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Jasper Godwin Ridley, FRSL (25 May 1920 – 1 July 2004) was a British writer, known for historical biographies. He received the 1970 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for his biography of Lord Palmerston .
Lipson, Dorothy Ann. Freemasonry in Federalist Connecticut, 1789-1835 (Princeton UP, 1977). online; Mackey, Albert Gallatin. The History of Freemasonry, Vol. 6 (Masonic History Co., NY, 1898) pages 1485-1486 online membership by state 1898; Ridley, Jasper. The Freemasons (1999), wide-ranging global popular history; for US topics see index p 338 ...
In 1848, Henry L. Valance allegedly confessed on his deathbed to taking part in Morgan's murder, a purported event recounted in chapter two of Reverend C. G. Finney's anti-Masonic book The Character, Claims, and Practical Workings of Freemasonry (1869). [34] In October 1827, a badly decomposed body washed up on the shores of Lake Ontario. Many ...
A writer in the Freemasons' Quarterly Review in 1839 claimed Nelson and his servant, Tom Allen, were Freemasons, but gives no evidence to support his claim. Hamon Le Strange, in his History of Freemasonry in Norfolk, says that among the furniture of the Lodge of Friendship No. 100, at Yarmouth , there is a stone bearing an inscription to Nelson.
The history of Freemasonry encompasses the origins, evolution and defining events of the fraternal organisation known as Freemasonry.It covers three phases. Firstly, the emergence of organised lodges of operative masons during the Middle Ages, then the admission of lay members as "accepted" (a term reflecting the ceremonial "acception" process that made non-stone masons members of an operative ...
The book claimed that Freemasons and Jesuits were plotting to foment a world revolution. [81] During the 19th Century, this theory was repeated by many Christian counter-revolutionaries, [ 82 ] [ 83 ] who accused Freemasons of being behind every attack on the existing social system.
Center for Fraternal Collections and Research, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana [1] Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, Library and Museum, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania [2] ...
The Anti-Masonic Party was the earliest third party in the United States. [11] Formally a single-issue party, it strongly opposed Freemasonry in the United States.It was active from the late 1820s, especially in the Northeast, and later attempted to become a major party by expanding its platform to take positions on other issues.