Preston Tower  R.A.C. No. 499   

                                                         

    First Principal}  MEC John Cunningham  


Companions are respectfully reminded that Test Fees for 2011/12 are now due.  Any Companion more than one year in arrears will not be entitled to receive postal billet. Fee 6.00 pounds.

Forget...
Forget the hasty, unkind word: Forget the slander you have heard;
Forget the quarrel and the cause; Forget the whole affair, because,
Forgetting is the only way. Forget the storm of yesterday;
Forget the knocker, and the squeak; Forget the bad day of the week.
Forget you're not a millionaire; Forget the gray streaks in your hair;
Forget to even get the blues -- But don't forget to Pay Your Dues!


Preston Tower Royal Arch No. 499

 

 

Regular Convocation, Thursdays 7.15 pm.                                

 

1st March 2012. PGRAC of M&L. visit.

Tickets for Annual Prize Draw on Thursday 1st March 2012 are now available for distribution.

Provincial Grand Chapter’s Annual Visitation is on Thursday 1st March 2012 and your special support on this occasion would be appreciated.

 

April                Friday 13th at 7pm by Dispensation

 

Special Harmony (‘Cork Degree’ ~ ).

 

 

Friday 13th April                  Cork Degree.   

Fee for new Corks £10.00


Acheson`s Haven Cryptic Council No.376;   

                                                                   

Next meeting will be held on Thursday 29th March 2012 at 7.15pm.

 

We also require several Companions as Stewards to assist at harmony boards.  Please advise recorder if you are available.

 


 

Lodge & Council No. 376

                                                                                        

 


Any Companion interested in ritual working please contact MEFP or any office bearer.

Chapter ties are on sale priced 7 pounds, there`s also a supply of Mark Tokens priced 3 pounds.

                                                                                                                                                                    James Nicol


Office Bearers Preston Tower No. 499

MEZ   MEC     John Cunningham 

     

MEH.             MEC. John Cormack   

MEJ.              MEC. Walter G Thomson  

DEP.Z            MEC. Tommy Thomson  

IPZ.                MEC. Walter G Thomson

SE .                 EC. James Nicol

SN.                 MEC. MEC Gordon G Boyd IPZ                                

Tres.               EC. John Moffat 

1st Soj.           EC. Graeme Nicol PZ      

2nd Soj.          EC. Stuart P Murray  

3rd Soj .          EC. Ian A Sutherland

Doc.               EC. George Wikie PZ

Chaplain .      EC. John McNeil  PZ

Organist.       EC. Robert Hooker PZ

S of W.          EC. Graham S. Crawford

C3rd V.          EC. Brian Ritchie

C 2nd V.         EC. John Smith

C 1st V.          EC. Robert W Irvine

Steward.       EC. John Reynolds


The Book-Worms

 Through and through th' inspir'd leaves,

Ye maggots, make your windings;

But O respect his lordship's taste,

And spare his golden bindings.

Burns 


The Royal Arch

The Royal Arch degree is not native to Scotland, but seems to have been introduced from both Irish and English sources, often Military Lodges, towards the middle of the eighteenth century.  The earliest reference to the degree is at Stirling in 1743.

These Military Lodges introduced many other degrees beyond the Craft, and when the regiments moved on, Lodges in the vicinity sometimes continued to work them.  This situation continued until the end of the eighteenth century.

However, the early Secret Societies Acts caused the Grand Lodge of Scotland, in 1800, to issue a warning to its Lodges against the working of any degrees other than those of Entered Apprentice, Fellow Craft and Master Mason.

Many Lodges heeded the warning and the additional degrees associated with Royal Arch or Templar masonry had to be worked in assemblies separate from the Lodge. The feeling grew amongst the Brethren that these assemblies should be legitimised in some way.  A few obtained Charters from the Grand Encampment of Ireland.  Others petitioned the Templar Grand Body in England and in 1810, under the patronage of the Duke of Kent, the Royal Grand Conclave of Scotland was chartered and Alexander Deuchar appointed its first Grand Master.

This Royal Grand Conclave was empowered to grant Charters for the conferring of the Knight Templar grades upon those qualified as Royal Arch Masons.  Deuchar soon realised that it was unsatisfactory to have the first three degrees and the Knight Templar grades under proper control but not the intermediate, qualifying, degrees of the Royal Arch.

In 1815 he convened a special committee, and all bodies in Scotland known to be working the Royal Arch degrees were contacted, with a view to forming a Grand Body to exercise proper control.  All three Home Grand Lodges were consulted, so as not to infringe upon their interests.  Advice was sought, in particular, from England where the United Grand Lodge of England had recently been formed, and where the status of the Royal Arch degree had been acknowledged, as the completion of the third degree.

The Earl of Sussex was supportive, and advised Deuchar to make every effort to persuade the Grand Lodge of Scotland to adopt a similar stance, and take the Royal Arch under its wing.  However, after an initially encouraging reply from the Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of Scotland, the matter became inextricably bogged down in Committee.

Eventually a meeting of interested Chapters could be delayed no longer and, in August 1817, representatives of 34 Chapters met in Edinburgh and the Supreme Grand Royal Arch Chapter of Scotland was erected and consecrated. Charters were issued, and the new Grand Body grew slowly but steadily, and gradually all bodies working the Royal Arch degree in Scotland came under its control.

At its peak, in the 1960's, the Supreme Grand Royal Arch Chapter of Scotland had some 650 active Chapters, many of which subsequently left to form Supreme Grand Royal Arch Chapters of their own, as happened for example in Israel and New South Wales.

There are, currently, some 470 active Chapters, 220 of which are overseas.