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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.XII   September, 1934   No.9

THE MASTER?S HAT

by: Unknown

?Why does the Master wear a hat??

How many times do newly raised brethren ask the question, and how few 
of the brethren interrogated can give a satisfactory answer!  Usually 
the reply is: ?Oh, that an old symbol,? or: ?That?s one of the 
Landmarks.:  But, as a matter of fact, wearing a hat in Lodge is 
symbolic only as all custom with regard to headgear are symbolic, and 
certainly no custom which has suffered so many changes and reversals 
as this, can, by any stretch of a point, be considered a Landmark.
Ceremonies connected with clothing are very ancient, dating at least 
from the era in which the first captives in tribal wars were stripped 
of all their clothing, partly that their captors might possess it, 
partly as a symbol of the complete subjugation of the slave state.  
Among some peoples today, stripping part of the clothing is still a 
sign of respect; the Tahitians uncover to the waist as a sign of 
reverence to a king; Asiatics bare the feet; Japanese take off a 
slipper for ceremonious salute.  Worshippers in ancient Greece and 
Rome remove their sandals in a house of worship, as do East Indians 
today.
During the days of chivalry, knights often wore full armor in public, 
and usually when going upon private journeys.  To open a visor was a 
form of greeting which said in effect: ?I do not expect a sword 
thrust in the mouth from you,:  A knight removed his helmet before a 
friend as a token that he feared no blow, and always in the presence 
of a King, as a symbol that his life was the King?s.
Moderns remove the hat as a sign of respect in greeting a friend, 
always when speaking to or meeting a lady, a survival of the ancient 
custom of uncovering as a symbol of trust, or subjectivity to a 
higher authority.
That monarchs wear crowns - or hats - as a right when all others are 
uncovered, has been sung by poets of all ages.  In Scott?s ?Lady of 
the Lake,? Ellen Douglas is taken to see the King, little suspecting 
who he is:
?On many a splendid garb she gazed - 
Then turned bewildered and amazed
For all stood bare, and in the room
Fitz-James alone wore a cap and plume,
To him each lady?s look was lent
On him each courtier?s eye was bent;
Midst furs and silks and jewels sheen
He stood, in simple Lincoln green,
The center of the glittering ring
And Snowden?s knight is Scotland?s King!?
The King never uncovered.  He wore his crown where he would. even in 
the House of God.  All had to uncover before the King, as all had to 
retreat from his presence by moving backward - a custom which obtains 
even today in ceremonial audiences in England - that none might ?turn 
his back on the sovereign.?  The very bowing of the head in the 
presence of authority confessed either fearlessness of an unseen 
blow, or his willingness to receive it from his liege Lord.
Not always does the removal of the hat indicate respect.  Orthodox 
Jews remain covered in their synagogues; early Quakers wore hats in 
their houses of worship; women do not remove their hats in some 
churches.  Romans prayed with covered heads; indeed, Romans forbade 
the head covering to a slave, a wooden cap (pileus) being only for 
citizens.  After a Roman owner liberated a slave, the manumitted man 
often went to the Temple of Feronia, on Mt. Suracte, if indeed, he 
did not receive his freedom in her Temple.  Feronia, the goddess of 
fruits, nurseries and groves, was especially honored as the patroness 
of enfranchised slaves, and in her Temple the manumitted received a 
cap.
Dr. George C. Williamson (Curious Survivals) says of the House of 
Commons in London:  ?A member has to wear his hat when he is to 
address the House and there is often confusion when the member is 
unable to find his hat at the moment, and put it on, before he 
addresses the speaker, but, were he to rise without his hat, he would 
be greeted immediately with cries of ?Order, Order!??
Just when or where originated the custom of a Master wearing a hat as 
a sign of authority is an unsolved question.  It is easy enough to 
?guess? that it began from operative Masons of the Middle Ages aping 
the customs of the Court, and requiring all Fellows of the Craft to 
uncover before the Master Mason.  But guessing is not proving.
	
Oliver is quoted as saying:  ?Among the Romans the hat was a sign of 
freedom.  Formerly Masons wore them as a symbol of freedom and 
brotherly equality.  In English and American Lodges it is now 
exclusively an attribute of the Master?s costume.?
Oliver as a historian is open to question; certainly hats are not 
generally worn by Masters in England now.  But this quotation 
indicates that English Masters formerly did, which is born out by 
some notable exceptions of today; 
Bristol, for instance and Lodge Newstead, 47, in the Province of 
Nottingham, where the Master wears a silk hat at Lodge ceremonies.  
In the Royal Sussex Lodge of Hospitality (Bristol) the Master carries 
(not wears) wa cocked hat into the Lodge room.  In Lodge Moria the 
transfer of the hat from outgoing to incoming Master has for many 
years been a part of Installation.
There are extant some rituals of French Masonry of 1787, apparently 
authentic, which seem to give a true picture of the ritual and 
practices of French Brethren of the time.  Masonic students are 
agreed that while doubtless French Masons did dramatize some of the 
English ritual and made certain changes in the Old English ceremonies 
which better fitted the Latin temperament, on the whole these rituals 
contain much that was originally English Masonic practice.
In the old French Ritual of 1787, in the third degree, each Master is 
required to wear a hat.  The word ?Master? here has the double 
significance; Master of the Lodge and Master Mason.  This has led to 
some confusion in translating the real meaning of the rituals.  But 
in this particular instance the context is made clear by some old 
prints, showing French brethren in a Lodge in which all present wear 
hats ?except the candidate.?
Writing in 1896, Wor. Brother Gotthelf Greiner states, of German 
Masons;? . . .it is the invariable custom for brethren in Lodge to 
wear silk hats (which are raised during prayer and when the name of 
the G.A.O.T.U. is invoked).  In that country, it (the wearing of the 
hat) is not a distinction confined to those of any particular 
standing.  
It is to be noted that the Ahiman Rezon of Pennsylvania specifies 
that at Masonic funerals all the brethren should wear black hats,
Contrast these instances of all brethren wearing hats (except the 
candidate) with one of the articles of the statutes of the Chapter of 
Clermont (1755) which reads: 
?Only the Master of a Lodge and the Scots Masters are permitted to 
remain covered.?
Confirming this, an old eighteenth century catch question (which 
survives in some of our Lodges to this day) is:
	Q.	?Where does the Master hang his hat??
	A.	?On nature?s peg.?

Some fanciful theories have been advanced to account for the Master?s 
hat.  Among these may be mentioned this curious idea; because of a 
supposed unpopularity of the Mason?s Craft in the middle ages, the 
brethren on a cathedral building project were occasionally permitted 
to hold their meetings in the cathedral they built, or, if it was not 
sufficiently advanced, in a nearby monastery.  The monks, being 
learned men, were often made Masters of the various builders? Lodges, 
and continued to wear their mitres, as was their custom.  From this 
is supposed to have arisen the custom of a Master wearing a hat!
Fort, in his ?Antiquities of Freemasonry,? writes:
?During the Middle ages, when a traveling Fellow approached a Lodge 
of Masons in prescribed form, he first exclaimed: ?May God Bless, 
direct and prosper you, Master, Pallier (Wardens), and dear fellows!?  
Whereupon the Master, or in his absence the Pallier, was instructed 
by the ordinance of Torgau, to thank him in reply, in order that the 
visiting brother might see who was custodian of the Lodge.  And 
having obtained suitable assistance, the wandering craftsman removed 
his hat, and thanked the brethren with an established formula.  From 
the proceeding ceremony, it is evident that neither the Master not 
the Wardens of a mediaeval German Lodge were distinguishable by 
distinctive tokens while at mechanical labor; otherwise, no 
regulation was essential or obligatory upon the officers to make 
proper response to a visitor for the purpose of deter-mining the 
Master.
?Curiously enough, the implication is direct and clear that the 
Masons of ancient times, when regularly convened for work, and during 
the formal reception of a traveler, pursued their daily avocation and 
attended the usual Masonic demands, within closed portals, with 
covered heads.  At the present day the custom has materially changed, 
and, with one exception, the members of a Lodge at labor noticeably 
divest themselves of their hats.  This is unquestionably a 
transformation of recent origin, and with it the instruction usually 
incident to the distinction has been adopted to the innovation.
?When the initiatory rites in a mediaeval Lodge were performed, the 
Master was not thus prominently contrasted with his brethren.  I 
speak with especial emphasis upon this point, because the esoteric 
and sublime signification involved in the Master?s hat has been 
recklessly perverted and destroyed.  
It was typical, during the Middle Ages, of superiority, and was so 
interpreted in the ceremonies of initiation by the Masons of France 
at the termination of the eighteenth century, all of whom sat in open 
Lodge with covered heads.  (At the conclusion of the rites in French 
Lodges, the Master handed the candidate his hat, and said: ?For the 
future, you shall be covered in a Master?s Lodge.?  
This very ancient usage is a sign of liberty and superiority.)  Among 
the Germans, this article was used as a symbol of transfer of 
chattels, and landed property.  The judge held a hat in his hands; 
the purchaser must receive it from him, and with it the title passed.  
Frequently the ceremony perfecting a sale was performed by the 
contract parties thrusting their hands into a hat, and upon 
withdrawing them the estate changed owners.

?Gothic justices wore a cap or suitable headdress when presiding over 
court, as emblematic of authority, and manifestly the people wore 
their hats while attending the tribunal as symbols of personal 
liberty.  (In an engraving, dating from the 15th century, given in 
Lacroxi, op. cit. p. 379, all persons attendant upon court are 
presented with heads covered).  And with this typical allusion 
generally acquiescence originally harmonized; but the distinctive and 
exceptional feature of a Master?s head-dress contains the secret 
symbolism of authority at the present day, while mediaeval Masons 
worked with covered heads as a sign of freedom.  Both customs, 
descended from a remote teutonic antiquity, have long since 
dissipated their vital forces, while the ordinary interpretation 
possesses less significance than a dilapidated mile-post!?
By all of which it may be seen that we really know very little, and 
must guess a great deal as to the origin of the custom.  But in the 
light of history and the etiquette of various ages, the most probable 
theory seems to be that a Master wears a hat today in imitation of 
the rulers of olden times who wore hat or crown while those who them 
allegiance were uncovered.
Turning from history to practice, a question often asked is: ?When 
should the Worshipful Master remove his hat??  The answer must come 
from taste rather than law.  Some Masters are veritable ?hat 
snatchers,? pulling off their headgear whenever they speak from the 
East.  There seems little more reason for a Master to divest himself 
of his badge of office when addressing a brother, than to remove his 
apron or jewel.  the Master?s hat is not used as a head covering 
designed for warmth and protection from the weather, but as a badge 
of authority.  Good taste would dictate its lifting when the Master 
speaks of or to Deity, of death, during the reading of passages of 
Scripture, and in the presence of the Grand Master.  In other words, 
the Master?s hat is doffed in the presence of superior authority. 
What kind of a hat should a Master wear?  Here also is neither law 
nor rule except for those of good taste.  Fashion and custom rule all 
our clothing, including our hats.  The gentleman in dark cutaway 
coat, gray stripped trousers, a black and white tie, gray gloves and 
spats, who appeared at the White House wearing a golf cap, might 
easily be mistaken for a lunatic; he who tried to step to bat on the 
diamond with a derby would certainly receive Bronx cheers if not pop 
bottles!
Lodges in which the officers appear in evening clothes, either 
?swallow tails? or dinner coats, naturally expect Masters to use 
black silk hats.  Lodges where less formality is practiced frequently 
see Masters in silk hats, but the results are sometimes anomalous.  
The spectacle of a brother in white trousers, black and white shoes 
and a silk hat, is incongruous, at the least.  At a Lodge meeting in 
hot weather in informal clothes the Master is better dressed with a 
straw hat than the more formal silk.  Lodges in which officers wear 
ordinary business clothes should look with approbation on the felt or 
derby.
The Grand Master in Massachusetts wears a three cornered cockade hat 
at the solemn ceremonies of St. John?s Day in winter, survival of the 
custom begun in the days when Paul Revere was Grand Master in that 
Jurisdiction, inclusive of a large, heavily gold-encrusted apron, 
collar, gauntlets and jewels, removes any feeling of incongruity from 
the appearance of this old custom; the Massachusetts Grand Master 
does not wear his cockade when visiting other Grand Lodges.
That the Grand Master ?should? wear his hat, and not let the old 
custom go by default, merely for personal convenience, goes without 
saying.  But it has been said!
On closing the one hundred fiftieth Communication of the Grand Lodge 
of New York, Grand Master Charles S. Johnson (now Grand Secretary) 
said:
?I want to call your attention to the fact that I have been wearing a 
hat during this communication.  I have done it on purpose - not 
because I have any desire to wear a hat like this, but I want you men 
in the Lodge to see that the ancient custom of a Master wearing a hat 
shall not be dispensed with.  I have found as I have gone around the 
State, again and again, that in many Lodges there is no attempt on 
the part of the Master to fulfill this ancient tradition of our 
Fraternity.  It is a very interesting tradition in our organization, 
and I think it is one that we ought not to lose; and, therefore, I 
have set you the example, and I ask you in your respective Lodges 
throughout the State and the City of New York, to see that this old 
tradition, which has been so honoured in the past, shall continue 
even in these modern days.?