senior deacon
Sr. Member
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- Jul 3, 2014
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- Location
- Humboldt, Iowa
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- #1
Thread Owner
A notebook was recently rediscovered in the rare book vault of the Iowa Masonic Library. It is known as " The Creigh Notebook ". It is notes on the Francken Manuscript which is the earliest ritual for the Scottish Rite and the one Pike worked from. This notebook is a hand written copy and contains the notes on the 4 th thru the 25 th degrees of the Scottish Rite. What is interesting to me is that it contained the ritual for the 30th. to the 32nd. degrees. It was termed as the degrees for the lodge of perfection. The charter for the lodge of perfection was granted to Stephen Morin by the Grand Lodge( Orient ) of France in 1762. The ritual was not done until 1783. Pike would revise them completely a century later taking him almost as long to rewrite them as it took to write them. He reorganized them into 32 degrees and one higher or 33 degrees in total. Then sub dividing them in to four groups actually five with the blue and or Red lodge being the first. The ritual for the southern jurisdiction was updated about ten years ago. Not the form of the degrees but the wordings. They were modernised to be more revelent for today's language.
This notebook was received in Iowa about the year 1866. More than likely T.S. Parvin commissioned it so he could start the or should I say introduce the Scottish Rite into Iowa. He was one of very few men who have served the Grand Lodge, the York Rite, and the Scottish Rite in the state of Iowa all at the same time. Pike and Parvin were Masonic contemporaries both scholars and at the time Parvin had the largest Masonic Library west of the Mississippi river. It was bigger than Pike's what Pike didn't have Parvin did.
The full story is in the current Grand Lodge of Iowa Bulletin. Volume 117 number 1. They have even include two of the hand drawn diagrams in the Bulletin. What excites me is that the Franchen manuscript was the one that Pike would have worked off of. He would have had to have had access to the Creigh Notebook also.
I am sorry for the long post but feel that if we can find the author of the rituals ( both the Scottish Rite and the K.G.C. ) we can come closer to the treasure. Hints would have been hidden in them.
S.D.
This notebook was received in Iowa about the year 1866. More than likely T.S. Parvin commissioned it so he could start the or should I say introduce the Scottish Rite into Iowa. He was one of very few men who have served the Grand Lodge, the York Rite, and the Scottish Rite in the state of Iowa all at the same time. Pike and Parvin were Masonic contemporaries both scholars and at the time Parvin had the largest Masonic Library west of the Mississippi river. It was bigger than Pike's what Pike didn't have Parvin did.
The full story is in the current Grand Lodge of Iowa Bulletin. Volume 117 number 1. They have even include two of the hand drawn diagrams in the Bulletin. What excites me is that the Franchen manuscript was the one that Pike would have worked off of. He would have had to have had access to the Creigh Notebook also.
I am sorry for the long post but feel that if we can find the author of the rituals ( both the Scottish Rite and the K.G.C. ) we can come closer to the treasure. Hints would have been hidden in them.
S.D.