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Colonel John H. Mitchell, 33º
By: Ill. Bro. McDonald L. Burbidge, 33º
E-mail: photo0027@aol.com

Freemasonry
first enjoyed consideration and a firm footing in Germany when the highly
gifted crown prince, afterwards King Frederick II of Prussia, was initiated.
Without his influence, Masonry in Germany would not have met with the
support, nor have been very extensively disseminated.
In the year 1801, Charleston South Carolina was
known as "The Antebellum City" because of the rapid expansion of
rice and cotton growing along with the fabulous prices that these
Commodities brought to the planters.
During the war, Colonel Mitchell held the title of,
Deputy Quartermaster General. The duties of his job were to supply any
officer whatever they needed at the time and to make sure they received what
they had requested.
In the latter half of 1778, a correspondence began
between George Washington and John Mitchell. In a letter from General George
Washington to Mitchell (Fredericksburg, November 11, 1778) indicates there
had been earlier correspondence. It acknowledges certain goods received from
Mitchell, and then mentions Mrs. Washington is en route to Philadelphia
which Washington asks a favor of Mitchell.
"Upon her arrival in Philadelphia I must
beg the favor of you to give me notice of it by the Lay expresses that I may
send for her, if my own quarters for the winter should happen to be fixed
up. But as this is not the case yet, and I do not know when it will be, I
cannot, under the Uncertainty of her stay in the city, think of
accepting yours and Mrs. Mitchell’s kind and polite Invitation to her to
lodge with you; the trouble of such a visitor (for more than a day or so)
being too much for a private family. But I shall be equally thankful to you
for providing good lodgings for her, as I do not know how long it may
necessary for her to remain in them."
In other letters between these two gentlemen
you will find that Colonel Mitchell supplied General Washington with china,
candlesticks, clothes, hats, and writing paper. Mitchell showed a great
amount of admiration for General Washington that is seen in the letters
passed between these two gentlemen throughout the War.
On June 25th, 1781, "says Mackey,
Barend M. Spitzer, in a convention of Inspectors held at the city of
Philadelphia, conferred the degrees, and the rank of an Inspector upon
Colonel John Mitchell." He later became Master of the Lodge of
Perfection established at Charleston in 1783, Most Equitable (Master) of the
Grand Council of Princes of Jerusalem. In the year 1802 he held the
following titles of Perfect Sovereign of the Rose Croix Chapter, President
of the Council of Princes of Jerusalem, and Grand Commander of the Grand
Consistory.
In September 1787 Brother Mitchell was elected a
Warden of Ward 2, Charleston, South Carolina. The statutes of South Carolina
at the time provided a requirement that wardens must have resided in the
State at least three years previous to election and would indicate that
Brother Mitchell had arrived in Charleston sometime during 1784.
According to Grand Commander Fitzibbon of Ireland,
Mitchell is believed to have been initiated in an Ulster Lodge No. 8, in
Charleston. In 1789 and 1790 he was Junior Grand Warden of the Grand Lodge
of South Carolina and in 1799 and 1800 he was Deputy Grand Master. This is
where he found the opportunity for exercising that Masonic foresight and
vision, which was so well, manifested a couple of years later. Under the
date of June 24, 1799, he signed a circular to other Grand Lodges to unite
all lodges under a systematic plan to work together.
The Charleston Orphan House, the oldest municipal
orphanage in the United States at the time, was founded on October 18, 1790,
at the instigation of John Robertson, a philanthropic citizen and a member
of City Council. The Charleston Orphan House stood at the corner of Calhoun
and St. Philip Streets. It’s main purpose was to establish the Institution
for the purpose of supporting and educating poor and orphan children and
those of poor and disabled parents who are unable to support and maintain
them. From its founding John Mitchell was one of the Commissioners of the
Orphan House at Charleston. A tablet commemorating the first meeting of the
Commissioners on October 28, 1790 lists Mitchell second after Major Charles
Lining. He is recorded as being present at every meeting thereafter until
1794. The minutes show no one more active than Colonel Mitchell in promoting
public support for the Orphan House and in the management of its affairs
during the difficult first years. On Saturday May 7, 1791 President George
Washington, with the City Intendment and Wardens, visited the Orphans House,
and Mitchell is listed as the senior Commissioner receiving him, afterwards
entertaining him at breakfast in the Commissioners’ Room.
A set of tablets containing the names of the first
commissioners- Arnoldus Vanderhorst, Charles Lining, John Mitchell, John
Robertson, Richard Cole, Thomas Corbett, William Marshall, Thomas Jones, and
Samuel Beekman, and also, individual tablets to John Robertson, was made and
put on pubic display at the Orphan House. At the one-hundredth anniversary
of the Orphan House a banner was made. On the front of the banner was
written, 1790 Charleston Orphan House 1890. On the back of the banner
located in the center was a drawing of a ship’s anchor with a chain on it.
Above the anchor is the word "Faith" and below it is written
"Charity."
The Society of the Cincinnati was established in
Charleston, South Carolina in 1783 with the first president being William
Moultrie. The Society motto was, "FOR BROTHERLY KINDNESS, FOR UNION
AND NATIONAL HONOR. AS LONG AS THEY SHALL ENDURE."
In the Institution, or basic law of the Society
of the Cincinnati, its founders thus explained their choice of its name:
" The Officers of the American Army have
been generally taken from the citizens of America, posses high veneration
for the character of that illustrious Roman, Lucius Quintius Cincinnatus,
and being resolved to follow his example, by returning to their citizenship,
they think they may, with propriety, denominate themselves the Society of
the Cincinnati."
Colonel Mitchell was elected a member of the
Standing Committee of the Society on July 4, 1798. At the same time Major
Thomas B. Bowen was chosen the senior of the Society’s two Stewards. He
again appears, as Chairman of this Committee for 1806, 1807, 1808, and 1809.
The list of officers elected for the year of 1810 and 1812 shows that John
Mitchell was elected Secretary for South Carolina. He was again elected
Chairman of the Standing Committee in 1814, 1815, and 1816. It should also
be noted that General George Washington who was also a member of the Society
was a good friend of Colonel John Mitchell during and after the
Revolutionary War.
On May 31, 1801 Colonel John Mitchell along with
his close friend Brother Frederick Dalcho established in Charleston a
Supreme Council of the Ancient & Accepted Scottish Rite, Dalcho had
received the necessary qualification from Colonel John Mitchell six days
before the opening of the Supreme Council.
Colonel Mitchell who was a native of Ireland and an
officer of the American Army in the Revolutionary War. Frederick Dalcho was
a native of England, who was afterwards Grand Commander of the Council, and
Assistant Rector of St. Michael’s Episcopal Church in Charleston. This
was the first official meeting of the Supreme Council. The place for this
historic event was held at "Shepheard’s Tavern" which also
served as a meeting place for some of Charleston’s earlier Masonic Lodges
since 1736. It was located at the corner of Broad and Church Street in
downtown Charleston. Also established on this date by Colonel John H.
Mitchell was "The New Age Magazine." The magazine was used as a
tool to informed Brothers everywhere what the Supreme Council was doing at
the time; similar to what the, "Circular Throughout the Two Hemispheres"
did to inform the world of the creation of the Supreme Council in
Charleston.
There has been much debate and concern as to when
Col. John H. Mitchell passed away. Ray Baker Harris book on "Eleven
Gentlemen of Charleston" lists John Mitchell’s death as January 16,
1816. In 1816 a silver smith by the name of John Mitchell appears in the
city directory. He was listed as a jeweler at No. 168 Meeting Street, his
name does not appear in any of the city directories again. Colonel John H.
Mitchell is listed as living at 17 Guignard Street in the city directory.
Albert Mackey lists John Mitchell date of death as in the year 1820 with no
month or date provided. In a Charleston city directory for the year of
1822-1827 lists "Mitchell, John H., Quorum Unis & Notary Public,
Residence 42 Guignard St. Office 88 E. Bay St. In "The Charleston News
and Courier" for January 27, 1826 you will find a death notice for
Colonel John H. Mitchell.
"DIED, on Thursday evening, in the 85th
year of his age, Colonel JOHN MITCHELL, For many years Notary Public and
Magistrate of this city."
The date of death was January 26, 1826. As of
yet his final resting-place has not been located in Charleston. The search
will continue till one day when his grave will be found.
On May 31, 2001 the Scottish Rite Masons honored
Ill. Brother John H. Mitchell along with the 10 other "Gentlemen of
Charleston." Col. John H. Mitchell will always be remembered as the one
who succeeded in starting the Supreme Council for the 33° in the United
States of America where others had tired in different cities and could not.
His keen insight along with Brother Frederick Dalcho allowed him to pick
just the right kind of Brothers that would help make the Scottish Rite a success,
as we know it today. Shepheard’s Tavern is no longer located at the corner
of Broad and Church Street as it once was. But its memory and what it stands
for will always be there for generations to come to Scottish Rite Masons
throughout the world.
If you have the chance to visit Charleston position
yourself on the corner of Broad and Church Street just as our founding
fathers once did. As you are standing on this corner try to visualize what
it might have been like on May 31, 1801 in Shepheard’s Tavern Lodge Room
when Col. Mitchell was seated in the East looking around the lodge room at
all the Brothers there for the first historic meeting. As Ill. Brother
Mitchell stands up and embraces the gavel, the gavel is raised and drops
down with a loud bang as he announces the meeting called to order for the
first Supreme Council of the Scottish Rite in the United States of America. |