FREEMASONRY, ANTI-MASONRY AND ILLUMINISM IN
THE UNITED STATES, 1734-1850, A BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Walgren, Kent Logan Worcester, MA.
American Antiquarian Society
2003 small 4to., cloth. cxvi, (ii), 497+(1); vi, (ii), 499-1136
pages.
Two volumes. $195 + Post and Packing
(No cover image as yet available)

© Rosslyn Templars
Below is the publishers 'review' of this book. We are reliably informed that
this book is an important addition to our understanding of Freemasonry and how
it developed in the United States of America (although it started in the then
British colonies! - Ed.). Once we have obtained a copy an independent
review will be posted here.
A comprehensive successor to earlier bibliographies of Masonic books
printed in the United States, such as Richard Barthelmess's "Bibliographie der
Freimaurerei in Amerika" (1856) and Enoch T. Carson's " Bibliotheca Masonica
Carsoniana" (1874). Volume 1 contains Introductory Essays and Entries from
1734 to 1827; Volume 2, entries from 1827-1850 and Indexes. The author has
compiled 5,560 annotated entries, personally examining 95 per cent of those
for which surviving copies are known. Arranged in a chronological/geographical
format, listing U.S. Masonic publications by date and state; and attempting to
(1) reclaim lost bibliographical and historical lore known to the Masons of
earlier generations; (2) by means of textual quotations, a sense and flavor of
the social, political, and religious issues that preoccupied U.S. Freemasons
and their detractors in the 18th and 19th centuries, such as the mythical
early history of Masonry, women and Masonry, African-American Freemasonry,
religion and Freemasonry, and politics and Freemasonry; (3) Raw data on
printing of Masonic literature and its economics in the early United States.
"The chronological/geographical arrangement, which allows one to track the
genesis and growth of the Craft in each state through the year 1850, provides
a sense of time (cause-and-effect), context, and history." (introduction).
Illustrated throughout with 70 title-page facsimiles, from "The Constitutions
of the Free-Masons" (Phila., Benjamin Franklin, 1734), to the "Constitution of
the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons for the State of California, and
Minutes of the Proceedings of the Convention to Constitute Said Lodge" (San
Francisco, Bartlett & Robb, 1850). A valuable reference for scholars of U.S.
Freemasonry, historians of U.S. social, political, and religious thought,
librarians, and students of early U.S. printing.