Founder of Black Masonry
and Advocate of Negro Freedom
Prince Hall,our Patron, is recognized as the Father
of Black Masonry,. in the United States. He made it possible for persons
of African descent to be recognized and enjoy all privileges of Free
and Accepted Masonry,known today as Prince Hall
Freemasonry.
It is
unfortunate that the story of Prince Hall's life has never been written
except in the most condensed form, had he been connected with any other
race, except that of Afro-American, history would have fearlessly
told the story and confronted all honest criticisms with the truth.
"The fact that no documentary evidence has been
found in the Department of Archives in Barbados in confirmation of the
date of birth,parentage and place of birth of Prince Hall,it must be
noted that the recording of births was not compulsory in Barbados
until 1891,when legislation was enacted, and so without doubt many
births before 1891,were unrecorded .
It is to be further
noted that at the 79th. Conference of Grand Masters of Prince Hall
Masons,it was resolved that until otherwise proven the Conference would
recognize the date of birth of Prince Hall as September 12,1748".1
Documents in Massachusetts showing
that slaveowner William Hall freed a man named Prince Hall on
April 9, 1765 cannot be conclusively linked to any one individual as
there exists record of no less than 21 males named Prince Hall,living
in Boston at that time. Our Patron
"Prince Hall was born in Bridgetown, Barbados, British West Indies,at about September 12,1748. He was free born.His father,
Thomas Prince Hall, was an Englishman and his mother a free coloured
woman of French extraction." 2
At the age of twelve years Prince Hall was placed
as an apprentice to a leather worker, although he made rapid progress at
his trade,his greatest desire was to visit America.When
he communicated his wish to his parents, they gave him no encouragement.
Prince Hall would always visit the harbour hoping
to find a vessel bound for America.Finally one morning in February 1765
young Prince Hall found a vessel in port which was bound for America,he
approached the Captain and offered to work his way for the passage.After
some hesitation,the Captain was convinced that the young Prince Hall
meant what he said,and agreed to take him.
Prince Hall arrived at Boston, Massachusetts in
March 1765.When
he stepped off the vessel onto the shores of New England, he was
seventeen years of age.He was in a strange land without friends or
education, but determined to fight his own way.
Eight years
later he had acquired real estate and was qualified to vote. Religiously
inclined, he later became a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal
Church with a charge in Cambridge.He was married to Sarah Ritchery and shortly after
their marriage she died at the age of twenty-four years.
He worked as a leather dresser and later as a
labourer by day and studying at night,he not only educated himself but
became a leader in the movement,which led to erosion of slavery in the
north. As a freeman he preached the cause of unity among all his
people,slave and free alike.
To demonstrate that
belief he repeatedly took the lead in preparing and signing petitions
denouncing the slave trade and the institutions of slavery.Thus,when
three free blacks were seized and transported to St. Bartholomew to be
sold as slaves,Hall’s signature was the first amongst twenty-one black
freemen who petitioned the Governor John Hancock,to obtain their
release.Hancock, who knew Hall and had paid him nine pounds and eight
shillings for leather services,appealed to the French Consul and the men
were set free.
It is believed that he was one of the six black men of
Massachusetts named Prince Hall listed in military records of the
Revolution, and he may well have fought at Bunker Hill. A bill he sent
to a Colonel Crafts indicates that he crafted five leather drumheads for
the Boston Regiment of Artillery in April, 1777.
With the coming of the
Revolution,Prince Hall and other black volunteers saw action in the
early battles.When George Washington arrived in Cambridge to take
command of the troops,he found scores of blacks amongst them.He allowed
them to serve,but they were not accepted as regular members of the
Continental Army.Hall led a delegation to the general in protest and
Washington thereupon agreed to allow them to join,and so informed the
congress.
In
the year of 1775, Prince Hall,then
twenty-seven years of age, received the light of Masonry and was
raised to the sublime degree of Master Mason in Lodge No. 441, Irish
Constitution,
attached to the 38th Regiment of Foot, British Army Garrisoned at
Castle William (now Fort Independence) Boston Harbour.Thus,
becoming the first man of African decent to be initiated into the Order
in the American Colonies.The Master of the Lodge was Sergeant
John Batt.
Thus black Freemasonry began,when
on March 6th
of the same year, fourteen other free black men were initiated
into Lodge No. 441, the newly made masons were: Cyrus Johnson, Bueston
Slinger, Prince Rees, John Canton, Peter Freeman, Benjamin Tiler, Duff
Ruform, Thomas Santerson, Prince Rayden, Cato Speain, Boston Smith,
Peter Best, Forten Howard and Richard Titley.They
are reported to have paid fifteen guineas to receive the three degrees.The
men Batt initiated into what became African Lodge were evidently free
men.
When the British Army left Boston in 1776, this
Lodge No 441, granted Prince Hall and his brethren authority to meet as
African Lodge #1 (Under Dispensation), to go in procession on St. John's
Day, and as a Lodge to bury their dead; but they could not confer
degrees nor perform any other Masonic "work".
For nine years these brethren, together with others
who had received their degrees elsewhere, assembled and enjoyed their
limited privileges as Masons. Thirty-three masons were listed on the
rolls of African Lodge #1 on January 14th, 1779.
Prince Hall and the
members of his lodge having petitioned the English Grand Lodge of
Massachusetts for its approval.This
was denied them by the white brethren in Massachusetts.
Finally on March 2, 1784, Prince Hall petitioned
the Grand Lodge of England, through a Worshipful Master of a subordinate
Lodge in London (William Moody of Brotherly Love Lodge No. 55) for a
warrant or charter.
It was granted on September 29, 1784 and delivered
to Prince Hall personally in Boston on April 29, 1787 by Captain James
Scott, brother-in-law of John Hancock and master of the Neptune.Captain
Scott having made his way to the office of the
Grand Secretary of Modern Masons,Sir William White, located on Green
Street,London to received the Warrant. He having paid the
fees
of five pounds, fifteen shillings, and six pence
received the warrant. Under
its authority African Lodge No. 459 was organized one week later,
May 6,
1787,at the Golden Fleece on Water Street in Boston,Massachusetts.
The Warrant to African Lodge No. 459 of Boston is
the most significant and highly prized document known to the Prince Hall
Mason Fraternity. Through it our legitimacy is traced, and on it more
than any other factor, our case rests.
Prince Hall was appointed a Provincial Grand
Master in 1791 by His Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales. The question
of extending Masonry arose when Absalom Jones of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania appeared in Boston. He was an ordained Episcopal priest and
a mason who was interested in establishing a masonic lodge in
Philadelphia.
Under the authority of the charter of African Lodge
#459, Prince Hall established African Lodge #459 of Philadelphia on
March 22, 1797 and Hiram Lodge #3 in Providence, Rhode Island on June
25, 1797.
African Lodge of Boston became the "Mother
Lodge" of the Prince Hall Family. It was typical for new lodges to
be established in this manner in those days. The African Grand Lodge
was not organized until 1808 when representatives of African Lodge #459
of Boston, African Lodge #459 of Philadelphia and Hiram Lodge # 3 of
Providence met in New York City.
Prince Hall, one of Boston's most prominent citizens during the
revolutionary period, was the founder of the African Lodge,
the world's first lodge of black Freemasonry and the first society in
American history devoted to social, political, and economic improvement.
Hall was active in the affairs of Boston's black
community, using his position as "Worshipful Master" of the black
Masons to speak out against slavery and the denial of black rights. For
years, he protested the lack of schools for black children and finally
established one in his own home.
In his last published speech, his charge to the African Lodge at West
Cambridge,Massachusetts on June 24,
1797, Hall spoke of mob violence against blacks: "Patience, I say;
for were we not possessed of a great measure of it, we could not bear up
under the daily insults we meet with in the streets of Boston, much more
on public days of recreation. How, at such times, are we shamefully
abused, and that to such a degree, that we may truly be said to carry
our lives in our hands, and the arrows of death are flying about our
heads. ..................My brethren,let us not be cast down under these
and many other abuses we at present are laboring under, - for the
darkest hour is just before the break of day.."3
In
the fall of
1807,Prince Hall,
while on one
of his daily errands of carrying relief to some poor widow or orphan,
or whispering some words of comfort in the ears of some sick
brother,caught a cold which rapidly developed into pneumonia from which
he never recovered.He died on the morning of December 7, 1807, after four weeks
of illness.
He was succeeded by Nero Prince as Master. When Nero Prince
sailed to Russia in 1808, George Middleton succeeded him. After
Middleton, Petrert Lew, Samuel H. Moody and then, John T. Hilton became
Grand Master. Hilton recommended a Declaration of Independence from the
English Grand Lodge.
As a memorial to Prince Hall for
his devotion to black Freemasonry, African Grand Lodge #1 by an act of
the General Assembly of the Craft changed its name to Prince Hall Grand Lodge.The name "Prince Hall Grand Lodge" has since been
adopted by Grand Lodges of the Prince Hall Masonic Order.
Prince Hall is buried in Copps
Hill Cemetery in Boston,where an imposing monument of Vermont granite is
erected.Today pilgrims of our great order can be seen winding their way
to the final resting place of this great Mason,Soldier and Statesman.
In 1869 a fire destroyed Massachusetts' Grand Lodge
headquarters and a number of its priceless records. The charter in its
metal tube was in the Grand Lodge chest. The tube saved the charter from
the flames, but the intense heat charred the paper.
It was at this time that Grand Master S.T. Kendall
crawled into the burning building and in peril of his life, saved the
charter from complete destruction. Thus a Grand Master's devotion and
heroism further consecrated this parchment to us, and added a further
detail to its already interesting history.
The original Charter No. 459 has long since been
made secure between heavy plate glass and is kept in a fire-proof vault
in a downtown Boston bank.It is the only original charter held by any
American Masonic Society.
"Over
the years there have been several white Freemasons who have wished
Prince Hall Masonry well. They have assisted it insofar as their
obligations would permit. John Dove, the Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of
Virginia, shortly after the close of the American Civil War gave Prince
Hall Masons his text book. Much of it is still used to this day even
though it has been revised and copyrighted by Prince Hall Masonry.
There are something like 40 Black organizations calling themselves
Masonic that are illegitimate. These have no connection with Prince Hall
Masonry, and the latter is constantly "at war'" with them".4
Today, the Prince Hall fraternity has over 4,500
lodges worldwide, forming 45 independent jurisdictions with a membership
of over 300,000 masons.
Recently the United Grand Lodge of England,Grand Lodges of
Scotland and Ireland have established fraternal relations with a
number of Prince Hall Grand Lodges.
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1. An
article prepared by R.W (now M.W.) Bro Lionel
Greenidge and published in our 250th.Commemorative Journal
2 This account, paraphrased from the Grim Shaw book of
1903.
3
.William C.Nell,The Colored
Patriots of the American Revolution (Boston:R.F. Wallcut,1855)
4 This account, was taken from the article by
Allen E.Roberts,FPS on 'Black Freemasonry'
Researched
and Scripted by R.W.Brother Hermon Gaskin,Webmaster
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Some Notable Prince Hall Masons
-
Thurgood Marshall, Associate Justice, U.S. Supreme Court
- Alex Haley,
author
-
Booker T. Washington, educator/founder Tuskegee Institute
- Charles B. Rangel, U.S.
Congressman New York
- Louis Stokes, U.S. Congressman
Ohio
- William
"Count" Basie, orchestra leader/composer
-
Nathaniel "Nat King" Cole, American pianist and singer
-
Jerry "The Ice Man" Butler -Renowned
Singer
- Edward Kennedy
"Duke" Ellington, orchestra leader/composer
- Medger Wiley Evers, civil rights leader
- James
Herbert "Eubie" Blake, composer/pianist
Matthew Henson, explorer
Paul Robeson,entertainer/scholar
Andrew Young, former mayor of Atlanta
Thomas Bradley, mayor of Los Angeles, California
Sugar Ray Robinson, mid/light heavy boxing champion
John H. Johnson, publisher EBONY and Jet magazines
Carl B. Stokes, first Black elected mayor, Cleveland, OH
Robert Sengstacke Abbott, founder/publisher CHICAGO DEFENDER
Richard Allen, founder/first bishop AME Church
Daniel "Chappie" James, general U.S. Air Force
James Forten, abolitionist/manufacturer
Timothy Thomas Fortune, journalist
Richard D. Gidron, president, Dick Gidron Cadillac
William C. Handy, composer
Augustus F. Hawkins. U.S. Congressman California
Lionel Hampton, orchestra leader/composer
Benjamin L. Hooks, Former Executive Director NAACP
Benjamin Mays, educator/former president Atlanta University
Ralph H. Metcalfe, Olympic champion
A. Phillip Randolph,founder/ first president,International Brotherhood
of Sleeping Car Porters
W.E.B. DuBois, educator/author/historian
Lawrence Douglas Wilder -The First Black
elected Governor in the U.S.A.(Virginia)
Dale Hale Williams -first sugeon to
perform open heart surgery
Martin Luther King Sr.,Civil Rights Leader
Rev. Al Sharpton - Civil Rights
Advocate
Joseph Jenkins Roberts - First
President of the Republic of Liberia
Leon M'Ba - First President of
Gabon
Kwane Nkrumah,President of Ghana,West Africa
Egbert Austin "Bert" Williams, actor/ comedian
Don King -Boxing
promoter
Jack Johnson -First Black
heavyweight boxing champion of US
Harry A. Williamson, author/Masonic historian
Rev. Jesse Jackson, Civil Rights leader
Martin R.Delany - First Black to
matriculate from Harvard Medical School/First Black Major in the U.S.army
Benjamin Banneker,designed the nation's (USA)
capital;inventor;astronomer
Scottie Pippen, #33, Chicago Bulls / Forward
Dr.Ernest Everett Just,biologist,a founder of
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity Inc
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