
PHILIP C. TUCKER, 33°
(1826-1894)
PHILIP CROSBY TUCKER, 33°, Sovereign
Grand Inspector General in Texas, was born in Vergennes,
Vermont, February 14th, 1826. He was a lawyer by profession, he was a Past Master of Dorchester Lodge Vermont in 1847. He was T. I. M. of Vergennes Council, Royal
and Select Master, Past District Deputy Grand Master,
Past Grand Secretary of the Grand Royal Arch Chapter
of Vermont and was made a Knight Templar in Burlington Commandery.
He came to Galveston, Texas, in November 1852, and affiliated, with Harmony Lodge No. 6,
and was Worshipful Master of it for six years and declined
a re-election December, 1867. He was also a member of
Tucker Lodge No. 297; Past High Priest of San Felipe de
Austin Chapter No. 1, R. A. M. ; was Eminent Commander
of San Felipe de Austin Commandery, Knights Templar,
for fourteen years; Grand Master of the Most Worshipful
Grand Lodge of Texas in 1869; Grand High Priest of
Grand Royal Arch Chapter in Texas in 1864 and 1865,
and Grand Commander of the Grand Commandery of
Knights Templar in Texas in 1864, and was the Representative of several other Grand Bodies to those near
Texas.
He received the degrees of Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite from 4° to 32° inclusive at New Orleans, Louisiana, February 5th, 1867, at the hands of Brother James
C. Batchelor, 33°, Inspector General; Samuel M. Todd,
83°, Inspector General, assisted by Bro. H. R. Swasey, 32°,
by virtue of a dispensation to that effect issued by Albert
Pike, 33°, dated the 22nd day of July, 1866.
He was
commissioned as Deputy Inspector General of the Supreme Council with ample powers for the State of Texas,
by the Venerable Grand Commander, February 13th, 1867.
Elected a 33° at Charleston, South Carolina, in May 1868;
crowned an active member September, 1868, at Saint
Louis, Missouri; appointed Second Grand Equerry of the
Supreme Council May 6th, 1874; appointed Grand Prior
ad interim February 5th, 1883; elected Grand Prior October 22nd, 1884; elected Lieutenant Grand Commander
October 17th, 1892; elected Grand Commander, October
18th, 1893. He was also commissioned as representative
and guarantor of amity from the Supreme Council of
Mexico to this Supreme Council on the 27th of January,
1882, which position he held until 1891, when he resigned.
Brother Tucker died in the house of the Temple, Washington, D. C, on the 9th day of July, 1894. He was the
last survivor of the noble band who organized the Grand
Chapter in Vermont. He was buried with Masonic honors in Galveston, Texas, Sunday morning, July 15th.
During the Civil War he was in
the Confederate service doing duty as a volunteer aid on
General McGruder's staff, with the rank of Major, and not
only rendered valuable aid to the cause by his intimate
knowledge of the surrounding country, but was able to
give Masonic relief and assistance to those taken prisoners.
He was an active member of the Howard Association
during the yellow fever epidemics that visited Galveston,
night and day for long months, in each epidemic he never
suffering was done by him and his associates.
Everywhere at all times, under all circumstances, he performed
faithfully, punctually and thoroughly every duty, civil
and Masonic, imposed upon him by the nature of his office, pure of heart, of perfect integrity and most worthy
of the grand old name of "Gentleman"; immeasurable,
generous, kind, affectionate and tender-hearted, a fast,
firm, friend, genially hearty and good humored, he was one
to win esteem and honor, firm friendship and warm affection.
The superior lustre of his name will out-shine
the flashes of their resentment, and reflect a glory upon
Masonry which can never fade.
When the War Stood Still in
Galveston
by Duncan Howard
Reprint From The Texas
Mason, Spring 1994
The recapture of Galveston by Confederate
forces is little known in the annals of war. But Masons, wherever dispersed,
take a special pride and share a certain feeling when the war stood still in
Galveston while Worshipful Master Philip C. Tucker, Jr. opened Harmony Lodge No.
6 and conducted the Masonic burial of a Northern Brother, "appreciating the
spirit and force of Masonic ties." It is a Masonic legacy for all Masons to
cherish until time shall be no more.
By way of background, the Union Navy
established a blockade of Port Galveston on October 6, 1862. Later, on Christmas
Day, Federal troops landed and placed the entire island under Northern control.
In the meantime, Texas gained a battle-tested hero as Confederate General John
Bankhead Magruder, nicknamed "Prince John" for his dramatic flair and
goldbraided pomp, was transferred to command the War Department of Texas, New
Mexico and Arizona on October 10, 1862.
General Magruder, a West Pointer, had been
thrice promoted in the Mexican War for "gallant and meritorious conduct" and was
credited with directing and winning the first land battle in the Civil War for
Southern Independence. Describing the battle, the Richmond Dispatch reported
that Magruder had met a flag of truce in the conflict and granted the removal of
a slain Federal officer. In parting, he had shaken hands with a Union Lieutenant
and said, "We part as friends, but on the field of battle we meet as enemies."
Although politicians might differ, General Magruder had expressed the feeling of
most Masons and most combat soldiers of either North or South. And, it is
interesting to note that Magruder had become an Entered Apprenticed Mason in San
Diego Lodge No. 35 while stationed in California after the Mexican War, but his
advancement was stopped due to a duel with the Lodge Treasurer.
When General Magruder arrived in Texas, he
recognized that the economy of the state was held hostage by Union blockades
along the Texas coast and immediately planned a land/sea attack to retake
Galveston Island. In preparation, two small steamboats -the Bayou
City and the Neptune - were fitted with guns and
armored with bales of cotton which Magruder said gave "an appearance of
protection" to the volunteers who manned them. Then, under cover of New Year's
Eve night of 1862, the cotton-clad boats with makeshift tenders cruised to
rendezvous with eight Northern ships in Galveston Harbor. At the same time a
land force of Texas volunteers secretly crossed Galveston Bay on the railway
bridge that still connected the island to the mainland and stationed themselves
in a semicircle around Kuhn's Wharf where Union troops were garrisoned. No
doubt, the Union soldiers were startled from sleep about three o'clock in the
morning on New Year's Day, 1863, when General Magruder fired the first cannon
shot as a signal for the Battle of Galveston to begin. After firing the cannon,
a little of "Prince John" slipped out as a jovial Magruder remarked to his
closeby troops, "Now I've done my duty as a private and I will go now and attend
my duties as a General."
The outcome of the battle centered around the
Union ship Harriet Lane, a copper-sheathed gunboat
commanded by Commander Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright, Jr., the forty-one year old
son of Protestant Episcopal Bishop Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright, Sr. of New York
and the grandfather of Masonic General Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright III of World
War 11 fame. The second in command was Lieutenant Commander Edward Lea, a
graduate of the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md., in 1855, and a
family relation of Margaret Moffette Lea Houston, wife of the Masonic General
Sam Houston.
Upon entering the harbor, the Bayou
City and Neptune opened fire and attempted to
ram the Harriet Lane. The Harriet Lane returned fire in like kind and sank the Neptune in the
shallow bay. Finally, the Bayou City managed to ram the Harriet
Lane in such a way that the vessels locked together. At this time the Harriet Lane was boarded and captured during hand-to-hand
combat. Following the seizure of the Harriet Lane, a flag of truce was sent to
the Union Commodore Renshaw whose flagship Westfield had
run aground. In truce, General Magruder demanded surrender of the entire fleet
and gave three hours for consideration, After demands were met, the Northern
ships were brought to anchor, flying the white flags of truce. In this interim,
Commodore Renshaw was killed in an explosion that he set to scuttle his flagship Westfield and the Union gunboats, Clifton and Owasco, steamed from the
harbor with their white flags still flying. Seeing they were abandoned by their
fleeing fleet, the Union soldiers fighting at Kuhn's Wharf accepted
unconditional surrender. The Battle of Galveston was over and the Island
remained in Southern control until the end of the Confederate Nation.
At the time the Confederates boarded the Harriet Lane both Wainwright and Lea refused to surrender
and both fought valiantly to save their ship. Commander Wainwright sustained
injuries to his head and left thigh before he was killed by a shot to the head
from the Mason, Commodore Leon Smith, Commander of the Bayou
City and a brother of Past Grand Master of Indiana Caleb B. Smith
who served as Secretary of the Interior in Lincoln's first cabinet. Mortally
wounded, Lieutenant Commander Edward Lea lay dying on the ship deck. When the
Confederate Major Albert Miller Lea boarded the ship, he recognized his son
Edward, whom he had not seen since the war began, and rushed to comfort him. As
he knelt by his son, Edward, barely conscious, whispered to a shipmate, "My
father is here." Then, he died.
Masonic prisoners from the Harriet
Lane vouched to Confederate Masons that Wainwright was a Mason in
good standing. Although they asked nothing for themselves, they requested a
Masonic burial for their late Commander and Masonic Brother. When this
information reached Philip C. Tucker, Jr., a Major on Magruder's staff and
Worshipful Master of Harmony Lodge No. 6 in Galveston, plans were made to open
the Lodge for Masonic burial.
As soon as Brother Tucker reported to the
Confederate headquarters located in the Roman Catholic Bishop's palace, General
Magruder accosted him with: "Major Tucker, I hear you intend to bury the
remains of Commander Wainwright tomorrow with Masonic honors. Is this true?"
Major Tucker saluted and answered, "Yes, Sir. And I hope General Magruder will
give it military honors." The reply was, "Who in H--l ever heard of burying a
dead enemy with Masonic and military honors?" The response was, "General
Magruder, when Lieutenant Colonel Rogers of the Second Texas fell, the Federal
authorities gave the body Masonic and military burial (unconfirmed), and it is
said that you are never to be outdone in courtesy to a friend or enemy." The
rebuttal was, "Not by a d---d sight. Colonel DeBray (a Mason and former
Secretary of Austin Lodge No. 12), turn out your regiment for escort duty
tomorrow at the Masonic burial of Lieutenant Commander Wainwright of the Harriet Lane."
On January 2, 1863, Harmony Lodge opened and
resolved, "that the members of this Lodge, appreciating the spirit and force of
Masonic ties, will not allow their feelings and prejudice and love of righteous
cause to obliterate from their hearts and minds the merciful teachings of the
Order; that it does not conflict with their duties as patriotic citizens to
respond to calls of mercy by a prostrate political foe, or to administer the
last rite of the Order to the remains of a Mason of moral worth, although
yesterday they met as an armed enemy in mortal combat in which the deceased
parted with his life-,..."
The Lodge minutes continue, "Whereupon the
Lodge was called upon to bury the dead. A public procession formed in which
appeared both friends and foes wearing the insignia of the Order, and
accompanied with a proper military escort under the command of Col. and Brother
H. B. Debray, among which was the Major General Commanding J. Bankhead Magruder.
The body of Bro. Wainwright was borne to its grave in the Episcopal Cemetery
where it was deposited with rites of Masons and military. Lodge called from
burying the dead and closed in due form."
Although the preceding quotes do not include
reference to Lieutenant Commander Lea, his body was borne to the cemetery and
buried in a single grave with Commander Wainwright. In his official report of
the Battle of Galveston to President Jefferson Davis, the Entered Apprentice
Mason General Magruder wrote, "Captain Wainwright and Lieutenant Lea of the
Federal Navy were buried with Masonic and military honors in the same grave;
Major Lea, of the Confederate Army, father of Lieutenant Lea, performing the
funeral service." In addition, the book History of DeBray's
Regiment includes the statement, "the bodies of Lieutenant Commander
Wainwright, killed in action, and of Lieutenant Lea were buried in the Galveston
Cemetery with military and Masonic honors, the Confederate father reading over
his Federal son's grave the solemn funeral service of the Episcopal Church. The
witnesses of that heart-rending scene can never forget it."
After graduation from West Point, Albert
Miller Lea was assigned to frontier duty at Fort Des Moines on topographical
duty. Later, his published notes gave the state of Iowa its name. Although the
Grand Lodge of Iowa has no record of Masonic membership for Albert Miller Lea,
it supplied an article of the Iowa Historical Society written by Lea just before
his death. The article confirms his service in the Battle of Galveston and
states, "I met in battle my oldest son, and said the Grand Service of the Church
over his Captain, Wainwright, son of the late Bishop of New York, and himself,
buried in one grave."
Since Lea makes no mention of the Masonic
burial of his son, perhaps it is more correct to put on record that Harmony
Lodge extended the courtesy of escorting both Wainwright and Lea to the
cemetery, conducted the Masonic burial of Wainwright, and attended the Episcopal
Church service that committed both Federal officers to rest in a single grave.
Following the war, the body of Wainwright was moved to New York and interred
near his father, Bishop Wainwright, in the cemetery of Trinity Church. No
mention is discovered whether the honor of Masonic burial was conducted during
this second burial.
July 9, 1994, marks the hundredth
year since Philip C. Tucker, Jr. walked among Masonic Brothers. Yet, his Masonic
labors live on and his achievements continue to strengthen Freemasonry in
general, and in Texas, in particular.
Brother Tucker was born on
February 14, 1826, in Vergennes, Vermont. There he spent his early life and was
educated as an attorney by reading law in his father's office and beginning
practice under his father's guidance. Upon attaining the age of twenty-one,
Philip was raised a Mason in Dorchester Lodge in 1847. During the next five
years, he worked three years as assistant Grand Secretary, served twice as
Worshipful Master of Dorchester Lodge, and was District Deputy Grand Master for
three terms. In addition, he joined York Rite Freemasonry and served as Thrice
Illustrious Master of his Council.
In 1852, just as he turned
twenty-six years old, Brother Tucker moved to Galveston, Texas, where he
established a successful law practice, became active in the Trinity Episcopal
Church, was a community leader and affiliated with Harmony Lodge and the York
Rite Bodies in Galveston. Later, he affiliated with Tucker Lodge No. 297 that
was named in his honor. He was Worshipful Master of Harmony for six years,
Commander of San Felipe Commandery for fourteen years, and served as High Priest
of San Felipe Chapter.
In Grand Bodies, he became Grand
Commander of the Grand Commandery of Texas in 1864, Grand High Priest of the
Grand Royal Arch Chapter of Texas in 1865, and Grand Master of the Grand Lodge
of Texas in 1869.
His continued enthusiasm for
Masonry prompted Brother Tucker to accept an invitation from Grand Commander
Albert Pike of the Supreme Council, 33°, of the Southern Jurisdiction of the
Scottish Rite of Freemasonry to become involved in introducing the Scottish Rite
System of Freemasonry into Texas. On February 4-5, 1867, Brother Tucker traveled
to New Orleans where the Scottish Rite degrees were communicated to him by
dispensation from Grand Commander Pike. At the same time, he was commissioned as
Deputy Grand Inspector General in Texas. Later, on May 17, 1867, Deputy Grand
Inspector General Tucker granted Letters Temporary for the organization of San
Felipe de Austin Lodge of Perfection in Galveston, Texas.
Grand Inspector General Tucker was
an active and productive member of the Supreme Council in Washington, D.C., and
on July 28, 1893, he was elected as Grand Commander. At the age of sixty-seven,
he moved to Washington to perform the duties of Grand Commander. But,
unfortunately, his tenure was suddenly terminated by death on July 9, 1894. His
body was returned home to Galveston and buried with Masonic honors not far from
the grave in which he placed Lieutenant Commanders Wainwright and Lea and where
Lieutenant Lea still rests.
Brother Tucker was essential to
the fulfillment of the Masonic legacy when the war stood still in Galveston.
Apparently, under his leadership in the years of the Civil War for Southern
Independence, Harmony Lodge is the only Lodge, North or South, to conduct the
Masonic burial service for a Mason killed in mortal combat as an enemy.
What pride and respect we hold for
the masons of yesteryear who held Masonry firm and stable, "appreciating the
spirit and force of Masonic ties," while states separated, churches divided and
families split over political differences.
As word of the planned Masonic
burial spread over town, most citizens and some Masons denounced it as "Treason
to the Confederacy." And certainly, discussion of Tucker's birth up North added
fuel to the beginning fire which was quickly quenched when Magruder added
support to Tucker and the Lodge by taking military honors to the burial service.
No one could accuse General Magruder with "Treason to the Confederacy" and,
suddenly, the Masonic burial with military honors seemed the thing to do.
General Magruder had a sad life
following the war. Instead of surrendering, he went to Mexico and served as a
general in the army of Maximilian. After the defeat of Maximilian, he returned
to Houston. There, almost in poverty, he died in 1871 and was buried in the
cemetery lot of a friend. Later, spirited citizens of Galveston wanted Magruder
buried on the Island he saved. They had his body moved to Galveston where it
waited for several years in a funeral vault for enough money to be contributed
for final interment.