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1764 12 avril : Création de la Loge les "
Parfaits d'Écosse " à la Nouvelle Orléans - C'est le premier
atelier de hauts grades sur le continent nord
Américain
Estienne Morin and his Rite of 25
Degrees
Charter of the Rite of Perfection 25º
A French trader, by the name of Estienne Morin, had been
involved in high degree Masonry in Bordeaux since 1744 and, in
1747, founded an "Ecossais" lodge (Scots Masters Lodge) in the
city of Le Cap Francais, on the north coast of the French
colony of Saint-Domingue (now Haiti). Over the next decade,
high degree Freemasonry continued to spread to the Western
hemisphere as the high degree lodge at Bordeaux warranted or
recognized seven Ecossais lodges there. In Paris in the
year 1761, a Patent was issued to Estienne Morin, dated
27 August,
creating him "Grand Inspector for all parts of the New
World." This Patent was signed by officials of the Grand
Lodge at Paris and appears to have originally granted him
power over the craft lodges only, and not over the high, or
"Ecossais", degree lodges. Later copies of this Patent
appear to have been embellished, probably by Morin, to
improve his position over the high degree lodges in the West
Indies.[10
]
Early writers long believed that a "Rite of Perfection"
consisting of 25 degrees, the highest being the "Sublime Prince
of the Royal Secret", and being the predecessor of the Scottish
Rite, had been formed in Paris by a high degree council calling
itself "The Council of Emperors of the East and West". The
title "Rite of Perfection" first appeared in the Preface to the
"Grand Constitutions of 1786", the authority for which is now
known to be faulty.
[11] It is now generally accepted
that this Rite of twenty-five degrees was compiled by Estienne
Morin and is therefore more properly titled "The Rite of the
Royal Secret", or "Morin's Rite".
[12]
Morin returned to the West Indies in 1762 or 1763, to
Saint-Domingue, where, armed with his new Patent, he assumed
powers to constitute lodges of all degrees, spreading the high
degrees throughout the West Indies and North America. Morin
stayed in Saint-Domingue until 1766 when he moved to Jamaica.
At Kingston, Jamaica, in 1770, Morin created a "Grand Chapter"
of his new Rite (the Grand Council of Jamaica). Morin died in
1771 and was buried in Kingston.
[13]
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