Masons Became
Leaders in Texas, El Paso
By Rita Arroyo and Beth Tucker
All but four of the signers of the Declaration of Independence and 32 of the
55 members of the Constitutional Convention were Masons. George Washington was a
Mason as were 14 other presidents. George W. Bush used Washington's Masonic
Bible in January 2001 when he took his oath of office. It is the oldest
fraternity in the world, with over 4.75 million Masons worldwide, and over 900
lodges in Texas.
Freemasons, as they are also called, were instrumental
to the establishment of El Paso and contributed to
education, medical care and business. Yet few non-members
know much about the society, commonly believed to be the
largest secret society in the world.
Freemasonry teaches a moral philosophy of life. Masons
are dedicated to becoming better men, improving themselves
and the quality of life of their community, and in so doing
becoming wiser and happier. Members achieve these lofty
goals by means of a series of moral instructions taught,
according to ancient usage, by symbols, allegorical figures
and lectures.
Although actual origins have been lost in time, some
historians such as G. Albert Mackey claim that the ancient
order dates back to the Knights Templar, an order of
Christian warrior monks. They were founded after the First
Crusade in 1118 to protect pilgrims visiting Palestine.
Their noble cause of joining swords, strength and lives to
defend the Christian faith soon garnered a tremendous
following and great wealth in the form of contributions from
noble European families. They formed an effective banking
system, transferring money and supplies to Palestine.
The bankrupt French king, Philip the IV, became envious
of the Templars' power and wealth. He appointed Pope Clement
V and in 1307 together they conspired to have the Templars
arrested, stripped of their riches and charged with heresy
and blasphemy.
The Pope used two Templars who had been expelled from the
order to testify against their brothers in exchange for
their freedom. Based on this testimony, Jacques de Molay,
the Grand Master of the Knights Templars, was burned at the
stake in front of the Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris.
Many Templars sought refuge in England, where the papal
edict was not immediately enforced. Some historians believe
that these fugitives could have used stonework and its
symbols as a cover, much like early Christians used the sign
of the fish for identification. The Templars may have
communicated with hand signals and grips as a means of
protection. Masons today still maintain such secret signs
and passwords.
L. Dumenil writes that Masons suffered more setbacks
during the Spanish Inquisition in 1478 and again in 1738
when Pope Clement XII forbade Catholics to become Masons
under penalty of excommunication. This rift between the
Catholic Church and Masons forced many to become
Protestants.
Mackey says that Freemasonry rituals trace their
beginnings back to the building of King Solomon's Temple and
actual stone, or operative, masons and their tools. Stone
masons were ranked by degrees of proficiency from Entered
Apprentice to Fellow Craft to Master Mason, the three
degrees of membership still used by Masons.
In the Middle Ages, masons were incorporated into guilds
or companies. Later masons became "freemasons," independent
of any company or guild. As construction of cathedrals
slowed, the English Grand Lodge formed in London in 1717,
admitting men from other professions. Similar lodges
developed in Scotland and Ireland.
These groups gave birth to Speculative or Philosophical
Masonry. The men converted tools at one time used by the
masons to build cathedrals and other buildings into
instruments for use in shaping their own morality. During
this Masonic Revival in Britain, Masonry evolved and adopted
a cosmopolitan and tolerant rule, accepting men of different
nationalities and ethnic backgrounds. This rule required of
its members a belief in only one God, the validity of the
Holy Scriptures and faith in the immortality of the soul.
By 1730, Freemasonry made its first appearance in
America when Daniel Coxe was named Grand Master of the Lodge
of Pennsylvania. A lodge in Boston also organized in that
year. All colonists involved in the Boston Tea Party were
Masons.
Freemasonry made its debut in Texas, on February 11,
1828, at San Felipe on the Brazos River. Present at this
meeting was Stephen F. Austin, the "Father of Texas." A
petition to establish a lodge in Texas was made to the Grand
York Lodge of Mexico, then politically divided. The Scottish
Lodges were comprised of members of the aristocracy who
favored Spanish rule, while the York Masons opposed it.
Because civil war broke out in Mexico, the application by
Austin and others was ignored.
The Grand Master of Louisiana approved the first Texas
lodge in Texas in 1835 in Brazoria, Texas. The story exists
that during Texas' fight for independence from Mexico,
General Sam Houston, a Mason, spared Mexican General Santa
Ana's life after recognizing him as a brother Mason.
Master Masons held a convention in Houston in 1837 and
began the Grand Lodge of the Republic of Texas. When the
United States annexed Texas in 1845, the name reverted to
the Grand Lodge of Texas. During the U.S.-Mexican War,
Colonel Doniphan, commander of the Missouri volunteers,
captured the El Paso-Juárez area. Doniphan's troops had a
Masonic charter for a lodge that was probably lost or
destroyed during ensuing battles.
On January 21, 1854, Lodge 130 was founded in San
Elizario, the county seat at that time. This was one of the
first lodges to appear on the Western frontier, 600 miles
from the closest one in San Antonio.
El Paso Lodge meetings were suspended between 1859 and
1866 during the Civil War. Lodge 130 resumed work in July
1866, and a formal meeting was held at the Grand Central
Hotel. During the following years, El Paso Lodge 130 rented
different places in which to hold its meetings until they
could erect a one-story adobe building at San Antonio and
Mesa Streets.
The history of the El Paso Lodge is intertwined with the
history of the city. In 1870, judges and Masons Gaylord Judd
Clarke and A.J. Fountain founded St. Clement's Episcopal
Mission, the first Protestant church in the county.
El Paso Masons first met at Judge Simeon Hart's
residence, or Hart's Mill. Journalist Ken Flynn says Hart's
flour mill was probably "the first real industry on the
America side of the river." Parts of Hart's mill and
residence are preserved as historical landmarks and are now
home to La Hacienda Restaurant. Hart was also one of the
founders of the El Paso Times.
For several years, Masons owned the Ralston Hospital at
Five Points until they decided to support the new Providence
Memorial Hospital. Later they built the Masonic Hospital, in
service until the mid 1940s.
Members of the Lodge also contributed to the economy of
El Paso. Benjamin Dowell set up a combination grocery store,
saloon and billiards hall, and his business also became the
city's first official post office. Joseph Magoffin, who,
like Dowell, was mayor of El Paso, served as Collector of
Customs. His home is now a state park. Masons Maury C.
Edwards and O.T. Bassett were associated with the lumber
business for years.
Masons helped establish the public education system in
El Paso. In 1870, M.A. Jones, a Mason and lawyer, set up a
day school in his law office where he taught American and
Mexican children to read and write. In 1882, the school
board was formally organized, with Edward C. Pew, Joseph
Magoffin and Samuel Freudenthal, all Masons, serving as
members. In the 1800s, Masons as a group lobbied for the
establishment of state supported education and federal land
grant colleges.
While most Masons are members of the three
aforementioned levels, others advance through about 100
other rites composed of 1,000 higher degrees worldwide. The
two most popular rites in the United States are the Scottish
that awards 33 degrees and the York that awards 10,
including the Order of Knights Templar, similar to the
highest degree Scottish Rite Mason. Many African-Americans
belong to the Prince Hall Grand Lodge.
Other orders include the Veiled Prophets of the
Enchanted Realm (the fraternal fun order for Blue Lodge
Masons) and the Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the
Mystic Shrine. The latter are thirty-second degree Masons
called Shriners, noted for burn institutes and hospitals for
crippled children. Two such charities are the Texas Scottish
Rite Hospital for Crippled Children in Dallas and the
Shriners Burns Institute in Galveston.
Shriners also are identifiable by antics in their tiny
cars during community parades and their sponsorship of the
Shrine Circus. The circus raises money for the hospitals,
and free seats are given to local needy children.
Charity is at the heart of Masonic teachings of growth
and development of individuals. Compassion, honor and
integrity unite Masons in a brotherhood also known for its
emphasis on fellowship. Masonic organizations for women
include the Order of Eastern Star and Amaranth. Girls may
join Rainbow, Job's Daughters, Triangle or Constellation and
boys enter DeMolay.
Like other fraternal societies, the Masons use symbols
and rituals. The most widely known symbol is the Square and
Compasses, with the former representing things of the earth
as well as honor, integrity and truthfulness, and the latter
symbolizing things of the spirit, including the importance
of self-control. The G in the middle of the symbol stands
for geometry, the science which the ancients believed most
revealed the glory of God and His works.
Over the centuries, the Masons have encountered much
opposition. Masons have never been permitted in some
Catholic countries such as Spain, and the Church still
discourages its members from joining the order. The Masons
do not bar Catholics, however, and many lodges are active in
Latin America. In the United States, short-lived opposition
came in the form of the political anti-Masonic party
established in 1828 that nominated William Wirt to run for
president against Andrew Jackson. Jackson won handily over
Wirt, ironically himself a Mason. The party lasted only
until 1834.
Masons have done much to influence the nation, the state
of Texas and El Paso. Although most fraternal organizations
have lost membership in the past few decades, Grand Lodges
across the country are working to make the organization more
appealing to prospective members.
top
|