May 2011 News
Crayford Lodge News
May
2011
Volume 12 Issue 3
Web Site. www.crayfordlodge.org.uk
Editorial
We thank W.Bro Mel for being our Master for the last
two years. He did an excellent job. Brother James has
a lot to live up to but we know he is capable of the
task
We are thinking of a
Ladies Festival Weekend away
at Selsdon Park Hotel in March or April next year
Cost will be £156 each
We are thinking of setting up a Standing Order Facility (Payment over 10 months.)
126 Addington Road Sanderstead, South Croydon, CR2 8YA
Selsdon Park Hotel is a magnificent property set in over 200 acres of breathtaking parkland. A Neo-Jacobean building offering the most up to date conference, team building, wedding and banqueting facilities. Only 13 miles from central London with wonderful views of the North Surrey Downs.
Enjoy our Sauna or heated indoor pool and, during the summer months, our heated outdoor pool. With an 18-hole championship golf course, as well as professional tuition available, you shall be in golf heaven.
Whether you chose a Standard, a Suite or a room with breathtaking views of the surrounding countryside, you'll enjoy one of the most memorable stays in the UK.
Programme for 2011
May Installation
Programme for next season to be agreed
Social events
20th May Bowls Game Vs Lullingstone Lodge with Fish and Chip Supper
3rd June. Race Night.
22nd July. Medway Boat Trip
July or August Greek Meal at Welling
4th November Visit to Prestwick Scotland for 3rd Degree
Names and cash at May meeting please. Also please
show your interest for next Ladies Festival
Bowls game v Lullingstone
Lodge
The Bowls Game against Lullingstone Lodge will be
held on Friday 20th May at 6.00pm at Hesketh Park
Bowls Club, Dartford.
Come along and support
your Lodge.
Friends and Relatives Welcome for
the Fish and Chip Supper after.
If interested
contact Roy or Brian
Some attended practice at Hesketh Park on
Saturday 16th
April
Provincial
Service of Thanksgiving
8th
May 2011
The RW Provincial Grand Master, together with his
deputies and brethren of the Province, their families
and friends, are invited to Choral Evensong at
Rochester Cathedral on Sunday 8 May 2011 at 3.15pm.
Masonic Regalia will not be worn on this occasion.
Please come along to support the Province.
__________________________________________________________________________
Steven
Butler thanks
the Lodge and individual members for their
contribution to his London Marathon Run for the
British Heart Foundation.
His time was 3 hrs 53 minutes and he raised £1440.00
Kids at
Masonic Home
Easter Egg Hunt at West Kent Province Duke of Kent
Court
The Way Forward 2011
Freemasonry
- What’s in it for you?
When: Wednesday 18 May 2011
Where: Oakley
House, Bromley
Target audience:
initiates/potential new members
In this modern world where potential new members find
it hard to juggle the demands of the day job, home
life and a social calendar - why join Freemasonry and
give up more of that precious time?
This seminar will look at where Freemasonry can sit
in this busy world and how it can help with that work
/ life balance we are all struggling to achieve. How
it can broaden your social life by building
friendships with others in all walks of life. How it
can give purpose by becoming active in fundraising
for charity and how it will provide that feel good
factor by helping those in need.
Masonic
Fire
Bro.
Yoshio Washizu wrote this very interesting article on
Masonic "FIRE" or toasts that was published in Vol
111, 1998 Ars Quatuor Coronatorum Transactions. As
you will see from the article (which we had to
condense because of space limitations), Masonic
toasting after banquets is a tradition, virtually,
"time immemorial."
Masonic "fire" is an old custom, which may be derived
from that of firing after toasts. Our Masonic
ancestors to suit their needs modified the original
practice.
The custom of gunfire salutes after toasts already
existed in the 17th century. Dr. Richard Kuerden (or
Jackson) MD (1623-6900?) of Preston in Lancashire,
compiled a Brief Description of the Borough and Town
of Preston (1682-6, in which he described a
celebration of the Preston Gild Merchant thus:
"...The Mayor, with his great attendance is received
in the streets by his guards of Souldiers and
Company’s of Trade, he makes his procession to
the Church gate bans, where he and his attendance are
entertained with a speech made by one of the chief
Scholars of the School, a Barrel or Hogshead of nappy
Ale standing close by the Barrs is broached, and a
glass offered to the Mayor, who begins a good
prosperous health to the King, afterwards to the
Queen, the Nobility and Gentry having pledged the
same; at each health begun by Mr. Mayor, it is
attended with a volley of shott from the musketiers
attending; the country people there present drinking
of the remainder."
Here is another example of the 17thcentury custom of
toasting associated with gunfire. In February 1694
Captain Thomas Phillips, in his account of the voyage
of the ship Hannibal, referred to a similar practice
thus:
"In this garden [of Cape Coast Castle on the West
Coast of Africa] Captain Shirley and I entertained
the agents, factors, and other officers of the castle
at dinner before our departure... where we enjoyed
ourselves plentifully, having each of us six of our
quarter-deck guns brought ashore, with powder,
&c., and our gunners to ply them; which they did
to purpose, _ and made them roar merrily, firing
eleven at every health."
Two months later Phillips and some other officers
dined with the native chief who occupied
Christiansborg Castle, having captured it from the
Danes. When they were ascended, the Chief drank to
them in a glass of brandy and all the guns in the
fort were discharged. After dinner he "drank the king
of England's, the African company's, and our own
health’s frequently, with vollies of
cannon."
Some believe, however, that such a practice has
nothing to do with the origin of the term, Masonic
"fire," but that it is rather the conversion into
reality of what is really a metaphor.
It is unknown exactly when Masonic "fire" started.
Anderson recorded in his New Book of Constitutions
(1738) that Desaguliers, the newly installed Grand
Master, "revived the old regular and peculiar Toasts
or Health’s of the Free Masons" on June 24,
1719. We do not know what those "old regular and
peculiar Toasts" were like and whether or not the
"firing" was practiced then. It is in French
exposures published in the late 1730s and the early
1740s that we find the earliest reference to the
practice of Masonic "fire." For example, here is an
extract from the Reception d'un FreyMaCon (1737):
"...This ceremony [initiation] ended, & this
explanation given, the Candidate is called Brother,
& they seat themselves at Table, where they
drink, with the permission of the Worshipful Grand
Master [the Will.] to the health of the new Brother.
Each has his Bottle before him; when they want to
drink, they say, give the Powder, everyone rises, the
Grand Master says, charge; the Powder, which is the
Wine, is poured into the, glass; the Grand Master
says, lay your hands to your firelocks [armes], and
they drink to the health of the Brother, carrying the
glass to the mouth in three movements; after which,
& before replacing the glass on the Table, it is
carried to the left breast, then to the right, &
then forwards, all in three movements, & in three
movements it is set down perpendicularly on the
Table, they clap their hands three times & each
of them cries three times Vivat."
On the other hand, the earliest reference to such a
practice in England is contained in Three Distinct
Knocks (1760), from which the following description
is taken:
"Every Man has a Glass set him, and a large Bowl of
Punch, or what they like, is set in the Center of the
Table; and the senior Deacon charges (as they call
it) in the North and East, and the junior Deacon in
the South and West; for it is their duty to do so,
i.e., to fill all the Glasses.
Then the Master takes up his Glass, and gives a Toast
to the King and the Craft, with Three Times Three in
the Prentice's; and they all say Ditto, and drink all
together, minding the Master's Motion: They do the
same with the empty Glass that he doth; that is, he
draws it across his Throat Three Times... and then
makes Three Offers to put it down; At the third, they
all set their Glasses down together, which they call
`firing': Then they hold the Left-hand Breast-high,
and clap Nine Times with the Right, their Foot going
at the same Time: When this is done, they all sit
down."
The same source notes that the reason for their
drinking three times three is:
"...Because there were antiently but Three Words,
Three Signs and Three Gripes; but there have been
Three added, viz. The Grand Sign of a Master, the
Pass-Gripe of a Fellow-Craft, and Pass-Word, which is
Twelve in all for you to remember, viz. The Word,
Sign and Gripe of an entered Apprentice is Three: The
Word, Sign, Gripe, Pass-Gripe and Pass-Word of a
Fellow-Craft is Five; And the Master hath Four, viz.
The Sign, the Grand Sign, the Gripe and Word, which
is Twelve."
However, just because the earliest reference to
Masonic "fire" is found in French exposure does not
mean necessarily that the custom originated in
France. No reference is made to this custom in Samuel
Prichard's Masonry Dissected published in 1730.
During the next 30 years few exposures were published
in England-perhaps partly because of the great
popularity of Prichard's booklet. There is no telling
if Masonic "fire" was in practice in England during
that period. It could have been practiced in England
first and then exported to France. Or it could have
started in France and English freemasons adopted it
later. No definite conclusion can be drawn because
there are insufficient records available on this
matter.
Masonic "fire" with Brethren crashing down
thick-based drinking glasses on the table was once a
common practice.
The use of such firing glasses is now much less
common, however, and the "fire" is more usually
accompanied by the Brethren clapping their hands
instead.
There is no official form of giving "fire."
Basically, it is a variation of ".point-left-right"
(PLR) followed by the "three times three" hand
clapping-a typical "fire" procedure being
PLR, PLR, PLR, one
(point to the left), two (point to the right), one
clap, short pause and three short claps followed by
another set of three short claps.
Various theories have been suggested about the origin
of the PLR. Listing several different theories, e.g.,
the Sign of the Cross made by a clergyman in
benediction over food or drink, the "Hammer of Thor"
sign used in Scandinavia in olden times to appease
the great God, the motions made by a bricklayer when
lifting cement with his trowel and a royal salute of
21 guns, Carr concluded none of them can be
considered its origin and that such movements rather
originate from one of the early modes of recognition.
Some doubt there is any significance or symbolical
meaning in Masonic "fire" itself and believe it is a
survival of a convivial custom originally carried out
as a cheerful, boisterous routine.
The way Masonic "fire" is given varies widely in
different localities. Carr recalled an Australian
freemason's description of several different forms of
"fire" in use in that country.
"So
there are many variations of Masonic "fire." It
cannot be said that a certain way of "firing" is the
only correct way and that any other way is incorrect.
It is a matter of local custom and the particular
lodge."