| Bicentennial
Monument Installed In Charleston, South Carolina

The Supreme Council requested the Scottish Rite Monument and Plaque
Committee in Charleston, South Carolina, to install a granite monument to
commemorate the original location of Shepheard's Tavern (at the corner of
Church and Broad Streets, which is now the site of the Bank of America
Building). Formal dedication of the monument is slated for October 3,
2001.
The committee designed the monument, and E. J.
McCarthy & Sons Monument Co. manufactured it, placing it on a granite
base. Installed on November 30, 2000, the three-ton commemorative stone's
top is slanted forward with the image of Shepheard's Tavern sandblasted
into the granite, and a 33rd Degree double-headed eagle emblem is on the
front of the monument. Just below the emblem is the following wording:
"On this site stood Shepheard's Tavern, the birthplace of The Ancient
and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, the Mother Supreme Council of
the World, May 31, 1801."
Looking from the front of the monument, the left
side has the following wording: "Founders of the Supreme Council:
Abraham Alexander, Sovereign Grand Inspector General; Emanuel De La Motta,
Sovereign Grand Inspector General; Dr. Isaac Auld, Sovereign Grand
Inspector General; Israel De Lieben, Sovereign Grand Inspector General;
Moses C. Levy, Grand Treasurer General; Dr. James Moultrie, Grand
Secretary General."
On the right side is the following wording:
"Founders of the Supreme Council: Colonel John Mitchell, Sovereign
Grand Commander; Frederick Dalcho, Lt. Grand Commander; Alexander F. A.
DeGrasse, Sovereign Grand Inspector General; Jean Baptiste Delahogue,
Sovereign Grand Inspector General; Thomas B. Bowen, Grand Master of
Ceremonies."
On the rear it reads: "Dedicated October 3,
2001; C. Fred Kleinknecht, Sovereign Grand Commander." During the
installation, the monument was suspended above the base as workmen placed
ice between the stone and its foundation. This allowed the heavy stone to
be moved slightly until it was exactly in its proper position. Also, the
slings holding it could then be removed before the ice melted. Although
landscaping still has to be completed around the monument, it has already
created a lot of local interest as passersby stop to read the
inscriptions. Be sure to see this historical marker when you come to
Charleston.

Submitted by Ill. Herbert S.
Goldberg, 33°
Chairman, Charleston Monument and Plaque Committee
Photo: Ill. McDonald "Don" L. Burbidge, 33° |