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New Beginning's
History
Read about our New
Beginning Lodge No. 970 of the Most
Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of
Alabama F. & A. M. was organized September
29, 1999....
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Prince Hall History
Read about our founder
Prince Hall and this amazing fraternity that
has been in existence for over 225 years..
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Stay tune for upcoming events
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Prince
Hall is recognized as the Father of Black Masonry in the
United States. He made it possible for us to also be
recognized and enjoy all privileges of Free and Accepted
Masonry. 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 countries
of the day were searched and churches with baptismal
records were examined without a find of the name of
Prince Hall.
One widely circulated rumor states that "Prince Hall
was free born in British West Indies. His father, Thomas
Prince Hall, was an Englishman and his mother a free
colored woman of French extraction. In 1765 he worked
his passage on a ship to Boston, where he worked as a
leather worker, a trade learned from his father. Eight
years later he had acquired real estate and was
qualified to vote. Religiously inclined, he later became
a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church
with a charge in Cambridge." This account,
paraphrased
from the generally discredited Grimshaw book of 1903, is
suspect in many areas.
Black Freemasonry began when Prince Hall and fourteen
other free black men were initiated into Lodge No. 441,
Irish Constitution, attached to the 38th Regiment of
Foot, British Army Garrisoned at Castle William (now
Fort Independence) Boston Harbor on March 6, 1775. The
Master of the Lodge was Sergeant John Batt. Along with
Prince Hall, the other newly made masons were 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.
When the British Army left Boston in 1776, this
Lodge, No 441, granted Prince Hall and his brethren
authority to meet as African Lodge #1 (Under
Dispensation), to go in procession on St. John's Day,
and as a Lodge to bury their dead; but they could not
confer degrees nor perform any other Masonic "work". For
nine years these brethren, together with others who had
received their degrees elsewhere, assembled and enjoyed
their limited privileges as Masons. Thirty-three masons
were listed on the rolls of African Lodge #1 on January
14th, 1779. Finally on March 2, 1784, Prince Hall
petitioned the Grand Lodge of England, through a
Worshipful Master of a subordinate Lodge in London
(William Moody of Brotherly Love Lodge No. 55) for a
warrant or charter.
The Warrant to African Lodge No. 459 of Boston is the
most significant and highly prized document known to the
Prince Hall Mason Fraternity. Through it our legitimacy
is traced, and on it more than any other factor, our
case rests. It was granted on September 29, 1784,
delivered in Boston on April 29, 1787 by Captain James
Scott, brother-in-law of John Hancock and master of the
Neptune, under its authority African Lodge No. 459 was
organized one week later, May 6, 1787.
Prince Hall was appointed a Provincial Grand Master
in 1791 by H.R.H., the Prince of Wales. The question of
extending Masonry arose when Absalom Jones of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania appeared in Boston. He was an
ordained Episcopal priest and a mason who was interested
in establishing a masonic lodge in Philadelphia. Under
the authority of the charter of African Lodge #459,
Prince Hall established African Lodge #459 of
Philadelphia on March 22, 1797 and Hiram Lodge #3 in
Providence, Rhode Island on June 25, 1797. African Lodge
of Boston became the "Mother Lodge" of the Prince Hall
Family. It was typical for new lodges to be established
in this manner in those days. The African Grand Lodge
was not organized until 1808 when representatives of
African Lodge #459 of Boston, African Lodge #459 of
Philadelphia and Hiram Lodge #3 of Providence met in New
York City.
Upon Prince Hall's death on December 4, 1807, Nero
Prince became Master. When Nero Prince sailed to Russia
in 1808, George Middleton succeeded him. After
Middleton, Petrert Lew, Samuel H. Moody and then, John
T. Hilton became Grand Master. In 1827, Hilton
recommended a Declaration of Independence from the
English Grand Lodge.
In 1869 a fire destroyed Massachusetts' Grand Lodge
headquarters and a number of its priceless records. The
charter in its metal tube was in the Grand Lodge chest.
The tube saved the charter from the flames, but the
intense heat charred the paper. It was at this time that
Grand Master S.T. Kendall crawled into the burning
building and in peril of his life, saved the charter
from complete destruction. Thus a Grand Master's
devotion and heroism further consecrated this parchment
to us, and added a further detail to its already
interesting history. The original Charter No. 459 has
long since been made secure between heavy plate glass
and is kept in a fire-proof vault in a downtown Boston
bank.
Today, the Prince Hall fraternity has over 4,500
lodges worldwide, forming 45 independent jurisdictions
with a membership of over 300,000 Masons.
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