MASONIC CLOTHING
How did the Ancient Craft get
its distinctive dress? Whence the apron, collar,
jewel, raiment? Why do we put so much emphasis
on being "properly clothed"?
No one can answer with complete
authority; so many causes contributed that it
is impossible to state an origin as having been
at one time or place.
The first paragraph in the "History
of the Cryptic Rite" (Authors Hinman, Denslow,
Hunt) sets forth:
"In slavery days in this
country, little colored babies were sometimes
sold to speculators who raised them for the
market. Topsy, in Uncle Tom's Cabin, was a child
thus raised, and therefore with no knowledge
of her parentage or age. She said she 'never
was born, never had no father nor mother, nor
nothin; I was raised by a speculator with lots
of others. Old Aunt Sue use to take car' on
us-I 'spect I just grow'd."'
Masonic clothing is much like
Topsy-it "just grow'd". No man may
say who its father and mother were or the date
when it was born. But there is much to be said
of the family, and, if we cannot trace direct,
we have some knowledge of collateral ancestors!
Apron and gloves have already
been considered in these pages (June, 1932;
February, 1940) but clothing as a whole and
"clothing the lodge" is of wider interest.
"Clothing" should not
be confused with "regalia"---It too
often is, and modern dictionaries are to some
extent responsible. In its Masonic sense "clothing"
and "regalia" are distinct.
"Regalia" is not found
in Latin with its present meaning. William of
Malmesbury in the 12th century, describing the
coronation of Emperor Henry V by Pope Paschal
11, says: "After the ceremony the pope
laid aside his sacerdotalia and the emperor
his regalia". The words "regale"
and regalia" meant the royal prerogatives.
"Regale" meant the privileges of kings
of France to receive certain revenues and to
present benefices. But by the 17th century,
the modern meaning was given to the word "regalia".
According to the Standard Dictionary
that "modern meaning" is "the
distinctive symbols or decorations and insignia
of a particular order as 'the Masonic regalia"'.
But the dictionary also states that in Old English
law the word meant the six prerogatives of sovereignty:
judicature, power over life and death, right
to wage war or conclude peace, right to tax,
to coin money, and to take charge of masterless
goods.
In England today "regalia"
is formally used to mean the emblems of royalty
used at a coronation: the crown, scepter, verge
(rod) staff of Edward the Confessor, ampulla
(flask of anointing oil), anointing spoon, bracelets,
spurs and vestments.
"Vestments" is apparently
the only modern British connection of "regalia"
with "clothing" as the latter word
is used in the Masonic sense.
In 1772 Preston described "properly
clothed" for public appearance as follows:
"All the Brethren, who walk in procession,
should observe, as much as possible, an uniformity
in their dress. Decent mourning, with white
stockings, gloves and aprons, is most suitable
and becoming; and no person ought to be distinguished
with a jewel, unless he is an officer of one
of the Lodges invited to attend in form. The
officers of such Lodges should be ornamented
with white sashes and hat-bands; as also the
officers of the Lodge to whom the dispensation
is granted, who should likewise be distinguished
with white rods".
The Festival of St. John the Baptist
was reported in the Boston Gazette for July
2, 1739 as follows: "At three in the Afternoon
They assembled at the House of their Brother
John Wagborn, from whence they walk'd in Procession
to His Excellency's House, properly Clothed,
and Distinguished, with Badges, and other Implement
pertaining to the several Orders and Degrees
of the Society, proceeded by a Compleat band
of Musick, consisting of Trumpets, Kettle Drums,
etc".
In early days of Masonry in London
the brother "made" had to "clothe
(or cloath) the lodge" which meant that
he supplied the aprons and gloves to all who
attended. Those who did not attend did not receive
"clothing" from the newly-made brother,
as we learn from many sources.
The by-laws of a Boston lodge
of 1733 specify: "The Master of this Lodge,
or in absence, the Grand Master, Deputy Grand
Master or Wardens, when there is a private Lodge
ordered to be held for a Making, shall be obliged
to give all the Members timely notice of the
time and place in writing where such Lodge is
held that they may give their attendee and every
member being duly warned as aforesaid and neglecting
to attend on such private Making shall not be
cloathed.
"No member that is absent
from the Lodge of a Lodge night when there is
a Making, shall have the Benefit of being cloathed
for that time."
It is correct to speak of proper
Masonic clothing as the "livery of Masons",
although for those to whom the word means only
the uniform of a domestic servant or butler
the statement may seem strange. Nevertheless
livery, meaning the costume of a class, sect,
organization or group, can be applied to the
costume of the ancient pilgrim, seeking his
goal in a dress peculiar to his vocation, or
to the modern Masons in apron, gloves, collar,
jewel, and hat.
The pilgrim is a character of
song and story; the pilgrimage made to a holy
place is, apparently, as old as man. Exodus
speaks of "the land of Canaan, the land
of their pilgrimage, wherein they were strangers".
One of the great poetic passages of the Bible
is in Hebrew, 11: "By faith Abraham, when
he was called to go out into a place which he
should after receive for an inheritance, obeyed;
and he went out, not knowing whither he went.
By faith he sojourned in the land of promise,
as in a strange country * * * * For he looked
for a city which hath foundations, whose builder
and maker is God." The story of faith is
finished with the verse: "These all died
in faith, not having received the promises,
but having seen them afar off, and were persuaded
of them, and embraced them, and confessed that
they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth."
(Italics supplied.)
The pilgrim, then, was a man who
sought good -- -who traveled to seek God. In
the Middle Ages his dress was conventionalized
and prescribed, giving us a new vision of the
age of livery and clothing and dress as a part
of ceremony.
The pilgrims of the early 'teen
centuries wore a long gown, dark in color, coarse
in texture, a leathern girdle as an emblem of
humility and poverty, a staff, a rosary and
cross, and carried a scrip (bag). Spenser in
the "Fairie Queen" describes one thus:
A silly man in simple weeds foreworn
And soiled 'with dust of the long
dried way,
His sandals were with toilesome
travel torne
And face all tanned with scorching
sunny ray;
As he had travelled many a summer's
day
Through boiling sands of Araby
and Inde,
And in his hands a Jacob's staff
to stay
His weary limbs upon; and eke
behind
His scrip did hang, in which his
needments he did bind.
The word livery comes from that
which was delivered-anciently, land or property
held in trust, and given to its owner at the
proper time; delivery was the act of possession.
Hence, according to Mackey, when feudal lords
delivered their clothing to their servants,
that clothing became "livery". Clothing
and livery became synonymous in the time of
Edward the First and he who joined a gild or
association was said to "have the clothing".
Mackey thinks there is no doubt that the "clothing"
of Masons, and our custom of speaking of one
ready to enter lodge as "properly clothed",
comes from this custom of livery or uniform
costume of the old gilds.
Hence "a Freemason's livery"
is a term of honor, not one of belittlement.
The emphasis on "clothing"
for Masons-which varies in different countries
and times-according to the noted authority H.
L. Haywood springs from the days of the operative
Masons, the cathedral builders. To them the
twin questions of clothing and of wages were
of vital importance. Indeed, the "Master's
Wages" of modern Masonry seems an echo
of days when builders were badly underpaid,
so much so that they could not afford decent
clothing.
Today workmen would form a union,
strike and get what they wanted. In the early
centuries of cathedral building such remedies
were not known. The authorities had a much better
plan.
If a workman could not afford
good clothes for his family, they tried to make
him satisfied by forbidding him to buy them
or his family to wear them! Clothing for wives,
sons, daughters was a matter of legal enactment
to keep workmen and their families from dressing
"like their betters", and to make
sure that the workmen and their people wore
the proper livery of their craft. In the time
of Edward the Third, the law specified that
"people of handicraft and yeomen"
could not wear cloth costumes higher than forty
shillings, and furs, except the very cheapest,
were forbidden the women.
Here Haywood finds a reason why
gloves were early so important in Masonry---the
gloves worn in lodge meant that here at least
the lowest was the equal of "his betters".
Some Grand Lodges today prescribe
Masonic clothing in great detail; others content
themselves with specifications as to the size
and permissible decorations of the apron; still
others have no, or little, regulation.
Massachusetts is typical of those
Grand Lodges which go into detail as to clothing.
In addition to prescribed shapes, sizes and
forms for jewels and other insignia, the Grand
Lodge specifies:
"The Collars of the Grand
Officers shall be chains of gold or metal gilt.
"The Apron of the Grand Master
shall be of white lambskin, lined with purple,
ornamented with the blazing Sun, embroidered
in gold in the center; on the edging the pomegranate
and lotus, and the seven-eared wheat at each
corner, and also on the fall; all in gold embroidery,
the fringe of gold bullion, with purple edging
and strings.
"The Apron of the Deputy
Grand Master and of a District Grand Master
shall be of the same material and lining, having
the emblem of his office in gold embroidery
in the center, and the pomegranate and lotus
alternately embroidered in gold on the edging.
"The emblem of the District
Grand Master shall be within a double circle
bearing the name of his District.
"The Aprons of the other
Grand Officers shall be of white lambskin, lined
with purple; edging of purple three and a half
inches wide; with purple strings; ornamented
with gold, having the emblems of office, in
gold, in the center.
"Each officer of a Lodge
shall wear a blue velvet collar trimmed with
silver lace, or a white metal chain collar upon
blue ribbon of such pattern or patterns as shall
be approved by the Grand Master, from which
shall be suspended the jewel of the office in
silver. The aprons may bear the emblems of the
offices and a fringe of silver.
"The Apron of a Master Mason
will be a plain white lambskin, fourteen inches
wide by twelve inches deep. The Apron may be
adorned with sky-blue lining and edging, and
three rosettes of the same color. No other color
shall be allowed, and no other ornament shall
be worn except by officers and past officers."
The Ahiman Rezon of the Grand
Lodge of Pennsylvania sets forth that on the
occasion of "public participation in any
ceremony, all the members of the Grand Lodge
shall appear in Masonic dress, consisting of
a suit of black clothes, black necktie, black
silk hat and white gloves; the Officers of the
Grand Lodge and Subordinate Lodges shall wear
their appropriate jewels and aprons; the other
members of Grand Lodge white lambskin aprons;
Past Grand Masters, Past Deputy Grand Masters
and Past Masters shall wear their appropriate
jewels on the left lapel of the coat".
It is further stated in this book
of the law that a brother must "wear a
Masonic apron on entering a lodge* * * * every
Past Master must wear his jewel".
Incidentally, in Pennsylvania
Grand Lodge officers have white satin aprons
with purple velvet borders with a gold edging,
but are rounded at the bottom and have a rounded
flap; they are lined with purple and have purple
strings.
In a few lodges, here and there,
those who conduct a degree, usually the Master's
degree, wear costumes, generally called robes.
The practice is not common, and is neither provided
for nor forbidden by the Masonic law in most
jurisdictions. It is perhaps a compound of the
desire to "dress up the parts and make
the scene more lifelike, and a throw-back to
the days when the proposal was made in the Grand
Lodge of England (1778) that the Grand Master
and his officers should be robed. The cloak
or mantle is very old, and must have been known
to the Masons of the Grand Lodge of England
in 1778 as ancient dress, because for many years
it had been the hallmark of chivalry, the knight-in-armor's
principal decoration when not dressed in steel.
But wise counsels prevailed, the Grand Lodge
decided to stick to its own peculiar style of
dress, rather than ape that which bad long been
prescribed for a different order.
Nevertheless robes, cloaks, costumes
are occasionally used in Symbolic Lodges; they
are much more common in Royal Arch Chapters
and find their fullest use in the ceremonies
of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite and
in such appendant orders as the Shrine and Grotto.