It may be said that never in the annals of Freemasonry
has so much been attributed by so many to one single man: Elias Ashmole. Yet
Ashmole’s own direct patronage of the Craft was minimal at best. Why then the
attention? And, more intriguingly, why should a man of Ashmole’s standing
become a freemason in the first place?
Ashmole was born in modest surroundings on 23rd
May 1617 at Lichfield, Staffordshire. The well-respected family was not wealthy
and the young Elias was an ambitious man. He pursued, from a young age, a
diversity of interests that were to become the hallmark of his life. He also
pursued money and wealth and his second marriage in 1649 to Lady Mainwaring, 20
years his senior, was the transparent fulfilment of his ambition. He was now
able to begin to amass the large collections of manuscripts, coins, astrological
and archaeological specimens and medical artefacts of which we are today the
beneficiaries. In 1675 his whole collection was donated to Oxford University and
the world-famous Ashmolean Museum, the first Museum in Great Britain, opened its
doors.
By 1633 the talented 16 year old had finished Music
school in his home town to find himself following a legal career in London. This
served him well. Ashmole was constantly embroiled in litigation, which he
invariably won. The culmination of his legal career was the prestigious
admission to the Middle Temple in 1657. By age 25 Ashmole appears to be retired.
Having given up his legal activities he returned to Peter Mainwaring’s house
in Smallwood, Cheshire in 1642 just as the Civil War was about to engulf the
country. He spent the next few years in leisure, composing poetry, reading and
acting as legal consultant. Ashmole was a staunch Royalist and in May 1644 he
was appointed a Collector of Excise and sent to Oxford where he decided
to remain. His name is closely associated with Brasenose College,
although he does not appear to have graduated from Oxford University, being
given an honorary degree later in life. During the course of 1645 and 1646,
crucial years in the Civil War, Ashmole’s political and military careers
developed on parallel lines. In May he was appointed as one of the King’s Gentlemen
of the Ordnance of the Garrison. In December 1645 Charles I appointed him commissioner,
receiver and registrar of Excise of City & County of Worcester and in
March 1646 he was made Captain of the Foot by Lord Astley himself, commander of the Royalist infantry. Two
months later, as Assistant Master of Ordnance, Ashmole
witnessed the surrender of the City of Worcester to Cromwell’s forces and the
final defeat of King Charles in September 1646.
It was during this lull that he took a six-month
‘break’ returning to Smallwood and on 16 October 1646 Elias Ashmole was made
a freemason in Warrington. His initiation took place at 4.30 in the afternoon.
The precise time can be given thanks to what are known as the Elias Ashmole
diaries, but were in fact biographical annotations. Ashmole only began the
chronological ‘collection of occurrences and accidents for my life’ on 26
December 1679. It was intended as source material for a future biography, which
never materialised. He did keep a cipher diary between 1645 and 1649 in which
his initiation is recorded; otherwise the entries prior to 1679 were inserted
from memory. His last diary entry is dated 1692. In the whole of his extensive
manuscript annotations there are only two references to his Masonic activities,
dated 1646 and 1682. The first 10-line entry is lucid and typical of his
entries:
‘1646 Oct. 4H.30pm I was made a
Free-Mason at Warrington in Lancashire with Coll. Henry Mainwaring of Karincham
in Cheshire. The names of those that were of the Lodge, Mr Rich:Penkett Warden.
Mr James Collier, Mr Rich Sanchey, Henry Littler, John Ellam, Rich: Ellam, Hugh
Brewer.
The historical importance of this early record does
not lie in what Ashmole did. He did, after all, nothing more than record his
initiation. The importance lies in this being the first evidence of the
initiation of an English speculative mason. That is notwithstanding the fact
that those present and listed would have certainly been initiated at an earlier
date. Yet, because of the very limited detail in the entry, there have been as
many questions raised as have been resolved by this historic event. The most
interesting argument still extant is the exact nature of the Lodge in which
Ashmole was initiated. There is little dispute that, with the possible exception
of Richard Ellom (sic) who styled himself a Freemason in his will, those
present did not belong to the stonemasons trade. The Lodge, however, will have
consisted of several additional members not present at the initiation and who
may well have been working operative stonemasons. This may be read in the
context of the London Masons Company which Ashmole was to attend in 1682 and
which is discussed in further detail below. There are also interesting hints at
the nature of Masonic activity at the time. Colonel Henry Mainwaring, with whom
Ashmole was initiated, was a Roundhead parliamentarian friend, related to
Peter Mainwaring, Ashmole’s father in law and Warrington was at this time a
Parliamentary stronghold. The implication is that freemasonry, from these very
early days, recognised no political boundaries. The structure of the Lodge is
also hinted at by the significant reference to Richard Penkett as a Warden (if
one overlooks the unsubstantiated suggestion that Warden was Richard Penkett’s
last name). Furthermore, the conclusion has been reached, that Ashmole took his
obligation not on a bible but on what is now known as the Sloane Manuscript
No 3438. The text to the
manuscript was written by an Eduard Sankey, related to the Richard Sankey
mentioned by Ashmole, who signed and dated the ancient charge 16 October
1646. It was probably expressly composed for the ceremony of Elias Ashmole’s
initiation.
An interesting problem arose with the first printed
edition of his diaries in 1717 published to coincide with the formation of Grand
Lodge. The printed text differs from the manuscript version in a minor detail.
It reads ‘The names of those that were then at the Lodge’ instead
of ‘then of the lodge’ as written by Ashmole. The
difference is significant, the former version implying that those present were
not members of the Lodge. There are two perennial questions raised with regard
to Elias Ashmole’s initiation. Why did he join? And why is there no other
mention of freemasonry in his extensive diaries until his visit to London in
1682? The answer may lie in that freemasonry was not an organisation of
consequence. Ashmole joined because by nature he was a joiner. He could not have
resisted the temptation to discover the nature of what even then was a
mysterious association and he may well have found nothing of consequence in the
fraternity. It is also possible that he may have attended meetings unrecorded in
his annotations until the summons to the Masons Company in London.
Ashmole was an extraordinarily accomplished man. By
1648 he had extended his studies in Astrology and Anatomy to Botany and Alchemy.
This last subject, which was to occupy him considerably, culminated in several
publications, the first in 1650 under the pseudonym of James Hasolle. This was
followed by two further well know works: Theatrum Chemicum Britannicum in
1652 and The Way to Bliss in 1658. Much has been written of Ashmole
undoubted fascination with esoteric and hermetic studies. He often consulted
oracles and chose Mercury as his personal sign. He also became the
spiritual son of William Backhouse who, in 1653 bequeathed him the secret of ‘the
true Matter of the Philosopher’s Stone’. Yet Ashmole made a point of not
allowing his enthusiasm for alchemy to obscure his factual historical research
and he never saw himself as a practicing alchemist. He specifically stated that
he never went past the stage of speculative enquiry. Ashmole’s many
lawsuits – as he says in preface to The Way to Bliss– deprived him of
the tranquillity of mind he wanted in order to pursue alchemy. There is no
evidence that Ashmole’s hermetic and esoteric interests extended into his
restricted involvement with Freemasonry.
Ashmole’s loyalty to the King paid off with the
Restoration of Charles II in 1660. A year later he was nominated Windsor Herald
where he became the Registrar & Treasurer between 1668-1671. It is here that
he wrote the monumental publication The institution, laws & ceremonies of
the most noble Order of the Garter completed in 1672. It was also as Windsor
Herald he saw himself qualified to propose the design for the coat of Arms of
the Royal Society of which he was elected a member in January 1661, a few months
after the Society’s foundation. His submission, inspired by the biblical
reference in Amos 7, vv.
7&8 had, in the use of the plumb rule, also Masonic connotations of which Ashmole would no doubt have been aware. The
drawing shows a shield divided into
two, the upper half with the Royal Coat of arms on the top left hand side. A
hand protruding from a folded sleeve holds a plumb rule between thumb and index
finger descending into the lower half of the arms. At the base the legend ‘Rerum
Cognoscere Causas’, abbreviated from Virgil’s full sentence:
felix qui potuit rerum
cognoscere causas which translates: happy the man
who could learn the causes of things. Ashmole was a founding member of the
Society, whose first president, Sir Robert Moray had been initiated 5 years before Ashmole. In May 1641 Moray
was serving with the Scottish forces besieging Newcastle-upon-Tyne and on 20th
May he was admitted a mason at St Mary’s Chapel Lodge of Edinburgh. The first
recorded Masonic initiation on English soil. It is interesting to speculate
whether the two men discussed Freemasonry.
The second and only other Masonic mention in the 1850
odd manuscript pages that comprise his annotations and diaries is dated 10th
March 1682, thirty-five years after his initiation, and states:
About
5 pm I reced a summons to appr at a lodge to be held the next day at Masons Hall
London
with an additional entry on the next day
11th
Accordingly I went & about Noone were admitted into the fellowship of
Freemasons, Sir William Wilson Knight, Capt. Rich: Borchwick, Mr Will: Woodman,
Mr Wm Grey, Mr Samuel Taylour & Mr William Wise. I was the senior Fellow
among them (it being 35 years since I was admitted). There were present beside
myself the Fellowes after named. Mr Thos: Wise Mr of the Masons Company this
present yeare. Mr Thomas Shorthose, Mr William Hamon, Mr John Thompson, & Mr
Will: Stnaton.
We
all dyned at the Half Moone Tavern in Cheapside, at a Noble Dinner prepared at
the charge of the New-accepted Masons.
The same questions arise in this instance as they did
with regard to the first entry. What ceremony did Ashmole exactly attend? He was
The Senior Fellow among them thus a speculative gathering in an operative
environment of the Masons Company of London. Of the ten who dyned at the Half
Moon Tavern eight were operative Masons employed by Christopher Wren.
Ashmole reced a summons to appr implying that he was known to be a mason.
The recorded ceremony of the acception in the Masons Company has yet to
be explained. It appears to be a ‘club within the club’ to which selected
individuals were admitted as members. Ashmole’s presence here may be seen as
evidence or at least suggest that Ashmole’s own lodge into which he was
initiated in 1646 was of a similar composition. Namely an operative lodge with
non-masons as members and that the ceremony Ashmole experienced at his making
was the same acception ceremony that Ashmole was now attending in London.
The arguments continue.
Once again the first printed version of the diaries
published in 1717 deviated from the original entry in a manner, which was
misleading at best. The word ‘by’ was inserted before Sir William
Wilson reading
11th Accordingly I went, and about Noon
were admitted into the fellowship of Freemasons, by Sir William
Wilson …
This implies that the candidates or ‘newly
accepted’ masons were their own hosts, which was certainly not intended by
Ashmole. James Anderson in his second Book of Constitutions published in 1738
makes an equally misleading statement. Paraphrasing Ashmole’s words, Anderson
quotes him as saying ‘. . . when we admitted into the
Fellowship. . implying that
Ashmole actively participated in the ceremony.
From 1675 Ashmole lived quietly in South Lambeth in
the grounds that once belonged to the Tradescant family. For the next decade he continued writing, completing
works on the Antiquities of Windsor and a Biography of John Dee.
He also gathered material for various projects never completed. My good friend
John Hart, curator of the Worcester Museum, recently commented: What
a pity Elias Ashmole never anticipated Robert Gould and wrote a history of
Freemasonry. The fact is that Ashmole
appears to have had plans for a History of Freemasonry. His intention is
evidenced in several writings and references. All the more pity that this
project never took off and that none of the material collected, outside of minor
references to details of the Temple in Jerusalem, survived or have been located.
Elias Ashmole died on 18th or 19th
May 1692 well into his seventies and no doubt oblivious to the speculative
legacy that was to follow his long and fulfilling life.
Selected Bibliography and Sources
Churton, Tobias , Elias Ashmole 1617-1692 Notes on
his life with special
attention
given to his connections with Freemasonry &
Rosicrucianism
Privately printed folio 1992
Ovenell, R.F. The Ashmolean Museum 1683-1894
(1986)
Page, Bryan F Elias Ashmole The First recorded
English Freemason
Prestonian Lecture for 1988
Josten
C H Elias Ashmole Oxford, 1966
Rogers, Norma he Lodge of Elias Ashmole, 1646 AQC
65 1952
Rylands W H Freemasonry in the 17th
Century Warrington Masonic
Magazine
December 1881
Scanlan, Mathew The Mystery of the Acception
Heredom Vol 11, 2003
Tuckett J E S Dr Richard Rawlinson and the Masonic
Entries in Elias
Ashmole’s
Diary AQC 25 1912
My thanks are extended to William Hunt, Windsor Herald
who treads on Elias Ashmole’s footsteps and John Hamill for his ready
accessibility