorder. To supervise the state and condition of the
finances, and adopt such measures in relation thereto as may be
necessary to increase, secure, and preserve the same, and also to in-
sure the'utmost punctuality on the part of every accounting officer
in the safe-keeping and paying over the funds and property of the
Grand Commandery. To grant or withhold dispensations and
charters for all new" Commanderies. For good cause to revoke any
pre-existing charter or dispensation ; to assign the limits of Subor-
dinate Commanderies within its own jurisdiction, and settle all con-
troversies that may arise between them; and finally, to consider
and do all matters and things appertaining to the good, well-being
550 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
and perpetuation of Templar Masonry, but always subordinate to
the Grand Encani])nient of the United States.
No business shall be transacted at the called meetings save that
which was specified in the c»riginal summons.
At every meeting all questions shall be determined by a majority
of votes, the presiding officer for the time being to be entitled to
one vote. In case the votes are equally divided, he shall also give
the casting vote. No appeal shall lie to the Grand Commandery
from the decision of the Grand Commander.
SECTION 5. — Duties of the Officers.
1. The Grand Commander.
The Grand Commander of a State Grand Commandery shall have
a watchful supervision over all the Subordinate Commanderies
under his jurisdiction, and see that all the constitutional enactments,
rules and edicts of the Grand Encampment of the United States,
and of his own Grand Commandery, are duly and promptly observed.
^ He shall have the power and authority,' during the recess of his
Grand Coiumandery, to grant letters of dispensation to a competent
number of petitioners, nine or more, residing within his jurisdic-
tion, and possessing the constitutional qualifications empowering
them to form and open a Commandery; such dispensations to be in
force no longer than the next annual meeting of this Grand Com-
mandery. But no letters of dispensation for constituting a new
Commandery shall be issued save upon the recommendation of the
Commandery in the same territorial jurisdiction nearest the place
of the new Commandery prayed for.
He may call special meetings of his Grand Commandery at his
discretion. (See Art. II, Sec. 4.)
He may visit and preside at any Commandery within the juris-
diction of his Grand Commandery, and give such instructions and
directions as the good of the institution may require, but always ad-
hering to the ancient landmarks.
It is his duty, either in person or by proxy, to attend all meetings
of the Grand Encampment of the United States.
2. The Deputy Grand Commander.
The Deputy Grand Commander, in the event of the death, re-
moval, or physical incompetency of his superior, shall act as the
Grand Commander. At all other times he shall perform such
duties as may be assigned him by the Commandery or the Grand
Commander.
It is his duty, either in person or by proxy, to attend all meetings
of the Grand Encampment of the United States.
3. Grand Generalissimo and Grand Captain General.
In the absence of their respective su[)eriors, the Grand Generalis-
simo and Grand Captain General shall severally act as Grand Com-
mander, in order, according to rank. At all other times they shall
perform such duties as may be assigned them by the Grand Com-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 551
mandery, or such as are traditionally appropriate to their respective
stations.
_ It is their duty, either in person or by proxy, to attend all meet-
ings of the Grand Encampment of the United States.
4. The Grand Recorder.
The Grand Eecorder shall make an annual communication to the
Grand Eecorder of each of the other Grand Commanderies, likewise
to the Grand Master and the Recorder of the Grand Encampment
of the United States ; said communication to embrace the roll of
Grand Officers, and such other matters as mav conduce to the gen-
eral good of the Order. He shall also regularly transmit to the
Gnind Master and Grand Recorder of the Grand' Encampment of
United States copies of all the By-Laws and Regulations adopted by
his Grand Commandery.
The duties of the remaining officers, as well as of those above
specified, shall be such as are traditionally appropriate to their re-
spective stations or allotted to them by the Grand Commandery,
and corresponding as near as may be to 'those of the corresponding
officers of the Grand Encampment of the United States.
In the event of the absence of all the four principal officers of the
Grand Commandery, the Past Grand Officers, according to the rank
and seniority of service, shall be empowered to preside.
ARTICLE THIRD.
OF SUBORDINATE COMMANDERIES.
SECTION 1. — How Constituted.
Each State Grand Commandery shall have exclusive power to
constitute new Commanderies within its jurisdiction. During the
recess of the Grand Commandery, the Grand Commander shall have
the power to grant letters of dispensation to a competent number of
petitioners, nine or more, possessing the constitutional qualifica-
tions, and residing within its territorial jurisdiction, empowering
them to form and open a Commandery for a term of time not extend-
ing beyond the next stated meeting of the Grand Commandery.
The Grand Encampment of the United States shall have exclusive
power to constitute new Commanderies within any State, District or
Territory, wherein there is no State Commandery regularly formed
uiider the authority of the Grand Encampment of the United States.
During the recess of the Grand Encampment, the Grand Master sliail*
have the power _ to grant letters of dispensation to a competent
number of petitioners, nine or more, possessing the constitutional
qualifications, and residing within said unappropriated State, Dis-
trict or Territory, empowering them to form and open a Command-
552 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
ery for a term of time not extending beyond the next stated meet-
ing of the Grand Encampment of the United States.
A vSubordinate Commandery consists of the following members:
1. The Commander. 2. The Generalissimo. 3. The Captain Gen-
eral. 4. The Prelate. 5. The Senior Warden. 6. The Junior
Warden. 7. The Treasurer. 8. The Recorder. 9. The Standard-
bearer. 10. The Sword-bearer; and 11. The Warder.
Likewise : 12. As many members as may be found convenient for
work and discipline.
Each of the individuals enumerated in this section shall be enti-
tled, when present, to one vote in all the proceedings of the Subor-
dinate Commandery.
SECTION 2.— Titles.
The title and designation of the Commander of a Subordinate
Commandery is Eminent.
SECTION 3.— Meetings.
The stated meetings of a Subordinate Commandery shall occur at
least semi-annually, at such time and place as may be specified in
the charter or designated in the by-laws of the Commandery.
Special meetings may be called by the Commander at his dis-
cretion.
The several officers shall hold their respective offices until their
successors be duly elected and installed.
No business shall be performed at the called meetings save that
which was specified in the original summons.
At every meeting, all questions shall be determined by a majority
of votes, the presiding officer for the time being to be entitled to
one vote. In case the votes are equally divided, he shall also give
the casting vote. No appeal shall lie to the Subordinate Command-
ery from the decision of the Commander.
SECTION 4. — Duties of the Officers.
The Cominander.
The Commander has it in his special charge to see that the by-
laws of his Commandery are duly observed, as well as the Constitu-
tion, rules and edicts of the State Grand Commandery and of the
Grand Encampment of the United States ; that accurate records are
kept and just accounts rendered ; that regular returns are made to
the Grand Encampment or Commandery annually ; and that the
annual dues are promptly paid.
It is his duty, together with the Generalissimo and Captain Gen-
eral, either in person or by proxy, to attend all meetings of his Grand
Encampment or Commandery.
The Recorder.
It shall be the duty of the Recorder of every Subordinate Com-
mandery working under the immediate jurisdiction of the Grand
Encampment of the United States, to report annually to the Grand
Recorder of the Grand Encampment of the United States, up to the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 553
first day of August, the roll of his officers and members, and the
working roll of his Commandery ; and to accompany the same with
the amount of dues to the Grand Encampment of the United States.
For faihire herein, the Commandery so offending shall be subject
to Knightly discipline.
In the event of the absence of all the three principal officers of
the Commandery, the Past Commanders, according to rank and se-
niority of service, shall be empowered to preside.
ARTICLE FOURTH.
MISCELLANEOUS.
SECTION 1.— Fines, Dues, and Financials.
The fee for instituting a new Commandery shall not be less than
ninety dollars.
For every Knight Templar created in any Commandery, holden
by dispensation or charter whilst under the immediate jurisdiction
of the Grand Encampment of the United States, there shall be paid
two dollars into the treasury of the Grand Encampment of the
United States.
The Grand Recorder of the Grand Encampment of the United
States shall receive ten dollars as his fee for each charter issued,
and five dollars for endorsing, under the seal of the Grand Encamp-
ment of the United States, the extension of a dispensation.
The State Grand Commanderies, repectively, shall possess author-
ity, upon the institution of new Commanderies within their respec-
tive jurisdictions, to require from the several Commanderies within
their respective jurisdictions such proportions of the sums received
by them for conferring the Orders, likewise such sums in the form
of annual dues from their respective members, as may be necessary
for supporting the Grand Commandery.
No Subordinate Commandery shall confer the Orders of Knight-
hood for a less sum than twenty dollars.
There shall be a contingent fund of three hundred dollars placed
to the credit of the Most Eminent Grand Master on the books of
the Grand Treasurer at the close of each triennial session ; out of
which the Grand Master shall reimburse himself for his necessary
cash expenses in the performance of his constitutional duties, and
make a triennial report of the same to the Grand Encampment.
There shall be appropriated, at each triennial session of the Grand
Encampment of the United States, a sufficient sum to be used by the
Grand Recorder to meet the current expenses of the Secretariat, of
which he shall render an account at the succeeding session.
SECTION 2. — General Regulations.
1. No Commandery, Grand or Subordinate, shall confer the
Orders of Knighthood upon any one who is not a regular Royal
47 Y
554 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAK.
Arch Mason, according to the requirements of tlie General Grand
Chapter of the United States.
2. The rule of succession in conferring the Orders of Knighthood
sliall be as follows: 1. Knight of the Red Cross. 2. Knight Temp-
lar and Knight of Malta.
3. Every Commandery working in a State, District or Territory
where there is a Grand Commandery shall have a dispensation or
charter from said Grand Commandery. And no Commandery
hereafter to be formed or opened in such State, District or Territory
shall be deemed legal without such charter or dispensation. All
Masonic communication, as a Templar, is interdicted between any
Commandery working under tiie general or special jurisdiction of
this Grand Encampment, or any member thereof, and any Com-
mandery or member of such, that may be formed, opened or holden
in such State, District or Territory without such charter or dis-
pensation.
It shall be deemed irregular for any Commandery to confer the
the Orders of Knighthood, or either of them, upon any sojourner
whose settled place of residence is within any State, District, or Ter-
ritory in which there is a Commandery regularly at work, until the
consent of the Commandery having territorial jurisdiction is first
obtained. In the event of the violation of this interdict, the Com-
mandery so offending shall be subject to Knightly discipline, and
be required, upon demand, to pay over to the Commandery thus de-
frauded the amount of fees received for such admission.
The officers of every Commandery, Grand and Subordinate, before
entering upon the exercise of their respective offices, shall take the
following obligation, viz. : "I(A. B.) do promise and vow that I
will support and maintain the constitution of the Grand Encamp-
ment of Knights Templar of the United States of America."
The Grand Master of this Grand Encampment may issue his
prox}' to any Knight Templar in regular standing, authorizing him
to constitute a Subordinate Commandery which lias received a
charter; and any Commandery thus constituted shall be deemed
regularly constituted.
SECTION 3.— Amendments.
The Grand Encampment shall be competent, upon the concurrence
of three-fourths of its members present at any stated meeting, to
revise, amend and alter this constitution : provided, one day's pre-
vious notice of such motion to amend be given, and a particular time
be set to take the vote thereon.
In all other cases, any proposed amendment shall lay over until
the next stated meeting of the Grand Encampment, when a concur-
ring vote of two-thirds shall be necessary to adopt such alteration,
amendment or revision.
SECTION 4.— Rules of Order.
Rule 1. After the ceremony of opening the Grand Encampment,
it shall be the duty of the Grand Recorder to read the minutes of
the last triennial session, unless such reading be dispensed with ; and
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 555
at the resumption of business in each successive sitting the minutes
of the preceding one shall also be read.
KuLE 2. A Committee on Credentials, consisting of three Sir
Knights, shall be appointed by the Grand Master, to report at the
opening of the next sitting.
Rule 3. After the report of this committee, the Grand Master,
the Deputy Grand Master, the Grand Generalissimo, and the Grand
Captain General will successively read the reports of their doings
during the preceding three years. These reports shall be referred
to the Standing Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers, who
may recommend the apportionment of such parts thereof to special
or to such other of the standing committees as they may deem
necessary.
Rule 4. The standing committees shall be :
1. A Committee on the Doings of the Grand Officers.
2. A Committee on Finance.
3. A Committee on Dispensations and New Coramanderies.
4. A Committee on Unfinished Business.
5. A Committee on Grievances.
6. A Committee on Masonic Jurisprudence.
7. A Committee to designate the place of the next triennial
meeting.
The reports of these committees shall be heard in order except the
last one, which shall report on the last day of the meeting of the
Grand Encampment.
Rule 5. While the several committees are preparing their reports,
the new business may be acted upon ; and if any subject is brought
forward requiring a reference to any standing or special committee,
it shall be so referred forthwith. All committees shall make it a
point to report as soon as convenient after their appointment.
Rule 6. No Sir Knight shall be allowed to speak more than once
on the same subject, except to explain the meaning of some of his
remarks, unless it be by special permission of the Grand Encamp-
ment first obtained.
Rule 7. The Grand Encampment shall proceed to the election of
officers for the ensuing three years immediately after the opening
of the first sitting on Thursday following the commencement of the
triennial meetings.
Rule 8. It shall be the duty of the Grand Master, at each trien-
nial meeting, if time permit, to cause an exemplification of the work
appertaining to the Orders of Knighthood to be exhibited before the
Grand Encampment ; and also to correct, officially, all irregularities
and discrepancies that exist.
In testimony Avhereof I have caused the seal of the
^ _ Grand Encampment to be hereunto affixed.
f 1 Dated at the City of Cincinnati, this first day of
I Seal. | November, A. D. 1865, and of the Order 744.
* — , — -> John D. Caldwell,
Grand Recorder.
556 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Burial Service of the Orders of Masonic Knighthood.
Adopted by the Grand Encampment of the United States, Chicago, 1859.
GENERAL REGULATIONS.
1. No Sir Knight can be buried with the funeral honors of Knight-
liood unless he be a Kiiiglit Templar in regular standing.
2. It shall be the duty of the Eminent Commander to convene the
Sir Knights of the Commandery, upon notice of the death of a Sir
Knight who may be entitled to receive funeral honors, upon re-
quest, made when living, or by his fiimily after his decease, for the
purpose of attending the funeral ceremonies.
3. Sir Knights, on such occasions, will attend in full uniform,
pursuant to the regulations, their sword-hilts and the banner of the
Commanderv being suitably dressed in mourning.
4. On the'coffin of the deceased Sir Knight will be placed his hat
and sword; and, if an officer, his jewel, trimmed with crape.
5. The Eminent Commander will preside during the services, and,
assisted by the Prelate, lead in the ceremonies, pursuant to the
ritual. If Grand Officers or Past Grand Officers be present, they
will be allotted a place in the procession according to their rank ;
and if the Grand Prelate or a Past Grand Prelate be present, he will
take the place of the Prelate.
6. The Sir Knights will assemble at their Asylum, and march to
the residence of the deceased in the usual order of processions ; the
line being headed by the Warder, and the officers being in the rear,
according to rank ; that is, the Eminent Commander last ; the Pre-
late being preceded by the Holy Writings, carried on a cushion, and
the arms and hat of the deceased borne in the rear of the Eminent
Commander. On arriving at the house, the lines are opened, and the
Eminent Commander passes to the front and receives the body,
placing the hat and sword on the coffin, as above directed.
7. The procession is then formed as before ; the body, witli the
mourners and citizens present, being in the rear of the Sir Knights
and in front of the officers. If the services are perfornied at_ a
church or place of public Avorship, the procession, on arriving, will
enter in reversed order, the Eminent Commander and Prelate, with
the other officers, preceding the body and mourners.
8. When the public or religious services are concluded, the face
of the deceased will be uncovered, and the Sir Kniglits (or a detach-
ment of them) will form the "cross of steel" over the body, the
Eminent Connnander, with the Prelate, being at the head of the
coffin and the other officers at the foot.
9. When more convenient or desirable, the part of the service
before going to the grave, as here indicated, may be performed at the
house of the deceased, or be deferred till at the grave.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 557
THE FUNERAL SERVICES OF KNIGHTHOOD WILL BE CON-
DUCTED ACCORDING TO THE FOLLOWING
EITUAL.
E. Commander. Sir Knights : In the solemn rites of our Order we
have often been reminded of the great truth that we were born to die.
Mortality has been brought to view, that we might more earnestly
seek an immortality beyond this fleeting life, where Death can come
no more for ever. The sad and mournful funeral knell has betokened
that another spirit lias winged its flight to a new state of existence.
An alarm has come to the door of our Asylum, and the messenger
was Death, and none presumed to say to the awful presence, "Who
dare approach?" A pilgrim-warrior has been summoned, and "there
is no discharge in that war." A burning taper of life in our Com-
mandery has been extinguished, and none, save the High and Holy
One, can relight it. All that remains of our beloved companion Sir
Knight lies mute before us, and the light of the eye and the breatli-
iiig of the lips, in their language of fraternal greeting, have ceased
for us, for ever, on this side of the grave. His sword, vowed only to
be drawn in the cause of truth, justice, and rational liberty, reposes
still in its scabbard, and our arms can no more shield him from
wrong or oppression.
(The Sir Knights here return arms.)
It is meet, at such a time, that we should be silent, and let the
words of the Infinite and Undying speak, that we may gather conso-
lation from His revelations, and impress upon our minds lessons of
wisdom and instruction, and the meetness of preparation for the last
great change which must pass upon us all.
Let us be reverently attentive while Sir Knight, our Prelate, reads
to us a lesson from the Holy Scriptures.
Prelate. Help, Lord! for the faithful fail from among the chil-
dren of men.
Response. Help us, O Lord !
Prelate. The righteous cry, and the Lord heareth and delivereth
them out of all their troubles.
Response. Hear us, O Lord !
Prelate. The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart,
and saveth such as be of a contrite spirit.
Response. Be nigh unto us, O Lord !
Prelate. The Lord redeemeth the souls of his servants ; and none
of them that trust in Him shall be desolate.
Response. Eedeem us, O Lord !
Prelate. For I will not trust in my bow, neither shall my sword
save me.
Response. Eedeem us, O Lord !
Prelate. But God will redeem my soul from the power of the
grave; for He shall receive me.
Response. Eedeem us, O Lord !
47 *
558 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Prelate. Wilt Thou sliow wonders to the dead ? shall the dead
arise and jiniise Thee ? Shall Thy loving-kindness be declared in the
grave, or Thy faithfulness in destruction ?
Response. Save us, O Lord !
Prelate. We spend our years as a tale that is told. The days of
our years are threescore years and ten ; and if, by reason of strength,
they be fourscore years, yet is their strength labor and sorrow, for
it is soon cut off" and we fly away. So teach us to number our days
that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom.
Response. Teach us, O Lord !
Prelate. For He knoweth our frame ; He remembereth that we are
dust. As for man, his days are as grass ; as a flower of the field he
flourisheth. For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone ; and the
place thereof shall know it no more. But the mercy of the Lord is
from everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear Him.
Response. Show mercy, O Lord !
Prelate. We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed in a
moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the
trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and
we shall be changed. For this corruptible must put on incorruption,
and this mortal must put on immortality. So when this corruptible
shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on
immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written,
Death is swallowed up in victory. O Death, where is thy sting?
O Grave, where is thy victory ?
Response. O Death, where is thy sting ? O Grave, where is thy
victory ?
Prelate. The sting of death is sin ; and the strength of sin is the
law. But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through
our Lord Jesus Christ.
Response. Thanks be to God !
E. Commander. Shall the memory of our departed brother fade
from among men ?
Response. It is cherished in our souls for ever !
E. Commander. Shall no record be left of his virtues and worth ?
Response. It is inscribed upon our hearts ; it is written in our
archives; the heart may cease to throb, and the archives may
moulder and decay ; but the tablets of the Recording Angel on high
can never perish.
The Recorder here opens the book of Records of the Comraandery,
on which a page is set apart, suitably inscribed, and says :
Thus it is written.
The Sir Knights uncover and bow their heads.
E. Commander. He was a true and courteous Knight, and has
fallen in life's struggle full Knightly with his armor on, prepared
for Knightly deeds.
Prelate. Rest to his ashes, and peace to his soul !
Response. Rest to his ashes, and peace to his soul !
Prelate. Sovereign Ruler of the Universe ! into Thy hands we
devoutly ar.d submissively commit the departed spirit.
Response. Thy will be done, O (irod !
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 559
The following
will be sung :
HYMN
Words by Robert Morris, K. T. Arranged by J. B. Taylor, K. T.
3:
J__>_j__N
-^•'f^ W''-^'-
r^or^^^
-^
I > I I
1. Pre-cious in the sight of Ilcav-en Is the scene where Christians die :
H=b=^=P=N
¥^^^^-J-J-4^-
r=:r^
-fi-^ftB:
^ir\-~^
rr'-Q
ri
Souls, with all their sins for- giv - en, To the courts of glo - ry fly
T
M
r^iiitit^^
I'^^l^::^
^-^^-^
I ^ I
jiz±
^-
Eve-ry sor-row, eve-ry bur - den, Ea'c - ry cross, they lay it down;
}d^^=e±eze=f:
g
5^
4.^::^:
i^^i^'ziit^ii^g
>-fl
^
ZSijrwt^
Je-sus gives them richest gucr-don In his own im - nior-tal crown.
^
l=i;:iit:^^
:it:itJ=i:
-f'-f-f-
tz:
=;-=^:
560 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAK.
2 Here, above our brother weeping,
Through our tears we seize this hope,
He, ill Jesus sweetly sleeping,
Shall awake to glory up.
He has borne his cross in sorrow —
Weary pilgrim all forlorn :
When the sun shines bright to-morrow
'Twill reveal his sparkling crown.
Knights of Christ ! your ranks are broken !
Close your front, the foe is nigh !
Shield to shield, behold the Token,
As he saw it in the sky !
By this Sign, so bright, so glorious,
You SHALL Conquer if you strive,
And, like him, though dead, victorious
In the sischt of Jesus live. .
The following prayer will then be made by the Prelate (or an
extemporaneous prayer may be made by him, or by any clergyman
present, as may be preferred):
Father of Lights! in this dark and trying hour of calamity
and sorrow we humbly lift our hearts to Thee. Give us, we pray,
tbat light which cometh down from above. Thou hast mercifully
said in Thy holy word that the bruised reed Thou wouldst not
break ; remember in mercy, O Lord, us who are before Thee. [Be
Thou, at this hour, the Father of the fatherless and the widow's
God. Administer to them the consolations which they so sorely
need.] Cause us to look away from these sad scenes of frail mor-
tality to tlie hopes which lie beyond the grave, and bind us yet
closer together in the ties of brotherly love and affection. While
we see how frail is man, and how uncertain the continuance of our
lives upon the earth, and are reminded of our own mortality, lead
us, by Thy grace and spirit, to turn our thoughts to those things
which make for our everlasting peace; and give us a frame of mind
to make a proper improvement of all the admonitions of Thy provi-
dence, and fix our thoughts more devotedly on Thee, the only sure
refuge in time of need. And at last, when our earthly pilgrimage
shall be ended, " when the silver cord shall be loosed and the golden
bowl be broken," oh wilt Thou, in that moment of mortal extremity,
be indeed Immamiel — Christ with us; may "the lamp of thy love"
dispel the gloom of the dark valley, and we be enabled, by the com-
mendations of Thy Son, to gain admission into the blessed Asylum
above; and, in Thy glorious presence, amidst its ineffable mysteries,
enjoy a union with the spirits of the departed, perfect as is the hap-
piness of heaven and durable as the eternity of God. Amen !
Response. Amen, and Amen !
The procession will then form and march to the place of inter-
ment in the same order as before.
On arriving at the place, while forming in order, a suitable dirge
or the followiu":
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
561
HYMN
may be sung :
Air— Pleyers Hynm.
$
3:
-<s>-
^
s
Arranged by J. B. Taylor.
■> ^
1. Soft - ly, sad - ly bear him
r
forth To his
I^
:^
=^=
^±
^
IZ22:
' i^-
:^
P
3^3:3^=
^^?P^
dark and si - lent bed; Weep not that he's lost to
t^^=
:r±.
:^:
-<s^
=^:
:^
4f^
:^:
:^
P
'TIIT-
:Eg;
-•s'-
?^:
:?2:
E
= — ^— ti
ri
earth, Weep not that
his
:^:
:^
spir - it's
-I
i^
21^:
2 By our trials, hope and fear;
By our anguish keenly felt ;
Let us trust God will be near
When we're at Ilis altar knelt.
3 This, our brother, gone before,
May we in remembrance keep,
Hoping, as time passes o'er,
We shall meet where none e'er weep.
4 Sadly now we leave his form
In the tomb to moulder still ;
Hoping, in th' eternal morn,
Christ His promise will fulfill.
5 One last look, one parting sigh ;
Ah, too sad for words to tell ;
Yet, tho' tears now dim each eye,
Hope we still, and sigh farewell !
Y *
fled.
562 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
On reaching the grave, the Sir Kniglits will form a triangle around
it, the base being at the foot, the Eminent Commander and Prelate
being at the head of the grave and the friends and relatives at the
foot, and the services will thus proceed:
Prelate. Sir Knights: There is one sacred spot upon the earth
where the footfalls of our march are unheeded; our trumpets
quicken no pulse and incite no fear ; the rustling of our banners
and the gleam of our swordn awaken no emotion : it is the silent
city of the dead, where Ave now stand. Awe rests upon every heart,
and the stern warrior's eyes are bedewed with feelings which never
shame his manhood. It needs no siege, nor assault, nor beleaguer-
ing host to enter its walls ; we fear no sortie and listen for no battle-
shout. No warder's challenge greets the ear, nor do we wait awhile
with patience for permission to enter.
Hither must we all come at last; and the stoutest heart and the
manliest form that surrounds me will then be led a captive, without
title or rank, in tlie chains of mortality and the habiliments of
slavery, to the King of Terrors.
But if he has been faithful to the Captain of his salvation, a true
soldier of the Cross — if he has offered suitable gifts at the shrine of
his departed Lord, and bears the signet of the Lion of the ti'ibe of
Judah, then may he claim to be of that princely house, and to be
admitted to audience with the Sovereign Master of heaven and
earth. Then will he be stripped of the chains of earthly captivity
and clothed in a white garment, glistening as the sun, and be seated
with princes and rulers, and partake of a libation, not of death and
sorrow, but of that wine which is drank forever new in the Father's
kingdom above.
We cannot come here without subdued hearts and softened affec-
tions. Often as the challenge comes which takes from our side
some loved associate, some cherished companion-in-arms, and often
as the trumpet sounds its wailing notes to summon us to the death-
bed and to the brink of the sepulchre, we cannot contemplate " the
last of earth" unmoved. Each successive death-note snaps some
fibre which binds us to this lower existence, and makes us pause
and reflect upon tiiat dark and gloomy chamber where we must all
terminate our pilgrimage. Weil will it be for our peace then if we
can wash our hands, not only in token of sincerity, but of every
guilty stain, and give honest and satisfactory answers to the ques-
tions required.
The sad and solemn scene now before us stirs up these recollec-
tions with a force and vivid i)Ower which we have hitherto unfelt.
He who now slumbers in that last, long, unbroken sleep of death
was-our brother. With him have we walked the pilgrimage of life,
and kept watcii and ward together in its vicissitudes and trials. He
is now removed beyond the effect of our praise or censure. That
we loved him our presence here evinces, and we remember him in
scenes to which the world was not witness, and where the better
feelings of humanity were exhibited without disguise. That he had
faults ami foibles is ImU to repeat what his mortality demonstrates —
that he had a human nature, not divine. Over those errors, what-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 563
ever they may have been, we cast, while living, the mantle of charity :
it should, with much more reason, enshroud him in death. We,
who have been taught to extend the point of charity even to a foe
when fallen, cannot be severe or merciless toward a loved brother.
The memory of his virtues lingers in our remembrance, and re-
flects its shining lustre beyond the portals of the tomb. The earthen
vase which has contained precious odors will lose none of its frag-
rance, though the clay be broken and shattered. So be it with our
brother's memory.
The Junior Warden then removes the sword and hat from the
coffin, which last will then be lowered into the grave, while the
Prelate repeats as foUown:
Prelate. "I am the resurrection and the life: he that believeth
in Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live; and whosoever liveth
and believeth in Me, shall never die." To the earth we commit the
mortal remains of our deceased brother, as we have already com-
mended his soul to his Creator, witli humble submission to Divine
Providence. {Here cast some earth on the coffin.) Earth to earth
{here cast again) ; ashes to aslies {hei-e cast more earth) ; dust to dust ;
till the morn of the resurrection, when, like our arisen and ascended
Redeemer, he will break the bands of death and abide the judg-
ment of the great day. Till then, friend, brother. Sir Knight, fare-
well! Light be the ashes upon thee, and "may the sunshine of
heaven beam bright on thy waking !" ^
Response. Amen, and Amen!
The Junior Warden then presents the sword to the Eminent Com-
mander, who says :
E. Commander. Our departed brother Sir Knight was taught,
while living, that this sword, in his hands, as a true and courteous
Knight, was endowed with three most estimable qualities: its hilt
\iii\\ fortitude undaunted; its blade \w\\.\\ justice impartial; and its
point with mercy unrestrained. To this lesson, with its deep emble-
matical significance, we trust he gave wise heed. He could never
grasp it without being reminded of the lively significance of the
attributes it inculcated. He has borne the pangs of dissolving nature
— may we trust that it was with the same fortitude that he sustained
the trials of this passing existence ; to his name and memory be
justice done, as we hope to receive the like meed ourselves ; and may
that mercy, unrestrained, wliich is the glorious attribute of the Son
of God, interpose in his behalf to blunt the sword of divine justice,
and admit him to the blessed companionship of saints and angels in
the realms of light and life eternal !
Response. Amen, and Amen !
The Senior Warden then presents a cross to the Prelate, who
says :
Prelate. This symbol of faith — the Christian's hope and the
Christian's trust — we again place upon the breast of our brother,
there to remain till the last trumpet shall sound, and earth and sea
yield up their dead. Though it may, in the past history of our
race, have been pei'verted, at times, into an ensign of oppression,
and crime, and wrong ; though it may have been made the emblem
564 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
of fraud, and superstition, and moral darkness; yet its significance
still remains as the badge of a Christian warrior. It calls to mind
Gethsemane and its sorrowful garden ; the judgraent-hall of Pilate
and the pitiless crown of thorns ; Golgotha and Calvary, and their
untold agonies, that fallen man might live and inherit everlasting
life. If an inspired apostle was not ashamed of the cross, neither
should we be; if he gloried in the significance of the truths it
shadowed forth, so ought we to rejoice in it as the speaking witness
of our reliance beyond the grave. May this hope of the living have
been the anchor to the soul of our departed brother — the token to
admit him to that peaceful haven "where the wicked cease from
troubling, and the weary are at rest."
Response. Amen, and Amen !
The Prelate then casts the cross into the grave, and continues :
Prelate. The Orders of Christian Knighthood were instituted in a
dark period of the world's history, but their mission was high and
holy. To succor and protect the sorrowing and destitute, the inno-
cent and oppressed, were their vow and their lifelong labor and duty.
For long, long years they well and nobly performed their vows an'd
did their devoirs. In those rude ages the steel blade was oftener
the arbiter of justice than the judgments of judicial tribunals or
the decrees of magistrates. So long as the Templars adhei'ed to
their vows of poverty, they were virtuous and innocent ; and their
language was, in truth, " Silver and gold have I none, but such as I
have, give I unto thee." But, with the accession of wealth and civil
power, they were tempted and fell from their high estate ; and their
possessions attracted the cupidity and their prowess incurred the
hatred of the despots of those times. Wlien the martyred De Molay
had perished, and the Order was proscribed, they united with the
fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons, and returned to their prim-
itive simplicity of manners ; and a rough habit, coarse diet, and
severe duty were all that were offered to their votaries.
In our land, we have perpetuated only the distinctive rites, with
tlie appellations and regulations, of the defenders of the Holy Sepul-
chre— the early champions and soldiers of the cross — and this as a
guerdon of merit, not a badge of rank. The sword, in our hands is
more as the symbol of the duties we haye vowed to fullill than as an
instrument of assault or defence. We claim to exercise practical
virtues in the holy bonds of our confraternity, in humble imitation
of those renowned Knights of the olden time; for there is still, in
this refined age, innocence to be guarded, widowed hearts to be re-
lieved of their burdens, and orphanage to be protected from the chill
blasts of a wintry world. And to be true and courteous is not
limited to any age or clime.
Our brother, whose cold and lifeless remains have just been com-
mitted to the earth, was one of our fraternal band, bound by the
same ties and pledged to the same duties. To his bereaved and
mourning friends and relatives we have but little of worldly conso-
lation to offer, but we do tender to thein our heartfelt sympathies.
And if the solenin and interesting ceremonies in which we have
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 565
been engaged have not pointed to them a higher liope and a better
consolation, then all our condolences would be in vain.
Sir Knight companions, let us pray :
Here all repeat the Lord's Prayer'
E. Commander. Attention, Sir Knights !
The lines are then formed, and the Cross of Steel made over the
grave.
The Sir Knights may then escort the friends of the deceased to
their home, or return to their Asylum, as may be expedient.
Ceretnonies and Charges upon Constituting and Dedicati^ig a
Commandery, and Installing its Officers,
The Sir Knights will assemble in the room where the ceremonies
are to be performed, and open a Commandery. The jewels are then
placed on the altar. An ode is then sung. 'The Sir Knights form
a triangle around the altar and attend prayer.
The Grand Marshal will then say :
"Right Eminent Grand Commander, a constitutional number of
Knights Templar, duly instructed in the sublime mysteries of our
Orders, and being desirous of promoting the honor of the same by
aiding the cause of Humanity, Knoidedge and Virtue, have applied to
proper authority for a warrant or charter to constitutes them a regu-
lar Commandery of Knights Templar and the appendant Orders.
The prayer of their petition liaving been granted, they are now as-
sembled for the purpose of being legally constituted and of having
their officers duly installed in due and ancient form."
The Grand Commander will then direct the Grand Recorder to
read the charter, which being done, he will ask the members if they
still approve of the officers named in the charter ; if they assent, the
Grand Commander will declare :
" By virtue of the high power and authority in me vested, I do
now form you, my worthy brother Knights, into a just and regular
Commandery of Knights Templar. Henceforth you are authorized
and empowered to form and open a Council of Knights of the Red
Cross, a Commandery of Knights Templar and Knights of Malta
of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, and to perform all such
things as may appertain to the same : conforming in all your doings
to the laws and constitution of the Grand Commandery under whose
authority you act, and to the constitution and edicts of the Grand
Encampment of the United States. And may the God of your
fathers be with you, guide and direct you in all your undertak-
ings !"
The jewels are now uncovered to solemn music, when the Prelate
rises and says :
" From time immemorial, it has been customary for the Masonic
48
566 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Fraternity to dedicate the different departments of our institution to
ditlerent patrons. We dedicate our Lodges to St John the Baptist
or the Evangelist; our Chapters to Zerubbabel, and our Comniande-
ries to St, John the Almoner. We do this, not in that superstitious
sense in which the heathen employ the term when they set apart
their temj)les for the worship of their imaginary deities, nor in that
high and solemn sense in which Christians dedicate their churches
to the great Jehovah ; but we do it simply to testify our respect and
esteem for the character of those who have been so eminently bene-
ficial to our institution, and that their examples may stimulate us to
imitate their exalted virtues.
" To our most eminent and worthy patron, St. John the Almoner,
I do now solemnly dedicate this Commandery, by the name and title
of Commandery; and may the God of all grace abundantly
bless you in your laudable undertaking, and may each one of its
members so redeem his time that he may receive the joyful invita-
tion, ' Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord!' 'Glory to God in the
highest, and on earth peace, good-will towards men !' "
Besponse. "As it Avas in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen."
INSTALLATION.
The Eminent Commander elect is then presented to the Grand
Commander by the Marshal, who says :
" KiGHT Eminent : I have the honor to present you the Eminent
Sir , who has been elected to the office of Commander of this
Commandery. I find him to be well skilled in our sublime mysteries,
and observant of the noble precepts of our forefathers ; and have,
therefore, no doubt but he will discharge the important duties of his
office with fidelity."
The Grand Commander then asks :
** Eminent, are you ready to subscribe to the oath of office?"
On his answering in the affirmative, the Grand Commander will
draw his sword, and hold it horizontally, the edge toward the
Eminent Commander elect, who will place his left hand on the same
and his right hand on his left breast, and repeat as follows:
"I, A. B., do solemnly promise, upon the honor of a Knight Tem-
plar, that I will, to the best of my knowledge and ability, faithfully
discharge the various duties incumbent upon the office to which I
have been elected ; that I will support and maintain the By-Laws
of this Commandery, and the laws and Constitution of the Grand
Commandery, under whose immediate authority I act; also, the
Constitution and edicts of the Grand Encampment of the United
States of America."
The Grand Commander will then address the Eminent Comman-
der elect as follows :
"Eminent Sir: — Having been elected to the important and hon-
orable station of Eminent Commander of this [new] Commandery,
it is with unfeigned pleasure that I enter upon the discharge of the
pleasing duty of installing you into your office. As the head of an
institution founded upon the Christian religion and the practice of
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 567
the Christian virtues, you will sensibly realize the great responsibil-
ity of the new relation in which you now stand to your brethren ;
and, I am fully persuaded, will so conduct the important interests
about to be committed to your hands as to reflect honor upon your-
self and credit upon your Commandery. It now, Sir Knight, be-
comes my duty to propose certain questions to you relative to your
office, to which I must request unequivocal answers :
"I. Do you solemnly promise, upon the honor of a Knight Tem-
plar, that you will redouble your endeavors to correct the vices,
purify the morals and promote the happiness of those of your
brethren who have attained this magnanimous Order?
" II. That you will never sufier your Commandery to be opened
unless there be present nine regular Sir Knights of the Order?
"III. That you will not confer the Orders upon any one who has
not shown a charitable and humane disposition, or who has not made
a considerable proficiency in the foregoing Degrees ?
"IV. That you will promote the general good of our Order, and
on all proper occasions be ready to give and receive instructions,
and particularly from the General and State Grand Officers?
"V. That, to the utmost of your power, you will preserve the
solemnities of our ceremonies, and behave, in open Commandery,
with the most profound respect and reverence, as an example to your
brethren ?
" YI. That you will not acknowledge or have intercourse with any
Commandery that does not work under a constitutional warrant or
dispensation ?
*' VII. That you will not admit any visitor into your Commandery
who has not been Knighted in a Commandery legally constituted,
without his first being formally healed ?
" VIII. That you will pay due respect and obedience to the in-
structions of the General and State Grand Officers, particularly re-
lating to the several lectures and charges, and will resign the chair
to them, severally, when they may visit your Commandery ?
"IX. That you will support and observe the Constitution of the
Grand Encampment, and the General Kegulations of the Grand
Commandery under whose authority you act?
"X. That you will bind your successor in office to the observance
of the same rules to which you have now assented?
"Do you submit to all these things? and do you promise to ob-
serve and practice them faithfully ?"
Assents.
CHARGE TO THE EMINENT COMMANDER.
Eminent: — You will now permit me to invest you with this badge
of your office. It is a Cross, surmounted by rays of light. It is an
appropriate and beautiful emblem of the sublime principles of this
magnanimous and Christian Order of Knighthood. The Cross will
remind you of Him who offered up his life as a propitiation for the
sins of the world; and the refulgent rays that emanate from it, of
those divine teachings and sublime precepts which He has left to
guide and direct us in the paths of truth and holiness.
568 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLATl.
I present yon the Charter of yonr Commandery. Yon will re-
ceive it as a saci'ed deposit, and never permit it to l)e nsed for any
other purposes than tiios-e expressed in it, and safely transmit it to
your successor in office.
I also connnit to your hands the Holy Bible, the Great Light in
every degree of Masonry, together with the Cross Suwds. The doc-
trines contained in this sacred volume create in us a belief in the ex-
istence of the eternal Jehovah, the one only true and living God, the
Creator and Judge of all things in heaven and earth : they also con-
firm in us a belief in the dispensations of His providence. This be-
lief strengthens our Faith, and enables us to ascend the first step of
the Grand Masonic Ladder. This Faith naturally produces in us a
Hope of becoming partakers in the promises expressed in this inesti-
mable gift of God to man, which hope enables us to ascend the second
step. But the third and the last, being Charity, comprehends the
former, and will continue to exert its influence when Faith shall be
lost in sight, and Hope in complete enjoyment.
The Cross Swords, resting upon the Holy Bible, are to remind
us that we should be "strong in the Lord, and in the power of His
might ;" that we should "put on the whole armor of God," to be
able to wrestle successfully against principalities and powers, and
spiritual wickedness in high places.
I also present to you the Constitution of the Grand Encampment
of the United States of America, the Kules and Kegulations of the
Grand Commandery of this State, and the By-Laws of your Com-
mandery. You will frequently consult them yourself, and cause
them to be read for the information of your Commandery, that all,
being informed of their duty, may have no reasonable excuse to
offer for the neglect of it.
And now. Eminent, permit me to induct you into the chair of your
Commandery, and, in behalf of the Sir Knights here assembled, to
offer you my most sincere congratulations on your accession to the
lionorable station you now fill. It will henceforth be your special
duty to preserve inviolate the laws and constitutions of the Order,
to dispense justice, reward merit, encourage truth, and diffuse the
sublime principles of universal benevolence. You will distribute
alms to the poor and weary pilgrims traveling from afar ; feed the
hungry, clothe the naked,' and bind up the wounds of the afflicted.
You will inculcate the duties of charity and hospitality, and govern
your Commandery with justice and moderation. And finally, my
brother, may the bright example of the illustrious heroes of former
ages, whose'matchless valor has shed undying lustre over the name
of Knight Templar, encourage and animate you to the faithful per-
formance of every duty.
Sir Knights: Behold your Commander. [The Knights rise and
present arms.] Eecollect, Sir Knights, that the prosperity of yonr
Commandery will as much depend on your support, assistance and
obedience as on the assiduity, fidelity and wisdom of your Com-
mander.
The remainder of the officers are then duly qualified, by taking
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 569
the oath of office, in the form and manner before stated. The Grand
Marshal then presents the Generalissimo.
CHARGE TO THE GENERALISSIMO.
Sib- You have been elected Generalissimo of this Commandery.
I now invest vou with the badge of your office, which is a Square sur-
mounted bv'a Paschal Lamb. When beholding the Lamb, let it
stimulate vou to have, at all times, a watchful eye over yoiir own
conduct, and an earnest solicitude for the prosperity of the kingdom
of the blessed Immanuel, the spotless Lamb of God, who was slain
from the foundation of the world.
The Square is to remind you that the institution of Free Masonry
and the Orders of Knigbthood were formerly governed by the same
Grand Masters, and that the same principles of brotherly love and
friendship should for ever govern the members of both Orders.
Your station. Sir Knight, is on the right of your Comnuinder ; your
duty is to receive and communicate all orders, signs and petitions ;
to assist your Commander in his various duties, and, in his absence,
to presid'e in the Commandery. The exercise of all your talents
and zeal will be necessary in the discharge of your various duties.
I cliarge vou, therefore to be faithful to the Sir Knights with whom
you are associated ; put them often in remembrance of those things
'which tend to their everlasting peace. Finally, " preach to them
the word ; be instant in season and out of season ; reprove, rebuke,
exhort with all long-suffering and doctrine;" ever remembering the
promise, '' Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown
of life."
CHARGE TO THE CAPTAIN GENERAL.
Sir: You are elected Captain General of this Commandery. I
now invest you with the badge of your office, which is a Level, sur-
mounted by a Cock. As the undaunted courage and valor of the
cock stimulates him to conquer his competitor or yield himself a
victim to the contest, so should you be stimulated to the discharge
of every duty. You should have on "the breast-plate of righteous-
ness," so that with patience and meekness you may ever travel on
the level of humility, and be so supplied with divine grace as to pre-
vent you from selling your God or denying your Master. Y^our
station is on the left of your Commander. Your duty, among other
things, is to see that the proper officers make all due preparation for
the various meetings of the Commandery ; that the council-chamber
and Asylum are in suitable array for the introduction of candidates
and tbe" despatch of business. You are also to receive and commu-
nicate all orders issued by the Eminent Commander, through the
officers of the line. You are to assist in council, and, in the absence
of your Commander and Generalissimo, you are to govern the Com-
mandery. The distressed widow, the helpless orphan, and the inno-
cent of the weaker sex you are ever to assist and protect. But,
above all, vou are to stand forth, having your loins girt about with
Truth, in defence of the Christian religion from all its enemies.
And now I exhort you, that with fidelity you perform every duty ;
48*
570 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
and "wliatsoever ye do, do heartily as to tlie Lord, and not unto
men : continue in prayer, and watch in the same with thanksgiving;"
ever bearing in mind the promise, " Be not weary in well-doing, for
in due time you shall reap, if ye faint not."
CHARGE TO THE PRELATE.
Sir: You are elected Prelate of this Commandery. I have the
pleasure of investing you with this Triple Trianr/le, which is the
badge of your office, and a beautiful emblem of the eternal Great
Jehovah. Your station is on the right of the Generalissimo; your
duty is to officiate at the altar — to offer up prayers and oblations to
Deity. The duties of your office are very interesting and highly
important, and will require your early and punctual attendance at
every meeting. Your jewel is to remind you of the importance of
the trust reposed in you ; and may " He* who is able, abundantly
furnish you for every good work, preserve you from falling into
error, improve, strengthen, establish and perfect you;" and finally
greet you with, " Well done, good and faithful servant ; enter thou
into the joy of thy Lord."
CHARGE TO THE SENIOR WARDEN.
Sir: You are elected Senior Warden of this Commandery. I
now invest you with the badge of your office, which is a Hollow
Square and Sword of Jusf.ice. It is to remind you that, as the chil-
dren of Israel marched in a hollow square in their journey through
the wilderness, in order to guard and protect the Ark of the Covenant,
so sliould you be vigilant in guarding every avenue from innovation
and error. Let the sword of justice, therefore, be ever drawn to
guard the Constitution of the Order. Your station is at the south-
west angle of the triangle, and upon the right of the first division.
You will attend pilrp-im-ioai'riors traveling from afar, comfort and
support pilgrim-2yenite7its, and recommend tliem, after due trial, to the
favor and protection of Eminent Commander. You will be assidu-
ous in teaching your division their duties and exercises. You will
on all occasions form the avenues for the approach and departure of
your Commander, and prepare the lines for inspection and review.
Let it be your constant care that the loarrior be not deterred from
duty, nor the penitent molested on his journey. Finally, " let your
light so shine before men, that they, seeing your good works, may
glorify your Father which is in heaven."
CHARGE TO THE JUNIOR WARDEN.
Sir: You are elected Junior Warden of this Commandery. I
now invest you with the badge of your office, which is an Eagle aijd
Flaming Sword. It is to remind you to perform your various duties
with justice and valor, having an eagle eye on the prosperity of the
Order. Your station is at the north-west angle of the triangle, and
on the left of the third division. Your duty is to attend weary pil-
grims traveling from afar, conduct them on their journey, plead
their cause, and, by permission of the Eminent Commander, intra-
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 571
dnce them into the Asyhim. You will be careful that, in addition to
the sandals, staff and sen;?, their whole preparation and deportment
shall be such as shall cause them to be recognized as children of hu-
mility. Teach that ''Magna est Veritas et pra^valebit" is the motto of
our Orders ; and although, in the course of their pilgrimage, they
will often find the heights of fortune inaccessible, and the^thorny
path of life crooked, adverse and forlorn, vet, by faith and humility
—courage, constancy and perseverance in the great duties set before
them m the gospel— they may gain admission into the Asylum above,
there to enjoy the honor and rewards that await the valiant soldiers
ot the Lord Jesus Christ. Finally, be ye perfect, alwavs abounding
in the works of the Lord, that you may be a shining' light in the
world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hid.
CHARGE TO THE TREASURER.
Sir : You are elected Treasurer of this Commandery. I now in-
vest you with the badge of your office. Your station is on the right
of the Eminent Commander, in front. The qualities which should
recommend a Treasurer are accuracy and fidelity— aecurncv , in keep-
ing a tair and minute account of all receipts and disbursements;
hdelity, m carefully preserving all the propertv and funds of the
Commandery that may be placed in his hands, and rendjering a just
account of the same whenever he is called upon for that purpose. I
presume that your respect and attachment to the Commandery, and
your earnest solicitude for a good name, which is better than precious
ointment, will prompt you to the foithful discharge of the duties of
your office.
CHARGE TO THE RECORDER.
Sir : You are elected Kecorder of this Commandery. I now in-
vest you with the badge of your office. Your station is on the left
of the Eminent Commander, in front. The qualities which should
recommend a Recorder are— promptitude in issuing the notifications
and orders of his superior officers ; punctuality in attending the meet-
ings of the Commandery ; correctness in recording their proceedings •
judgment in discriminating between what is proper and what is im-
proper to be committed to writing; integrity in accounting for all
moneys that may pass through his hands, and fidelity in paving the
same over into the hands of the Treasurer. The possession of these
good qualities, I presume, has designated you as a suitable candidate
for this important office ; and I cannot entertain a doubt that you
will discharge its duties beneficially to the Commandery and honor-
ably to yourself And when you shall have completed the record
of your transactions here below, and finished the term of your pro-
bation, may you be admitted into the celestial Asylum of saints and
angels, and find your name recorded in the Lamb's Book of Life !
CHARGE TO THE STANDARD-BEARER.
Sir : You are elected Standard-Bearer of this Commandery. I
now invest you with the badge of your office, which is a Plumb, sur-
mounted by a Banner. Your station is in the west, and in the centre
572 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
of the second division. Your duty is to di.splay, support and protect
the standard of the Order, which I now, with pleasure, confide to
your valor. You will remember that it i.s our rallying-point in
time of danger; and, when unfurled in a just and virtuous cause,
you will never relinquish it to an enemy but with your life. Let,
therefore, your conduct be such as all the virtuous will delight to
imitate; let the refulgent rays which ever emanate from pure benev-
olence and humility diffuse their lustre on all around, that it niay en-
courage and animate all true and courteous Knights, and, at the same
time, confound and dismay all their enemies.
CHARGE TO THE SWORD-BEARER.
Sir : You are elected Sword-Bearer of this Comraandery. I now
invest you with the badge of your office, which is a Triangle and
Cross Swords. Your station is on the right of the Standard-Bearer,
and on the right of the second division when formed in line. Your
duty is to watch all orders and signals from the Eminent Commander,
and see that they are promptly obeyed. You are also to assist in
the protection of the banners of the Order, and with a heart livehly
devoted to the principles of Faith, Hope and Charity with the mys-
tic sword, that is endowed with justice and fortitude, and tempered by
mercy, in vour hand, vou mav cast your eyes upon the standard, and
remember that " In hoc signo vinces" is an expressive motto of our
Order and consoling to the heart of every believer.
CHARGE TO THE WARDER.
Sib : You are elected Warder of this Commandery. I now invest
you with the badge of your office, which is a Square P/a<e, with a
Trumpet and Cross Swords engraved thereon. Your station is upon
the left of the Standard-Bearer, and upon the left of the second
division, when formed in line. Your duty is to announce the ap-
proach and departure of the Eminent Commander, to post the sen-
tinels and see that the Asylum is duly guarded. You will, also,
report all petitions from visitors and strangers, and communicate
the orders of vour superior officers ; and I charge you to be punctual
in your attendance at our meetings, and indefatigable in the dis-
charge of your important duties; for though yours are among the
last offices in the Commandery, it is by no means the least m im-
portance.
CHARGE TO THE THREE GUARDS.
Sir Knights : You are appointed Captains of the Guards. I now
invest you witii vour badge of office, which is a Square Plate with a
Battle-axe engraved thereon. Your post is that of honor as well as
danger. You will, therefore, be vigilant and challenge with spirit,
examine with caution, admonish with candor, relieve cheerfully, protect
with fidelity, and fight valiantly.
CHARGE TO THE COMMANDERY.
Sir Knights: To manage and conduct the concerns of a Com-
mandery of Knights Templar with tliat promptitude, integrity and
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 573
skill which the institution demands, will require the exercise of all
the talents and perseverance of its officers and members. Are any
of you solicitous that your equals and inferiors should conduct them-
selves toward you with deference and respect? — you will be sure to
let no opportunity pass without furnishing them an example in your
own conduct toward your superiors. The officers will recollect'that
those moral and religious duties and precepts which they, from time
to time, so forcibly impress upon the minds of others, should by no
means be neglected by themselves, as the most effi^ctual way to in-
sure success is to let precept and example go hand in hand.
I would therefore exhort one and all of you to look well to the
East, to the West, to the North and to the South, and see that the
entering avenues are strictly guarded, and that you suffer no one to
pass the threshold of your Asylum but the worthy children of humility,
and, at the same time, that you suffiir no one to walk among you dis-
orderly without admonition or reproof. While such is the conduct
of the officers and members, you may rest "assured that this valiant,
magnanimous Order will for ever flourish like the green bay tree.
And now, my worthy Sir Knights, I would address you in the
language of David to his beloved city, "Peace be within thy walls,
and^ prosperity within thy palaces !" For my brethren and com-
panions' sake, I will now say. Peace be with thee!
The Grand Marshal then proclaims the [new] Commandery in the
following manner, viz.:
" In the name of the Grand Commandery of the State of ,
I proclaim this [new] Commandery, by the name of Com-
mandery, No. — , to be legally constituted, consecrated, and the
officers duly installed."
After the necessary business is finished, the Commandery is
closed.
CHAPTER VII.
OFFICERS ELECTED AND MEMBERS KNIGHTED SINCE
THE PUBLICATION OF THE FIRST SERIES, P. 351.
GRAND OFFICERS.
JUNE 12, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
R. E. Sir Jer. L. Hutchinson,
(Philadelphia.)
V. E. " John Vallerchamp,
(Harrisburg.)
James H. Hopkins,
(Pittsburg.)
H. B. McKean,
(To wan da.)
Rev. and" " Robert H. Pattison,
(Philadelphia.)
Chas. M. Howell,
(Lancaster.)
Abraham Miller,
(Easton.)
R. A. O. Kerr,
(Altoona.)
Alfred Creigh,
(Washington.)
Ernest Knapp,
(Plioenixville.)
Z. P. BlERER,
(Greensbiirg.)
FiTZ James Evans,
(York.)
Geo. p. McMillan,
(Scranton.)
574
Grand Commander.
D. G. Commander.
G. Generalissimo.
G. Capt. General.
G. Prelate.
G. Sen. Warden.
G. Jun. Warden.
G. Treasurer.
G. Recorder.
G. St.-Bearer.
G. Sw. -Bearer.
G. Warder.
G. Sentinel.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
575
SUBORDINATE COMM ANDERIES.
PITTSBURG COMMANDERY, No. i.
{Continued from 'page 158 of First Series.)
MARCH 12, A. D. 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Geter C. Shidle, E. C.
Sir John Evans, G.
Sir D. W. C. Carroll, C. G.
Sir Isaac Whittier, P.
Sir George Glass, S. W.
Sir George Neeld, J. W.
Sir Charles A. Colton, T.
Sir Thomas W. Wright, R.
Sir L. W. Smith, St.-B.
Sir David M. Watt, Sw.-B.
Sir William D. Spiking, W.
Sir Charles F. Porter, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Boggs, William R.
Baer, C. C,
Brenelly, J. C,
Barnet, Jacob,
Burchfield, J. R., (No. 25,) Ch. Mem.
Bateman, Amzi,
Chambers, David,
Colt, H. F., (No. 25,) Ch. Mem.
Crawford, B. L., Adm.
Draper, E. D., (No. 25,) Ch. Mem.
Dravo, J. D.,
Date of Knighting.
February 12, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
April 30, 1867.
October 9, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
May 19, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
May 19, 1867.
576
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Name.
Dickson, James,
Dunseath, William G.
Erwin, William N.
Hoover, T. B., (No. 25,) Ch. Mem.
Harbison, S. P.
Hutchinson, D. W., (No. 30,) Ch. M.
Herdman, James,
Hale, Henry G.,
Harrington, D. J.,
Hum, David,
Hurst, Charles B.,
Jarvis, Washington,
Jack, Robert H.,
Jenkins, Marcross,
Kerr, David C,
Kilburn, Wm. A.
Liddell, Robert,
Litchfield, E. L.,
McMurty, George W.,
McKee, W. S.,
McCune, Samuel,
Meredith, Wm. B.,
Mullen, W. D.,
Mullhollaud, Andrew,
Mowry, R. B.,
Maratta, Edward,
Mattern, J. C,
Napier, John,
Peck, Charles R,
Porter, B. F., (No. 25,) Ch. Member.
Pollock, Alex. M.,
Pollock, A. M.,
Phelps, Charles L., (No. 30,) Ch. Mem.
Date of Knighting.
April 30, 1867.
May 19, 1867.
January 23, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
June 12, 1867.
January 23, 1867.
April 30, 1867.
May 19, 1867.
November 12, 1867.
November 29, 1867.
May 19, 1867.
April 30, 1867.
October 9, 1867.
November 20, 1867.
May 19, 1867.
May 19, 1867.
November 12, 1867.
January 23, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
May 19, 1867.
November 20, 1867.
March 12, 1867.
May 19, 1867.
August 9, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
May 19, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
October 9, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
September 10, 1867.
August 9, 1867.
June 12, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
577
Name.
Reymer, Philip,
Rhodes, Joshua, K. R. C,
Roberts, R. Biddle,
Rothrock, Geo. W.,
Robinson, Robert B.,
Rogers, Robert, (No. 10,) Adm.
Reese, James,
Shidle, James,
Stevenson, James E.,
Slack, Alfred,
Sinionton, S.,
Smith, T. F.,
Story, W. B.,
Stewart, John H.,
Shephard, Thomas, Adm.
Tindle, Alexander,
Vankirk, William,
Williams, D. D., (No. 25,) Ch. Mem.
Walton, Joseph,
Wiley, Thomas,
Watkins, Rev. W. B.,
Whitesides, E. G., (No. 25,) Ch. Mem
Date of Knighting.
November 20, 1867.
January 8, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
April 30, 1867.
July 9, 1867.
January 29, 1859.
May 19, 1867.
January 23, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
October 9, 1867.
November 12, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
March 12, 1867.
September 10, 1867.
April 9, 1867.
September 10, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
. March 13, 1867.
PHILADELPHIA COMMANDERY, No. 2.
{Continued from page 171 of First Series.)
MARCH — , 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir John Krickbaum, E. C.
Sir J. Henry Hayes, G.
49 Z
578
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TP^MPLAR.
Sir William A. Maas, C. G.
Kev. Sir Robert H. Pattison, D.D., P.
Sir Absalom Taylor, S. W.
Sir A. H. Peterson, J. W.
Sir Edward S. Hall, T.
Sir William C. Ewing, R.
Sir Peter Leetin, St.-B.
Sir AVm. Penn Walters, Sw.-B.
Sir John C. Snowden, W.
Sir William B. Schnider, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Barker, Matthew M., (No. 10,j Adm.
Bonsall, Sterling,
Burrows, David,
Ewing, William C, (No. 4,) Adm.
Ewing, George C, Jr.,
Hey, Henry,
Hey, Philip,
Harrison, Joseph,
Kingston, Charles H.,
Levy, Felix H.,
Palmer, C. Albert,
Randall, Joseph,
Rue, John B.,
Stillwell, Washington,
Taylor, John,
Wallace, James,
Date of Knighting.
January 26, 1860.
April 9, 1867.
June 4, 1867.
November 23, 1860.
June 4, 1867.
December 11, 1866.
January 8, 1867.
June 4, 1867.
September 10, 1867.
March 12, 1867.
June 4, 1867.
January 8, 1867.
March 12, 1867.
April 9, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
March 12, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 579
JACQUES DE MOLAY COMMANDERY, No. 3.
{Continued from page 182 of First Series.)
MARCH I 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir John Hall, E. C.
Sir Benjamin Brackny, G.
Sir George H. Harter, C. G.
Sir William Smith, P.
Sir James M. House, S. W.
Sir William AVolf, J. W.
Sir William Smith, T.
Sir Boyd Crumrine, R.
Sir W. D. Wilcox, St.-B.
Sir M. L. A. McCracken, Sw.-B.
Sir William Hart, W.
Sir Peter Kennedy, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Crumrine, Boyd,
Edwards, Rev. H. B.,
Fowler, AVilliam,
Herr, Rev. J. D.,
Ihle, George,
Longdon, Isaac H.,
Longdon, Moses S.,
McCabe, D. W.,
McCracken, M. L. A.,
Rea, Alexander M.,
Rine, Rev. D. I. K.,
Smith, Edward R.,
Stephenson, Robert T. C,
Date op Knighting.
May 29, 1867.
October 17, 1867.
September 20, 1867.
June 14, 1867.
June 4, 1867.
June 4, 1867.
June 4, 1867.
May 29, 1867.
June 4, 1867.
September 20, 1867.
August 9, 1867.
October 17, 1867.
October 17, 1867.
580 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
jj^jjg^ Date of Ksightino.
Vose, George B., Prof., June 4, 1867.
Walter, James, September 6, 1867.
Wilcox, W. D., September 6, 1867.
HONORARY MEMBERS.
KxAPP, Christian F., P. G. Com., June 14, 1867.
Vallerchamp, Dr. John., D. G. C, June 14, 1867.
ST. JOHN'S COMMANDERY, No. 4.
{Continued from page 216| of First Series.)
MARCH 29, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Charles Eugene Meyer, E. C,
Sir Andrew Kobeno, Jr., G.
Sir Charles L. Hale, C. G.
Rev. Sir John Chambers, P.
Sir Molledore Spiegle, S. W.
Sir Edward Masson, J. W.
Sir William G. Sears, T.
Sir Wm. M. Ireland, R.
Sir Michael Kelly, St.-B.
Sir Hanold S. Matthews, Sw.-B.
Sir J. Alexander Simpson, W.
Sir Wm. B. Schnider, S.
Sir William G. Sears, T., 1 Elected Nov.
Sir J. Atlee White, R., j 22, 1867.
MEMBERS.
I^^jjg Date of Knighting.
Blakely, John, (No. 2,) Adm. June 5, 1866.
Blakely, Christopher, May 31, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
581
Name.
Beatty, James M., K. R. C,
Blaukley, George H.,
Coulomb, Henry R.,
Davis, Thomas R.,
Davis, Samuel S.,
Dealy, Dennis F.,
Eldredge, George P.,
Graham, Samuel C,
Gibson, Charles H., (No. 2,) Adm.
Gilbough, James M.,
Graham, David B.,
Johnson, Jacob L.,
Kelly, William J.,
Mills, Frank,
Rich, William F.,
Schneider, Charles,
Sage, Benjamin V.,
Warford, John W.,
Wildey, Richard,
Date of Knighting.
October 25, 1867.
October 25, 1867.
October 25, 1867.
March 30, 1867.
May 31, 1867.
May 31, 1867.
October 25, 1867.
May 31, 1867.
May 8, 1866.
May 31, 1867.
May 31, 1867.
March 30, 1867.
March 30, 1867.
May 31, 1867.
October 25, 1867.
February 22, 1867.
May 31, 1867.
May 31, 1867.
October 25, 1867.
HUBBARD COMMANDERY, No. 5.
{Continued from page 224 of First Series.)
MARCH 21, A. D. 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir William McClelland, E. C.
Sir Samuel McAllister, G.
Sir D. W. Braden, C. G.
Sir Absalom Hedge, P.
Sir N. Clarke, S. W.
Sir J. C. Phillips, J. W.
49*
582 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Sir William Cotterell, T.
Sir Justus F. Temple, R.
Sir Simon Rinehart, St.-B.
Sir Joseph Taylor, Sw.-B.
Sir James Scott, W.
Sir Anderson G. Cross, S.
MEMBERS.
Name. Date op Knighting.
White, Zachariah A., October 22, 1867.
Wallace, Alexander, October 24, 1867.
ST. OMER'S COMMANDERY, No. 7.
{Continued from page 236 of First Series.)
MARCH 8, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir William Chatland, E. C.
Sir Charles T. Hurd, G.
Sir D. D. Williams, C. G.
Sir John S. Marsh, P.
Sir Edward Toynbee, S. W.
Sir AVilliam Snowden, J. W.
Sir Thomas Duncan, T.
Sir Samuel S. Snowden, R.
Sir John Moyer, St.-B.
Sir John Marsh, Sw.-B.
Sir James A. Hill, W.
Sir David Anderson, S.
MEMBERS.
Name. Date of Knighting.
Gummert, Thomas C, May 10, 1867.
Jeffries, James W., May 10, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
683
ST. JOHN'S COMMANDERY, No. 8.
[Continued froin page 246 of First Series.)
MARCH 28, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
s
s
s
Kev. S
S
S
s
6
S
S
S
S
OFFICERS.
r John Palmer, E. C.
r John Gutshall, G.
r G. D. Chenoworth, C. G.
r Thomas Daugherty, P.
r George K. Mooney, S. W.
r W. Vance, J. W.
r John D. Gorgas, T.
r Ephraim Corn man, R.
r E. Lee, St.-B.
r A. J. Herman, Sw.-B.
r James M. Allen, W.
r John Harder, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Bowman, John D.,
Byers, Anthony,
Claudy, Samuel R.,
Cornman, Theodore,
Heck, George B.,
Harder, Alfred C,
Irvine, Samuel J.,
Irwm, John A.,
Kunkle, J. A.,
Manning, Henry,
McCachren, Robert,
Mclntire, Charles J. T.,
Rhoads, John P.,
Date of Knighting.
May, 24, 1866.
November 22, 1866.
July 25, 1867.
May 23, 1867.
May 22, 1867.
July 25, 1867.
November 22, 1866.
September 26, 1867.
November 22, 1866.
November 22, 1866.
November 22, 1866.
May 23, 1867.
November 22, 1866.
584 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
j^'^jjE. Date of Knightinq.
Rheem, John H., September 26, 1867.
Singiser, Theo. F., May 23, 1867.
Shroin, C. Frederick, (No. 1,) Adm. St.
Louis, May 23, 1867.
Spangler, Benjamin K., May 23, 1867.
Williams, Henry K., May 23, 1867.
Williams, Muhlenberg, September 26, 1867.
Zacharias, George A., November 22, 1866.
DE MOLAY COMMANDERY, No. 9.
{Continued from page 256 of First Series.)
MARCH 12, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir John C. A. Hoffeditz, E. C.
Sir Ephraim Moser, G.
Sir Frederick W. Lauer, C. G.
Sir Wm. Murray Weidman, P.
Sir Charles A. Saylor, S. W.
Sir Albert F. Rightmeyer, J. W.
Sir John A. Shroeder, T.
Sir Henry C. L. Crecelius, R.
Sir Bartolett Grant, St.-B.
Sir John Chason, Sw.-B.
Sir Cornelius S. Stamm, W.
Sir Stephen Orth, S.
MEMBERS.
jj ^jjj. Date of Knighting.
Barto, Tobias, K. R. C, March 26, 1867.
Beck, James H., K. R. C, September 11, 1866.
Bear, Edwin S., September 20, 1867.
Name
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Date of Knightixo
585
Crouse, Henry, September 20, 1867.
Drenkel, Amos, September 20, 1867.
Gery, Jacob M., K. R. C, July 9, 1867.
Goodman, Jacob, February 12, 1867.
Grant, George W., September 20, 1 867.
Heckman, George, June 6, 1867.
Hain, William T., February 26, 1867.
Harbster, William, February 26, 1867.
Jennings, John C, October 18, 1867.
McGovrin, Franklin, February 12, 1867.
Miller, Amich D., February 13, 1866.
Mansfield, John, September 20, 1867.
Miller, George W., September 20, 1867.
Phillips, Jacob, February 26, 1867.
MOUNTAIN COMMANDERY, No. lo.
{Continued from page 2Qb of First Series.)
MARCH 26, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Joshua L. Reifsnyder, E. C.
Sir E. B. McCrum, G.
Sir B. F. Rose, C. G.
Sir William R. Findley, P.
Sir C. C. Mason, S. W.
Sir R. Clark, J. W.
Sir H. C. Dern, T.
Sir William Boy den, R.
Sir George Potts, St.-B.
Sir A. E. Hess, Sw.-B.
Sir Robert King, W.
Sir A. J. Cherry, S.
586 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
MEMBERS.
^•^"'^* Date of Kmguting.
Cherry, A. J., January 25, 1867.
Deibert, John, February 26, 1867.
Johnson, W. R, (No. 26,) Ch. Mem. March 26, 1867.
Laushe, John, January 25, 1867.
McFadden, Samuel P., January 25, 1867.
Mann, Joseph F., (No. 26,) Ch. Mem. July 26, 1867.
Shannafelt, A. J. January 17, 1867.
PARKE COMMANDERY, No. ii.
{Continued frontpage 273 of First Series.)
MARCH 6, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Charles H. Mann, E. C.
Sir J. Brisben Boyd, G.
Sir William H. Egle, C. G.
Sir John J. Clyde, P.
Sir William K. Alricks, S. W.
Sir Jackson Sheaffer, J. W.
Sir John T. Wilson, T.
Sir William Knoche, R.
Sir Thomas J. Finney, St.-B.
Sir John D. Hibbs, Sw.-B.
Sir William H. Eckles, W.
Sir Michael Bender, S.
MEMBERS.
^^'*'^- Date of Knighting.
Eckles, William H., February 5, 1867.
Eager, John, November 16, 1867.
Granger, Brownell, April 2, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
587
Name.
Greenleaf, P. L., Dr.
Grove, S. P.,
Hibbs, John D.,
Knoche, William,
Kuhn, William,
Murphy, Samuel E., Adm.
Martin R., (No. 26,) Ch. Member,
Taylor, Ambrose,
Young, R. J,,
Date of Knighting.
August 22, 1867.
August 22, 1867.
February 5, 1867.
February 5, 1867.
August 22, 1867.
October 16, 1865.
October 1, 1867.
Nov. 16, 1867.
April 2, 1867.
CRUSADE COMMANDERY, No. i3.
{Continued from page 286 of First Series.)
MARCH, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70,
OFFICERS.
Rev.
Si
r Jonathan R. Dimm, E.
C.
Rev.
Si
Si
r David A. Beckley, G.
r Philip Conrad, C. G.
Rev.
Si
Si
r John Thomas, P.
r John B. Leuker, S. W.
Si
r Charles C. Shorkley, J.
W.
Si
r Ephraim P. Luts, T,
Si
r Chr. Fr. Knapp, R.
Si
r M. P. Fowler, St.-B.
Si
r M. S. Ridgway, Sw.-B.
Si
r Simon W. Burg, W.
Si
r James B. Harman, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Date of Knighting.
Abbot,
William
H., A
-Ugust 15,
1867.
Breisch
, Aaron,
October 15,
1866
588
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Name.
Burg, Simon W.,
Brune, F. F.,
Bachman, Charles,
Brower, J. J.,
Curtis, Eugene J.,
Caslow, J. F.,
Crevelling, John,
Chamberlin, H. P.,
Dunkleberger, J. R.,
Englebert, A. F.,
Eves, Hiram C,
Fowler, Gilbert H.,
Freck, J. M.,
Fulmer, Aaron,
Haupt, Emanuel,
Hunter, Joseph,
Hoffman, Jesse,
Hoagland, W. M.,
Hower, H. C,
Hoagland, Jonathan J.,
Hahn, J. D.,
King, Rev. R. P.,
Love, Robert,
Lewis, Edward,
Millard, Mordecai,
Miller, Rev. S. S.,
Maize, J. H.,
McAteer, William,
Owens, John,
Price, Rev. Job A.,
Rohland, Charles B.,
Rehrer, E. G.,
Schoch, M. L.,
Date of Knighting.
January 17, 1867.
May 16, 1867.
June 6, 1867.
September 12, 1867.
January 17, 1867.
March 26, 1867.
April 23, 1867.
August 15, 1867.
April 23, 1867.
May 30, 1867.
January 17, 1867.
June 6, 1867.
September 12, 1867.
June 6, 1867.
October 15, 1866.
October 15, 1866.
January 17, 1867.
April 18, 1867.
September 12, 1867.
April 18, 1867.
August 1, 1867.
August 15, 1867.
April 23, 1867.
April 23, 1867.
January 17, 1867.
February 14, 1867.
October 11, 1867.
February 14, 1867.
August 15, 1867.
May 16, 1867.
April 18, 1867.
August 15, 1867.
January 17, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
589
Torry, William,
AVren, Thomas,
Walton, H. F.,
Webber, Elias K.,
AVebb, George,
WagODseller, B. F.,
Wright, J. P.,
Young, Jacob Weimer,
Yerick, S. E,.,
Date of KNiGHTiKa.
May 30, 1867.
January 17, 1867.
February 14, 1867.
March 26, 1867.
March 26, 1867.
August 1, 1867.
August 15, 1867.
January 17, 1867.
August 1, 1867.
COLUMBIA COMMANDERY, No. 13.
{Continued from page 295 of First Series.)
MARCH 28, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Charles M. Howell, E. C.
Sir Jacob M. Westhaeffer, G.
Sir Levi Ellmaker, C. G.
Sir Henry Baumgardner, P.
Sir John McCalla, S. W.
Sir William A. Morton, J. W.
Sir Henry Blinckersderfer, T.
Sir Hugh S. Gara, R.
Sir Thomas Grieves, St.-B.
Sir Herman Miller, Sw.-B.
Sir Adam Z. Ringwalt, W.
Sir George Lutz, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Bitner, John R.,
Brukaber, Roland H.,
50
Date of Knighting.
November 28, 1867.
February 28, 1867.
590
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Name.
Conygham, David,
Carter, Edward,
Conklin, Isaac M.,
Calef, William H. H.,
Coonley, Fredk. W.,
Dissinger, Aaron,
Davis, Esaias K.,
Eagles, George A.,
Evans, Samuel D.,
Fisher, Henry,
Formosa, William H.,
Groff, Francis B.,
Groff, Adam B.,
Haldeman, Sneeder B.,
Herr, Christian G.,
Kurtz, Samuel,
Kilburn, John P.,
Kryder, Charles H.,
Landes, Dr. Henry,
Lewis, Thomas D.,
Linden, Robert J.,
Manaham, Amos G.,
Mayer, Nathaniel,
Metzgar, Rev. Jacob N.,
Manson, Alfred S.,
Ostermayer, John H.,
Pyle, Philip A.,
Prangley, James,
Raub, Dr. John K.,
Roath, Emanuel D.,
Richards, David,
Rieufried, Peter C,
Roth, David,
Date of Knighting.
September 26, 1867.
January 24, 1867.
September 26, 1867.
September 26, 1867.
October 24, 1867.
December 27, 1866.
April 25, 1867.
May 23, 1867.
November 28, 1867.
October 24, 1867.
October 24, 1867.
January 24, 1867.
November 28, 1867.
February 28, 1867.
April 25, 1867.
February 28, 1867.
March 28, 1867.
April 25, 1867.
March 28, 1867.
March 28, 1867.
September 26, 1867.
March 28, 1867.
October 24, 1867.
April 25, 1867.
May 23, 1867.
December 27, 1866.
February 28, 1867.
September 26, 1867.
December 27, 1866.
January 24, 1867.
March-28, 1867.
March 28, 1867.
April 25, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
591
Name.
Snyder, Leonard,
Sprenger, J. Abraham,
Sherry, James F.,
Stehman, John M.,
Shultz, Alexander,
Shaffner, George W.,
Sener, Frederick,
Spangler, John,
Snyder, Elim G.,
Snavely, John G.,
Schofield, William S.,
Taylor, George A.,
Wall, George,
Welchens, Joseph,
Date of Knighting.
December 27, 1866.
February 28, 1867.
February 28, 1867.
February 28, 1867.
November 28, 1867.
March 28, 1867.
October 24, 1867.
March 28, 1867,
May 23, 1867.
March 28, 1867.
May 23, 1867.
November 28, 1867.
December 27, 1866.
December 27, 1866.
PALESTINE COMMANDERY, No. 14.
{Continued from page 302 of First Series.)
MARCH 15, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Hiram Marsh, E. C.
Sir Thomas Orchard, G.
Sir William E. Baker, C. G.
Sir J. B. Vanbergen, P.
Sir Thomas Vogle, S. W.
Sir Wash. Burr, J. W.
Sir W. Burr, T.
■ Sir Joseph B. Vanbergen, R.
Sir Philo C. Gritman, St.-B.
Sir W. Root, Sw.-B.
592
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Sir Alonzo Hubbard, W.
Sir William Root, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Burrel, George,
Cramer, Nathan P.,
Davies, Edward Y.,
Foster, Philander J.,
Stephens, Jacob B.,
Underwood, Jerome,
Wilson, Charles P.,
Wilson, Hem\y,
Date of Knightino.
July 12, 1867.
July 12, 1867.
July 12, 1867.
September 13, 1867.
July 12, 1867.
July 12, 1867.
July 12, 1867.
September 13, 1867.
JERUSALEM COMMANDERY, No. 15.
{Continued from page 309 of First Series.)
MARCH 6, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Isaac Clegg, E. C.
Sir Samuel Deimer, G.
Sir Levi B. Kaler, C. G.
Sir William W. Wisler, P.
Sir Artemus Deimer, S. W.
Sir Peter Emery, J. W.
Sir George Walters, T.
Sir Joseph Morgan, Jr., R.
Sir Albert M. Chalfant, St.-B.
Sir George Fronefield, Sw.-B.
Sir Abeltis Keely, W.
Sir George Clegg, S.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
593
MEMBERS.
Name.
Bowman, Lewis H.,
Hooven, Alexander,
Johnson, John R.,
McAdams, Robert,
Quillman, Jacob F.,
Sling] uff, John,
Stabler, William,
Date of Knighting.
July 2, 1867.
February 21, 1867.
February 21, 1867.
July 2, 1867.
February 21, 1867.
February 21, 1867.
July 2, 1867.
NORTHERN COMMANDERY, No. i6.
(Continued frovi page 317 q/" First Series.)
MARCH 8, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir George D. Montanye, E. C.
Sir W. H. H. Gore, G.
Sir E. B. Coolbaugh, E. G.
Sir W. A. Peck, P.
Sir A. G. Cramner, S. W.
Sir H. A. Frink, J. W.
Sir A. G. Mason, T.
Sir Ch. S. Russel, R.
Sir C. B. Patch, St.-B.
Sir L. D. Montanye, Sw.-B.
Sir R. H. Patch, W.
Sir G. W. Coon, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Bull, Gordon L.,
Cobb, M. H., (No. 28,) Ch. Mem.
Christie, John B., (No 28,) Ch. M.
50 *
Date of Knighting.
June 8, 1866.
May 23, 1867.
May 23, 1867.
594
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Name.
Craft, David,
Davies, William T., •
Frink, H. Alexander,
Foley, Andrew, (No. 28,) Ch. Mem.
Keeler, George L.,
McKee, Robert,
Rice, E. W.,
Date of Knioiiting.
May 11, 1866.
May 11, 1866.
February 15, 1867.
May 23, 1867. '
February 15, 1867.
July 8, 1867.
May 18, 1866.
CCEUR DE LION COMMANDERY, No. 17.
{Continued from page 323 of First Series.)
MARCH 16, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Charles A. Stevens, E. C.
Sir Thomas E. Geddis, G.
Sir A. B. Stevens, C. G.
Sir John A. Price, P.
Sir A. Davis, S. W.
Sir M. H. Dale, J. W.
Sir Wra. H. Perkins, T.
Sir Fred. J. Amsden, R.
Sir Wm. P. Connell, St.-B.
Sir Samuel E. Shick, Sw.-B.
Sir James Ruthveu, W.
Sir G. P. McMillan, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Albright, Edgar L.,
Butler, Zebulon,
Brown, James E.,
Baldwin, P. B.,
Date op KmaHTiNO.
December 9, 1866.
June 13, 1866.
July 17, 1867.
November 17, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 595
Name. Date of Knighting.
Bunnel, F. C, November 17,1867.
Geddis, Henry E., December 9, 1866.
Gillespie, John B., November 17, 1867.
Heermaus, E. A., July 17, 1867.
Miller, George W. March 27, 1867.
Mott, Henry A., May 2, 1866.
Scranton, James, July 17, 1867.
Winton, Aretus H., December 9, 1866.
KEDRON COMMANDERY, No. i8.
{Continued from page 328 of First Series.)
MARCH 5, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Henry Kettering, E. C.
Sir Samuel Rock, G.
Sir Daniel Welty, C. G.
Rev. Sir William H. Locke, P.
Sir Augustus Row, S. W.
Sir Robert W. Turney, J. ^Y.
Sir Richard Coulter, T.
Sir William Robinson, R.
Sir William S. Brown, St.-B.
Sir D. W. Shryock, Sw.-B. ,
Sir Z. P. Bierer, W.
Sir James Hunter, S.
MEMBERS.
Name. Date of Knighting.
Beaumont, Jacob, December 26,1867.
Caldwell, James G., January 5, 1867.
Keenan, Edward J., December 26,1867.
596
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Name.
Date of Knighting.
Latta, John,
Linton, John P.,
Long, James,
Logan, Samuel,
Logan W. W.,
McQuiston, J. L., '
Oliphant, S. Duncan,
Stouffer, B. W.,
White, James,
Wehn, George W., Jr.,
Wilson, J. W.,
December
December
August 7,
December
August 7,
August 7,
March 26,
March 26,
March 26,
December
December
26, 1867.
26,1867.
1867.
26,1867.
1867.
1867.
1867.
1867.
1867.
26,1867.
26,1867.
HUGH DE PA YENS COMMANDERY, No. 19.
( Continued from 'page 335 of First Series.)
MARCH 4, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir William Mutchler, E. C.
Sir Uriah Sandt, G.
Sir Francis Vogle Barnet, C. G.
Rev. Sir Joseph Isaac Elsegood, P.
Sir John Frederic Thompson, S. W.
Sir Bernhard Ernst Lehman, J. W.
Sir Abraham Miller, T., (C.)
Sir Lewis H. Stout, R.
Sir Enos Werkheiser, St.-B.
Sir James Lane Mingle, Sw.-B.
Sir Theodore Oliver, W.
Sir John Konn, S.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
597
MEMBERS.
Name.
Ashmore, William Alexander,
Borhek, Ashton Christian,
Borhek, Morris Augustus,
Boyd, Thaddeus Sobieski,
Bloss, Henry,
Geissinger, John Albert,
Glanz, Charles,
Hughes, John L.,
Pomp, William Henry,
Snyder, Edward,
Seitz, William Augustus,
Schweitzer, Henry,
Tomlinson, Israel Starr,
Whitesill, James Benjamin,
Date of Kxighting.
March 7, 1867.
February 4, 1867.
February 4, 1867.
February 4, 1867.
October 7, 1867.
November 19, 1866.
April 15, 1867.
September 2, 1867.
April 15, 1867.
March 7, 1867.
March 7, 1867.
October 7, 1867.
August 5, 1867.
October 7, 1867.
ALLEN COMMANDERY, No. 20.
{Continued from page 341 of First Series.)
MARCH 8, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Dewees J. Martin, E. C.
Sir Charles W. Cooper, G.
Sir Henry J. Sseger, C. G.
Sir Henry S. Clemens, P.
Sir Esaias Rehrig, S. W.
Sir James B. Boeder, J. W.
Sir Aaron Troxell, T.
Sir Tobias Kessler, R.
Sir C. F. Schultz, St.-B.
Sir Jacob Heller, Sw.-B.
598
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Sir Joseph E. Baliet, W.
Sir William H. Good, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Albright, Edwin,
Albright, Phaon,
Bryou, Andrew C,
Beitel, J. D.,
Bohlinger, John F.,
Erdman, George,
Erdman, Enos,
Grim, Ephraim,
Grim, Jacob S.,
Good, William H.,
Hardwi, Jacob, Jr.,
Herbst, William,
Hoats, Samuel,
Hartzell, Henry K.,
Heilman, A.,
Houser, William E.,
Heebner, Francis Z.,
Jacoby, Jacob,
Keck, Charles,
Lichtenw'alner, John H.,
Leinbach, A. N.,
Lee, Samuel C,
Lawall, Edmund D.,
Lee, Armat W.,
Martin, Edwin G.,
Koney, William A.,
Kiegel, Henry H.,
Koth, George W.,
Schall, John R.,
Date of Knighting.
April 11, 1867.
May 9, 1867.
May 9, 1867.
October 10, 1867.
January 9, 1868.
May 9, 1867.
November 14, 1867.
May 9, 1867.
January 9, 1868.
May 9, 1867.
January 9, 1868.
March 14, 1867.
March 14, 1867.
April 11, 1867.
May 9, 1867.
November 14, 1867.
November 14, 1867.
November 14, 1867.
May 9, 1867
January 12, 1865.
April 11, 1867.
October 10, 1867.
October 10, 1867.
November 14, 1867.
April 11, 1867.
May 9, 1867.
November 14, 1867.
November 14, 1867.
March 14, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 599
N.VME, Date of Knighting.
Stout, Abraham, April 11, 1867.
Sigmund, A. M., April 11, 1867.
Schreiber, Frank J., October 10, 1867.
Shick, Augustus F., November 14, 1867.
Thayer, Kussel A., January 9, 1868.
Weberoth, Jacob J., January 9, 1868.
Wilson, James W., November 14, 1867.
YORK COMMANDERY, No. 21.
{Continued from page 346 of First Series.)
MARCH 21, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS,
Sir J. D. Heiges, E. C.
Sir Peter Bentz, G.
Sir J. R. Davis, C. G.
Rev. Sir Andrew Burg, P.
Sir S. H. Spangler, S. W.
Sir William Gilberthorp, J. W.
Sir G. H. Maish, T.
Sir O. C. Brickley, R.
Sir N. F. Burnham, St.-B.
Sir G. P. Smyser, Sw.-B.
Sir G. W. Demarest, W.
Sir N. Johnson, S.
MEMBERS.
Name. Date op Knighting.
Brillinger, Jacob A., Jr., March 2, 1867.
Heiges, George W., K. R. C, June 5, 1867.
Ives, Chauncey, March 2, 1867.
Johnson, Nathan, March 2, 1867.
Stambaugh, Michael, March 2, 1867.
600 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
BALDWIN COMMANDERY, No. 22.
{Continued from page 349 of First Series.)
MARCH 19, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Dr. Wm. F. Logan, E. C.
Sir James Goodlander, G.
Sir Joseph W. Chapman, C. G.
Sir William R. Prior, P.
Sir Henry C. Parsons, S. W.
Sir Emil C. Luks, J. W.
Sir Alexander Beede, T.
Sir Marcellus L. Clay, R.
Sir J. P. Salmon, St.-B.
Sir Edwin B. Bryan, Sw.-B.
Sir F. D. Greene, W.
Sir W. W. Beard, S.
MEMBERS.
^"^■A^ME. Date of Knighting.
Beede, Alexander, (No. 12,) Adm. January 12, 1865.
Barber, J. R., May 30, 1867.
Blair, E.H., September 17, 1867.
Burlinghara, J. G., (No. 25,) Ch. M. May 30, 1867.
Cogswell, Joseph H., May 30, 1867.
Detwiler, B. H., March 19, 1867.
Edwards, J. L., May 30, 1867.
Elwart, Robert A., July 22, 1867.
Early, C. R., September 17, 1867.
Fowler, J. P., May 30, 1867.
Glines, Z. B., May 21, 1867.
Gucker, Thomas, May 21, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
601
Name.
Goetchius, J. C,
Heylmun, E. G.,
Heylmun, C. G.,
Hull, W. R.,
Luks, Erail C, (No. 9,) Adm.
Luke, N. G.,
Liggett, Benjamin,
Langdon, R. W.,
Laverty, J. C,
Payne, John E., (No. 30,) Ch. Mem.
Poole, H. C,
Riddle, John W.,
Rathraell, Thomas M.,
Sweeny, R. W.,
Smeeton, James,
Sanderson, George L., (No. 13,) Adm.
Updegraff, Derrick,
Wheeler, S. F.,
Wheeler, C. L.,
Wright, Isaac A.,
Date of Kxightixg.
May 30, 1867.
February 19, 1867.
February 19, 1867.
February 19, 1867.
April 11, 1866.
May 30, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
September 17, 1867.
April 16, 1867.
May 30, 1867.
April 16, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
February 19, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
February 22, 1866.
February 19, 1867.
May 30, 1867.
May 30, 1867.
May 30, 1867.
PACKER COMMANDERY, No. 23.
{Continued from page 351 of First Series.)
The Dispensation was issued September 28, 1866, and
Charter granted June 12, 1867.
OFFICERS ELECTED UNDER THE CHARTER.
JULY 16, A. D. 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
Sir Thomas S. McNair, E. G.,
Sir James Houston, G.
Sir Robert Klotz, C. G.
51 2 A
602
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Sir Joseph P. Salmou, P.
Sir Anthony W. Raudenbush, S. W.
Sir James H. Wilhehn, J. W.
Sir Milton W. Raudenbush, T.
Sir James A. Dinkey, R.
Sir E. R. Brown, St.-B.
Sir Josiah W. McCrea, Sw.-B.
Sir Robert A. Packer, W.
Sir William Oliver, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Blakslee, Eugene H.,
Blakslee, James J.,
Boyd, George L.,
Boston, Robert,
Desmond, Thomas,
Dolon, John C,
Fuller, Hiram L.,
Fidler, John,
Glover, William,
Gardner, John R.,
Hulin, Henry,
Kline, Frederick C,
Lentz, La Fayette,
Nimson, Albright B.,
Newlin, Rev. E. J.,
Oliver, William,
Packer, Asa,
Roberts, Wm. H.
Ralston, John,
Scott, William W.,
Skeer, Charles O.,
Salmon, Rev. James M.,
Date of Knightikcj.
January 15, 1867.
April 16, 1867.
July 16, 1867.
September 17, 1867.
January 15, 1867.
July 16, 1867.
January 15, 1867.
February 19, 1867.
March 19, 1867.
July 16, 1867.
July 16, 1867.
March 19, 1867.
April 16, 1867.
January 15, 1867.
September 17, 1867.
September 28, 1866.
April 16, 1867.
July 16, 1867.
July 16, 1867,
March 19, 1867.
March 19, 1867.
September 17, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 603
Name. Date of Knighting.
Sutherland, H. E., September 17, 1867.
Taylor, John, March 19, 1867.
Tomlinson, John C, March 19, 1867.
Weldy, H. A. July 16, 1867.
HERMIT COMMANDERY, No. 24.
An application was presented to R. E. Sir Robert Pit-
cairn, Grand Commander of Knights Templar of the State
of Pennsylvania, on the 16th day of May, 1866, praying
for a dispensation, and signed by the following Sir Knights,
viz. : Jacob Weidle, Sr., Grant Weidman, J. P. S. Gobin,
William W. Murray, John Ulrich, W. G. Bowman, L. E.
Weimer, Martin Manderbach, George L. Seltzer, Franklin
Myers, John A. Donges and Rev. M. Rhodes, to establish
a Commandery in Lebanon, Lebanon county, Pennsyl-
vania.
The dispensation was issued May 16, 1886, and Hermit
Commandery constituted September 23, 1866.
The Charter was granted June 12, 1867.
MAY 16, A. D. 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Jacob Weidle, Sr., E. C.
Sir Grant Weidman, G.
Sir J. P. S. Gobin, C. G.
Rev. Sir M. Rhodes, P.
Sir W. G. Bowman, S. W.
Sir Joseph L. Lemberger, J. W.
Sir L. E. Weimer, T.
Sir Wm. W. Murray, R.
Sir Martin Manderbach, St.-B.
604 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Sir John A. Donges, Sw.-B.
Sir Anthony S. Ely, W.
Sir John Ulrich, S.
MEMBERS.
Name. Date of Knighting.
Bowman, W. G., (No. 9,) Ch. M. Adm. April 28, 1866.
Donges, John A., (No. 9,) Ch. M. Adm. April 22, 1865.
Ely, Anthony S., May 23, 1867.
Ebur, John H., June 10, 1867.
Gobin, J. P. S., (No. 12,) Ch. M. Adm. March 29, 1866.
Halter, Richard E., October 4, 1867.
Hynicka, L. K, June 10, 1867.
Lemberger, Joseph L., May 23, 1867.
Lick, John H., August 23, 1867.
Murray, Wm.W., (No. 9,) Ch. M. Adm. April 28, 1866,
Manderbach,Martin,(No.9,)Ch.M.Ad. April 27, 1858.
Myers, Franklin, (No. 9,) Ch. M. Adm. August 22, 1865.
Rhodes, Rev. M., (No. 12,) Ch. M. Ad. April 26, 1866.
Seltzer, George L., (No. 9,) Ch. M. Ad. November 26, 1863.
Ulrich, John, (No. 9,) Ch. M. Adm. December 15, 1863.
Weidle, Jacob, Sr., (No. 9,) Ch. M. Ad. May, 16, 1866.
Weidman, Grant, (No. 9,) Ch. M. Adm. April 28, 1866.
Weimer, Lucius E., (No. 9,) Ch. M. Ad. April 28, 1866.
OFFICERS ELECTED UNDER THE CHARTER.
JULY 23, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
Sir Grant Weidman, E. C.
Sir J. P. S. Gobin, G. '
Sir W. G. Bowman, C. G.
Rev. Sir Mosheim Rhodes, P.
Sir Joseph L. Lemberger, S. W.
Sir Anthony S. Ely, J. W.
Sir Lucius E. Weimer, T.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 605
Sir William W. Murray, R.
Sir Martin Manderbach, St.-B.
Sir L. K. Hynicka, Sw.-B.
Sir John Ulrich, ^V.
Sir John F. Ebur, S.
NORTHWESTERN COMMANDERY, No. 25,
Is located at Meadville, Crawford county. An application
was made for a charter to the Grand Comraandery of Knights
Templar of Pennsylvania at its fourteenth Annual Conclave
held in the city of Pittsburg, June 11, 1866, A. O. 749, A.
.0. E. P. 70, and recommended by the R. E. Sir Robert
Pitcairn, Grand Commander. The petitioners were Sir
Knights Samuel B. Dick, Christian M. Hoover, William C.
Hay, Benjamin F. Porter, Jesse R Rupp, Francis H. Fos-
ter, Theo. B. Lashells, Edward B. Whitesides, George C.
Porter, H. T. Colt, Edward D. Draper, S. Johnson Thomas,
D. D. Williams, F. Shattuck, A. L. Power, N. Truesdale,
J. R. Burchfield, Charles Bowman, J. G. Burlingham, T.
B. Hoover and A. M. Hoover. The charter was granted
June 12, 1867, and Northwestern Commandery, No. 25,
was duly constituted by E. Sir James Hopkins, Grand
Generalissimo, on the 22d day of July, 1867.
JULY 22, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Samuel B. Dick, E. C.
Sir Christian M. Hoover, G.
Sir William C. Hay, C. G.
Sir S. Johnson Thomas, P.
Sir B. F. Porter, S. W.
Sir Francis H. Foster, J. W.
51 *
606
ITLSTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Sir Theodore B. Lashells, T.
Sir Edward D. Draper, R.
Sir H. T. Colt, St.-B.
Sir Edward G. AVhitesides, Sw.-B.
Sir G. C. Portei-, W.
Sir W. H. Forker, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Austin, Richard H.,
Adrain, Robert,
Austin, Henry,
Anderson, George K.,
Burchfield, James R., (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Bowman, Charles, (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Burlingham, John G., (No. 22,) Ch. M.
Bradley, Charles Whiting,
Bain, Geo. K.,
Brady, Edward H.,
Brawley, J. Buchanan,
Baillet, John Whitcomb,
Colt, H. Tracy, (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Cochran, Robt. L.,
Dick, Samuel B., (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Draper, E. Delano, (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Derickson, Edwin V.,
Dunbar, Andrew L.,
Foster, F. Harry, (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Forker, AVm. H.,
Fisher, John J.,
Fletcher, Albert,
Groves, Wm. F.,
Galbraith, Wm. J.,
Hoover, Chr. M., (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Date of Knighting.
July 22, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
July 23, 1867.
October 29, 1867.
February 12, 1867.
August 4, 1864.
June 20, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
October 29, 1867.
September 3, 1867.
October 29, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
July 23, 1867.
October 16, 1865.
March 13, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
May 31, 1866.
July 22, 1867.
September 3, 1867.
September 12, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
September 3, 1867.
February 13, 1866.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
607
Name.
Hay, Wm. C, (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Hoover, T. Benton, (No. 1,) Ch. M.
Hoover, Alvin M., (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Hubbard, J. E.,
Hamblin, Henry M.,
Kennear, Francis D.,
Kughler, Geo. D.,
Lashells, Theo. B., (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Litchfield, H. C,
McDonald, G. B.,
Montague, John A.,
McMillen, George,
Millhouse, Joseph E.,
Mossman, Beriah E.,
McDonald, Michael J.,
Porter, Benjamin F., (No. 1,) Ch. M.
Porter, Geo. C, (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Power, Alex. L., (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Patten, Bobt.,
Porter, John,
Porterfield, Wm. H.,
Payne, Walter S.,
Rupp, Jesse R., (No. 1,) Ch. Member,
Rogers, L. D.,
Ridgeway, Geo. E.,
Shattuck, Fred'k., (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Shrom, Henry N.,
Sage, Miles H.,
Shepard, Charles H.,
Thomas, S. Johnson, (No. 1,) Ch. Mem
Truesdale, Newton, (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Torbitt, Saml. A.,
Whitesides, Edward B., (No. 1,) Ch. M.
Date of Kxightixg.
May 31, 1866.
Febuary 12, 1867.
May 31, 1866.
July 22, 1867.
July 23, 1867.
July 23, 1867.
July 23, 1867.
May 31, 1866.
July 22, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
July 22, 1867.
July 23, 1867.
July 23, 1867.
October 29, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
May 31, 1866.
May 31, 1866.
July 22, 1867.
July 23, 1867.
September 3, 1867.
September 3, 1867.
September 6, 1865.
July 23, 1867.
July 23, 1867.
May 31, 1866.
July 22, 1867.
July 23, 1867.
July 23, 1867.
. May 31, 1866.
May 31, 1866.
July 22, 1867.
March 13, 1867.
608 HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Name. Date of KMcnxiXfl.
AValp, Andrew J., July 22, 1867.
Wallace, Frank, September 3, 1867.
Wilson, Kobt. R, September 12, 1867.
Williams, David D., (No. 1,) Ch. M. February 12, 1867.
LEWISTOWN COMMANDERY, No. 26.
An application was made to the E. E. Grand Command-
ery of Knights Templar of Pennsylvania for a charter to
establish a Commandery of Knights Templar at Lewis-
town, Mifflin county, Pennsylvania. The petitioners were
Sir Knights John A. Wright, Jesse Mendenhall, Joseph F.
Mann, William Willis, Robert H. Junkin, D. E. Robeson,
W. J. Long, G. H. Long, Reuben E. Wilson, W. F. John-
ston, H. J. Walters and Robt. Martin. The charter was
granted June 12, 1867, and the Commandery was duly con-
stituted October 16, 1867, by P. Grand Commander Sir
Robert Pitcairn.
OFFICERS UNDER THE CHARTER.
OCTOBER 16, 1867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
r John A. Wright, E. C.
r William Willis, G.
r D. E. Robeson, C. G.
r Robert Martin, P.
r H. J. Walters, S. W.
r Joseph F. Mann, J. W.
r Jesse Mendenhall, T.
r Robert H. Junkin, R.
r David S. Monroe, St.-B.
r John A. McKee, Sw.-B.
r John B. Selheimer, W.
r Martin Neal, S.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
609
MEMBERS.
Name.
Benedict, Homer,
Dull, Casper P.,
Hoyt, John,
Junkin, Robert H., (No. 11,) Ch. Mem.
Johnston, Wm. F., (No. 10,) Ch. Mem.
Junkin, Hiram W.,
Long, Wm. J., (No. 10,) Ch. Member,
Long, George H., (No. 10,) Ch. Mem.
Mendenhall, Jesse, (No. 10,) Ch. Mem.
Mann, Joseph F., (No. 10,) Ch. Mem.
Monroe, David S.,
McKee, John A.,
Mann, James H.,
Martin, Robt., (No. 11,) Ch. Mem.
Neal, Martin,
Pratt, Riley,
Robeson, D. E., (No. 10,) Ch. Mem.
Selheimer, John B.,
Swanzey, Wm, H.,
Vines, William C,
Wright, John A., (No. 8,) Ch. Mem.
Willis, Wm., (No. 10,) Ch. Mem.
Wilson, Reuben E., (No. 12,) Ch.Mem
Walters, H. J., (No. 11,) Ch. Mem.
AVallace, Wm. M.,
Date of Kmghtixg.
October 19, 1867.
October 29, 1867.
October 19, 1867.
January 29, 1862.
March 21, 1867.
October 19, 1867.
May 18, 1859.
June 26, 1860.
September 22, 1863.
July 26, 1867.
October 16, 1867.
October 16, 1867.
October 19, 1867.
October 1, 1867.
October 16, 1867.
October 29, 1867.
September 22, 1868.
October 16, 1867.
October 29, 1867.
October 19, 1867.
August 13, 1855.
October 27, 1863.
. November 25, 1863.
June 23, 1857.
October 19, 1867.
GREAT BEND COMMANDERY, No. 27,
Was organized at Great Bend, Susquehanna county. The
petitioners were Sir Knights John H. Dusenbury, C. P.
Bigelow, Sardis Smith, George F. Thompson, A. P. Stephens,
John L. Brown, Thomas D. Hays, George W. Weed, R. T.
2 A ^i^
610 HISTORY OF THE KNIOHTS TEMPLAR.
Stephens and AV. H. Powell, who made application for a
Charter, which was referred to the Committee on Charters,
who reported favorably; a Charter was granted June 12,
1867. Sir John H. Dusenbury, E. C, Sir Thomas D. Hays,
G., and Sir George F. Thompson, C. G., being present at
the Grand Conclave, were installed as the officers. The
consecrating and installing ceremonies were performed Sep-
tember 13, 1867, by Sir Christian Frederic Knapp, P. G.
C, who was deputized for that purpose by R. E. Sir Jere-
miah L. Hutchinson.
SEPTEMBER 13, 1867. A. O. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir John H. Dusenbury, E. C.
Sir Thomas D. Hays, G.
Sir George F. Thompson, C. G.
Sir Charles P. Bigelow, P.
Sir Almon P. Stephens, S. W.
Sir Sardis Smith, J. W.
Sir Peuben T. Stephens, T.
Sir William H. Powell, E.
Sir John L. Brown, St.-B.
Sir Charles A. Miller, Sw.-B.
Sir George W. Weed, W.
Sir Ebenezer Gill, S.
MEMBERS.
Name. Date of KxiGnTiNG.
Bourne, J. T., September 13, 1867.
Barnum, E. September 13, 1867.
Dayton, S. W., September 16, 1867.
Dohan, James F., September 27, 1867.
Falkcnbury, AV. J., September 27, 1867.
Gill, Ebenezer, September 13, 1867.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 611
N*'^- Date of Kxightixg.
Hawley, E. B., September 16, 1867.
Miller, C. A., September 13, 1867.
Merrill, C. G., September 13, 1867.
Simerel, W. W. September 13, 1867.
Smith, E. P., September 16, 1867.
Simons, E.F., ' September 16, 1867.
Simpson, Charles, September 16, 1 867.
Smith, A. H., September 27, 1867.
Tyler, H. C, September 27, 1867.
TYAGAGHTON COMMANDERY, No. 28,
Is located at Wellsboro', Tioga county, and derives its
romantic name from the waters of Pine Creek, which
meanders through that county. Application was made for
a Charter to the Grand Commandery by the following Sir
Knights: Robert C. Simpson, Thomas B. Bryden, M. H.
Cobb, Andrew Foley, J. B. Christie, AVilliam Roberts, H.
S. Hastings, E. H. Mason, and G. D. Montanye, which was
granted June 12, 1867, and the Commandery duly consti-
tuted and the officers installed on July 5, 1867. The
Grand Commandery was represented by Sir Chr. Fr.
Knapp, P. G. C, Sir H. B. McKean, G. C. G., and Sir
xllfred Creigh, G. R.
JULY 5, ,867, A. 0. 749, A. 0. E. P. 70.
OFFICERS.
Sir Robert C. Simpson, E. C.
Sir AVilliam Roberts, G.
Sir Andrew Foley, C. G.
Sir M. H. Cobb, P.
Sir Calvin B. Kelley, S. W.
612
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Sir H. S. Hastings, J. W.
Sir Kobert Roy, T.
Sir Jerome B. Niles, R.
Sir J. B. Christie, St.-B.
Sir Rufus Farr, Sw.-B.
Sir Henry W. Williams, W.
Sir John T. Purvis, S.
MEMBERS.
Name.
Bryden, Thos. B., (No. 16,) Ch. Mem.
Cobb, M. H., (No. 14,) Ch. Mem.
Christie, J. B., (No. 14,) Ch. Mem.
Foley, Andrew, (No 14,) Ch. Mem.
Farr, Rufus,
Hastings, H. S., (No. 22,) Ch. Mem.
Kelley, Calvin B.,
Mason, E. H., (No. 16,) Ch. Mem.
Montanye, G. D., (No. 16,) Ch. Mem.
Maus, George V., (No. 30,) Ch. Mem.
Niles, Jerome B.,
Purvis, John T.,
Roberts, William, (No. 16,) Ch. Mem.
Roy, Robert,
Simpson, Robert C, (No. 17,) Ch. M.
Williams, Henry W.,
Date or Knighting.
December 9, 1861.
May 23, 1867.
May 23, 1867.
May 23, 1867.
July 5, 1867.
September 13, 1866.
July^, 1867.
December 4, 1857.
April 22, 1859.
July 5, 1867.
July 5, 1867.
July 5, 1867.
May 9, 1865.
July 5, 1867.
June 10, 1856.
July 5, 1867.
KADOSH COMMANDERY, No. 29.
On the 26th of September, 1867, at a special Conclave
of the Grand Coramandery of Knights Templars of Penn-
sylvania, held in the city of Plwladelphia, a petition was
received, endorsed by Commanderies No. 2 and 4. The
petition was signed by Sir Nathan Smith, P. E. C, Rev.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 613
Sir John Chambers, Sir John Hanold, P. E. C, Sir John
S. Bradbury, Sir Thomas Brown, Sir Alphonso C. Ireland,
Sir C. Oakford Klett, Sir Charles K. Ide, Sir J. H. Living-
ston, Sir William Ivins, and Sir Thomas K. Patton. This
Commandery was constituted ; and the officers elected under
the charter, Nov. 26, A. D. 1867, were—
Sir Nathan Smith, E. C.
Sir Thomas Brown, G.
Sir Charles K. Ide, C. G.
Rev. Sir John Chambers, P.
Sir Thomas R. Patton, S. W.
Sir John S. Bradbury, J. W.
Sir John Hanold, T.
Sir Alphonso C. Ireland, R.
Sir William Ivins, St.-B.
Sir C. Oakford Klett, Sw.-B.
Sir Joseph H. Livingston, W.
Sir W. B. Schnider, S.
MEMBERS.
Name. Date of Knighting.
Somerville, Maxwell, (No. 4,) Adm. May 22, 1864.
Smith, S. Grant, (No. 4,) Adm. September 23, 1864.
MOUNT OLIVET COMMANDERY, No. 30.
This Commandery is stationed at the city of Erie, Erie
county, Pennsylvania. The dispensation was granted by
the R. E. Jeremiah L. Hutchinson, Grand Commander of
Pennsylvania, on the 30th of September 1867, and was
constituted by Sir Christian F. Knapp, P. G. C.,on 30th of
October, 1867. The petitioners w^ere Sir George Vance
Maus, Sir John E. Payne, Sir J. E. Disbrow, Sir Samuel
52
CI 4 HISTORY or THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Erastus Footc, Sir Abel A. Adams, Sir George Loudon
Baker, Sir E. W. Matthews, Sir Thomas A. Clark, Sir
Dennis I). Loop, Sir Geo. Perry Griffith, Sir Charles L.
Phelps, Sir David W. Hutchinson, Sir Charles A. Clute
and Sir James Moorehead McCord.
- OFFICERS UNDER THE DISPENSATION.
Sir George Vance Maus, E. C.
Sir John E. Payne, G.
Sir George P. Griffith, C. G.
Kev. Sir John Henry Black, P.
Sir George Clinton Bennett, S. W.
Sir Willam Himrod, Jr., J. W.
Sir George L. Baker, T.
Sir E. R. Chapman, R.
Sir Chas. A. Clute, St.-B.
Sir D. W. Hutchinson, Sw.-B.
Sir Abel A. Adams, W.
Sir S. S. Smith, S.
MEMBERS.
Name. Date of Knightixo.
Adams, Abel A., (Boston Enc.,) Ch. M. January 19, 1859.
Adams, Franklin Farrar, October 31, 1867.
Arbuckle, George W., October 30, 1867.
Baker, Geo. Loudon, (Monroe Com., No.
12, Rochester, N. Y.,) Ch. Mem.
Bennett, George Clinton, October 30, 1867.
Bennett, George Cary, October 31, 1867.
Black, Rev. John Henry, October 30, 1867.
Carter, John J., November 4, 1867.
Clark, Thos. A., (Hugh De Payens, No.
30, Buffalo, N. Y.,) Ch. Mem.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 615
Name. Date of Knighting.
Clute, Chas. A., (Buffalo, N. Y., No. 30,)
Ch. Mem. April 15, 1866.
Chapman, E. R., October 30, 1867.
Clark, Curtis S., October 31, 1867.
Craig, Allen A., November 4, 1867.
Disbrow, J. E., (Ft. Wayne, Ind., No. 4,)
Ch. Mem. November 16, 1859.
Dolph, O. Augustus, October 30, 1867.
Foote, Samuel Erastus,(Milwaukee,Wis.,
No. 1,) Ch. Mem. December 4, 1850.
Frazer, Edwin J., October 31, 1867.
Farrar, Fernando Freeman, October 30, 1867.
Foil, John W., October 30, 1867.
Gallower, Geo. C, January 8, 1868.
Griffith, George P., (Buffiilo, N. Y., No.
30,) Ch. Mem. August 16, 1867.
Gleason, O. E., October 30, 1867.
Hatch, Charles E., January 8, 1868.
Heath, A., ^ January 8, 1868.
Hutchinson, D. W., (No. 1,) Ch. Mem. June 12, 1867.
Houston, John E., October 31, 1867.
Himrod, Wm., Jr., October 30, 1867.
Howland, Andrew B., October 31, 1867.
Janes, M. W., October 31, 1867.
Jones, D. T., October 31, 1867.
Kennedy, S. B., October 31, 1867.
Loop, Dennis D., (Hugh DePayens,-No.
30, Buffalo, N. Y.,) Ch. Mem. October 15, 1866.
Lawrence, John Jacob, October 30, 1867.
Maus, Geo. Vance, (No. 28,) Ch. Mem. July 5, 1867.
Matthews, E. W., (No. 12,) Ch. Mem. March 24, 1863.
McCord, Jas. M., (Buffiilo, N. Y., No.
30,) Ch. Member, August 16, 1867.
616
IIISTOKY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
NAilE.
McCarter, James E.,
Mooreliead, Joseph B.,
McCrum, J. J.,
Phelps, C. L., (No. 1,) Ch. Mem.
Payne, John E., (No. 22,) Ch. Mem.
Price, Wm. Fo^vler,
Phelps, B. E.,
Pelton, Halsey,
Purdon, Rev. Henry,
Reed, William W.,
Rogers, H. C,
Spaulding, Rev. John Franklin,
Smith, A. R.,
Smith, Sidney S.,
Skinner, Bert,
Swally, C,
Taylor, Rev. Wm. Howell,
Wadsworth, John J.,
Walton, Asa,
Date of Knighting.
October 31, 1867.
October 30, 1867.
October 31, 1867.
June 12, 1867.
April 16, 1867.
October 30, 1867.
October 30, 1867.
October 31, 1867.
November 4, 1867.
October 30, 1867.
October 31, 1867.
October 31, 1867.
January 8, 1868.
October 30, 1867.
October 31, 1867.
October 31, 1867.
November 4, 1867.
October 30, 1867.
January 8, 1868.
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 617
ST. JOHN'S COMMANDERY, No. 8.
{Continued from page 584.)
Name. Date of Knightixg.
Bashore, D. W., December 26, 1867.
Eyster, George B., Adm. December 26,1867.
Geyer, Henry F., December 26,1867.
Heck, J. B., December 26, 1867.
Johnson, Wm. Y., December 26,1867.
Kerr, B. M., December 26, 1867.
Lloyd, W. Penn, December 26, 1867.
GREAT BEND COMMANDERY, No. 27.
( Continued from page Gil.)
Name. Date of Knightixg.
Bigelow, C. P., (No. 21, N.Y.,) Ch. M. May 18, 1866.
Brown, John L., (No. 21, N. Y.,) Ch. M. December 21, 1866.
Dusenbiiry, I. H., (No. 16, Pa.,) Ch. M. March 18, 1859.
Hays, Thomas D., (No. 21, N. Y.,)C. M. May 18, 1866.
Powell, W. H., (No. 21, N. Y.,) Ch. M. December 21,1866.
Smith, Sardis, (No. 21, N. Y.,) Ch. M. April 5, 1867.
Stephens, A. P., (No. 21, N. Y.,) C. M. December 21, 1866.
Stephens, R. T., (No. 21,N. Y.,)C. M. December 21,1866.
Thompson, Geo. F., (No. 21, N. Y.,) C. M. December 21, 1866.
Weed, Geo. W., (No. 21,N. Y.,) Ch. M.January 23, 1860.
52^
APPENDIX.
COSTUME OF A KNIGHT TEMPLAE.
Office of the Grand Recorder of the
Grand Encampment of K. T. for U. S. A.,
Cincinnati, O., Oct. 14th, A. D. 1862, A. O. 744.
The following is the uniform for a Knight Templar, which, at the
triennial meeting of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar
for the U. S. A., held in the City of New York, on Sept. 3, 1862, was
adopted, and earnestly recommended to be adopted by all Knights
Templar throughout this jurisdiction.
Witness my official signature, and the seal of the Grand Encamp-
ment.
John D. Caldavell,
Seal. ^ Grand Recorder.
I Seal. |
FULL DE-ESS. — Black frock coat, black pantaloons, scarf, sword,
belt, shoulder-straps, gauntlets and chapeau, with appropriate trim-
mings.
FATIGUE DKESS. — Same as full dress ; except for cliapeau a
black cloth cap, navy form, with appropriate cross in front; and for
gauntlets, white gloves.
Scarf. — Five inches wide in the whole, of white, bordered with
black one inch on either side, a strip of navy lace, one-fourth of an
619
620
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
inch wide, at tlie inner edge of the black. On tlie front centre of
tlie scarf, a metal star of nine points, in allnsion to the nine found-
ers of the Temple Order, enclosing the Passion Cross, surrounded by
the Latin motto, " In hoc Signo Vinces ;" the star to be three and
three-quarter inches in diameter. The scarf to be worn from the
right shoulder to the left Jiip, with the ends extending six inches
below the point of intersection.
Chapeau. — The military cl)apeau, trimmed with black binding,
one white and two black plumes, and appropriate cross on the left
side.
Gauntlets. — Of bufF leather, the flap to extend four inches up-
ward from the wrist, and to have the appropriate cross embroidered
in gold, on the proper colored velvet, two inches in length.
Sword. — Thirty-four to forty inches, inclusive of scabbard; hel-
met head, cross handle, and metal scabbard.
Belt. — Red enameled or patent leather, two inches wide, fastened
round the body with buckle or clasp.
^"'% ?fe
Shoulder-Strap;?. — lujr (irand Master and Past Grand Masters
HISTORY OF TPIE KNIGHTS TEMPLA.R.
621
of the Grand. Encampment. — Eoyal purple silk velvet, two inches
wide by four inches long (outside measurement), bordered with two
rows of embroidery, of gold, three-eighths of an inch wide ; Cross
of Salem embroidered, of gold, in the centre, lengthwise.
^m^^iS?l^^^'^ .^..^i^„.^,.. .v^ -'^^^^^--^j.
For all other Grand Officers of the Gi^and Encampment. — The same
as the Grand Master; except for the Cross of Salem, the Patriarchal
Cross, of gold, with the initials of the office respectively, embroidered,
of silver (©I!& jEniglisf) characters), at the foot of the cross, narrow-
wise of the strap.
For the Officers and Past Grand Officers of the Grand Commandery. —
Bright red silk velvet, two inches wide by four inciies long, bordered
with one row of embroidery, of gold, quarter of an inch wide; Temp-
lar's Cross, of gold, with the initials of the office respectively, to be
embroidered (©lil ^n^Iis^ characters), in silver, on the lower end
of the strap.
For the Commanders and Past Commanders of a Subordinate Com-
mandery.— Emerald green silk velvet, one and a half inches wide by
four inches long, bordered with one row of embroidery, of gold,
622
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
quarter of an iiicli wide ; the Passion Cross, with a halo, embroidered,
of silver, in the centre.
For the Generalissimo. — Same as the Commander ; except for the
Passion Cross, the Square, surmounted witli the Paschal Lamb.
^.5JLwjiajy!!j'.jjjuuijjiJuui i>]
For the Captain General. — Same as the Commander ; except for tlie
Passion Cross, the Level, surmounted Avith the Cock.
Cap, — Navy form ; black cloth, four to five inches high, narrow
leather strap fastened at the sides with small metal TempUir's Cross,
and with appropriate cross in front.
Distinctions. — TheSir Knights will wear the white metal where-
ever metal appears. Commanders and Pa^^t Commanders, Grand
and Past Grand Officers, gold.
Crosses. — Sir Knights, Commanders and Past Commanders of
Subordinate Commanderies will wear the Passion Cross; Grand and
Past Grand Officers of State Commanderies, the Templar Cross ;
Grand and Past Grand Officers of the Grand Encampment, the
Patriarchal Cross ; the Grand Master and Past Grand Masters of the
HISTORY OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. 623
Grand Encampment, the Cross of Salem, Avhicli is the Patriarchal
Cross, with an additional bar in the centre.
The various crosses, as designated, to be worn on the ontside of
the chapeau and on the scabbard of the sword. ^ Those on chapean
to be three inches in height; on the sword, one inch.
Hangings for Jewels.— The hangings for Grand and Subordi-
nate Commanderies may remain as at present.
Grand Standard.— -Is of white woolen or silk stuff, six feet in
height and five feet in width, made tripartite at the bottom, fiistened
at the top to the cross-bar by nine rings ; in the centre of the field, a
blood-red Passion Cross, over which is the motto, "J/i hoc Signo
Vinces,'' and under, " Non nobis, JDomine! non nobis, seel Nomine, tita
da Gloriam r Tiie cross to be four feet high, and the upright and
bar to be seven inches wide. On the top of the staff, a gilded globe
or ball, four inches in diameter, surmounted by the Patriarchal
Cross, twelve inches in height. The cross to be crimson, edged with
gold.
Beauseant. — Of woolen or silk stuff, same form and dimensions
as the Grand Standard, and suspended in the same manner. The
ujjper half of this banner is black, the lower half white.
Prelate's Eobes.— A full white linen or muslin robe, open be-
liind, reaching down within six inches of the feet, fastened around
the neck below the cravat (which should be white), and having flow-
ing sleeves reaching to the middle of the hand. A white woolen
cloak, lined with white, fastened around the neck, and extending
down to the bottom of the robe ; on the left front, a red velvet
Templar Cross, six inches in width. A blue silk stole, reaching
down in front to within six inches of the bottom of the robe, and
having on it three Templar Crosses of red silk. Mitre of white
merino, bordered with gold, lined with green, having the red Temp-
lar Cross extending to the edges, and surmounted by a Passion Cross
three inches high. The special badge of his office is a Crosier.
THE END.