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The Cowan abridged from an article by Bro. Anton O. Aspeslet, P.G.M. May 1983
The Oxford Dictionary gives the following definition of the word "Cowan": Cowan -
The earliest official ban against cowans entering a [free, accepted or speculative
lodges] appeared in the Schaw Statutes in 1598. To better understand the position
of the cowan it is necessary to look at the organization of the old operative lodges.
In the days of James I of Scotland (born 1394, reigned 1424-
Theoretically it was possible to have an organisation for each, but practically the quarrier and the rough mason were looked upon as the labouring class, while the builder and especially the hewer were looked upon as skilled artisans, and in more intimate relationship to the designer or architect, whose position they frequently encroached upon or even occupied. 1 Carr, The Freemason At Work, p. 86. The hewer and builder were both masons par excellence, though the hewer was especially the freemason, The English Statute of 1459 shows that the rough mason or waller, or builder with unhewn stones and without lime (like the Scottish Cowan) was a lower class tradesman according to the wages then fixed. The skilled and privileged Craft as a body was conventionally divided into members as follows:
1. Honourary, or non-
2. Freemen of the Craft in full membership and with full privileges.
3. Servants or operative and skilled employees permanently retained by certain freemen as employees.
4. Journeymen, free of the Craft, operatives duly skilled and open for employment day by day, but travelling from one master to another and not in business for themselves.
5. Apprentices.
6. Cowans or Cowaners, i.e.., freemen or journeymen restricted to one class of work .
It appears that in England c.1459 the freeman of the Craft, whether in full standing
or only partially so as a journeyman or apprentice was of a different and higher
class than even the master rough mason or the master cowan. A lad might be apprenticed
to a cowan for that class of work as well as to a mason, but only the mason had a
Craft Guild or incorporation. The cowan being the unskilled labour, did not require
a [lodge] to protect privileges, as he had few or none to protect. The following
minute from the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning at Edinburgh may be of some interest.
Dated 21 September 1642: "In the presence of George Frier deacon, John Paterson a
non-
In 1707, in its ordinance against the employment of Cowans, the Lodge of Kilwinning
described a Cowan as a mason "without the word" -
When Cowans were admitted, and many of them were, they were allowed to work only in the particular area covered by the lodge to which they were admitted; for the privilege as in the case of Johne McCoull he was to pay the lodge the sum of four pounds yearly, in quarterly payments. Should he default in his quarterly payment for more than 20 days, the fee was doubled. From the foregoing it can be seen that the term "Cowan" meant something entirely different in the operative years of the Craft than now in use in speculative Freemasonry. It seems quite clear that the word "Cowan" is of Scottish origin, and is from operative masonry. That the Cowan could become a member of the masons craft is also clear. They were, however, different in many respects: 1. Cowans could not use lime in their mortar. 2. Cowans worked with unhewn stones only. 3. Cowans were free to work only in the area in which their lodge had jurisdiction. If they moved, they would be out of work until they were admitted to another lodge [and 4. Derogatorily as eavesdroppers].