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A BRIEF
HISTORY OF ST. JOHN'S LODGE
St. John's
Lodge enjoys the unique privilege of being the oldest duly constituted
and chartered Masonic lodge in the Americas.
Contemporary accounts reveal that a Masonic lodge had met in King's
Chapel, Boston, as early as the 1720s (meeting according to the "old
customs"). In 1733, Henry Price, a prominent tailor and storekeeper who
had emigrated to Boston in 1723, was appointed "Provincial Grand Master
of New England and Dominions and Territories thereunto belonging" and
authorizing him "to Constitute the Brethren now Residing or who shall
hereafter reside in those parts into One or more Regular Lodge or Lodges
as he shall think fit" by the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of England,
Anthony Lord Viscount Montague. On July 30, 1733, at a meeting held at The
Bunch of Grapes Tavern in Boston, Henry Price exercised his authority
and granted a group of eighteen Masons a charter empowering them to work
as a Masonic lodge in Boston. Thus was formed St. John's Lodge, the
first duly constituted and chartered lodge in the Americas.
The Lodge has been in continuous existence since its constitution
in 1733, since which time its members have convened for over 3,700
regular meetings, or 'Communications.' Famous Masons like George
Washington, Ben Franklin, and the Marquis de Lafayette visited St.
John's Lodge in their travels to Boston.
The men after whom both Quincy Market and Rowe's Wharf are named
(Josiah Quincy and John Rowe) were prominent members of the Lodge. It
was Rowe who famously asked just before the Boston Tea Party, "One
wonders how tea will mix with salt water." Another famous member was
James Otis, who argued against the Writs of Assistance in the 1760s,
went on to coin the slogan "Taxation without representation is tyranny!"
and who is today commemorated as the Father of the Fourth Amendment.
Another illustrious member of the Lodge was Robert Newman, who climbed
the Old North Church to signal to fellow Mason Paul Revere ("one if by
land; two, if by sea"). In the twentieth century, the Lodge was
fortunate to have among its members Lowell Thomas, the most prominent
newsman of his day and the reporter perhaps best remembered as the man
who discovered and made Lawrence of Arabia famous.
Today, St. John's Lodge cherishes its unique historical legacy. It
prides itself on being a convivial and welcoming Lodge that is committed
to cultivating brotherly love among men from all walks of life,
practicing charity in ways large and small, and maintaining the highest
standards of Masonic ritual. It is pleased and privileged to be able to
count as members some 300 men from a wide range of occupational,
educational, ethnic, religious, political and racial backgrounds - men
who acknowledge the Brotherhood of Man under the Fatherhood of God and
who thus chose to become Masons. As it enters the twenty-first century,
St. John's Lodge remains firmly committed to safeguarding and
transmitting to future generations of men the Masonic ideals entrusted
to the Lodge by Henry Price in 1733.
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