- Dec 2, 2022
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Why the USA is a Freemason country.
But who brought Freemasonry to America? According to this authentic Jewish Website, it was Jews:1. The founders were Freemasons: George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Paul Revere, John Hancock, John Marshall, etc.
2. The Great Seal is Masonic.
3. The Statue of Liberty was created by a Freemason: Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi.
4. The White House was created by a Freemason: James Hoban.
5. The Washington Monument was created by a Freemason: Robert Mills.
6. The flag was created by a Freemason: Francis Hopkinson.
7. The national anthem was created by a Freemason: John Stafford Smith.
8. The first president was a Freemason: George Washington.
9. Many presidents were Freemasons: Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman, Lyndon B. Johnson, etc.
10. Hollywood was created by Jewish Freemasons: Carl Laemmle, Jack L. Warner, Darryl F. Zanuck, Adolph Zukor, Louis B. Mayer, etc.
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And according to the authentic The Encyclopedia of Freemasonry and its Kindred Sciences, Freemasonry has its origin in the Solomonic Temple:Jewish names appear among the founders of Freemasonry in colonial America, and in fact it is probable that Jews were the first to introduce the movement into the country. Tradition connects Mordecai Campanall, of Newport, Rhode Island, with the supposed establishment of a lodge there in 1658. In Georgia four Jews appear to have been among the founders of the first lodge, organized in Savannah in 1734. Moses Michael Hays, identified with the introduction of the Scottish Rite into the United States, was appointed deputy inspector general of Masonry for North America in about 1768. In 1769 Hays organized the King David's Lodge in New York, moving it to Newport in 1780. He was Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts from 1788 to 1792. Moses *Seixas was prominent among those who established the Grand Lodge of Rhode Island, and was Grand Master from 1802 to 1809. A contemporary of Hays, Solomon *Bush, was deputy inspector general of Masonry for Pennsylvania, and in 1781 Jews were influential in the Sublime Lodge of Perfection in Philadelphia which played an important part in the early history of Freemasonry in America. Other early leaders of the movement included: Isaac da *Costa (d. 1783), whose name is found among the members of King Solomon's Lodge, Charleston, in 1753; Abraham Forst, of Philadelphia, deputy inspector general for Virginia in 1781; and Joseph Myers, who held the same office, first for Maryland, and later for South Carolina. In 1793 the cornerstone ceremony for the new synagogue in Charleston, South Carolina, was conducted according to the rites of Freemasonry.