Prince
Hall, our Founder, was a great American and was the first Grand
Master associated with our first Grand Lodge and its expansion.
Approximately one year and four months prior to the writing of the
Declaration of Independence, Prince Hall engraved his image in the
annals of American history. Prince Hall, a free mulatto, became a
property owner, voter, and community activist in the Cambridge-Boston
Colony. His story has not been told nor recorded in the history and
text books despite the fact that he was a civil rights activist who
actually lived and made a significant contribution to the growth and
development of this nation.
Although little is known about the
circumstances of his birth, his condition of servitude, or his
occupation, we do know that because of Prince Hall's dedication to
improve the quality of life for his people, accompanied by a desire
to become a Freemason, he and 14 other men of color received the
three degrees of Freemasonry by being initiated into the fraternity
on March 6, 1775 in an Irish Military Lodge attached to the 38th Foot
of the British Army. This event made Prince Hall the first of his
race in North America to enter the oldest and most prestigious
fraternity in history. The historical record reflects that the others
were: Cyrus Johnston, Bueston Slinger, Prince Rees, John Canton,
Peter Freeman, Benjamin Tiler, Duff Ruform, Thomas Santerson, Prince
Rayden, Cato Speain, Boston Smith, Peter Best, Fortune Howard, and
Richard Titley.
Around April 14, 1776, the military regiment to
which Hall's lodge was attached received orders to relocate to the
New York Colony, leaving Prince Hall and his Negro brethren, all
civilians, without a lodge. Prior to his leaving, however, the
Worshipful Master, Sgt. John Batt, issued to Prince Hall and his
brethren a permit to walk on St. John's Day and to bury their dead
with full Masonic Rites.
As a result, African Lodge #1 Ancient
Accepted York Masons was formed with Prince Hall elected the
Worshipful Master. As the Batt permit left Prince Hall with Masonic
limitations, Hall petitioned the Grand Lodge of England, Ancient and
Accepted York Masons, for a full charter in 1784.
On March 2,
1784, Prince Hall wrote a letter to William Moody, Worshipful Master
of Brotherly Love Lodge #55 in London, England, stating that African
Lodge had been in operation for eight years and they had only "a
Permit to walk on St. John's Day and to bury their dead in manner and
form." He thought it "best to send to the Fountains from
whence he received the Light for a Warrant." This Warrant or
Charter was prepared that same year but was held up when the fees
sent by Prince Hall never arrived.
After several years had passed,
Hall decided to entrust another fee to Captain James Scott of Boston,
brother-in-law of Governor John Hancock of Massachusetts, a signer of
the Declaration of Independence. Captain Scott delivered the letter
and the money, and received the Charter Warrant, which he duly
delivered to Prince Hall in Boston, Massachusetts in September of
1787, about the time of the writing of the U.S. Constitution. Prince
Hall acknowledged receipt of the Charter in a letter to England and
added, "By the grace of God, I shall endeavor to fulfill all
that is required of me in the Charter and I shall make the
Constitution my guide."
According to record, the Charter
naming and numbering African Lodge No. 459, which was later changed
to 371 on the English Grand Lodge Register, has been and is in the
exclusive possession of the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge
of Free and Accepted Masons of Massachusetts, and it is secured in
the First National Bank of Boston. It is brought out and displayed
every ten years during the Prince Hall Masonic pilgrimage. Some of us
have seen it and treasure it, for it is believed to be the only
original Charter issued from the Grand Lodge of England which in now
in the possession of any lodge in the United States.
Prince
Hall made a great impact upon society during his life; among his many
accomplishments:
He petitioned General George Washington to
admit men of color into the Continental Army. Of further note Hall
distinguished himself at Bunker Hill. He led the entire Lodge
membership in support of Governor Bowdoin during the rebellion of
Daniel Shay and his group.
He petitioned the Massachusetts state
legislature for the funds to educate children of color.
He opened
his home as a school to provide an education to adults of color.
He
petitioned the state legislature to grant to all citizens of color
the right to own real property and to vote in all elections.
He
served as a "Special Deputy" to the Grand Lodge of England
at the end of the Revolutionary War and was armed with the charge to
travel throughout the colonies to determine the number of Subordinate
Caucasian Lodges still operating as such in the new world.
The
question of extending Masonry within the Black Community arose when
Absalam Jones of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania appeared in Boston in
1791. He was an ordained Episcopal Priest and a Freemason who was
interested in establishing a Masonic Lodge in Philadelphia. Black men
from Providence, Rhode Island also came to Boston to inquire about
Masonry. At a subsequent assembly in 1791, the African Grand Lodge
was formed by delegations from Philadelphia, Providence, and New
York. Prince Hall served as its first Grand Master and remained in
this capacity until his death. African Lodge in Philadelphia and
Hiram Lodge in Providence came under the aegis of this Grand Lodge in
1797.
Prince
Hall died December 4, 1807. A broken-column monument marks the
gravesite of Prince Hall in Copp's Hill Cemetery in Boston. At the
General Assembly of the Craft in 1808, the name "African Grand
Lodge" was changed to "Prince Hall Grand Lodge, Free and
Accepted Masons of Massachusetts." The Deputy Grand Master,
Brother Nero Prince, became Prince Hall's successor as Grand Master
from 1807-1808, followed by George Middleton, 1808-1810, then Peter
Lew, Samuel H. Moody, and the well-known John T. Hilton, who
recommended a declaration of independence from the English Grand
Lodge in 1827 and the assumption of powers and prerogatives as an
independent Grand Lodge.
During this most significant period
of Masonic growth and development, Freemasonry spread from
Massachusetts, through New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Deleware,
Rhode Island, Connecticut, Maryland, Washington, D.C., Ohio, and
Virginia. Many lodges and Grand Lodges were founded under the
authority of the Prince Hall Grand Lodge. Today there are over one
million Prince Hall Masons in approximately 50,000 lodges in 44
jurisdictions throughout the United States, Canada, Africa, Asia,
Europe, and the Caribbean.
It takes three or more lodges to
form a Grand Lodge. Hannibal Lodge Number 1 of San Francisco,
Philomathean Lodge Number 2 of Sacramento, and Victoria Lodge Number
3 of San Francisco are the three lodges that formed the "Grand
Lodge, Free Ancient and Accepted York Masons," organized in San
Francisco, California on Tuesday, June 19, 1855. Hence, the ninth
Grand Lodge was formed. Later, it was titled "Sovereign Grand
Lodge." The fraternity now holds the distinguished title of
"Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge, Free and Accepted
Masons of the States of California and
Hawaii, Incorporated."
Since its colonial birth, the organization has attracted to its ranks
professional men in business, government, religion, and community
service—civic-minded men of goodwill and character who continue to
provide needed services for the betterment of mankind, thereby
leaving a legacy by which Prince Hall Freemason's are best known.