The
Cryptic Rite in New York
by Dr. Floyd R. Bass Sr. {ARM23}
The early development of the Council of Royal and
Select Masters or the Cryptic Rite in Prince Hall Freemasonry may be
traced [Hinman, History of the Cryptic Rite, 1861] to Henry A.
Fracken, founder of the Lodge of Perfection at Albany, New York,
1767 in New York, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Joseph Cerneau
conferred the degree Royal Master in New York during 1807,
establishing a Grand Council authorizined by the Grand Consistory of
France. A Council of Select Masters in New York, founded by Eckel
and Miles formed in 1821, joined around d1824 with a Council to
confer the Super Excellent Master degree. Authority was provided to
give the Royal, Select and Super Excellent Masters Degrees.
The Royal and Select Master Degrees: These Cryptic Rite degrees were
slower to take root in the Prince Hall Fraternity. It was not until
August 14, 1916 that the Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Master for
Ohio, at tis session in Dayton, sanctioned the establishment of
Councils of Royal and Select Masters. (Harry Davis) "The
Cryptic Rite is one of the smallest, yet one of the most important
and certainly one of the most curious of all the rites. One of its
oddities is that the two degrees of Royal Master and Select Master
have associated with them a ceremony known as Super Excellent
Master, which is not considered a degree, yet is more dramatic than
most Masonic degrees.
Another peculiarity is that there has long been a difference of
opinion as to which of the two degrees should be conferred on the
candidate first. Both the Royal and the Select are known as Ninth
Arch or Secret Vault degrees and the name Cryptic was given them by
Rob Morris as derived from the Greek crupe or the Latin crypta,
meaning vault. Hugan stated that Cryptic Masonry was worked in
England from about 1760 but died out, though it continued in
Scotland under one branch of the Grand Encampment of Knight Templar,
where it evidently also died out. Phillip C. Tucker, Grand Master of
Vermont (1847 - 1861) said, "We have good authority for saying
that as early as 1766 they were conferred in the city of
Albany." He referred to the Royal and Select degrees. The
Select Master, under the name, Select Masons of Twenty-seven, was
conferred at Charleston, S.C. in 1783, and that is probably the
earliest that either degree was worked in this country. Some
investigation has shown that the Charleston bodies did not possess
the Royal Master degree in that early period … and that Royal
Master was never conferred with Selet Master until after 1821 and
then first in New York (Mackey).
No data is available on the history of the Super Excellent Master
ceremony. An event which may not only remove the isolation of the
Cryptic Rite but may even strengthen and consolidate the York Rite
was the decision of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar of the
United States in 1958 to give State Grand Commanderies the option of
declaring the Royal and Select Master degrees prerequisite to the
degrees of the Commanderies (Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia, 1961).
Harry Davis (History of Freemasonry among Negroes in America, 1964)
stated that three councils were authorities (1916) in Ohio: Adoriam
#1 (Cleveland), Zabud #2 (Toledo) and Herald #3 (Columbus), and n
August 13, 1917 a convention of delegates from these three councils
organized a Grand Council at Cincinnati and this body was
incorporated under the laws of Ohio on December 21st, 1920. Councils
were soon organized in Boston, Chicago, Newark, Portsmouth,
Indianapolis, Pittsburgh, and Springfield. Deputies were appointed
for Pennsylvania, Indiana, Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois, New York,
Rhode Island and Massachusetts.
It wasn't until after the Great Depression of 1929 that Councils
spread to other Prince Hall jurisdictions. Prince Hall Grand Council
of Royal and Select Masters, Sate of New York also warranted by the
Prince Hall Grand Council of Royal and Select Masters of Ohio on May
26th, 1958, and included three subordinate councils: Alpha Council
#1 (New York); Jordan Council #2 (Connecticut); and Philadelphia
Council #3 (Pennsylvania) Subsequently, this New York Grand Council
R&SM has contributed to the establishment of Grand Councils
R&SM in neighboring jurisdictions: Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
Maryland, Washington, D.C., North Carolina and Florida.
The principal leadership during the past four decades has been
provided by these twenty Thrice Illustrious Grand Masters: Emmett J.
Avery 58-69; Phelmon E. Johnson 69-71; Samuel A. Jackson 71-73; Owen
H. Thompson 73-75; Jerry Bigger 75-77; Cliford J. Story 77-79;
Wilfred C. Medley 79-81; William B. Simmons 81-83; Julius H. Snoddy
83-85; Arthur L. Taylor 85-88; Albert Bennett 88-89; Robert L.
Williams 89-91; Dr. Floyd L. Bass, Sr. 91-92; Maurice LaFate Sr.
92-94; Robert M Barrett, Jr. 99-01; Raymond Joiner 01-02 and
currently Leonard W. LaRue.
The Most Illustrious Prince Hall Grand Council of Oryal and Select
Masters, State of New York and its Jurisdiction has included
selected subordinate councils: four in New York City - Alpha Council
#1, Zabud Countil #7, Mystic Tie Council #8 and Melchizedek Council
#17; two in Delaware - John H. Hubert Council #12 and William H.
Barrett Council #22; two in Massachusetts - Ish Sodi Council #10 and
Adonriam #23; and Jordan Council #2 in Connecticut. M.I. Past Thrice
Illustrious Grand Master, Companion Maurice W. LaFate Sr., pointed
out in his 1994 annual address, "A Royal and Select Master is
God's other self, Cryptic Rite Masonry possesses antiquity
tradition, irrevocable landmarks, its own jurisdiction and a ritual
peculiar to itself." The ritual of Cryptic Masonry admonishes
individual Master to be aware of his influence in their lives. The
'voice of God' is perhaps the same voice referred to in the Charge
of the Degree, Entered Apprentice. "Care little for the jibes
of men, but heed the sting of conscience!"
|
|