Evans, Douglas
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Evans, Douglas
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Evans, Douglas
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On March 6, 1775, Prince Hall and 14 men of color were made masons in Lodge #441 of the Irish Registry attached to the 38th British Foot Infantry at Castle William Island in Boston Harbor, Massachusetts. It marked the first time that Black men were made masons in America. About a year later, the British Foot Infantry left Boston, along with its lodge, leaving Prince Hall and his associates without a lodge. Before the lodge left, Worshipful Master Bait gave them a "permit" to meet as a lodge and bury their dead in manner and form. This permit, however, did not allow them to do any "Masonic work" or to take in any new members. Under it, African Lodge was organized on July 3, 1776, with Prince Hall as the Worshipful Master.
On March 2, 1784, African Lodge No. 1 petitioned the Grand Lodge of England the Premier or Mother Grand Lodge of the world, for a warrant (or charter), to organize a regular Masonic lodge, with all the rights and privileges thereunto prescribed. The Grand Lodge of England issued a charter on September 29, 1784 to African Lodge No. 459, the first African American lodge in America.
In Atlanta, Crystal Lodge #112 was instituted in 1891 and chartered in 1892 by Grand Master John D. Campbell. The chartered members were William Charles Thomas, Henry A. Rucker and James M. Scott. In 1902, Dr. Henry Rutherford Butler was elected Grand Master. In December of 1932, Grand Master John Wesley Dobbs combined the lodge with Golden Eagle #253 and changed the name of the lodge to William Charles Thomas Lodge #112. In 1935, Dobbs merged the lodge with Alexander Hamilton #349.
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African American freemasons
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Georgia--Atlanta
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