Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Craft Works

On Dec. 27, 1598, a Scottish architect named William Schaw, an advisor to King James VI of Scotland, gathered a group of stone masons at Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh for, essentially, a sales pitch. 

The masons had been at the forefront of a building and construction boom in the country for several years, but Schaw wanted to take it further. He appealed to their knowledge and expertise and said their work could incorporate elements of both Classical architecture and thought. He envisioned them engaged in Renaissance-era advancement of building and ideals, which he assured them conformed to the king’s own grand vision. 

His appeal took hold and in the ensuing decades a couple dozen groups of organized masons emerged all over Scotland. From those modest roots sprang a worldwide movement that enlisted millions of members and influenced nations and politics and policy for the next 400 years. 

It’s all outlined in “The Craft: How The Freemasons Made The Modern World,” an interesting read that dives into Freemason history and key episodes and characters. Author John Dickie, a British university professor and researcher who also wrote a couple of well-regarded books on the Italian mafia, lays out how the Freemasons evolved from an artisan guild into a fraternal order bound by ritual and secrecy that provided a template for conduct and everyday life. Among Freemason members were 14 U.S. Presidents starting with George Washington, five English kings, Mozart, Henry Ford, Winston Churchill, Arnold Palmer, Rudyard Kipling, Duke Ellington, Walt Disney, South African diamond magnate Cecil Rhodes, astronauts John Glenn and Buzz Aldrin, Mark Twain, Ben Franklin, Harpo Marx, former Australian Prime Minister Robert Menzies, James Naismith, the founding father of the Ringling Brothers circus and all seven of his sons, 19th-century Italian patriot and national hero Giuseppe Garibaldi, boxer Sugar Ray Robinson and chicken tycoon Col. Harland Sanders. 

Membership has dipped in recent decades, but estimates still peg the number of Masons worldwide at approximately six million, with 400,000 in Great Britain and 1.1 million in the U.S. Freemasonry’s broad appeal rests in the fact that it wasn’t limited simply to building and construction techniques. Though Masonic lodges sprang up all over the world, the order became more a hall of ideals and rested on a code of brotherhood, religious tolerance, democracy, equality before the law, and the striving for betterment among members, who often refer to it as “the Craft” and themselves as “Craftsmen,” hence the book title.  

It’s steeped in peculiar initiation and advancement rituals, a code of strict silence until very recently, and symbols out the wazzoo, some of which are traditional tools of the stone mason’s trade: squares and compasses, aprons, gloves, trowels. The most identifiable symbol is the square and compass surrounding the capital letter G – which stands for both God and Geometry – that signifies unity. 

There are only three levels of membership – apprentice, intermediate and advanced, basically – though the traditional Scottish Rites have 33 levels, and some lodges contain many more. Maybe the best explanation for that is a bunch of bros in a secret society already teeming with special handshakes and invocations and rituals can’t help themselves but to create even more arcane stuff. 

Members and advocates point to Freemasonry’s tenets for individual conduct and the group’s philanthropic and charitable ventures. Critics often say, if the fraternal order is so good and beneficial, why all the secrecy? 

Indeed, Freemasonry has had detractors almost since Day One. As it worked its way through Great Britain, Europe and by extension through the British Empire, it ran afoul of the Catholic Church and various monarchies, and later authoritarian regimes, who were suspicious or downright hostile, persecuting and even murdering those identified as members. The church was antagonistic because Freemasons were by and large faithful but didn’t adhere to one religion. A multi-national organization was dangerous, according to ruling powers. 

Mussolini’s Italy and Gen. Francisco Franco’s Spain were particularly harsh. Hitler was every bit as contemptuous, but he believed the Jews were a more easily identifiable target. Freemasonry has been tied to everything from the French Revolution, the unification of Italy, a Zionist plot to create a New World Order, either a front for or the driving force behind Communism, the Spanish defeat by the U.S. in 1898, and the 1985 NBA Draft Lottery that permitted the Knicks to land Patrick Ewing. 

OK, that last one I made up. But Freemasonry is viewed by some as a trigger for modern day conspiracy theories. Dickie writes that for all the good and progress within Freemasonry and its members, it also fed imperialism and the subjugation of entire populations, war, dictatorships, religious fanaticism and the building and breaking of states. He also points out the ethical and logical contradictions of a group that preaches brotherhood and tolerance that regularly excluded women, Jews, Blacks and non-Christians for membership. Women still aren’t permitted in some lodges. The U.S. has a branch of the Craft called Prince Hall Freemasonry, named for the abolitionist who founded the country’s first Black lodge in Boston in the late 1700s. Black Freemasons still aren’t recognized by some lodges, particularly in the South. 

I can’t necessarily recommend the book to everyone. Dickie goes into the weeds about some episodes and characters within the order that bog down sections, but overall it’s a pretty accessible read. He didn’t get into how the Freemasons and Paul Finebaum fueled the Alabama football dynasty for the past 15 years, but perhaps that’s for another book or an American author.

27 comments:

Whitney said...

1756, Salzburg, January 27th: Wolfgang Amadeus is born
1761: at the age of 5, Amadeus begins composing
1773: he writes his first piano concerto
1782: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart marries Constance Weber
1784: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart becomes a Freemason
1791: Mozart composes The Magic Flute
On December 5th of that same year, Mozart dies
1985: Austrian rock singer Falco records…

Whitney said...

Who controls the British crown? Who keeps the metric system down? We do, we do!
Who keeps Atlantis off the maps? Who keeps the Martians under wraps? We do, we do!
Who holds back the electric car? Who makes Steve Guttenberg a star? We do, we do!
Who robs cavefish of their sight? Who rigs every Oscar night? We do, we do!

Naturally, the Stonecutters come to mind...

zman said...

Whither George Mason?

rob said...

i ran out of space for pics. gheorghe mason was next on the list.

OBX dave said...

A nugget in the book that I didn't include, cuz the post was already too long and I couldn't easily weave it: a huge, five-day fire in 1666 gutted London. The grandest and most notable part of the decades-long rebuilding process was 51 new churches and cathedrals throughout the city, all made of stone and brick.

The architect and driving force behind the new church effort: Sir Christopher Wren. He and his son and eventual partner, CW Jr, weren't stone masons themselves, but were what's called Free and Accepted Masons -- men accepted into the order who weren't craftsmen, but embodied the qualities the membership sought.

The Wren Building at W&M was built between 1695-1700. The London church effort mostly concluded by 1708, with the completion of St. Paul's Cathedral. And this from Dickie: "As well as being a genius, Sir Christopher Wren was by all accounts a very nice man. Mild of temperament, he was loyal to his friends, dedicated to his job and utterly untainted by corruption -- which in eighteenth-century England was little short of saintly."

rob said...

“…and that’s why the college of william and mary’s sports teams are known as the wrens.”

zman said...

"And that's why the College of William & Mary's mascot is a griffin."

rob said...

turns out it's gonna be historical movements week at g:tb. watch this space.

Whitney said...

I just walked by a dude with a t-shirt that just says, “MASON.” Timely, dude.

Whitney said...

And my doctor’s office parking garage takes cash or checks. It’s 2023. Cash or checks only? Please try a little harder. All of Busch Gardens is cash-free these days. (Oh, and they, uh, don’t take those things called “checks,” either.) There are like thousands of points of sale in that park. There’s one booth in this garage. Get it together!!

zman said...

Shouldn't the doctor's office promote contactless transactions? I took zson to the doctor a while ago and tried to make the $10 copay in cash, they wouldn't take it. They probably knew I blew my nose on it before we came inside.

zman said...

The shirt should say Mason and I hope it was a law studen. They renamed the law school "Antonin Scalia School of Law" and had to backtrack when the internet exploded in laughter at "ASS Law" and "ASSoL." Now it's Antonin Scalia Law School and they call it Scalia Law, all of which is nonsense particularly given the school's fondness for conservatism, originalism, textualism, and all manner of old timey isms. It should be Mason Law, named after the Founding Father from Fairfax.

Danimal said...

who knew? almost exactly a week ago at this time, since we're talking scotland and all, i stood on the castle ruins of where robert the bruce was thought to be born in turnberry. it's a shame he started his life prior to the freemason's time, as their isn't much left. like i said, "ruins". sure, it was about 1,000 years ago but still.

Whitney said...

I paid in coins. Ha ha! Damn them!

Whitney said...

Paste mag has a post about the 30 Best Nirvana Songs. “Smells Like Teen Spirit” comes in at Number 10.

Balls, Paste. Balls.

rob said...

that’s so paste. contrarian for the sake of being contrarian.

rootsminer said...

I once played in a duo that got hired to play an installation ceremony for a sub sector of the masons. It was weird to us, and probably even weirder for them.

zman said...

Oh, you want controversy?

https://www.avclub.com/50-greatest-music-videos-ranked-1850820669

rob said...

so here's a wild, wacky story. did a peloton strength workout with jess sims this afternoon (my ass was properly kicked). it was recorded on sunday, and during the session she mentioned several times that she'd just flown back from boulder, where she'd been at the colorado football game. i assumed she was a prime fan, or a colorado grad, or some such.

i ghooghled her to learn that it wasn't that at all. turns out she does sports reporting work in addition to fitness instruction, and that she was there as part of the espn gameday crew. WHERE SHE DID A FEATURE AT A LOCAL RESTAURANT THAT PROMINENTLY FEATURED MY KID. circle of life, so something. quite random.

rob said...

thriller is hands down the best music video ever, and sabotage is number two. and that's all i've got to say about that.

rootsminer said...

What album since Thriller has had anywhere near that level of cultural impact?

rob said...

smells like teen spirit, arguably.

zman said...

Play It For A Long Time

zman said...

I think Take On Me could be number two behind Thriller but Thriller seems like number one, hands down. I think they were like "hey, we need a Beyonce video" and I watched the Single Ladies video and it's just Beyonce dancing with two backup dancers. It's no different from anything Paula Abdul ever did.

rob said...

i think that's dead on, z. beyonce's 'formation' video goes harrrd: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDZJPJV__bQ. not knowing about that is criminal in the context of a top 50.

rob said...

my wife has earned a college football 'top fan' badge from espn on facebook. this is basically unfathomable.

Mark said...

Jess Sims is the only thing that's interested my wife in watching Gameday in the history of ever. She still doesn't really watch but will occasionally mention something that happened (example: the Jordans Jess was wearing during week 1) on Gameday now. Progress, I guess.