Alexandre Francois Auguste de Grasse

Le Comte Alexandre Francois Auguste de Grasse (February 14, 1765 June 10, 1845) was a founding father of the Supreme Council of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry.

Life

De Grasse was baptized in St. Louis Parish, Versailles, France. His father, Admiral de Grasse, commanded the French fleet which surprised Cornwallis at Yorktown and forced a surrender. In his father's biography, de Grasse gives a third person account of his journey to the New World.

While he was in Saint-Domingue, he married the daughter of Jean Baptiste Delahogue, another founder of the Supreme Council. In July 1794, de Grasse’s four sisters arrived in Boston. Later the next year, Congress awarded each of the daughters a thousand dollars each in gratitude for their father's aid to the American cause.

The Scottish Rite

The Comte was one of the eleven founders of the Supreme Council, the Mother Council of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite from which all other Supreme Councils of the world derive their authority.

On December 12, 1796, the Comte de Grasse, along with seven other men, was issued a patent by Hyman Long that made him a Deputy Grand Inspector General. Long had received the appointment and right to appoint new DGIG’s by Moses Cohen who had, in turn, received his appointment from Barend Spitzer. This appointment was a title recognizing that the bearer was in possession of the secrets of the Rite of the Royal Secret.

Due to the loss of records after the burning of Shepheard's Tavern, the actual level of involvement of Delahogue and de Grasse in the founding of the Supreme Council is a matter of much speculation.

Le Comte Alexandre Francois de Grasse Timeline 1765-1845

Alexandre-Francois Auguste, Marquis de Grasse, arrived in Charleston, South Carolina on August 14, 1793 aboard the ship "Thomas." Accompanying him on this voyage were his wife, daughters, four sisters, and stepmother. According to tradition, they were hospitably received by John B. Holmes at his dwelling, now 15 Meeting Street.

He was the son of Admiral de Grasse (1723–1788), who commanded the French fleet which helped in causing Cornwallis's surrender at Yorktown and the triumph of the Americans.

While in Charleston, two of Augustus de Grasse's daughters were baptized (one of whom had been born in Saint-Domingue), two of his sisters married, and two other sisters died.

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