
Supreme Council
The House of the Temple
1733 Sixteenth St., NW
Washington, D.C. 20009

History
The
Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, as we know it today, had its origins
on the continent of Europe. Its immediate predecessor, known as The Order
of the Royal Secret, consisted of 25 Degrees under the Constitutions of
1762. Masonic tradition maintains that Lodges of this Rite, transmitted
from Bordeaux in France through the West Indies to the American mainland,
were established at New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1763; at Albany, New York,
in 1767; at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1781–82; and at Charleston,
South Carolina, in 1783.
The Grand Constitutions of 1786 provided for an
extension of the Rite to thirty-three Degrees, governed in each country
under a Supreme Council of the Thirty-third and Last Degree. Its
provisions were cited in a Manifesto at Charleston that confirmed the
first Supreme Council ever opened under these Grand Constitutions, on May
31, 1801, "by Brothers John Mitchell and Frederick Dalcho." All
regular and recognized Supreme Councils and their Subordinate Bodies today
are descended directly or collaterally from this Mother Supreme Council of
the World.
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The Name
In
announcing its establishment to the Masonic world in that Manifesto, dated
December 4, 1802, the name was given as The Supreme Council of the
Thirty-third Degree for the United States of America. The word Scotch
appeared in connection with one of the early Supreme Council Degrees, and
Scotish (sic) was included in the name of one of the detached Degrees
conferred by The Supreme Council.
The name Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite first
appeared in an 1804 agreement between the Supreme Council of France and
the Grand Orient of France. Beginning with the administration of Grand
Commander Albert Pike in 1859, it came into general use in the Southern
Jurisdiction and elsewhere. Many Scottish Masons fled to France during
political upheavals in the 17th and 18th centuries, at a time when the
Degrees of the Rite were evolving in French Freemasonry. This has caused
some to think mistakenly that the Rite originated in Scotland. Actually,
however, a Supreme Council for Scotland was not established until 1846.
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Southern
Jurisdiction
The
Grand Constitutions of 1786, in the earliest known text in the possession
of John Mitchell and Frederick Dalcho, provided for two Supreme Councils
in the United States. The Supreme Council at Charleston sent one of its
Active Members to New York and authorized him to establish in 1813 a
Supreme Council for the Northern Jurisdiction of the United States of
America. With this accomplished, The Supreme Council at Charleston in 1827
ceded to the Northern Supreme Council the 15 states north of the Ohio and
east of the Mississippi Rivers. The Southern Supreme Council retained
jurisdiction over all other states and territories (at home and abroad) of
the United States.
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International Character of the
Scottish Rite
The
Supreme Council of the Southern Jurisdiction recognizes in its fraternal
relations 40 Supreme Councils and four National Grand Lodges practicing
the Rites that include the Scottish Rite, in different countries
throughout the world. Each regular Supreme Council has declared its
general adherence to those Grand Constitutions of 1762 and 1786, but each,
being a sovereign Masonic Body, has made variations in its Statutes to
meet its own particular needs. This is especially true as to the number of
members composing a Supreme Council. Some have retained the original
limitations of nine Active Members. In our Jurisdiction the number of
Active Members is limited to 33. In other Jurisdictions larger or smaller
limitations have been set. To maintain the spirit of international unity,
the Mother Supreme Council participates in overseas conferences with other
Supreme Councils.

Information from:
Mother Supreme Council of the World
Supreme Council
1733 Sixteenth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20009-3103. |