Skip to content

The Secrets of Masonic Washington: A Guidebook to Signs, Symbols, and Ceremonies
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

The Secrets of Masonic Washington: A Guidebook to Signs, Symbols, and Ceremonies at the Origin of America's Capital Paperback - 2008

by Wasserman, James

  • New
  • Paperback
Drop Ship Order

Description

Destiny Books, 2008-11-26. Paperback. New.
New
NZ$17.98
NZ$6.64 Shipping to USA
Standard delivery: 4 to 14 days
More Shipping Options
Ships from Mediaoutletdeal1 (Virginia, United States)

Details

  • Title The Secrets of Masonic Washington: A Guidebook to Signs, Symbols, and Ceremonies at the Origin of America's Capital
  • Author Wasserman, James
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition Original
  • Condition New
  • Pages 192
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Destiny Books, Rochester VT
  • Date 2008-11-26
  • Illustrated Yes
  • Features Bibliography, Illustrated, Index, Table of Contents
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 1594772665_new
  • ISBN 9781594772665 / 1594772665
  • Weight 0.8 lbs (0.36 kg)
  • Dimensions 9 x 6 x 0.43 in (22.86 x 15.24 x 1.09 cm)
  • Themes
    • Cultural Region: South Atlantic
    • Geographic Orientation: District of Columbia
    • Locality: Washington, D.C.
  • Library of Congress subjects Washington (D.C.), Freemasonry - Washington (D.C.) - History
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2008032011
  • Dewey Decimal Code 366.109

About Mediaoutletdeal1 Virginia, United States

Biblio member since 2014
Seller rating: This seller has earned a 2 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.

Terms of Sale:

30 day return guarantee, with full refund including original shipping costs for up to 30 days after delivery if an item arrives misdescribed or damaged.

Browse books from Mediaoutletdeal1

Summary

A fully illustrated guide to the Masonic origins and present-day Masonic sites of Washington, D.C.

• Provides a walking tour of the Masonic sites and symbols of the city

• Explores the critical role of Freemasonry in the founding of the United States

• By the author of The Templars and Assassins

In this guide to the Masonic underpinnings of America’s capital, James Wasserman reveals the esoteric symbols and the spiritual and visionary ideas that lie hidden in the buildings, monuments, and physical layout of Washington, D.C. His walking tour of these Masonic sites includes both the expected and unexpected--from the Lincoln Memorial and the Capitol Building to the Federal Reserve complex, National Academy of Sciences, and the Library of Congress. Each location includes descriptions, interpretations, and explanations of the Masonic symbols and ritualistic meanings hidden within its structure, all illustrated with contemporary color and historic black-and-white photographs.

Wasserman explains the purpose behind putting these symbols and Masonic designs into the capital and how all these monuments fit into the spiritual vision held by the founding fathers. He reveals the prominent role that Freemasonry played in the 18th-century Enlightenment movement and shows how in the New World of America, free of monarchy and aristocracy, the ideas of the Enlightenment were able to flourish. This illustrated guidebook to the Masonic secrets of Washington, D.C., provides valuable insights on the founding of America. It will be welcomed by students of esoteric art and symbolism, admirers of American history, and devotees of Dan Brown novels and National Treasure movies.

From the publisher

James Wasserman is the author of the bestselling The Templars and Assassins: The Militia of Heaven, The Mystery Traditions, An Illustrated History of the Knights Templar, and The Slaves Shall Serve: Meditations on Liberty. A longtime student of the occult sciences and a member of the secret society Ordo Templi Orientis since 1976, he lives in New York City.

From the rear cover

HISTORY / SECRET SOCIETIES "More than a breathtaking pictorial tour of Washington, D.C., this book is an archaeological expedition to a 'lost city' whose mystical treasures and traditions are hidden in plain sight--a city designed and built to be a powerful talisman and the beating heart of a spiritual entity that transcends all religions--a city whose very streets invoke the invisible energies that drive the evolution of human consciousness--a city inspired by a civic priesthood we know today as Freemasonry." --Lon Milo Duquette, 32, author of The Key to Solomon's Key: Secrets of Magic and Masonry In this guide to the Masonic underpinnings of America's capital, James Wasserman reveals the esoteric symbols and the spiritual and visionary ideas that lie hidden in the buildings, monuments, and physical layout of Washington, D.C. His walking tour of these Masonic sites includes both the expected and unexpected--from the Lincoln Memorial and the Capitol Building to the Federal Reserve complex, National Academy of Sciences, and the Library of Congress. Each location includes descriptions, interpretations, and explanations of the Masonic symbols and ritualistic meanings hidden within its structure, all illustrated with contemporary color and historic black-and-white photographs. Wasserman explains the purpose behind putting these symbols and Masonic designs into the capital and how all these monuments fit into the spiritual vision held by the Founding Fathers. He reveals the prominent role that Freemasonry played in the 18th-century Enlightenment movement and shows how in the New World, free of monarchy and aristocracy, the ideas of the were able to flourish. This illustrated guidebook to the Masonic secrets of Washington, D.C., provides valuable insights on the design and founding of America. It will be welcomed by students of esoteric art and symbolism, admirers of American history, and devotees of the Dan Brown novels and National Treasure movies. JAMES WASSERMAN is the author of the bestselling The Templars and Assassins: The Militia of Heaven, The Mystery Traditions, An Illustrated History of the Knights Templar, and The Slaves Shall Serve: Meditations on Liberty. A longtime student of the occult sciences and a member of the secret society Ordo Templi Orientis since 1976, he lives in New York City.

Excerpt


INTRODUCTION


Hidden In Plain Sight

Hidden in plain sight. Thus would I describe the esoteric and occult symbolism of the sacred space of Washington, D.C. Sit down with a map of the city, a pencil, ruler, protractor, and compass. You can draw pentagrams and hexagrams, triangles, crosses, and other multi-angled geometrical constructs that will fill the pages of books and Internet websites with potentially erudite speculation and amazing detail. Many people have and many more undoubtedly will.
     On the other hand, as we walk through the streets of Washington, D.C., in the pages of this book, we will enter an eternal world populated by archetypes in stone--carvings, monuments, statues, buildings, and inscriptions. Like hierophants of the mystery schools of antiquity, they silently communicate a curriculum designed to inspire, elevate, and teach eternal Truth. Washington, D.C., like Jerusalem or Mecca, offers a pilgrimage for those who seek a greater understanding of the miracle of their homeland, and for visitors from other shores who come to glimpse the hope of the first great free nation on earth.
     Washington is the central shrine of America’s national religion. This is a nondenominational faith, in line with the Masonic ideal, capable of being shared by all who recognize God as that which has created and sustains the universe. Such is the primal deity worshipped by Christians, Jews, and Muslims, yet it is also the basis of Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Paganism, and the New Age faiths--in fact every religion and spiritual path on earth. We glance at a sunrise or sunset, a flower, the night sky, a sculpture or painting, the eyes of a baby or a beautiful woman. This is the God in whose name we live and breathe and have our being. And despite any and all imperfections in our society--whether it be the greed of the rich or the irresponsibility of the poor--it is the goal to which every person of good will aspires.
     The sacred interaction between heaven and earth is continually mirrored in the iconography of Washington, D.C. The most prominent is the Washington Monument, symbol of the human will aspiring to the heavens while remaining firmly rooted on earth. Washington was the first president, the victorious general helping win our freedom, the conscious model against whom all leaders are judged. Yet, his monument offers a profound statement of impersonality, an expression of both the most austere severity and elegant symmetry, a far cry from the cult of personality dominating modern politics.
     The Lincoln Memorial is a Temple erected to the dream of equality before the law for all people, and of the indivisible nature of the American Union. Lincoln is a modern sacrifice, an offering upon the altar of justice. It is ironic that the nation that dared to aspire to freedom was mired in the ancient institution of slavery. This stubborn holdover of the Colonial era ultimately resulted in the greatest loss of American blood in our history. Its unholy remnants still stain our national self-image. Lincoln sits in mute contemplation to remind us that evil will not be tolerated by the forces that direct and sustain this country, that our duty is to rise beyond the errors and sins of our nature.
     On the steps of the Jefferson Memorial, we begin our ascent to the world of pure thought, what the Buddhist calls “clear mind.” Standing proud and tall among some of history’s most inspiring words, Jefferson gazes upon the city he helped design. His eyes are filled with understanding of the vicissitudes of fashion and the temptations of the ease of the moment. His will held firm, he counsels us to persevere with resoluteness on the course of liberty. In his open rotunda, whose dome resembles an astronomical observatory ever seeking intimacy with heaven, he advises us to take the long view, that of the eternity in which he now lives.
     Continue on to the Capitol, the Temple of Liberty. You will be surrounded by a magical pantheon of those who created a free nation. Look up at the painting of the Apotheosis of Washington some 180 feet above you. Its outer rim proclaims that the gods of antiquity still walk among us. Minerva leads the way in science, rejecting superstition and “consensus,” insisting on penetrating to the heart of reality with objective experimentation. Ever-active Mercury continues to inspire commerce as he did in Rome over two thousand years ago. For he knows that those who close their minds to the swift interchange of mutual self-interest and prosperity have little reason to maintain peace when conflicts arise. Neptune rules his watery realm, raising his trident of power to remind America that he controls some 70 percent of the surface of the earth; that the nation which does not sail mighty upon the sea will fall to the one who does; and that free access to shipping and fishing are as important today as ever. Ceres speaks similar words, pointing out that cultivation of the earth is the lot of human beings. Those who are successful in learning her secrets and pursuing her disciplines will prosper. Those who do not will wither and die. Vulcan leads his workers to the realization that we are put on this earth to build and fashion and construct. Humanity is made up of tool-wielding beings designed to imitate the creativity of their maker. Finally Columbia, the female personification of America, wields her sword in fiery demonstration that freedom is not free. It must ever be defended, protected, and earned--sometimes through the age-old ordeal of trial by combat.
     Washington, D.C., is simultaneously a hymnal and a history book, a shrine and a university, a prayer and a symphony. It is a memorial to truth in a culture of lies, a beacon of freedom in a world of tyranny, a ray of hope in a darkness of despair. Let us explore together its invigorating vision of courage and liberty, morality and lucidity, creativity and joy.

Media reviews

“This is a book to be read by all Americans, so that we can understand the truly magnificent design and heritage that is shared by all citizens of this great nation.”

About the author

James Wasserman (1948-2020) was the author of the bestselling The Templars and Assassins: The Militia of Heaven, The Mystery Traditions, An Illustrated History of the Knights Templar, and The Slaves Shall Serve: Meditations on Liberty. A longtime student of the occult sciences and a member of the secret society Ordo Templi Orientis since 1976, he lived in New York City.