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See also: rites and ceremonies, and various grades of dignity and honour
.
See also: Great antiquity has been claimed for the See also: order of Oddfellows—the most popular tradition ascribing it to the Jewish See also: legion under Titus, who, it is asserted, received from the emperor its first charter written on a See also: golden tablet
.
See also: Oddfellows themselves, however, now generally admit that the institution cannot be traced back beyond the first See also: half of the 18th century, and explain the name as adopted at a See also: time when the severance into sects and classes was so wide that persons aiming at social union and mutual help were a marked exception to the general See also: rule
.
Mention is made by See also: Defoe of the society of Oddfellows, but the See also: oldest See also: lodge of which the name has been handed down is the Loyal Aristarcus, No
.
9, which met in 1745 " at the Oakley Arms, See also: Borough of See also: Southwark; Globe See also: Tavern, Hatton Garden; or the Boar's See also: Head in Smithfield, as the See also: noble master may See also: direct." The earliest lodges were supported by each member and visitor paying a See also: penny to the secretary on entering the lodge, and See also: special sums were voted to any See also: brother in need
.
If out of See also: work he was supplied with a card and funds to reach the next lodge, and he went from lodge to lodge until he found employment
.
The lodges gradually adopted a definite See also: common ritual and became confederated under the name of the Patriotic Order
.
Towards the end ofthe century many of the lodges were broken up by See also: State prosecutions on the suspicion that their purposes were seditious," but the society continued to exist as the Union Order of Oddfellows until 1809
.
In 1813, at a See also: convention in Manchester, was formed the See also: Independent Order of Oddfellows, Manchester Unity, which now overshadows all the minor See also: societies in See also: England
.
Oddfellowship was introduced into the See also: United States from the Manchester
.
Unity in 1819, and the See also: grand lodge of See also: Maryland and the United States was constituted on the 22nd of See also: February 1821
.
It now rivals in membership and influence the Manchester Unity, from which it severed its connexion in 1842
.
In 1843 it issued a See also: dispensation for opening the See also: Prince of See also: Wales Lodge No.1 at See also: Montreal, See also: Canada
.
The See also: American society, including Canada and the United States, has its headquarters at Baltimore
.
Organizations, connected either with the United States or England, have been founded in See also: France, See also: Germany, See also: Switzerland, See also: Gibraltar and See also: Malta, See also: Australia, New Zealand, the See also: Fiji Islands, the Hawaiian Islands, See also: South See also: Africa, South See also: America, the West Indies and See also: Barbados, and elsewhere
.
The rules of the different societies, various See also: song-books, and a number of minor books on Oddfellowship have been published, but the most See also: complete and trustworthy account of the institution is that in The Complete See also: Manual of Oddfellowship, its See also: History, Principlesi Ceremonies and Symbolism, privately printed
.
(1899)
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