I've written a few articles here about an incredible Brother who, in my opinion, was the 20th
century's "Mason of the century." Most Worshipful Brother
Ray V. Denslow was General Grand High Priest of the General Grand
Chapter during the WWII years. He was the founder of the Royal Arch
Mason magazine and served as its editor and publisher from 1942 until
his death in 1960, at which time his son William, author of 10,000
Famous Freemasons, took over. Ray Denslow was also the world's
foremost authority on international Freemasonry, and published the
only complete account of the near-destruction of the Craft in Europe
in the years leading up to WWII and its reconstruction following the
war.
The shortcomings of each of us are borne out in the fact that our
rough ashlars will remain so. We as Freemasons work daily toward the
goal of the perfect ashlar, which seems always to lie just outside
our grasp. The same was true even of a Mason of the stature of Ray
Denslow. Immersed in human frailties, he had his share of doubts,
conflicts, and battles… and one of those battles went supernova
when the two most powerful Freemasons in the country went
head-to-head. Their feud lasted for years, in an ugly fight in which
Denslow was ultimately stripped of the 33°.
Denslow documents this brutal hostility in his memoirs, albeit from
his own point of view; but he lays out the facts objectively enough
that we can see both sides of the story. This account is spread over
many pages as he tells of issues that cropped up over time. As
a result, reading the books, it is difficult to
see the intense
impact of the story.
So I decided to take each of those incidents and compile them into an
article. I intended it for the Freemason magazine here in
Missouri and instead of just submitting it, I met personally with the
editor and told him, "This is hot stuff. If you review it and
decide it shouldn't go into the magazine, I will understand." So
the editor reviewed and accepted the story. It was destined to be
published for all the world to see.
A couple weeks later, I got a friendly phone call from the Grand
Master. He said he liked the article. Then he said, "Steve…
Steve… you know we can't publish this." I knew. And just as I
had told the editor, I understood.
So I went to work on a revision. I toned some things down and threw
in the standard disclaimer saying the article did not necessarily
reflect the views of the Grand Lodge, the Missouri Lodge of Research,
the Grand Line officers, the magazine, God or any individuals living
or dead. By this time there was a new Grand Master. I met with him.
He reviewed the article and gave it his blessing to be published. So
the on-again-off-again publication of this hot potato was on again.
Then, I met with the Denslows themselves – Ray's granddaughter and
grandson, and we talked about the issue. Not surprisingly, they saw
things from Ray's point of view. I realized the publication of the
article might embarrass or even alienate them after they had been so
good in working with me as I edited his memoirs… and I didn't want
that. In addition, let's face it, the whole episode was not
Freemasonry's finest hour. So I called the new Grand Master and we
once again decided not to publish the article. It's not like the
story has never been told. I've just never heard it told correctly or
completely.
So what to do with this thing? Well, here's what we're going to do.
This September at Chicago Masonicon, I'll lay out the whole grisly
story. What Denslow did that so offended the Scottish Rite that it
yanked his 33°. Who his great and powerful nemesis was, and how this
clash of the titans came to its imperfect resolution. I won't publish
it, but at that meeting we'll sit down and talk about it… just you
and me.
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