The Secret destiny of America
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While not mentioning Freemasonry by name, the illustration heading chapter 7 [p. 73.] incorporates a selection of masonic tools: the compasses, a square, twenty-four inch gauge, trowel and plumb rule. Manly P. Hall claims that the Dionysions “signed each stone with the secret symbols of their cult…” [p. 77.] but doesn’t provide an example, or even jusification for the claim. When he claims that Ashmole was “the first non-craftsman to be permitted membership” [p. 80.] he is obviously unaware of the earlier membership of John Boswell. Hall makes a number of other claims without giving any citation:
The lack of reference to any proof is frustrating. But even when Hall purports to give citations, his citations also lack proof. An otherwise unsubstantiated claim is made that on 4 July 1776 a mysterious stranger gained access to the deliberations of the delegates to the Continental Congress, gave an impassioned speech which swayed them to sign the declaration of Independence, and then mysteriously disappeared from the locked room. In chapter 17 Hall reports that A. P. Warrington, esoteric secretary of the Theosophical Society in Ojai, California, possessed a rare old volume of early American political speeches predating those preserved in the volumes of the Congressional Record. [p. 165.]
Hall further cites Robert Allen Campbell who claimed, without citation, that a mysterious stranger had given the USA flag design to the committee of Franklin, Lynch and Harrison on 14 December 1775. [Robert Allen Campbell, Our flag. Chicago, H. E. Lawrence & co. [1890] 128p. col. front., illus. 21 cm. LCCN: 10002224]
The Secret destiny of America, Manly P. Hall. ISBN: 089314388X pb 200p. |