| Publication information | 
| Source: The French Five Hundred and Other Papers Source type: book Document type: essay Document title: “The Story of Freemasonry” Author(s): Sibley, William G. Publisher: Tribune Press Place of publication: Gallipolis, Ohio Year of publication: 1901 Pagination: 121-209 (excerpt below includes only pages 184-85) | 
| Citation | 
| Sibley, William G. “The Story of Freemasonry.” The French Five Hundred and Other Papers. Gallipolis: Tribune Press, 1901: pp. 121-209. | 
| Transcription | 
| excerpt of essay | 
| Keywords | 
| freemasonry; McKinley assassination (religious response); William McKinley (as Freemason). | 
| Named persons | 
| William McKinley. | 
| Document | 
  The Story of Freemasonry [excerpt]
     In 1901 a protestant religious association 
  in Brooklyn discussed Freemasonry, several ministers declaring it to be “a menace 
  to Christianity and to government,” and the lodge “a breeder of lawlessness 
  and anarchy.” The institution was charged with being “at variance with the Christian 
  religion,” and the lodge oath “a subterfuge to hide wrongdoing,” while those 
  who are members of the fraternity were assailed as “worse than the mobs of lynchers 
  in the south.”
       One statement made at this meeting of clergymen 
  excited especial indignation and brought forth spirited replies in the public 
  press. It was that “all tendencies to anarchy and revolution can be traced to 
  Masonry, and the seed was sown in these orders for just such results as the 
  assassination of President McKinley.” [184][185]
       The third martyr President having been a Knight 
  Templar, and a Freemason since the War of the Rebellion, and so thoroughly in 
  sympathy with the fraternity’s purposes that long after he became conspicuous 
  in public life, he had his photograph made while he was in full Knight Templar 
  uniform, gave to this especial attack a venom rarely displayed in recent years. 
  But its very intemperance caused it to fall harmless to the ground.