|
First Lodge of Ireland, Cork
………. A Time Immemorial Assembly
Meets at 27, Tuckey
Street, Cork
First Monday of
every month, at 8.00 pm
(excluding June, July, August and September)
January meeting is at 6.30 pm; May meeting is on Second Monday
Lodge Contact:
rowland2311@eircom.net
In a region
universally acknowledged to be of great Masonic antiquity, there have
arisen in the past a number of private lodges in Munster whose
antient craft origins might reasonably be designated as Time
Immemorial. None, however, has a greater claim to this
denomination than today’s First Lodge of Ireland.
The oft-quoted
year of 1731 as its point of departure is misleading, in that the
Lodge quite clearly pre-dates the origin of the No. 1 Warrant by an
indeterminate, and probably not inconsiderable, period of time. The
unique early eighteenth century Transactions of the lodge – the oldest
extant in the Irish Constitution - strongly suggest that
fraternal activity within the original assembly at Cork, and its
associated Grand Lodge of Munster, was already on a sound
organisational basis prior to December 1726. It is
interesting to observe that the first known reference to Masonic
Deacons appears in the lodge Minutes of 2nd February 1727 – over
eighty years before the Office was eventually adopted by the ‘Premier’
Grand Lodge of England in 1809.
Whereas several
of the well established Cork lodges of the early 1730’s were quick to
make their mark with the developing Grand Lodge in Dublin – and
applied for Warrants without undue delay – the lodge generally
regarded as being the oldest of them all, today’s First Lodge,
showed no such enthusiasm for this procedure whatsoever.
It may be
conjectured that members of the old private Lodge of Corke, who
were also members of the venerable Grand Lodge of Munster,
disputed the fact that – under the simultaneous, though hitherto
separate, Grand Mastership of Lord Kingston of Mitchelstown, albeit a
fellow Munsterman – the regional body lost its identity by being
‘united’ with the national Grand Lodge of Ireland in
1731.
The outcome was
that the ‘First’ Lodge at Cork – which may well have existed
prior to the formation of either, or perhaps any other Grand Lodge
– continued to work as a Time Immemorial assembly and
apparently declined a Warrant from Dublin for a further thirty
years. Eventually, in 1776, they were offered – and finally
accepted – the unique No. 1 Warrant which now stands indisputably, as
the oldest masonic warrant in the world.
The regalia of
the lodge is of similar antique origin in that – uniquely throughout
the Irish Constitution – the member’s Aprons and the ancient velvet
Collars of the Master and Officers are trimmed with gold braid. This
is a distinguishing relic from the era of the Grand Lodge of
Munster, to which the old early lodge of Cork was so closely
affiliated in the early eighteenth century.
A minute dated
27th January 1836 reads ‘Lodge No.1 met to dine and celebrate union
with Lodge 27’. Evidently the W. M’s jewel of Lodge 27 was superior to
that of Lodge No.1, as today the W.M. still wears that which belonged
to Lodge 27.
Finally, there
are to this day in the First Lodge of Ireland, members of three old
County Cork families – namely, the families of Crofts, Newenham and
Wallis – whose ancestors formed part of the original
time-immemorial assembly of the 1720’s, a further indication,
perhaps, of the continuing durability of Freemasonry in the ancient
Province of Munster.
History of
Warrant No. 1
The First
Lodge of Ireland has worked in CORK since time immemorial, certainly
prior to 2 February 1726. Two other lodges also held the No. 1 Warrant
in the early period – the first was meeting in DUBLIN by 1735 (Smith),
but had ceased working before 1744 (Spratt); the other was established
at MITCHELSTOWN, Co. Cork, 1 February 1732, and was still at work in
1746, but dormant before 1754.
The First Lodge
of Ireland has held the No. 1 warrant since 10 August 1776, and aside
from a two-year hiatus – when the warrant was cancelled on 6 July 1826
until it was restored 2 October 1828, it has worked continuously.
All photographs on this website can be enlarged by clicking on
them.
Copyright 2007 - Provincial Grand Lodge of Munster - All Rights
Reserved
|