Copyright © 2020 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett
My post about the Scottish Rite scenery at Fort Leavenworth from 1924 included the standard Sosman & Landis design for the 18th degree. Labeled “Peristyle,” the design included a landscape with river dividing the scene, a pelican feeding its young, and a few other symbolic objects. The pelican was supposed to be piercing its breast to feed its young – a symbol of sacrifice.
This image is not unique to Freemasonry at all. It is found on stained glass windows in churches and even on the Louisiana state flag.
At Fort Leavenworth, however, Moses painted the pelican is feeding its young a worm.
He had done this before – many times. Besides, pelicans are water birds, and don’t really search for worms in the ground. I had always wondered who kept adding the worm and should have made the connection long before now. After all, in 1904, the artistic direction at the studio was handed over to Moses when he returned and became the vice-president of the firm. Moses and Fred Megan purchased the Sosman & Landis name after the company liquidated in 1923 and continued to deliver Scottish Rite scenery. It was seeing the pelican with a worm on the Fort Leavenworth scenery this week that made me realize Moses was the culprit. After all, he didn’t become a Mason until 1925, so it is understandable. What I find humorous is that it wasn’t immediately pointed out, or quietly fixed over the decades.
There are few Scottish Rite scenes that were solely designed for Masonic degree productions. Most stage settings that were used by the Fraternity originated for other venues. Many stage compositions had been used for centuries in a variety of theatrical and operatic productions. Palatial interiors, cathedrals, catacombs, dungeons, classical interiors, mausoleums, Egyptian temples, desert scenes, forests, rivers, landscapes, Gothic armories, rocky coasts, and garden scenes were all used for both commercial and fraternal productions.
The “INRI Peristyle” scene for the eighteenth degree, however, was unique. It would become a standard setting in many Southern Jurisdiction Scottish Rite theaters during the first decade of the twentieth century. This scene used a translucent lighting effect. The words “Infinity,” “Nature,” “Reason,” and “Immortality” were typically placed at the tops of columns. The first letter of each word (I.N.R.I.) was backed with red silk, allowing it to glow.
I am frequently asked questions about the subject matter and necessary symbolism in degree production scenery. How did the artists know what to paint? How did the Masons ensure appropriate symbolism on each backdrop without revealing any secrets? Did all of the scenic artists understand what they were painting on drops? The short answer is, “No, look at the pelican; it’s a perfect example of a detail being lost in translation.”
The pelican is an integral part of the eighteenth degree. In many stage settings it either appears on the backdrop or cut drop. Sometimes it is included as a set prop or light box.
Screwing up this significant image is a big deal, and yet many Scottish Rite scenes still have a Pelican feeding a worm to its young.
This major faux pas, however, was not unique to Sosman & Landis. Once Volland installation at the Scottish Rite in Hastings, Nebraska has a lone Pelican piercing its breast – no young anywhere in sight. It’s like a pelican suicide.
To be continued…