Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: Masonic Light, 1926.02.00 ([])

Cue: "The subscriber residing"

Source format: "Transcript"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: AB

MTPDocEd
To the Worshipful Master, Wardens, and Brethren of Polar Star Lodge No. 79 of the Ancient, Free, and Accepted Order of Masons, per John M. Leavenworth
26 December 1860 • St. Louis, Mo. (MS facsimile: Masonic Light, Feb 1926, UCCL 10665)

To the W. M. Wardens and Bretheren emendationof Polar Star Lodge No 79 A. F. and A. M.1explanatory note

The subscriber residing in St Louis of lawful age and by occupation a Pilot begs leave to state that unbiased by friends and uninfluenced by mercenary motives he freely and voluntary emendationoffers himself as a candidate for the mysteries of Masonry and that he is prompted to solicit this privilege by a favorable opinion conceived of the Institution a desire of knowledge and a sincere wish of being serviceable to his fellow creatures. Should his petition be granted he will cheerfully conform to all the Ancient established usages and customs of the Fraternity

Recommended by                     Signed
John M. Leavenworth
Tom Moore 2explanatory note           Sam. L. Clemens
Comm.–
H. T. Taylor
Defriez
Wannallemendation4explanatory note
Textual Commentary
26 December 1860 • To the Worshipful Master, Wardens, and Brethren of Polar Star Lodge No. 79 of the Ancient, Free, and Accepted Order of Masons, per John M. LeavenworthSt. Louis, Mo.UCCL 10665
Source text(s):

MS facsimile in “Mark Twain the Mason,” Masonic Light (Kansas City, Mo.: Masonic Light Publishing Co., February 1926), 9, in Iowa Masonic Library, Grand Lodge of Iowa, Cedar Rapids (IaCrM).

Previous Publication:

L1 , 106–107; Almost two years before publication of the MS facsimile in 1926, a transcript was published in Denslow, 56.

Provenance:

The location of the MS is unknown.

Explanatory Notes
1 

Polar Star Lodge No. 79, of St. Louis, had more members than any other Missouri lodge, among them many rivermen (Jones, 363–64).

2 

Moore and Clemens had been friends at least since they served together on the John J. Roe (see 6 July 59 to Mooreclick to open letter). John M. Leavenworth was a clerk with the St. Louis wholesale grocery firm of William L. Ewing and Company (Robert V. Kennedy 1860, 161). He was also the brother of Mark and Zebulon Leavenworth, captain and pilot, respectively, of the John J. Roe, which Clemens had steered in August and September 1857.

4 

The members of the committee appointed to consider Clemens’s petition have not been further identified. (One of them, evidently, inscribed these final four lines.) They reported favorably, and Clemens was elected on 13 February 1861. He received his first degree (Entered Apprentice) on 22 May, his second degree (Fellow Craft) on 12 June, and his third degree (Master Mason) on 10 July 1861. Although Clemens let his membership in Polar Star Lodge lapse while he was in the Far West, he did attend meetings of the Carson City and Angels Camp lodges on 24 March 1862 and 8 February 1865, respectively (Mace, 162). After reinstatement in Polar Star Lodge on 24 April 1867, he remained a Mason only until 8 October 1869, when the lodge granted his request for a demit, thereby accepting his resignation. (For a discussion of the Masonic influence on Clemens’s thought and work, see Jones, 363–73.)

Emendations and Textual Notes
  Bretheren •  sic
  voluntary •  sic
  Wannall  •  possibly ‘Waunall’
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