Grand Masters of the United Grand Lodge of England [ugle] and of Scotland



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UGLE Grand Masters & DGMs


and Fellows of the Royal Society [FRS] - 1719-1741

AQC Vol. 113 – 2000, pg. 93

Remarks by Bro. Bruce G. Hogg

“based very largely on . . . the tables prepared by Clarke, J. R., as Appendices I and III in his paper



The Royal Society and Early Grand Lodge Freemasonry, AQC 80, 1967, pp. 110-119 . . .”

See also, Lomas, Robert, Freemasonry and the Birth of Modern Science, Barnes & Nobles Books, New York. 2002.


Note: The following extract from Trevor Stewart’s ‘dissertation’ on Freemasonry and Hermeticism

is printed here to lend some general background material for consideration [re: http://sric-canada.org/stewartintro.html ]. Unfortunately, Bro. Steward provides no details as to the names of the members alluded to below.


. . . Attention has been drawn from time to time to the fact that at any one time during the first half of the 18th century at least 25% of the Fellows of the Royal Society were freemasons. According to the 1723 masonic membership List, 40 Fellows (i.e., 25% of the total membership of the Royal Society) belonged to London Lodges. Of these, 23 were Fellows before their Initiations and 16 were elected to their Fellowships after their Initiations. Of the former sub-group, 13 had been elected before the ‘re-founding’ of the Grand Lodge in June 1717. Examination of the 1723 List shows that 32 of these 40 Fellows still retained their membership of their Lodges and it also shows that a further 27 had been initiated before them. Of this latter ‘intake’, 16 had been elected to their Fellowships before their Initiations and 11 were elected after that. By 1725, 59 Fellows (i.e., still 25% of the Society’s total membership!) were freemasons. Examination of the Lists for 1723, 1725 and 1730 shows that nine Fellows continued their membership of their various Lodges throughout the decade. It has also been noted that these Fellows were members of at least 29 different Lodges that worked mostly in or around the central London area. Therefore, it has been assumed that this ‘elite’ membership was not concentrated in just a few Lodges; nor were they simply responding to the novelty of belonging to a new institution; nor to the social cachet of belonging (when it may have been perceived that some important noblemen had accepted the titular leadership of it in successive years). The assumption is that there must have been something more than the mere re-enactment of medieval builders’ ceremonies which attracted these distinguished men who contributed to the scientific literature of the nation.

However, before too much weight is placed on this remarkable incidence of Fellows of the Royal Society as freemasons, the morphology of Royal Society membership itself. For instance, it is by no means certain what kind of sample the membership of the Society provides. While it may be accepted that the Society did form some kind of English elite in the field of ‘scientific investigation’, it remains unclear even to this date what precise relationship its membership bore to the contemporary English scientific community generally and no one has yet been able to answer the following crucial and related questions:



  1. What prompted some scientific enthusiasts to join the Society while others did not accept membership?

  2. To what extent could membership be due to motives that had nothing to do with an interest/skill in science?

It is beginning to emerge that less formal and even accidental factors limited recruitment to the Society and these produced thereby both positive and negative distortions in the membership. These distortions are important factors in assessing the relationship between the Society’s membership and the general phenomenon of scientific enthusiasm in late Stuart England. It is now clear that in its early days the Royal Society was never central to the scientific activities of those many investigators who were based elsewhere in the provinces. Furthermore, judging from the elaborate genealogical links delineated in the data collected assiduously by William Bullock in the late 1820s, there are many instances when the only apparent reason for someone joining the Royal Society seems to have been the candidates’ social and/or family connections with those who were already members. Many of its aristocratic recruits were valued as much for the social eminence as for their enthusiasm and the inclusion of those names in the published membership lists gave much-needed testimony to the Society’s espousal of the ‘new science’ as well as lending a certain social rose. Indeed, there is every reason now to suspect that these printed sheets were used deliberately as roselytizing propaganda by the Society and that there may well have been considerable truth in the common contemporary and repeated complaint that the Fellows came to the meetings ‘only as to a play to amuse themselves for an hour or so’. While analysis of the Society’s membership cannot illustrate fully the social, political or religious affiliations of science, nevertheless it may provide a partial illustration of the social, political or religious affiliations of the supporters of the Royal Society in London – which is something quite different. Moreover, the same sort of caveat can be made about not attributing too much significance to the involvement of 25% of the Fellows in Freemasonry. If a quarter of the Society’s members became freemasons because they judged that there was something worthwhile pursing in the Lodges’ activities, what does that say about the remaining 75% who did not become freemasons?

That said, the Royal Society did have a sustained interest in Hermeticism in its early decades. Prominent members then were as much exercised by the underlying mystical principles and harmonies of the perceived universe as they were about furthering practical experimentation. In 1667, for example, the Society issued several alchemical and ‘Hermetic’ questionnaires to foreign correspondents to solicit their views and accumulate records of their experiences. Lynn Thorndike’s analysis of the first 20 volumes of the Society’s Philosophical Transactions revealed that there was a persistent preoccupation in Hermeticism over several generations in common with members of other such Societies in Europe and Keith Hutchinson has shown that there were continuing underlying Hermetic qualities in the Scientific Revolution. In the Society’s library there are meticulous MSS copies of geometric drawings taken directly from Perspectiva Corporum Regulatium, a book published in 1568 by Wenzel Jamnitzer. He was a distinguished member of a secretive circle of scholars, the Rosenkreizern, which flourished in Nurnberg in the early decades of the 17th century. The same clandestine association had no less a personage than Gottfried Leibniz (1646-1716), one of the most original ‘scientific’ thinkers of the age, as its secretary. Another of its prominent members, Johann Wulfer, emigrated to London in the latter part of the same century and became a close associate of four Fellows of the Royal Society: Boyle, Pell, Oldenberg and Haak. Another Rosicrucian group, called Aufrichtige Geselleschaft von der Tanne, flourished in Strasbourg from 1633. One of its leading proponents, Georg Rudolph Weckherlin (1584-1653), also came to live in London and after 1642 was employed in several key Chancery posts. He became a close friend of Hartlib and Pell. A third such group, the Collegium Philosophicum (or Societas Ereunetica) was founded in Rostock in 1619 by Joachim Junge (1587-1657). He was also a close associate of Hartlib. Likewise, Comenius, who was connected closely with Zesen, the founder of the Drei Rosen group in Hamburg, came to reside is London in 1641 at the express invitation of Hartlib and his Oxford circle. There were several other such sustained connections among English ‘scientific revolutionaries’ with Continental ‘Rosicrucianism’ at that time – particularly among those various English groups that were not centred on Oxford and London – and therefore, those Hermetic doctrines espoused by the Continental sources may have percolated into early speculative Freemasonry via the Royal Society.

----------------------
Many writers, regrettably, give the titles only; the underlined names are not given in Bro. Hogg’s AQC paper:
GM Age Title

1719 36 Desaguliers, John T [1683-1744] LLD FRS 1714



  1. c. 31 Montagu, John, [1688/90-1749] 2nd Duke of Montagu [with note] . . . . . FRS 1718

1723 28 Scott, Francis, [1695-1751] Earl of Dalkeith (1732 2nd Duke of Buccleuch) FRS 1724

1724-25 23 Lennox, Charles, [1710*-50] 2nd Duke of Richmond (and Lennox) FRS 1724

1726-27 39 Hamilton, James, [1686-1744] Lord Paisley (1734 7th Earl of Abercorn) FRS 1715

1727-28 34 Hare, Henry, [1693-1749] 3rd Lord Coleraine FRS 1730

1731 33 Coke, Thomas, [1697-1759] Lord Lovell [later [1744] 1st Earl of Leicester) FRS 1735

1733 30 Lyon, James, [1702-1735] 7th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne FRS 1732

1734 31 Lindsay, John, [1702-1749] 20th Earl of Crawford (4th Earl of Lindsay) FRS 1732

1736 31 Campbell, John, [1705-1782] 4th Earl of Loudoun FRS 1737

1737 21 Bligh, Edward, [1715-1747] 2nd Earl of Darnley FRS 1738

1739 c. 22 Raymond, Robert, [c. 1717-56] 2nd Lord Raymond FRS 1740

1741 c. 39 Douglas, James, [1701-1768] 14th Earl of Morton (GMM of Scotland 1739) FRS 1733

President of the Royal Society 1764-68


*should be b. 18 May 1701

No. Year[s] Name Title[s] FRS



1

2



3

4

5



6

7

8



9

10

11



12

13

14



15

16

17



18

19

20



21

22
23

24

25

26



27

28

29



30

31

32


33

34

35



36

37

38



38a

39

39a



39

40
40a

40b
41

42
43

44

45

46



47

48

49



A1

A2

A3



A4

A5

A6



A7

A8

A9



A10

1717


1718

1719


1720

1721


1722-23

1723


1724-25

1726-27


1727

1728


1728

1729-30


1731

1732


1732

1733


1734

1735


1736

1737


1738
1739

1740


1741-42

1742-43


1744-45

1745-46


1747-52

1752-53


1754-57

1757-61
1762-64

1764-66

1767-72


1772-76

1777-82


1782-90

1782-89*


1790

1790-1813*

1792-1813
1813
1813-43

1834-38*


1835

1839-40*


1841-43*

1844-70


1870-74
1874-1901

1874-90*


1891-98*

1898-1908*

1908*

1901-39


1939-42

1942-47


1947-50

1951-67


1967-

1753


1754-56

1756-60


1760-65

1766-70


1771-74

1775-81?


1783-91

1791-1813

1813



Premier Grand Lodge

Sayer, Anthony [Antony]

Payne, George Esq.

Desaguliers, Rev. John Theophilus

Payne, George Esq.

Montagu, John

Wharton, Philip

Scott, Francis

Lennox, Charles

Hamilton, James

O’Brien, William

Hare, Henry

King, James

Howard, Thomas

Coke, Thomas

Browne, Anthony [resigned to Lord Teynham]

Roper, Henry

Lyon, James

Lindsay, John

Thynne, Thomas

Campbell, John

Bligh, Edward

Brydges, James
Raymond, Robert

Keith, John

Douglas, James

Ward, John

Lyon, Thomas [2]

Cranston or Cranstoun, James

Byron, William

Proby, John

Brydges, James

Douglas, Sholto


Shirley, Washington

Blayney or Blaney, Lt. Gen. Cadwallader

Somerset, Henry

Petre, Robert Edward (1742-1801) [3]

Montagu, George

Hanover, HRH Henry Frederick

Howard, Kenneth Alexander (1767-1845)

Hanover, George (IV) Augustus Frederick

Rawdon, John

Hanover, George (IV) Augustus Frederick

------------

United Grand Lodge of England

------------

Hanover, Prince Augustus Frederick

Dundas, Thomas

Spencer-Churchill, Henry John, Deputy GM

Lambton, George John, Pro Grand Master

Dundas, Thomas

Dundas, Thomas

Robinson, George Frederick Samuel
Windsor, Albert Edward (VII)

Herbert, Henry Howard Molyneux

Bootle-Wilbraham, Edward

Amherst, William

Russell, Arthur Oliver Villiers

Windsor, Prince Arthur

Windsor, Prince George

Lascelles, Henry

Cavendish, Edward

Lumley, Lawrence Roger

Windsor, Prince Edward

------------



Antient GL

Turner, Robert

Vaughn, Hon. Edward

Stewart, William [GM Ireland 1738]

Erskine, Thomas Alexander

Mathew, Hon. Thomas

Murray, John

Murray, John

MacDonnell, Randall William

Murray, John

Windsor, HRH Edward


A.M.
2nd Duke of Montagu

6th Lord, 1st Duke of Wharton

Earl of Dalkeith, 2nd Duke of Buccleuch

2nd Duke of Richmond and Lennox

Lord Paisley, 7th Earl of Abercorn [1734]

4th Earl of Inchiquin

3rd Lord Coleraine

4th Lord Kingston

8th Duke of Norfolk

Lord Lovell, later 1st Earl of Leicester

6th Lord Viscount Montague

10th Lord Teynham

7th Earl of Strathmore & Kinghorne

20th earl of Crawford; 4th Earl of Lindsay

2nd Viscount Weymouth

4th Earl of Loudoun

2nd Earl of Darnley

9th Duke of Chandos, Viscount Wilton; Earl of Caernarfon; Marquis of Caernarfon

2nd Lord Raymond

3rd Earl of Kintore

Lord Aberdour, later 14th Earl of Morton

7th Lord Ward, 2nd Viscount Dudley and Ward

8th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne

6th Lord Cranston

5th Baron, Lord Byron of Rochdale

1st Baron Carysfort

Marquis of Carnarvon; later Duke of Chandos

15th Earl of Morton Sholto Charles Douglas, Lord Aberdour, afterwards 15th Earl of Morton

5th Earl of Ferrers

9th Lord Blayney, Baron of Monaghan

5th Duke of Beaufort

9th Baron Lord Petre

4th Duke of Manchester

Duke of Cumberland

1st Earl of Effingham

Prince of Wales; King of England

Lord Rawdon, Earl Moria

Prince of Wales; King of England


Union of 1813
Duke of Sussex

Lord Dundas


1st Earl of Durham

2nd Earl of Zetland

2nd Earl of Zetland (Shetland)

1st Marquess of Ripon; 3rd Earl de Grey and 2nd Earl of Ripon

Prince of Wales

4th Earl of Carnarvon, FRS

1st Earl of Lathom

3rd Earl Amherst

Lord Ampthill; 2nd Baron Ampthill

Duke of Connaught and Strathearn

Duke of Kent

6th Earl of Harewood

10th Duke of Devonshire

11th Earl of Scarbrough

Duke of Kent

1st Earl of Blessington; 3rd Viscount of Mountjoy

6th Earl of Kellie
3rd Duke of Atholl

4th Duke of Atholl

6th Earl and 2nd Marquess of Antrim

4th Duke of Atholl

2nd Duke of Kent


1714
1818
1724

1724


1715

1735


1732

1732
1737

1738

1740
1733



24 May 1860

* Acting Grand Master or Pro Grand Master

FRS = Fellow of the Royal Society of London

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip,_Duke_of_Wharton

[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earl_of_Strathmore_and_Kinghorne

[3] http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/History/Barons/barons3.html

--------------


Great Kings, Dukes and Lords,

Have laid by their Swords,

Our myst'ry to put a good grace on;

And ne'er been ashamed

To hear themselves nam'd

With a Free and an Accepted Mason.
Bro. Matthew Birkhead - 1722



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