"My father had been a soldier in the Union Army . . . He was
made a Mason in a military Lodge. Taken prisoner at Arkansas
Post, he was carried up the Mississippi River to Rock Island,
Illinois. My father became desperately ill, and made himself
known as a Mason to an officer of the camp. The officer took him
to his own home and nursed him back to life.
"When the war ended, he loaned Father money to pay his way
back to his Texas home, and gave him a pearl-handled pistol to
protect himself. This experience of my father, when I learned
about it, had a very great influence upon my life; the fact that
such a fraternity of men could exist, mitigating the harshness
of war, and remain unbroken when states and churches were torn
in two, became a wonder; and it is not strange that I tried for
years to repay my debt to it."
Joseph Fort Newton, D.D. in "River of Years" - [1]
The Civil War was the single most divisive event in our
nation's long history. No other war, political event, or
national crisis has ever approached the levels of animosity and
hatred that the Civil War caused.
Brother fought against brother. Fathers against sons.
Families were forever split over the idealism of the War. They
were not alone. Major national organizations, notably the
Baptist Churches, also broke up over the issues of slavery and
States' Rights. The War seemed to destroy the bonds of any
organization it touched.
All the organizations, that is, except one: Freemasonry.
While the War raged around them, Freemasons held on to the ties
and the idealism that brought them together in the first place.
Thousands of Masons fought in the War, and many died. But the
tenets of the Craft, those ideals and moral codes that we, as
Freemasons,[2] strive to abide by, were able to overcome the
hatred and the animosity that the War generated.
There are a number of reasons why this organization, more
than any other, was able to survive the tumult that was the
Civil War. A major reason is the long and storied history of the
Craft. The beliefs and tenets of the Lodge predate not only the
Civil War, but the Constitution, the discovery of the New World,
and, according to some, even the birth of Christ. When a
tradition of that many years exists, it is difficult to ignore.
A second reason why Masonry held together is that membership
in a Masonic Lodge is by choice only. No man has ever been
recruited into joining a Lodge. Our rules in fact prohibit
Masons from actively pursuing someone for initiation. Instead, a
man interested in becoming a Mason must, "of his own free will
and accord," [3] actively seek out a member of the Lodge which
he wishes to join and ask him for a petition for membership.
The third reason is the structure of the Craft itself. There
are a number of internal rules and customs that helped the Lodge
as a whole avoid the turbulent politics and divisiveness of the
War. This allowed the Lodge to continue to function as a place a
man could go when he needed help, or a quiet haven from the
storms that raged outside the Craft. It was then, and continues
to be today, a place where true brotherhood exists.
Perhaps the best example of these ties of brotherhood
occurred on the battlefield at Gettysburg. [4] This battle, the
turning point of the War, saw 93,000 Federal troops doing battle
with 71,000 Confederates. Of those numbers, more than 35,000
were killed or wounded in the three days of fighting from 1 July
to 3 July, 1863. Of the men who fought, 17,930 were Freemasons,
including the roughly 5,600 who became casualties. [5] One of
the most famous events that occurred at Gettysburg was the huge
Confederate infantry push known as Pickett's Charge. On 3 July,
Pickett (a member of Dove Lodge No. 51, Richmond, Va) led nearly
12,000 men on a long rush across open fields towards the center
of the Union line on Cemetery Ridge. It has been called the last
and greatest infantry charge in military history.
One of the men leading that charge was Brigadier General
Lewis Addison Armistead, CSA. He was a member of
Alexandria-Washington Masonic Lodge No. 22 in Alexandria.
Originally from North Carolina, he had attended West Point, and
fought with the US Army for a number of years before resigning
his commission to fight for the Confederacy. During that time,
he had occasion to serve with now Major General Winfield Scott
Hancock, USA (Charity Lodge No. 190, Norristown, Pa.) while both
men were in the west. The two had become good friends. However,
with Armistead's resignation, it had been nearly two and a half
years since the two men had had any contact. Until Gettysburg,
that is.
It was Hancock who had taken command of the fragmented Union
troops on Cemetery Ridge on 1 July, and organized them into a
strong front that had withstood three days of pounding from the
Confederate guns. And it was his position, in the center of the
Union line, that was the focus of Pickett's Charge. During the
action, both men were wounded. Armistead was shot from his
horse, mortally wounded. Hancock's saddle took a hit, driving
nails and pieces of wood into his thigh.
As the battle waned, it became clear that Armistead's
injuries were fatal. Knowing that his old friend was somewhere
behind the Union lines, Armistead exhibited the Masonic sign of
distress. [6] This was seen by Captain Henry Harrison Bingham,
the Judge-Advocate of Hancock's Second Corps (Chartiers Lodge
#297, Canonsburg, Pa.). He came to the fallen Armistead, and
declared that he was a fellow Mason.
The two men spoke for a time, and when Armistead realized
that Bingham had direct access to Hancock, he entrusted some of
his personal effects to him. Among them were his Masonic watch,
the Bible upon which he had taken his obligations, [7] and a
number of other items. Bingham said his farewells, and then
returned to the Union camp to deliver the items.
Armistead died two days later.
The fact that Armistead chose to use the Masonic sign of
distress signified that his war was over, and that there was
another, more pressing matter on his mind, even on the field at
Gettysburg. What could lead one of the highest ranking and most
intelligent officers in the Confederacy to lay aside all of the
ideology of the war and call for a brother of the Craft from the
other side? It is this question which I will now address.
During the war, and in the years just prior to it, the
questions of secession, slavery, and states' rights were as much
on the minds of Masons in this country as anyone. There was
almost no way of escaping the thoughts of imminent warfare
between the states. The following is taken from a letter,
drafted in June of 1861, from the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania,
sent in response to a communication received from the Grand
Lodge of Tennessee decrying the situation that the country was
in.
"As to the present deplorable state of this country, Masons
cannot fail to have opinions as to the cause that produced it.
It is to be feared that some of our brethren are in arms against
the union of the States; others are in the ranks of its
defenders. Taught by the history of he Order. . . they have
carried these principles into the formation of opinions on the
present crisis in our national history. But while Masons, as
individuals, have been thus influenced and are acting in harmony
with such views, Freemasonry is a silent, unimpassioned,
abstracted observer of events. . .
"Brethren -- We, with you, deplore the present unnatural and
deeply distressing condition of our national affairs. . .But if
this whirlwind threatens to overwhelm us, yet in this last
extremity, the still small voice of Masonic faith will be
uttered and heard, saying, Brethren, there is help at hand in
this time of need. . .
"'Surely your God is our God; your faith our faith; your
landmarks our landmarks; your joy our joy; your prosperity our
satisfaction.' Then let us unitedly work together for the
preservation and perpetuity of a common inheritance. . . We will
aid in maintaining unity, peace and concord, among the brethren
and citizens of united sovereign States in our glorious Union.
If all bonds should be broken, all ties rent asunder; if
discord, dissension, and disruption, shall mark the decline and
fall of the most wise and wonderful of the governments of
mankind, let the Masonic temple, in all States, kingdoms, lands,
peoples or confederacies, be common refuge of an indestructible
Masonic fraternity." [8]
These sentiments were echoed by virtually all of the other
Grand Lodges at one point or another during this time period.
Nobody wanted war. Negotiation was the overwhelmingly favored
option. However, if war occurred, everyone hoped and believed
that the Fraternity would be able to survive the conflict. But
why? What was so special about Masonry that set it apart from
other organizations similar to it?
The first reason is history of the Order. No other
organization has the amount and the type of history that
Freemasonry does. To truly understand the organization that
exists today, it is imperative to examine and understand the
history of the Craft.
There is no clear answer as to where the historical roots of
Freemasonry lay. The first school of thought traces the Craft
from the building of King Solomon's Temple in roughly the 10th
century, B.C. At this point, before the advent of metal working
tools, the construction of stone buildings required the work and
planning of master architects. They had only stone and mortar to
work with, and yet their plans were so well-designed as to stand
for centuries.
There were relatively few masters, and the secrets of the
trade were among the best-kept in the world. Masters knew that
the demand for their expertise was overwhelming, and they
guarded their knowledge well. Only a select few were elevated to
the rank of master, and the process was a long and arduous one.
A young man was first apprenticed to an established master,
often for a period of several years. The apprentice learned the
trade from that master, then set out on his own to practice his
trade.
Eventually, a few of these craftsmen were elevated to the
rank of master, but only after years of labor. This pattern is
repeated through many different eras in history, no matter what
the craft being learned.
The master architect involved in the construction of King
Solomon's Temple was a man named Hiram Abif. He was murdered by
a trio of men who aspired to be made masters of the craft. The
story of his murder forms the basis for the Master Mason degree
in modern Freemasonry. Abif would not relinquish the secrets of
the master, and sacrificed his life to protect the sanctity of
that honor. These and other ideals are explained in the Master
Mason degree, impressing upon the new Brother the extent to
which others have gone to uphold the fraternity. [9]
The second line of thought traces the Craft's development
from the guilds of the middle ages. This follows closely the
ideals of the other school.
Guilds of stonecutters were formed to protect the secrets of
the actual profession of stonecutting. This was known as
"operative Masonry." The first documented instance of a Masonic
Lodge in England occurs in 926 A.D. These guildsmen could
actually lay stone and build buildings. A person who was engaged
in this profession was virtually forced to become a member of
the guilds in order to secure work. It closely parallels the
development of the "closed shop" labor unions in this country.
Those who were not members could not find work.
As time went on, these guilds gained considerable power and
influence. They began to develop allegorical meanings for the
tools and terminology of the profession. They also developed
secret signs, words, and modes of recognition so that one Mason
could recognize another, no matter where they went. These
insured that only those who were eligible could sit in on the
meetings of the guilds. This allowed the mason to travel to
other parts of the world, and still be recognized as a master
stonecutter. This led to the coining of the term "Free &
Accepted Mason," shortened to "Freemason." The mason, as a
member of one of the guilds, was free to travel where he wanted
and continue to earn a living as a stonecutter.
In the 17th century, when cathedral building was on the
decline, some of the individual Lodges began to admit members
who were not actual masons. These included civil and religious
leaders, government officials, and other dignitaries. These
dignitaries realized the power and influence of the Lodges, and
gained membership to have a say in that power. Hence, a new type
of organization developed. No longer were these guilds of
operative masons. Here we see the development of what is know
today as "speculative Masonry." Speculative Masonry kept the
allegories and the secrets that the operative Masonic guilds
used, but merely expanded the rolls of membership to include
those who were not employed in the profession.
With a history as long and storied as this, it is little
wonder that the ties that bond a man to all of his Masonic
brethren are not taken lightly. They are solemn vows, taken in
the presence of God and the members of his Lodge. This set of
traditions, stretching back over many centuries, is not easily
disregarded in favor of such fickle and transient notions as
politics. Tradition, however, was not the only reason that the
Craft remained together.
A second important reason why Masonry stood apart from other
organizations is the way in which a man becomes a Mason.
Freemasonry is unique in that we do not recruit new members. In
order to gain admittance to a Lodge, a man must come to either
the Lodge as a whole, or to an individual member of the Lodge,
and request of them a petition for membership. The process
itself is controlled by the Lodge after that point, but the
important thing to remember is that the prospective member must
make the initial query.
This tradition has drawn some criticism in the last few
years, as membership has started to decline. Up until roughly
the 1960's, membership in virtually all fraternal organizations
was incredibly high. This included Freemasonry and all of its
appendant bodies, Greek fraternities and sororities on college
campuses, and other organizations such as the VFW, the Elks,
Moose, Eagles, etc. After the 1960's, however, membership in all
of these began to decline, and did so for nearly a generation.
It has only recently began to level off, and in some cases,
began to rise again. Many of the Grand Lodges, which are the
governing bodies in Masonry, have relaxed regulations about
discussing membership with prospective members. The rule has
remained in place, however.
This is an important distinction for several reasons. First
of all, there is a major difference between a group that you
choose to join and one that you are coerced into joining. Often,
in the other organizations, men were almost forced into becoming
members. Perhaps they had a relative, a father or uncle, who was
a member, and the younger man was naturally expected to join.
Certainly, this happens in Masonry to some extent, but there
is still the element of choice. Throughout the ceremonies of
initiation to the various degrees of the Masonic Lodge, the new
Brother is repeatedly asked if this choice, to become a Mason,
is "of his own free will and accord." This same question is
asked no fewer than three times in each degree. [10] There is
ample opportunity for a man to voice his objection if he feels
he is being forced or coerced into joining.
Another difference is the one between a group a person
chooses to join and one that he or she is born into. This is
perhaps the most important difference in this context. When a
person is born into a society, or a group, or a religion, he or
she does not have this element of choice involved. This is one
of the reasons that many of these other organizations did not
hold together when the war came. A number of the people in the
organization decided that they did not want to be in the
organization anymore, and as they had never asked to be there,
they felt that they were entitled to leave.
The best example of this is the political division between
North and South. One of the reasons that some of the
secessionists gave for wanting to leave the Union was that they
did not have the same loyalty to the Union and the Constitution
that the original founding fathers did. Those individuals made
the choice to form this new national government, and to abide by
the rules and the regulations thereof.
During the time of the Civil War, however, there was a
serious question of what bound the new generation of Americans
to the federal Constitution. There was a good deal more
significance paid to the individual state identities. People
would identify themselves as a Virginian first, and then as an
American. This question of dual citizenship would plague this
country until the question was settled through the bloodshed of
civil war.
This concept was what allowed secessionists to declare that
they had a more compelling allegiance to the state than to the
nation. While this idea may seem strange to modern Americans, to
our mid-19th century forefathers, it was perhaps foremost in
their minds. For all the talk of slavery being the major cause
of the war, the fact remains that the actual debate started over
the question of states' rights. Overly simplified, the South was
not fighting to preserve slavery, but rather to enforce states'
rights. By the same token, the North did not go to war to end
slavery, but to preserve the political and economic union.
The secessionists did not feel the same degree of loyalty to
the Union, because they had not made a conscious decision to
join that group. They felt powerless and on the outside of the
political process. This led to a great deal of resentment
towards the national government from the Southerners. They were
inside a political system that they could not change, and when
they tried to escape, a war was waged to keep them in.
On the other hand, the process for becoming a Mason was much
different. With this element of choice being so heavily
prevalent, each man in the organization was able to feel that he
really belonged, that Freemasonry was a place in which he had
some say over the government of the organization.
The government of Freemasonry and the way the organization is
set up is the third reason that it was able to hold together.
Every member in good standing had an equal vote in the affairs
of the Lodge. [11] The whole process is very egalitarian. When a
Lodge meets, it meets "on the level," meaning that no member is
any higher than any other. The newest Brother has the same voice
and the same voting power that the oldest does. The Master of
the Lodge, who presides over the affairs of the body, is not a
supreme dictator. Rather, he rules only by the consent of the
members. In elections and other affairs requiring votes, his
counts no more than any other.
Another advantage built into the structure of Masonry are the
taboos that exist within the Lodge. While it is true that the
Lodge is designed to be an open forum for members to express
their opinions and to debate matters of importance, there are
certain subjects which, as a rule, are not discussed.
By tradition, the only two taboo subjects are Religion and
Politics. Our Masonic forefathers deemed them too divisive and
the discussion of them as too temperamental and banned them from
the Lodge. One of the purposes of the Lodge is to provide a safe
haven for rational and intellectual debate. It also tries to
encourage a state of harmony within the Lodge itself. To ensure
this harmony, these two issues were banned. Our forefathers were
well aware that there had never been a conflict that could not
be traced to one of these two forces. So by not discussing them,
they hoped to provide for this harmonious state that existed
within the Lodge.
This stipulation helped to keep peace within the
organization. The firebrands and masters of rhetoric that so
infected governments and towns found no refuge within the
Masonic fraternity. Levelheadedness and reason more often than
not were able to prevail upon the leadership of the fraternity.
That is what could lead the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania to
declare that "Freemasonry is a silent, unimpassioned, abstracted
observer of events." [12]
The very structure of the Grand Lodge system lends itself to
the preservation of the Craft through national crises. The Grand
Lodge is the governing body of Masons in any particular
jurisdiction. It is made up of representatives from the various
Lodges within that jurisdiction. However, the point to remember
is that the Grand Lodge of one jurisdiction owes no allegiance
to that of any other. Neither does it subject itself to the rule
or authority of any superior body. Each Grand Lodge holds
absolute sovereignty within its jurisdiction.
The first of the Grand Lodges was the United Grand Lodge of
England. In 1724, four Lodges met in London and formed the first
governing body. They understood even then that the relation to
the national government was an important issue: "A Mason is a
peaceable subject to the Civil Powers, wherever he resides or
works, and is never to be concerned in plots and conspiracies
against the peace and welfare of the nation, nor to behave
himself undutifully to inferior magistrates; for as Masonry hath
been always injured by war, bloodshed, and confusion, so ancient
Kings and Princes have been much disposed to encourage the
Craftsmen, because of their peaceableness and loyalty, whereby
they practically answered the calls of their adversaries, and
promoted the honour of the Fraternity, who ever flourished in
times of peace. So that if a Brother should be a rebel against
the State, he is not to be countenanced in his rebellion,
however he may be pitied as an unhappy man; and, if convicted of
no other crime, though the loyal Brotherhood must and ought to
disown his rebellion, and give no umbrage or ground of political
jealousy to the government for the time being; they cannot expel
him from the Lodge, and his relation to it remains indefeatible.
[13]
"The foregoing is a copy of Section II of the Constitution of
Masonry as written by James Anderson for the Grand Lodge of
England, and adopted by that grand lodge and printed on "this
17th Day of January, 1724." It was the article most frequently
quoted in Masonic circles throughout the Civil War." [14]
These men who authored this Grand Lodge certainly understood
the importance of loyalty to both the state and to the
Fraternity. But the most important contribution that they made
to the preservation of the Craft was the invention of the Grand
Lodge system.
There is debate as to when the first Masonic Lodge was formed
here in America. Some estimates trace it back to the 1650's or
before. [15]
Certainly, however, there were Lodges in place by the early
18th century. The first Grand Lodge in the Americas, in
Massachusetts, was chartered in 1733. Importantly, it was
totally sovereign from the Grand Lodge of England. By the time
of the Civil War, 38 independent Grand Lodges existed in the
United States. [16]
Each of these Grand Lodges was independent from all of the
others, and absolutely sovereign within its own jurisdictional
boundaries. This lack of a national leadership is a major reason
why Freemasonry as a whole did not fracture along geographical
boundaries, as did many of the other organizations. In those
cases, groups like the Baptist Churches, the Presbyterian
Churches, and others, all had some sort of national leadership
council, comprised of representatives of all of the various
regions throughout the country. And as the war fractured the
country along a definitive line, so too did it divide the
national committees of these various groups. It is not logical
to assume that any organization, no matter how deeply held their
convictions are, no matter how dedicated to their ideals the
membership might be, could survive intact. In such a situation,
where the leadership of the group is so deeply and obviously
split, is it any wonder that the individual group members
themselves broke away?
This element was missing from Freemasonry, however. There was
no "Grand Lodge of America" to oversee the ones in the states.
There was no national committee of leadership to look to for
guidance. The individual Grand Lodges were on their own. The
rules and regulations that they laid down were only valid within
their jurisdiction.
Therefore, a Mason in Georgia did not have to be concerned
with the views of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts on the issues
of slavery and states' rights. He only had to be concerned with
those of the Georgia body. Such a man would have a definite and
palpable interest in the affairs of his state's Masonic body,
and, importantly, he would have an avenue to make his thoughts
and feelings on the various subjects heard. It could be easily
said that he had a more direct link to the business and affairs
of the Grand Lodge of his state than to the government of the
United States. This brings me to my final reason. The Masonic
brotherhood is founded on three basic principles that we use to
provide a moral guideline for our lives. Those three tenets are
Brotherly Love, Relief, and Truth. The concepts themselves seem
simple enough. The first teaches us that we should love and
respect all of our brethren of the earth, regardless of whether
they are members of the Craft or not. The second teaches that we
should do all that we can to help those who need our assistance.
The third teaches us that we should ever seek the light of
knowledge, for only in knowledge can men be truly free.
During the Civil War, Masons on both sides of the line had
opportunities to display those virtues. The story of Armistead,
Bingham, and Hancock is only one of hundreds of anecdotes that
can be related about Masonic brotherhood overcoming the hatred
and animosity of the Civil War.
There are a number of documented stories of warfare being put
aside for the purposes of Masonic funerals. In Galveston, a
Confederate Major named Tucker performed Masonic funeral
services for a Union Captain named Wainwright who had died in
Tucker's prison. "A public procession consisting of 'both
friends and foe wearing the insignia of the Order, and
accompanied with a proper military escort' accompanied the body
to the Episcopal cemetery." [17] In another case, a Masonic
Union Naval commander named Hart was killed on board his vessel
during a long bombardment. A small craft sailed into that
Louisiana port under a truce flag, and asked for a Mason. W.W.
Leake, the man who responded, immediately opened his Lodge and
afforded Hart full Masonic rites.
Some Masons took to wearing the signs and symbols of the
Craft on their uniforms, in the hopes that a Mason on the other
side, upon recognizing him as a Brother, would spare him harm.
Masons were also very active in the hospitals and the care
units at the sites of major battles. Often, the hospitals were
located on the farms or in the buildings owned by Masons. The
Masonic Temple in Vicksburg was used as a hospital first by the
Confederates, and then by the Federals after the fall of
Vicksburg on 4 July, 1863. [18]
There are many reasons why Freemasonry was able to survive
the divisiveness of the Civil War. The sense of tradition that
extends back over many centuries lends it an air of dignity and
reverence that is very difficult to ignore. No other
organization or government has so long and storied a tradition.
A man must choose to a Mason. He cannot be born or forced
into it. In an organization that a person chooses to join, there
is a more developed sense of loyalty to that group. Those in
which there is no choice, such as governments and religions,
have less of such a loyal following.
Finally, the structure of the Craft itself lends itself to an
advanced sense of coherency. Politics and religion, two of the
most divisive elements in human history, did not enter the Lodge
room. Every Mason was able to have an equal voice in the running
of the Lodge. Each of the Grand Lodges was independent of the
others. While there were well-developed lines of communication,
no state had to surrender sovereignty to any other. Neither did
they submit themselves to the rule of a supreme council. Lastly,
the three tenets of the Craft, Brotherly Love, Relief and Truth,
required Masons to act differently than non-Masons.
With all of these factors working in their favor, it becomes
more evident why Freemasons were able to hold together as an
organization more readily than many of their contemporaries. All
of the traditions and history established Masonry as a
legitimate organization. The attractive elements of Freemasonry
itself made membership something that men were eager to embrace.
And once these tenets of the Craft had been embraced,
disobedience of them was unthinkable. So men, as Masons, were
able to overcome all of the political strife and ideological
turmoil, simply by holding true to a set of principles that were
established long before there was a Union to fight over. A noble
accomplishment, to say the least.
MORE CIVIL
WAR MASONRY