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THOMAS W. DAVIS 1844-1915

ThomasWDavis1915.jpg

Junior Grand Steward, 1875
Junior Grand Deacon, 1876
Junior Grand Warden, 1883
Recording Grand Secretary

MEMORIAL

From Proceedings, Page 1915-54:

Brother Davis was one of the best Masonic jurists in this country, having seen service for many years as an officer and permanent member of the Grand Lodge, and serving on almost countless committees. Considering constitutional amendments and other matters, he became thoroughly acquainted with the laws and practices of the Fraternity. His advice on all such questions was equally sought by Grand Masters and all others seeking information on such subjects.

He was also distinguished along literary lines, being the author of many monographs and articles pertaining to the Craft, a striking example of which is the poem which appeared in the first number of the first volume of Nickerson's New England Freemason in January, 1874. This has been made a part of this address.

SIT LUX Let there be light! the great Creator spoke,
And at the summons slumbering Nature woke,
While from the East the primal morning broke.
Back rolled the curtains of the night,
AnrI Earth rejoiced to see the light.

Let there be light! through boundless realms of space
Beneath its touch arise new forms of grace;
Warmth, life, and beauty with its beam's keep pace.
Where'er it shines, with fresh delight
All things reflect the genial light.

Let there be light! the Master's lips proclaim,
And heart and hand unite in glad acclaim
To hail th' enrolment of a Brother's name.
While he beholds with ravished sight
The glories of the Perfect light.

Let there he light ! and let the Bible's glow
Pervade our thoughts-through all our actions show -
Around our hearts its warming influence throw.
So shall our steps be led aright,
If guided by that holy light.

Let there be light! though we see dimly here,
The shining gates are ever drawing near,
And send their glory down our pathway drear.
Beyond - shall Heaven our eyes requite
With its divine, transcendant light.

Thomas White Davis was born in Michigan City, Indiana, November 1, 1844, but came of an old central Massachusetts family. His father was Rev. Elnathan Davis, of Holden, Mass., and his mother was Mary A. (White) Davis, also of Holden. A great-grandfather was Captain James Davis, of Holden, and a great-grandmother was Mrs. Joseph Avery, of Holden, a niece of Samuel Adams. While Brother Davis was a boy his father's pastorate changed and the family came back to Massachusetts, where he attended the Fitchburg High School, afterwards went to Oberlin preparatory school, and from there to Williams College, from which he was graduated in 1866. For a short time he was an insurance agent and bookkeeper and in 1868 he went to Washington, taking a position in the War Department. The following year he worked in the Washington city postoffice.

In 1870 Brother Davis came to Belmont as principal of the High School. He held that place for a year and then entered the Cambridge Schools, being master of the Putnam and Harvard Schools in that city from 1871 until 1908, in which year he was elected Recording Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge. He was a trustee of the BeImont Public Library from 1877 to 1895, was a selectman from 1895 to 1899, and from 1901 to 1907. He was an assessor from 1883 until the present, being chairman of the present board. He was also a trustee of the Massachusetts School for Feeble-minded, president of the Waverley Cooperative Bank, and clerk and trustee of the Belmont Savings Bank.

Brother Davis's Masonic career began the year after he was graduated from college. He was raised in Charles W. Moore Lodge, of Fitchburg, April 2, 1867, and became Master of that Lodge in 1871, serving until 1873. In 1877 he joined Belmont Lodge and served as its secretary In 1875 he became Junior Grand Steward. of Grand Lodge and rose steadily through the grades of Junior Grand Deacon, District Deputy Grand Master (Fourth Masonic District), and Junior Grand Warden, which last named office he held in 1883. He had also served the Grand Lodge on the committee on by-laws, first as a trial commissioner. He was an honorary member of Charles W. Moore, Belmont, and Friendship Lodges' the last named. being located in Wilmington.

He joined, Thomas Royal Arch Chapter of Fitchburg, and had held subordinate offices in that and in Waltham Chapter. He was a member of Adoniram Council of WaItham and of Cambridge Council of Cambridge, being Past Master of Cambridge Council. He entered Templar Masonry in 1871, when he joined Jerusalem Commandery of Fitchburg. Shortly thereafter he affiliated with St. Bernard Commandery of Boston, of which he was Eminent Commander in 1890 and 1891. He was Recorder from 1885 to 18$8, and from 1901 to 1911. He was also a member of the Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Association of Past Commanders. In the Scottish Rite he was a member of Boston Lafayette Lodge of Perfection, Giles F. Yates Council of Princes of Jerusalem, Mount Olivet Chapter of Rose Croix, and Massachusetts Consistory, attaining the thirty-third degree September 17, 1907.

About two years ago Brother Davis accompanied the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge on a visit to the Panama Canal Zone and assisted in the constitution of Sojourners Lodge at Christobal and paid an official visit to Canal Zone Lodge at Ancon, both of which are under Massachusetts jurisdiction.

On July 22, 1872, Brother Davis married Amelia F. Sylvester, daughter of John Sylvester, formerly of Hanover, Mass. He is survived by his wife and two children, Ralph S. Davis, Harvard '98, and Miss Etta L. Davis, Bryn Mawr '99.

The funeral services were held at the Waverley Congregational Church on Wednesday afternoon. A short service of prayer for the family and immediate relatives was conducted at the residence by Rev. Francis L. Beal, rector of the Church of the Ascension, in Cambridge. As the remains. were borne to the church the bells were tolled.

Within the edifice were gathered representatives of all the Grand and many Subordinate Bodies in Masonry with which Brother Davis had been identified, together with fellow townsmen, former pupils, and all his friends who loved him so well. This Grand Lodge was represented at the funeral by the Grand Master, accompanied by many other officers. Rev. and Wor. E. A. Horton, Grand Chaplain, conducted the services assisted by Rev. Francis L. Beal. Past Grand Masters Blake, Flanders, and Benton; Past Deputy Grand Master Fletcher and Past Grand Warden Soule were among the bearers.

While the services were in progress the stores of the town were closed; the flags on the public buildings were at half staff in silent tribute as the body was borne to its final resting-place in Belmont Cemetery.

"To tell the story of a well-spent life
The Mason true builds his own monument
But not of bronze, and yet of marble white,
These soon are gone.

A higher life is then his monument
Which through the ages grander will become,
As it more fully breathes his spirit, and is spent,
To help bless mankind."

Fraternally submitted,
Everett C. Benton
Elbert L. Brigham, W.M. Charles W. Moore Lodge
Frederic S. Pry, W.M. Belmont Lodge
Committee

SPEECHES

AT CORNER STONE LAYING IN NAHANT, APRIL 1912

From Proceedings, Page 1912-65:

Most Worshipful Grand Master, Brethren, and Citizens of Nahant:

For the third time within a comparatively few years, the representatives of the Masonic Fraternity have visited this rockbound peninsula to give ceremonial dedication and God-speed to the beginning of a labor of municipal enterprise. It is interesting to note how peculiarly these occasions supplement each other in the diverging convergence of the movements thus inaugurated and how the few words added to our ritual follow lines of thought in different directions only to meet at last in recognition of the idea that the highest functions of good government have been illustrated in the establishment of the public library, the high school and the town hall.

It was the pleasure of the Acting Grand Master, when the corner-stone of the Library Building was laid, to refer to the historical legends which connect the soil of Nahant with those hardy voyagers of the North, who anticipated by so many hundred years the sailing of Columbus to rediscover our Western World. No word could have been more appropriate, for as these echoes of the past are listened to and traced back to their source, it is in the Library that the record is laid up and preserved to become the fulness of knowledge in the future. It is our pride that we are permitted to move among the scenes which delighted those with whom we can claim affiliation of race even if our own lives appear so barren by comparison with the fruitfulness of theirs. Without books, the inspiration of noble deeds and the warning given by the aberrations of imperfect humanity would be alike lost to us as a means of education, and the Public Library impresses upon us the consideration that the treasures of knowledge and wisdom are not hoarded for the benefit of a chosen few but are to be shared by the people. They are fitly typified by the open page, to be read of all men, that has succeeded to the manuscript roll accessible only to the monks and the scribes, who nevertheless saved for us the best of the literature and history of the vanished centuries.

The Grand Master who laid the corner-stone of the Nahant High School Building spoke of education with especial reference to the manner in which that building should become the means of developing the youth of the community into sound citizenship. He invoked the aid of the Public Library in this process, and joined it with the school-house in seeking to make every school-boy and every schoolgirl a good American citizen, not forgetting the while that the Church, by whatever name it is called, is to keep them from the snares of godlessness.

To-day, in the promise of the new place of assembly of the people of this town, a different but harmonious note has been sounded. As knowledge and education have, in the years that are now behind us, been rescued from the grasp of the few to become the possession of the many, so may we be able to discern much that the Town Hall symbolizes.

Without trying to trace the growth of systems of government, from the patriarchal to the tribal, the feudal, the monarchy, absolute or limited, it is for us to remember that upon our Western continent we are engaged in solving the greatest problem ever considered by men and women — government by the people; and that it is from our beginnings in New England that all that is distinctive in our system takes its rise.

Many of our colonies had their patrons, their proprietors, their lords, even we had our provincial governors to represent kingly authority; but from the first the control and direction of local affairs in New England has been in the hands of the inhabitants of a specified portion of territory, known as the town. So long as it has been possible for the whole people to meet to discuss and act upon matters of local interest, the Town Meeting has been the best example of a pure democracy, a government in which each individual has had a voice and a vote. The Town Hall has been the people's true forum, and because of the freedom of speech allowed within it, and the fact that the business transacted in it has been in view of the people without the desire or the ability to carry on underhand or fraudulent dealings, it has always been an important factor in preserving the liberties, first of the colonies and later of the State and the nation.

Because of this, and because of the training in public affairs imparted in such structures as the one which is to rise on this spot, we hail the Town Hall as one of the educational influences to be reckoned with the Public Library and the High School in the advancement of the community. There is certainly nothing garnered from the history of the past, nothing to be gleaned from the wisdom of the sage and the scholar, which is not to find its counterpart in the purest and most remarkable of all governments, the gathering of the citizens to consider and regulate the matters of common interest.

And so, it is a satisfaction to those whom I represent, that we have had a share in laying—square, level and plumb— the corner-stone of the edifice which, when its parts are fitly jointed together, is to become the center of your municipal life. May it arise in beauty, to be the home of wisdom in the plans and purposes here considered and adopted, and may those to whom the execution of those plans is entrusted acquit themselves with the strength of men, in guarding the interests of the people. While the fountain head is kept free from corruption in this and thousands of other communities, the stream of beneficence will flow unchecked to bless the land and to perpetuate our scheme of government which is never to fail because it is founded upon a rock, more firm than any of those that guard this wave-beaten shore, the education and development of the people by the Library, by the School and by the Town Hall.


Distinguished Brothers