
Prince Hall, our founder, was one of our greatest
Americans, a Worthy Grand Master associated with our first Grand
Lodge and its expansion. His name is carried and borne by our
Masonic organizations in the United States, and thousands of Masons,
who regard themselves as descendants from the Grand Lodge of England
from which he received his authority more than two centuries ago.
We in America celebrated in 1976 the two hundredth anniversary of
our Declaration of Independence. This is also the two hundred and
first (201st) anniversary of the founding of Prince Hall Masonry.
It is a monument to Prince Hall's life, career and leadership.
Many rumors of the birth of Prince Hall have
arisen. Few records and papers have been found of him either in
Barbados where it was rumored that he was born, but no record of
birth, by church or state, has been found there, and none in Boston.
All 11 of the counties were searched and churches with baptismal
records were examined without a find of the name of Prince Hall.
The first record which we have of Prince Hall is a manumission
paper filed by William Hall of Boston, and found in the Boston
Athenaeum. This document tells us:
"Prince
Hall has lived with us 21 years and served us well upon all
occasions, for which reasons we maturely give him his freedom and
that he is no longer to be reckoned a slave, but has been always
accounted as a freeman by us, as he has served us faithfully. Upon
that account we have given him his freedom. As witness our hands
this ninth day of April, 1770.
Witnesses:
Susannah Hall
William Hall
Elizabeth Hall
Margaret Hall
Boston 12 April 1770 recorded Boston
Athenaeum.
In appearance our Prince Hall was unlike the
portrait which has been used of him, which was near to a white man
in appearance. William Bentley of Salem, Massachusetts, once
described him at a Turtle Feast in Salem, Massachusetts as, "An
African and a person of great influence among his color in great
Boston, being Master of the African Lodge and a person to whom they
refer with confidence their principal affairs." Another, William F.
Haywood in his Minutemen and Mariners described another Turtle
Feast, "There was one outstanding expert: Prince Hall, a tall, lean
Negro of great dignity. He always did, for whenever a well-to-do
person wished the best catering job in eastern Massachusetts he sent
word to Prince Hall in Boston, and when the time came he appeared
with a dozen of his black men or two dozen if the banquet was a
large one." This author described how "four of Prince Hall's
Africans stepped smartly into the tent bearing on their shoulders
the great turtle shell filled with a pie to the delight of the
guests." These descriptions make Prince Hall as an African with an
African crew. He seemed to be a black man among black men or he
would have been pointed out, if otherwise.
A significant event in Masonry on March 6, 1775,
Prince Hall and fourteen other men were initiated in Masonry through
Warrant No. 459, which is still in our possession. John Blatt, who
was of the 38th Foot Regiment of the British Army having enlisted in
1759 and learning of the American cause re-enlisted in its Army.
The enlistees were Prince Hall, 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. The writer had this
record. A Permit was issued for these Masons to meet as African
Lodge No. 1 and they became the first Black Masons in the United
States. Prince Hall enlisted and served as a soldier in the 2nd
and 6th Regiments of Massachusetts. In this connection, George W.
Williams, historian, wrote in 1884, "that he saw hard service we
know by the record of the two regiments he served in, always
distinguished for steadiness and valor. Prince Hall was not only a
good soldier, he was a statesman."
As the years passed, Prince Hall decided to
approach England again, the war being over in 1783. On March 2,
1784, he wrote a letter to William Moody, Worshipful Master of
Brotherly Love Lodge No. 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" and he thought it "best to send to the Fountains from
whence he received the Light for a Warrant." This Warrant or
Charter was prepared but not sent. Three years passed then the cost
of it had not been received in London. It seems that Prince Hall
had sent it but it had not been delivered. Finally, he was careful
in selecting his messengers and asked Captain James Scott,
brother-in-law of Governor John Hancock of Massachusetts, a signer
of the Declaration of Independence. Captain Scott delivered the
letter, the money and received the Charter Warrant. Prince Hall
acknowledged this receipt and added in his letter to England, "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."
He added, "I hope we can adorn our profession as Masons." This
Charter is in the possession of African Lodge of Massachusetts and
is kept under lock and key. Some of us have seen it and treasure it
for it is the only Charter in existence from England, our source,
available today to Masons. A recognition of this fact was adopted
in a report of a unanimous committee in 1946 of the historic
Northern Jurisdiction but it was delayed by another committee's
action, but it is worth noting:
"It is believed to be the only original
Charter issued from the Grand Lodge of England which is now in the
possession of any lodge in the United States."
Some white Masons say that Blacks were not denied
admission to white lodges and they point to the very few and the
presence of others by invitation as proofs. We believe the
contrary for D. Bentley, a contemporary who wrote in his diary,
available to all, "The truth is they are ashamed of being on
equality with blacks. Even the Fraternities of France, given to
merit without distinction of color do not influence Massachusetts
masons to give an embrace less emphatically or tender affectionate
to their Black Brethren . . It is evident that a preeminence is
claimed by whites."
The question of extending Masonry arose when
Absalom Jones of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania appeared in 1791 in
Boston. He was an ordained Episcopal priest and a Mason who was
interested in establishing a Masonic Lodge in Philadelphia. In 1792
Black men came from Providence, Rhode Island to Boston to inquire
about Masonry. They attended to hear the charge by Prince Hall who
spoke of the presence of these men, "my dear brethren of Providence,
who are at a distance from and cannot attend the lodge but seldom."
Masons in both places, made in England or the
West Indies or elsewhere came to Boston to see Prince Hall and
mentioned their cities as places for lodges. At a subsequent
assembly the African Grand Lodge was formed in 1791 by delegations
from Philadelphia, Providence and New York in an assembly which was
a Grand Lodge. Prince Hall regarded as Grand Master was the source
and remained in this capacity until his death. African Lodge, in
Philadelphia, and Hiram Lodge, in Providence, came under his aegis
in 1797. With growth and expansion the movement went West and
South.
Prince Hall died December 4, 1807. His successor
was Nero Prince who sailed to Russia in the year 1808, George
Middleton succeeded him, 1808-1810, Peter Lew, Samuel H. Moody and
then the well known John T. Hilton who recommended a Declaration of
Independence from the English Grand Lodge in 1827, which the Grand
Lodge of Massachusetts had done in 1772 and assumed powers and
prerogatives as an Independent Grand Lodge.
Freedoms Journal, November 7, 1828, the
first black newspaper, praised Prince Hall as "the Founder of
African Lodge of Boston", and for his "work for the Grand Masonic
Lodge." The heritage which Prince Hall left us has authentic and
factual goodness to us as Masons, and we go forward distributed in
44 Grand Lodges, Eastern Star, two Supreme Councils, Golden Circles,
Shriners, Daughters of Isis, Brother and Sisters in the United
States, the West Indies, Canada, Liberia and West Africa, all doing
great work and spreading a good cause in Masonry. To all these and
those who read this, we say as Prince Hall said in 1797:
"Blessed be God, the Scene is Changed! They
now confess that God has no respect of persons, and therefore
receive them as friends and treat them as brothers. Thus doth
Ethiopia stretch forth her hand from slavery to freedom and
equality."