spacer spacer

spacer spacer

 

Archives-Vault

As with the Library, our collection is not as complete as it should be. Soon after the founding of the Supreme Council, we suffered a series of misfortunes, including fire and the death of our leaders, which caused us to lose some of our earliest records. When Albert Pike joined the Supreme Council, he was horrified to learn that many of our most valuable documents had been given to other jurisdictions and never returned. He also learned that many of our documents were thrown haphazardly into boxes and not catalogued. Although he greatly improved things and subsequent archivists have continued Pike's example, we are now, for the first time, systematically examining every document in the Archives, cataloging and preserving each in ultraviolet-filtered Mylar® archival protectors and acid-free containers.

The items in the Archives are our most valuable collection of records. In many regards, they are comparable (as far as the Scottish Rite is concerned) to the documents in the National Archives and Smithsonian Museums. Because of their age, condition and, in some cases, confidential nature, however, they are not generally subject to casual review by visitors to the House of the Temple. Specific requests for archival information from bona-fide scholars and researchers will be handled on an individual basis. As a matter of policy, the Supreme Council Archives does not permit photocopies to be made from original documents.

 

Navigation bar