The Grand Lodge of Georgia.
Last month Lodge St. Bryde received a great honour when our Bro. James L.
Jack, P.M. was Commissioned as The Representative of The Grand Lodge of Georgia
near The Grand Lodge of Scotland.
In this months Right Angle, we look at how Freemasonry was
established in that American State.
A band of English colonists under the leadership
of General James Edward
Oglethorpe, British soldier, statesman and humanitarian, arrived
on the west bank of the Savannah River on February 12, 1733. This was the
birth of the English Province of Georgia, the last of the Thirteen Colonies. Georgia was the southwestern frontier of British America for many years. In the same year, December 13,
1733, the Grand Lodge of England at its Quarterly Communication in London
adopted a resolution to "collect the Charity of this Society towards
enabling the Trustees (of Georgia) to send distressed Brethren to Georgia where
they may be comfortably provided for...that it be strenuously (sic) recommended
by the Masters and Wardens of regular Lodges to make a generous collection
amongst all their Members for that purpose..."
Some three
months later, February 21, 1734, a Lodge of Freemasons was organized at Savannah
under the "old Customs" (without warrant). Noble Jones, intimate
friend of James Oglethorpe, was initiated on that date, the first Freemason made
in Georgia. On December 2, 1735, the Lodge was warranted by the Grand Lodge of
England and entered on the engraved list as "The Lodge at Savannah in Ye
Province of Georgia". It was assigned number 139 on the register of English
Lodges. By 1770 its number had been reduced to No. 63 and by 1792 it was No. 46,
although no longer an English Lodge.
The
Lodge at Savannah changed its name in or prior to 1770 to Solomon's Lodge. In
1774 and 1775, respectively, the Grand Lodge of England warranted two more
Lodges in Savannah, Unity No. 465 and Grenadiers No. 481. Both Lodges died an early
death.
Except for that
brief period, Solomon's Lodge was the only Lodge in Georgia from 1734 until
1785. Solomon's Lodge was the second duly constituted Lodge in America, next
only to a Lodge in Boston warranted in 1733. Solomon's Lodge is the Mother Lodge
of Georgia.
Serving as
Provincial Grand Masters in Georgia were: Grey Elliott, 1760 until he was
succeeded in 1771 by Noble Jones. Brother Jones served until his death in 1775.
Sometime during the War for
independence, Samuel Elbert, American soldier and later Governor of Georgia, was
"elected"
Provincial Grand Master. On December 15, 1786, Brother Elbert resigned as
Provincial Grand Master so that the
independent Grand Lodge of Georgia might be formed.
A group of
dissident Freemasons in Savannah, disapproving the workings of Solomon's Lodge,
petitioned the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania in 1784 for a charter to organize a
Lodge. Their petition was granted by Pennsylvania on March 31, 1785, the Lodge
being listed on Pennsylvania's register as no. 42, to be known as Hiram Lodge,
Savannah, Georgia. In the true spirit of Freemasonry the differences between the
two Lodges were soon reconciled. In the following year it is
known that two additional Lodges
existed in the state, one at Augusta and one at Washington. It is
believed these four Lodges, on December 16, 1786 met together and created the
most Worshipful Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons for the State of
Georgia. William Stephens, Past Master of Solomon's Lodge, now No. 1, and the
first U.S. Court Judge in Georgia, was elected and
installed Grand Master.
The next eight Lodges in Georgia were: Columbia No. 3,
Augusta; St. Louis No. 4, Washington; Washington No. 5, Washington; St.
John's No. 6, Sunbury; Little River No. 7, Little River; St. Patrick's No. 8,
Waynesboro; St. George's No. 9, Kiokas; Union No. 10,
Savannah.
With the exception of Solomon's No.
1, all of the above Lodges are extinct. Social Lodge, originally No. 18, Augusta, Georgia, now also No. 1, was
chartered in December, 1799. Georgia has 451 Lodges and 72,451 members (as of
October, 1997).
Freemasonry has existed continuously in Georgia since 1734. The Grand Lodge of
Georgia, F. & A. M., has existed since 1786.
The Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons for the State of Georgia was
incorporated with perpetual duration on February 6, 1796, by an Act of the
General Assembly of Georgia passed for that purpose, and has been delivered down
to the present day.
May 2005