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McDonald L. "Don" Burbidge, 33°
155 Chandler Drive, Ladson, South Carolina 29456-4864
Archival details contribute to an emerging
portrait of Ill. Thomas B. Bowen, 33°, a Founder of the Supreme
Council, 33°, in Charleston in 1801.

The scroll at the top of this
18th-Century etching reads "An Exact Prospect of CHARLESTOWN,
the Metropolis of the Province of SOUTH CAROLINA." From Eleven
Gentlemen of Charleston
Thomas Bartholomew Bowen began his military journey in the Continental
Army as a First Lieutenant on April 4, 1776, when he joined the
rifle regiment under Colonel Samuel Miles, then located in Pennsylvania.
In his book Virtutis Praemium, John Dwight Kilbourne strongly
suggests that First Lieutenant Bowen initially became interested
in becoming a Mason through his involvement with Colonel Samuel
Miles while Bowen was a member in his regiment. Colonel Miles
was an active Mason and held one of 10 Military Lodge Charters
during the Revolutionary War. The Provincial Grand Lodge of New
York granted one of these Charters to Colonel Miles on July 24,
1775.
On May 11, 1778, while at Valley Forge, Captain Bowen took the
Oath of Allegiance while serving as Regimental Paymaster. His
last date of service with this regiment was sometime in January
1781. This regiment saw action mostly in northern New Jersey.
On January 17, 1781, he was transferred to the Fifth Pennsylvania.
While stationed in Philadelphia, Captain Bowen participated in
campaigns at Brandywine, Germantown, and Monmouth. It was during
this time that Sgt. John McGriff in Bowen's regiment kept an "Orderly
Book" which provides some additional insight into Captain
Bowen's life along with that of his regiment from October 12 through
November 11, 1780. This book is now at the Anderson House in Washington,
D.C., the world headquarters for the Society of the Cincinnati.
Soon after his retirement from military service, Brother Bowen
and his good friend Lt. John Markland relocated to Charleston,
South Carolina, to start a new life. On August 29, 1783, the Society
of the Cincinnati for the State of South Carolina was organized
at Charleston, S.C., at the Corner Tavern, which was located at
the intersection of Broad and Church Streets. Listed in the rolls
of the "Originals," we find the names of Captain Thomas
B. Bowen, Colonel John Mitchell, Lt. John Markland, and General
Mordecai Gist, along with 110 other officers for the state of
South Carolina. In Charleston, the first President of the Society
of the Cincinnati for the State of South Carolina was General
William Moultrie who held this office from 1783-1805. It should
be mentioned that General Moultrie was a distant cousin of Ill.
James Moultrie, 33°, one of the original Founders, along with
Colonel John Mitchell and Frederick Dalcho, of the Supreme Council
when it was first established in Charleston on May 31, 1801.
On November 23, 1784, Bowen and Markland formed a partnership
in a semi-weekly newspaper called The Charleston Columbian
Herald or, alternatively, The Patriotic Courier of North
America. The partnership dissolved on November 24, 1785, but
the paper continued to be published as a semi-weekly under the
names Columbian Herald or The Independent Courier of
North America. On July 30, 1793, to honor the first President
of America, Brother Bowen succeeded in advocating the change of
the logo at the top of the Columbian Herald from that of
a star to an image of George Washington.
The Charleston Courier of July 15, 1805, carried an announcement
of Ill. Bowen's death. Aside from sketching his life, the newspaper
article notes that his remains were deposited in the Lining family
burial grounds at Hillsbourgh Plantation, which was owned by Major
Charles Lining, a close friend of Bowen.
The same article notes that the Rev. Robert Mills, along with
many friends and several members of the Society of the Cincinnati,
attended the ceremonies to pay their last respects to this notable
soldier, publisher, and Mason.
Several Masonic historians believe Ill. Bowen was buried in a
tomb on Lining Island, Ghost Island, or Tomb Island, as it was
known through the years. However, a tomb did not exist on the
island until the year 1813 as attested to by the will of Major
Charles Lining, owner of the plantation. In his will, dated August
27, 1813, Linning leaves instructions concerning his funeral arraignments
along with note of his desire be buried in a tomb he lately built
on "a small island" on his plantation.
During the Civil War, Union forces ravaged the Hillsbourgh Plantation
and the Lining family burial grounds. The alleged tombs located
on the island were desecrated in the hope of finding valuables.
The only hope for the Lining burial grounds ever to be found is
for a contemporary researcher to find a map or plat that shows
the area in detail. No such map has, to date, been found. Thus,
Ill. Bowen's burial place remains unknown, and, given the fragmentary
records relevant to his life, we can only speculate on the personal
influence he brought to bear in his role as Master of Ceremonies
during the early years of the Supreme Council, 33°.
Editor's
Note: In Lodge of the Double-Headed Eagle, his excellent
one-volume history of the Supreme Council, Dr. William L. Fox, 33°,
presents a concise sketch of Ill. Thomas Bartholomew Bowen, 33°,
a soldier during the Revolutionary War and one of the 11 Founders
of the Supreme Council in Charleston in 1801. Dr. Fox writes: "The
fifth person listed in Dalcho's register of the founders was Major
Thomas Bartholomew Bowen (1742-1805) who was born in Ireland and
who arrived in America before the Revolution. He served with Pennsylvania
units during the war, after which he moved to Charleston where he
became a printer. In 1792 Bowen was elected Grand Master of the
Ancient Grand Lodge of South Carolina. He also served as a Grand
Master of the Sublime Grand Lodge of Perfection. On July 5, 1801,
a little over a month after the establishment of the Supreme Council,
he was among three who were elected to it. In turn, Major Bowen
became the Grand Master of Ceremonies of the Council. His death
four years later was the first among the Founders." (pp. 26-27)
For those desiring more details, though still fragmentary, about
this early Scottish Rite Brother, this essay by Ill. McDonald "Don"
Burbidge, 33°, is of interest, and, upon request, the author
can provide a list of the sources used in constructing this chronology.
Unfortunately, no image of Ill. Bowen survives, but his signature,
from Eleven Gentlemen of Charleston, is pictured above.
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McDonald L.
"Don" Burbidge was raised a Mason on November
19, 1975, and is currently a member of Summerville Lodge No.
234, Summerville, S.C., the Scottish Rite Bodies of Charleston,
S.C., and the Scottish Rite Research Society. On February
14, 1976, he received the 32°; on October 19, 1981, he
was invested a K.C.C.H.; and on October 30, 1999 he was coroneted
a 33°. Ill. Burbidge was strongly involved with the year
2001 celebration of the 200th anniversary of the founding
of the Scottish Rite in Charleston and has had several articles
and photographs published in the Scottish Rite Journal
since 1999. He is currently the Historian for the Charleston
Scottish Rite Center and has been the photographer of the
Valley for the past 29 years. He and his wife, Kathryn, have
two children, Kelley, a nursing student at Charleston Southern
University who will be graduating in May 2004 and Brad who
is 19 years old. |
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