David Ovason, zodiacs and Washington, DC
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What Ovason omits is the beginning half of the paragraph which details the order of the parade, placing “Mr. Ellicott and the Recorder” in the third row, several rows ahead of the Master of Alexandria-Washington Lodge No. 22 of Alexandria, Virginia, and the procession of Freemasons.1
This press clipping does not identify Ellicott as a freemason. Note that Ellicott came from a long line of Quakers [p. 355] who do not approve of Freemasonry.
Ovason mentions several key figures in the construction of the city’s architecture such as John Lenthall—”in charge of the construction of the US Capitol” [p. 2]; Franklin Webster Smith (b. 1826c) , — whose “highly original architectural ideas would help revolutionize the appearance of the city.” [p. 4] ; self-taught mathematician and astronomer Benjamin Banneker–who “worked on the project for only a few months: it seems that his age told against him…” [p. 6]; and influential architect Adulf Cluss who, moving to the USA in 1845 from Germany, designed the Smithsonian’s first separate museum in 1881 [p. 14], designed vaulted culverts on Tiber Creek, and oversaw the paving of avenues and planting of trees. [p. 400] He doesn’t claim they were freemasons.
Ovason notes that the following were freemasons but fails to demonstrate what significance their membership might have to his main premise.
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Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi: sculptor of Statue of Liberty, member of Lodge Alsace-Lorraine, Paris
William A. Brodie: Grand Master New York, 1884
Benjamin B. French; Grand Master 1847. Laid the cornerstone of the Smithstonian in 1847 by courtesy of Potomac Lodge No. 5, Washington DC
James Garfield: i. 1861/11/22, p. 1861/12/23 Magnoloia Lodge No. 20, Columbus Ohio. Charter member Pentalpha Lodge No. 23
Theodore Roosevelt: i. 1901/01/02 Matinecock Lodge No. 806; honourary member Pentalpha Lodge 1904/04/04
Casper Buberl: Bohemian sculptor
John Philip Sousa: Hiram Lodge No. 10 Washington DC petitioned: 1881/06/03.Sousa’s The Crusader premiering in 1888, incorporates Masonic music, according to John Philip Sousa, A Descriptive Catalogue of His Works by Paul E. Brierley. [p. 398]
Ebenezer Sibley, English astrologer who cast USA horoscope. i. 1784 Lodge No. 79. Ancients, Portsmouth; first Master No. 253, London
James Hoban: the architect who designed the President’s House, Master Georgetown Lodge No. 9, Federal Lodge No. 15 in 1793.
Benjamin Henry Latrobe
John H. B Latrobe (b. 1764/04/01) [p. 217] was elected Grand Master 22 November 1870 [p. 437]
James Hoban, architect of the President’s House, Master of Georgetown Lodge No. 9, and Federal Lodge No. 15 in 1793.
John Marshall, Supreme Court Justice
Andrew Mellon, (d. 1937) secretary of the Treasury under Coolidge and Hoover, donated 15 million dollars to build a national gallery of art; he was made a freemason 1928, and Raised in 1931 [p. 448]
Ovason refers to a number of men as freemasons without citation. Robert Mills, architect of the Washington Monument and Thomas Lincoln Casey, Chief of Engineers, astronomer, architect of Washington Monument and in charge of construction of the new Library of Congress is referred to as freemason without citation. The same for astronomer, Simon Newcomb (1835-1909) and architect, Charles Bulfinch. [p. 218] Denslow makes no mention of Casey or Bulfinch but notes that there is no evidence that Mills was a freemason.
Although Lieutenant Commander Henry Honeyman Gorringe [1841-1885] was a freemason, Lieutenant Richard Loveridge Hoxie is also claimed to be a freemason without citation. Gorringe transported an ancient egyptian obelisk from Egypt to New York in 1881. Of the inscriptions found under the obelisk, “…Pike came to the conclusion that they did not bear any resemblance to symbols used in Freemasonry.” [p. 32] Hoxie (d. April 1930) undertook the building of underground aquaducts. [p. 37]
[John Quincy Adams] “Ward [sculptor of Garfields’ memorial statue] had been a personal friend of Garfield, and was almost certainly a Mason, although I have not been able to identify his Lodge.” [p. 435]
Architect Arthur Brown is defined as a freemason because the sculptor of a statuary on the Departmental Auditorium used his face in a representation of freemason Nathanael Greene. “This implies that Brown is revealed as a Mason.” [p. 302]
Interestingly enough, John Russell Pope, the architect of the House of the Temple 1733 16th street, [old temple at 433 3rd street NW – p. 320] was not a freemason [p. 223] His design was submitted 6 May 1911.
Ovason is convinced that it was “Ellicott who laid out the important direction of Pennsylvania Avenue.” [p. 382] The second map published on March 1792 was amended by Ellicott from L’Enfant’s original August 1791 map, changing the angles of avenues and location of squares and circles to accomodate topographical requirements [p. 59] L”Enfant’s plan had been for 15 radial avenues, one for each state. The three commissioners determined the name of the city and that the grid streets be numbered and lettered. [p. 60] Ovason notes that city commissioners Daniel Carroll and Dr. David Stuart were freemasons [p. 406] while the third commissioner, Thomas Johnson, was not.
Ovason makes a number of errors about Freemasonry. He claims that the Year of Masonry is “symbolically denoting the era following the supposed foundation of the Temple of Solomon [p. 76] but later correctly notes the abbreviation A.L. refers to a creation date. The many assertians of the masonic significance of pyramids ignore the complete lack of references in masonic ritual. He perpetuates the myth that “higher degrees” are somehow more powerful or important than the Craft degrees. [p. 171] He appears unaware of the actual masonic significance of a sheaf of corn or wheat but sees references to the goddess Virgo in almost every architectural representation of agriculture or industry. Ovason defines this Virgo as the “Beautiful Virgin” in masonic iconography. He cites several illustrations of Time and the Virgin, the monument to a Master Mason, as proof that this is a key symbol or metaphor in Freemasonry, again while ignoring the complete lack of usage in masonic ritual. This leads to Ovason’s claim of a masonic significance for the virgo star-goddess without citing any reference to ritual or lectures. He claims that “Freemasons insist on calling [it] the Problem of Euclid” [p. 300] when in fact most masonic literature and ritual refers to Euclid’s 47th proposition. Equating the cornerstone laying ceremony with a banishing ritual [p. 89], and the blazing star with Sirius, Anubis, the dog star [p. 118] is simply specious.
Ovason’s theory stands or falls on the assumptions that L’Enfant and Ellicott were freemasons, that freemasons held similar views about astrology that he does, and that Freemasonry places any significance in Virgo. All his assumptions are unproven and his theory fails to pass any reasonable examination.
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The Secret Zodiacs of Washington DC, Was the City of Stars Planned by Masons? David Ovason. Random House UK Ltd, London: 1999. ISBN: 0 7126 7909 X
1. History of the Grand Lodge and of Freemasonry in the District of Columbia. Kenton N. Harper. Grand Lodge, Washington, D.C.: 1911. p. 12.^