"In the
Forefront, Spreading Light" SCRL--JA 1993
UTAH MASONS
AMONG THE MORMONS
By Mervin B. Hogan,
member Southern California Research Lodge
The
secret of Masonry is to keep a secret.
- Joseph Smith,
Jr., History of the Church, Vol. 6 p. 59.
The early decades of the 1800s in central upstate New York
were, in a number of
ways, the scene of great turmoil, accompanied hy furious
community emotion and
excitement. Politically, Dewitt Clinton caused a number of
significant
achievements:
Digging [of the Erie
Canal] began at Rome, New York, on July 4, 1817. On
October 2, 1825,
salvos of cannon, set within earshot of each other all the
way from Buffalo
to New York, boomed the news of the opening of the entire
waterway to
rejoicing throngs along the banks. They also proved the
starting guns of
one of the greatest and swiftest developments in the
history of
commerce. (1)
The building and operation of the Erie Canal brought
voluminous traffic, with
asociated entrepreneurs and camp-followers. Also great
hordes of migrant
workers with draft animals and conveyances, and heavy earth
moving equipment.
All the personnel had to be housed and fed. As part of the
invading contingent
were the stone masons and other organized groups of building
and construction
workers, all essential to the pursuit and accomplishment of
the project.
The unknown promoters of a new, third political movement,
known as the Anti-
Masonic Party, initiated their enterprise by publishing in
October 1826, at
Batavia, Genesee County, New York, an expose of the rituals
of the three Blue
Lodge degrees, allegedly authored by Captain (?) William
Morgan. This infamous,
so-called author had disappeared from Canandaigua, Ontario
County, New York, on
September 12, 1826. These events were used to trigger at
once a hysterical
mushrooming of an emotional holocaust, and the prompt
appearance of the Anti-
Masonic Party.
In the neighborhood of Palmyra, Ontario County, New York, a
local youth, Joseph
Smith, Jr., was subjected to a series of experiences which
he recounted, thereby
further exciting the local region. A near-illiterate farm
boy, some seventeen
years of age, Joseph received a strikingly mysterious visit
on the night of
September 21, 1828 by a supernal personage named Moroni.
This date was
commemorated annually with a successive visit by the same
heavenly being until
September 22, 1827, when the visitor entrusted a collection
of inscribed metal
plates in a stone box to the young man. From these plates he
later announced
had translated, with supernal assistance, the Book of
Mormon. This unique and
remarkable volume was offered for public sale March 26, 1830
in Palmyra's one
book store.
From the above dates it is evident the appearance and rise
of the Anti-Masonic
hysteria occurred concurrently with Joseph's sustained
series of instructional
visitations by the angel Moroni. Further, these two historic
events were
separated by only a few geographic miles. Canandaigua is
about 12.5 miles
south of Palmyra and some 46 miles east of Batavia, while
Dalmyra is about 48
miles east of Batavia.
The three rituals of the Masonic Symbolic Lodge, and the
four rituals of the
Masonic Royal Arch Chapter, were not only widely distributed
in printed full
form to the public, but each was widely exemplified on
public stages, for an
admission charge and the political promotion of the
Anti-Masonic Party. (2)
It is therefore evident that while Joseph was translating
the Book of Mormon,
he most likely learned from the noisy ambient all the basic,
fundamental tenets
of Masonry as presented ritually to each of the Order's
candidates.
Clearly, for some fifteen years prior to his accepting and
embracing Freemasonry
personally in Nauvoo Lodge on March 15-16, 1842, Joseph
Smitll, Jr. was well
informed and thoroughly conversant as to the true character
- the basic
concepts, principles and goals - of the Ancient Order.
Joseph Smith, Sr. was made a Mason in Ontario Lodge No. 23
at Canandaigua, New
York; being initiated December 26, 1817; passed March 2,
1818; and raised May 7,
1818. His older son Hyrum, born February.9, 1800, in the
early 1800s became a
youthful member of Mount Moriah Lodge No. 112 at Palmyra;
whose personal
record is lacking Masonic details which were doubtless lost
or destroyed due
to the Morgan panic. Joseph Smith, Sr. and Hyrum were two of
the appended
eight witnesses who certified the reality of the metal
plates as the source of
Joseph's translation of the Book of Mormon. They were joined
as a fellow
witness by a younger member of the family, Samuel Harrison
Smith, who became a
Mason at Nauvoo. Hyrum was the Mason of the group of six
founders of the
Mormon Church on April 6, 1930. Two others of those
founders, Joseph Smith,
Jr. and his brother Samuel Harrison Smith, each was made a
Mason later in
Nauvoo Lodge.
This well known documented membership of Joseph, Sr. and
Hyrum in the two
neighboring Lodges is of great consequence. Since Masonry
was widely recognized
by the public at that time as an elite, selective
institution, their membership
openly attests the accepted status and high esteem the Smith
family and its
members held in the minds of those living closest to them
and knew them best
Intrinsically Mormonism is a self-contained theocratic
organization tremendously
dedicated to the acquisition of material wealth and
relentless power in every
sense. The Mormon Church proselytizes aggressively,
enthusiastically and
continuously with militant zeal. Its tenets are based on
unquestioning and
unequivocal acceptance, - robotic obedience; not on free and
unrestricted
thought.
Presidency and the
quorum of Twelve Apostles), who are "the absolute leaders
of Mormonism," advising the members they are not
burdened with having to
think for themselves or examine facts, as these are services
provided them by
the administration. Some sixty years ago the BYU faculty was
bluntly
directed, "You are not hired to think, you are hired to
teach." A few years
later the Church membership received the publishied dictum:
When our leaders
speak, the thinking has been done." Today the
ever-present proclamation has
been simply shortened: "Follow the Prophet."
In sharp contrast, Freemasonry never invites a man, nor asks
him to become a
Mason. In whatever way, or due to whatever causes, the
ancient institution has
appealed to the man, or in some way attracted his favorable
attention, that
awakening must be in the nature of a motivating force
prompting him, of his own
free will and accord, to approach the Lodge personally and
seek membership in
the body on his own initiative. He must petition the Lodge
in writing and he
elected by a unanimous ballot of the brethren. Masonry is
constituted of men
from all religious persuasions and the convictions of each
man's religion are
strictly his private personal concern. The very designation,
"free and accepted
Mason," sharply states two of the principal attributes
of the order. The
individual Mason is obliged to make his own decisions, be
personally responsihle
especially to himself - for his commitments and actions; and
then live with them
and their consequences as time moves on.
Mormonisrn embraced Freemasonry in Illinois with incredible
enthusiasm. When
Joseph Smith added by revelation the temple and temple rites
to its tenets,
Mrmonism hecame a modern-day mystery religion. He announcrd
that the temple
ordinances were the restored Masonic teachings and rites in
the pristine form
which God had bestowed on Adam in the Garden of Eden. Joseph
suggested that
the Masonic Church on earth ought to he in constant
communion with the Masonic
Church in the heavens, thus constituting a universal
brotherhood indeed, not
withstanding its many nations, races, religions,
civilizations and Iawgivers.
A summary of changing circumstances, with the passage of
time implied above, is
recounted by Albert Pike in Morals and Dogma:
Though Masonry is
identical with the Ancient Mysteries, it is so in this
qualified sense; that
it presents but an imperfect image of their
brilliancy: the
ruins only of their grandeur, and a system that has
experienced
progressive alterations, the fruits of social events and
political
circumstances. Upon leaving Egypt, the Mysteries were modified
by the habits of
the different nations among whom they were introduced.
Though originally
more moral and political than religious, they soon became
the heritage, as it
were, of the priests, and essentially religious, though
in reality limiting
the sacerdotal power, by teaching the intelligent laity
the folly and
absurdity of the creeds of the populace. They were therefore
necessarily changed
by the religious systems of the countries into which
they were transplanted....Each
people, at all informed had its Mysteries
.. In the modern
Degrees three things are to he recognized: The image of
primeval times, the
tableau of the efficient causes of the Universe, and
the book in which
are written the morality of all peoples, and the code by
which they must
govern themselves if they would be prosperous. (pp.625-5)
When installing Nauvoo Lodge, Grand Master Abraham Jonas
made Joseph Smith,
Jr. and his immediate administrative associate, Sidney
Rigdon, each a Mason at
sight, March 15-16, 1842.
Birgam Young was the first candldate made a Mason
in Nauvoo Lodge; being initiated April 7, passed april 8 and
raised April 9,
1842, three successive days. Joseph and Brigam were the
initial two of the
first five presidents of the Mormon Church [Smith, Young,
Taylor, Woodruff and
Snow] who were made Masons by that frontier Lodge which
during its brief life,
recorded 1,529 membersb
The climactic crisis and tragedy of the contentions between
the two institutions
were the lynch murders of Joseph and Hyrum Smith, June 27,
1844, at Carthage
Jail, Illinois. Machinations and opportunistic actions
largely brought to pass
the disastrous consequences in that state. The
ill-conceived, unfortunate
conflict and interface were abruptly and totally terminated
when the Mormons
were forced to flee from their mid-west homes and abandoned
possessions. The
depresssing, disheartening exodus was formally initiated
February l5, 1846 by
Brigham Young, when he and associates drove their overburdened
wagons and teams
across the solidly frozen surface of the Mississippi River
into lowa Territory.
It has been commonly known for nearly a century and a half
that vicious friction
has always existed hetween Utah Masonry and the Mormon
Church. The real reasons
for this long standing rancor has rarely even been suspected
or surmised. The
Mormon professor of history at Southern Illinois University
Stanley B.
Kimball, (3) uniquely stated, competently and
authoritatively his relevant
evaluation:
Of the three older
standard treatments, S. H. Goodwin, Mormonism and
Masonry
(Washington, D.C. Masonic Service
Association, 1924); Anthony W.
Ivins, The
Relationships of "Mormonism" and Freemasonry (Salt Lake City:
Deseret News,
1934); and E. Cecil McGavin, Mormonism and Masonry, 4th
enlarged ed. (Salt
Lake City; Bookcraft, 1956), the latter is the least
vacuous and
discursive. Ivins and McGavin knew almost nothing about
Masonry and
Goodwin knew even less about Mormonism. (p. 91)
Actually the purposely clouded situation followed when both
the Masons and the
Mormons, with mutual understanding, each falsified to some
extent its versions
of the account of the situation.
With the Mormons, understandably, their venture into Illinois
Masonry had so
soured them, it was an experience they wished to distance
themselves from as
far as possible. In the new Deseret Territory, the forcibly
driven desert
outcasts held cleeply sustained emotions against the
perverted, ill-directed
Illinois Masonry which had viciously promoted and
participated in the
murders of Joseph and Hyrum. That same enemy had then
continued to add
physical damage, destruction and death to their initial
lethal outrages hy
further devastation in burning down the Mormons' homes,
destroying and
stealing their property, causing and inflicting human death,
and then
literally driving the destitute and suffering victims from
their pillaged land
and burned homes, and farther, until they had been forced
from the very State
of Illinois itself. In their new abode, Brigham faced the
largely individual
burdensome responsibility of establishing and successfully
administering,
literally from sheer rock bottom, a theocratic state in an
unwanted, remote
and totally isolated salt desert. Paralleling his anything
but attractive
colonizing demands were the highly differing complexities of
re-locating the
church he headed and directing it as a viable and expanding
enterprise.
In Utah, the Mormons viewed Masonry as a thing of the past.
They had learned
much as they lived through the harrowing disasters caused by
a perverted
Masonry unleashed into a raging destructive force. They
clearly realized their
pioneering future in the selected outlying region of Old
Mexico needed
Freemasonry like their covered wagons needed a fifth wheel.
Professor Stanley B. Kimball enlightened the situation
considerably when he
stressed a distinctly unique colonizing feature of the
Mormon migration west
(4) with the statement:
It is a curious fact
that the Mormons, who did not want to go west in the
first place, were
the most successful in doing so. Mormons were not
typical westering
Americans; whereas others went for a new identity,
adventure, furs,
land or gold, they were driven west for their religious
beliefs. The
pioneer group [Brigham Young's party of July 24, 1847] was
not concerned just
with getting themselves safely settled but in making the
road easier for
others to follow. Furthermore, the Mormons transplanted a
whole culture, not
just isolated, unrelated individuals. (p. x)
A major complication to understanding the clash hetween Utah
Mormons and the
Utah Masons is largely due to the fact that each
organization has more or
less planned it that way, and then adhered to their
particular course. Each
party has deliberately intended to keep the status quo as it
has been for
nearly a century and a half, and neither side has stated its
real story nor
its whole story. one dodge that served each party well for
decades was, with
tongue in cheek, to imply or infer, there was but one
history of the long
clash: namely, that the beginning of the antagonism
originated in Illinois,
crossed the plains full-blown with Brigham Young and his
pioneers, taking
vigrous root in Utah. Nothing could he further from the
truth.
Immediately granting that the termination of problems
involving human emotions
is anything but explicit and determinable with exactitude,
the
unquestionable fact is: the initial ugly phase of the
Mormon/Masonic
holocaust per se closed sharply and totally with the exodus
of the Mormons
from Illinois. There was no Mormon/Masonic situation
whatsoever in the
Territory of Utah until General Albert Sidney Johnston's
troops arrived
there and their attached Rocky Mountain Lodge No. 305,
AF&AM, chartered by
the Grand Lodge of Missouri. This was the first presence of
organized,
regular Masonry in what is now the State of Utah.
It is not possible to describe the limited and restricted
frugality of the
frontier life which immersed the founders and early Mormons
from the early
1800s in upstate New York, to about 1870 in Utah. Certainly
the coming,
of the railroad brought a new variety of outside influences,
including
Masonry, into Utah s Mormon culture as the calendar opened
on the 1879s.
The Grand Lodge of Utah Free and Accepted Masons was founded
in Salt Lake
City on January 16, 1872.
The first documented anti-Mormonism sponsored by Utah
Masonry is the oft-
published expose of the Mormon Temple Ritual, "Lifting
the Vail. (sic) The
Endowment House Mysteries Fully Explained," n.a. The
Daily Tribune, Sunday
Morning, September 28, 1879. This unsigned presentation was
due to Robert
Newton Baskin, who had been made a life member of Mt. Moriah
Lodge No. 2 on
July 8, 1878. Baskin was a driving, vicious power broker who
exerted
tremendous influence anonymously behind the curtain. He
accomplished his ends
in this manner most successfully.
Hate is a long-shadowed word. Yet it is the very key to
penetrating the shell
of the little understood, but confusingly durable, impasse
binding the
interests of Utah Masonry and the Mormon Church. A sustained
and intimate
Utah residence would likely fail to help one as he seeks the
source of the
omnipresent stress one senses about him in Utah. A few
Mormons and only a
few Masons have grasped an inkling of the factors relating
to the real and
true self-interests which motivate each party, or realize
the unbroken mutual
practice of never acknowledging the existence of the
rationale. The searcher
stands frustrated, since he is unaware the situation is
never laid on the
table, never acknowledged, and never discussed.
One must know the Mormon Church rests on the claim it was
founded in an
atmosphere of the supernatural and the miraculous, and aims
to have that
striking presence pervade the accounts of all events or
circumstances in its
history. From its very beginning, all supposedly scholarly
publications of the
Church have been written under its supervision, or edited by
it, to conform to
its inexorable mandate: nothing will be made public unless
it augments the
positive image of the institution. With this mind-set, the
Church cannot
tolerate any tarnishing of its supernal aura by a shadow
cast by such a
common, ordinary, mortal social entity of the world as
Freemasonry. Hence, its
goal is to expunge any trace of the Ancient Order from every
page of its
history.
Utah Masonry's problem is a deep-seated psychological one.
It stems from the
unique forces and circumstances under which Utah Territory
was colonized. When
the Utah Grand Lodge was organized January 16, 1872, every
member was an
openly declared Mormon hater. This circumstance essentially
held until
January 31, 1984, when the body repealed its continuous,
long-standing,
un-Masonic restriction. In such an intense, enduring
atmosphere of repulsion,
the Utah Masons simply and understandably could not accept
nor adjust to the
established fact that the Joseph Smith family of Palmyra,
New York was an
exemplary Masonic family, and the Mormon Church had its very
birth roots
deeply and firmly planted in quality Masonic soil.