On this day … 9 October 1820

The members of Preston’s Royal Lodge of Masons were sitting down to dinner at the Bull Inn (now Bull and Royal) in company with masons from all over the county, including the guest of honour, the Right Worshipful Francis Dunkinfield Astley Esq, the provincial grand master for Lancashire.

Preston Freemasons 1762
Preston’s Freemasons parade at the 1762 Guild: Fishwick’s History of Preston

Such a ceremony was a common occurrence in the town at that date. At each celebration of the guild, the Mason’s Company had a prominent place in the processions, and in other years the freemasons frequently paraded through the town, as in 1819 when all Preston’s freemasons had gathered to help the town’s Lodge of Perseverance celebrate a festival of St John the Evangelist.

The town’s inns provided meeting places for these lodges: the Lodge of Perseverance, for example, meeting at Robert Preston’s Three Tuns on High Street, the Lodge of Peace and Unity at Mr Bennet’s Horse Shoe in Church Street and the Lodge of Concord at Mrs Merrick’s in Turk’s Head Yard.

The district’s Anglican clergy were frequently freemasons. When a grand procession of some 7,000 headed from the Boar’s Head Inn in Friargate to the parish church in 1814 for a freemasons’ service, the sermon was given by a freemason who was also the curate of Woodplumpton.

Preston Freemasons 1882
Preston’s Freemasons parade at the 1882 Guild: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/6701433261/

When foundation stones were laid for the town’s public buildings the event usually involved an elaborate masonic ceremony, as when about 1,500 freemasons assembled to participate in the laying of the foundation stone of the Harris Museum in 1882.

Earlier, in 1844, when the mayor laid the foundation stone for the Literary and Philosophical Society’s new building at the corner of Winckley Square and Cross Street, he was ‘assisted’ in the task by the Provincial Grand Master for Lancashire, Le Gendre N. Starkie Esq.

One group who would have been excluded from the brotherhood of masons was the town’s Catholics, who from 1738 until 1983 faced automatic excommunication if they associated with or supported Masonic organisations. And even now, Catholics are prohibited from joining the masons: ‘faithful who enrol in Masonic associations are in a state of grave sin and may not receive Holy Communion’.

A man who bridged the divide between the freemasons and the Catholic Church in Victorian Preston was the town’s MP and squire of Cuerden Hall, Robert Townley Parker.

Parker was a Freemason, with two lodges named after him, and a supporter of the many ultra-Protestant Orange Order lodges that flourished in Lancashire. Yet at the end of his life, he looked back proudly on the audience he was granted with Pope Pius VII at the beginning of the century, and he counted many prominent Catholics among his close friends, including Cardinal Manning, the archbishop of Westminster.

The two lodges that bear his name are still flourishing today. The website of Townley Parker Lodge 1032, which currently meets at Cunliffe Hall in Chorley, pays tribute to his place in Freemasonry:

‘Named in honour of Robert Townley Parker (1793–1879), a Unionist Member of Parliament and a notable Freemason, the lodge carries on his legacy. Despite most Masonic lodges being named after locations or moral virtues, Townley Parker had the unique distinction of having two Masonic lodges and a Masonic chapter named after him, including our sister lodge – Townley Parker Lodge 1083, which now meets in central Manchester.’


Sources
Whittle’s History of Preston
Hewitson’s History of Preston
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_ban_of_Freemasonry


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