
Freemasonry I
Description
On June 24, 1717, four London lodges gathered at the Goose and Gridiron Ale-house in St. Paul's Churchyard and formed the Grand Lodge of England. The total membership was probably fewer than seventy-five men. Within a century, Freemasonry had spread to every continent, enrolled kings and presidents among its members, and generated a mythology so vast that it eclipsed the documented history entirely.
This investigation traces Freemasonry from its origins in the medieval stonemasons' guilds through the Scottish transformation under William Schaw, the founding of the Grand Lodge, the ritual system built around the legend of Hiram Abiff, the Continental traditions that split over the question of whether God is a prerequisite for brotherhood, and the Enlightenment laboratories where men of different faiths practiced equality behind closed doors.
The documents show a stonemasons' trade guild that absorbed gentlemen, acquired ritual, and organized itself into the largest fraternal organization in history. The mythology claims something larger: a secret engine of world power descended from Solomon's Temple, the Knights Templar, or the builders of ancient Egypt.
Both stories are real. One is documented. The other is consequential.
This book examines both-neither debunking the mythology nor defending the organization, but documenting what the sources show, where the mythology diverges from the record, and what the gap between them reveals about Freemasonry and about the societies that have spent three centuries theorizing about what happens behind a tiled door.
What the Schaw Statutes actually regulated. What the Edinburgh Lodge recorded in 1599. What Anderson's first charge on God and religion actually says-and why it became the most consequential passage in Masonic history. What happens inside a lodge meeting. How the Hiram Abiff legend works. Why the Grand Orient de France split from the Anglo-American tradition in 1877 and never reconciled. Why every authoritarian regime from the Catholic Church to the Soviet Union has targeted Freemasonry. And why the Taxil hoax of 1897 remains one of the best-documented fabrications in modern history.
Volume 1 of 3. The American story continues in Freemasonry II: The Craft in America. The global conspiracy industry is investigated in Freemasonry III.
Secret Societies Revisited is a fifty-book investigative nonfiction series examining the world's most famous and most mythologized secret societies. Each volume traces the documented history, investigates the mythology, and maps the gap between what the sources show and what the conspiracy culture claims.
Neither debunking nor promoting. The documents are the story. The reader decides.