Joseph Burr Tyrrell—Freemason, Discoverer of Dinosaur Bones in Alberta, Canada—A Gesu/Roman Gatekeeper?




Freemasonry:


Hold Freemasonry up to the light and you cannot help but see the black papacy’s watermark. Isn’t it reasonable, given the circumstances, that the “G” in the center of the familiar Masonic emblem represents the initial of “Gesu,” the residence of the black popes at the Jesuits’ world headquarters at Number 5, Borgo Sancto Spiritu, in Rome? Freemasons wouldn’t suspect this, nor would Jesuits. It would be information reserved uniquely to the unknown superior, who shares what he knows with no one. “Your enemies will serve you without their wishes,” said Sun-tzu, “or even their knowledge.”

Freemasonry was the natural, the reasonable, the only intelligent way for the Roman Catholic Church to control (a) the ongoing affront to Protestantism, (b) the increase in “divine right” kings heading their own national churches independent of Vatican control, and (c) the incredible explosion of international  mercantilism. Like the aquatic creature whose mouth resembles a comfortable resting place to its prey, the Lodges were a sagacious recycling of the ole Templar infrastructure into a dynamic spiritual and economic brotherhood that face Protestants, Jews, Buddhists, Muslims, agnostics, [atheists,] and anyone else an opportunity to build a better life outside Roman Catholicism, yet still under the Church’s superintending eye. For Sun-tzu said, “The General sees all, hears all, does all, and in appearance is not involved with anything.” The Jesuit [Superior] General is the disembodied eye substituting for the pyramid’s missing capstone, the stone the builders rejected.  


The Lodge’s secrecy and its condemnation by the Church were essential to sustaining the integrity of both institutions. And so the deepest Masonic secret, the secret that not even their Grandest Masters could penetrate, was that all their secrets were known to one man alone, the Superior General of the Society of Jesus. This should not surprise anyone aware of how thoroughly Freemasonry is suffused with Jesuitic technique. Both Freemasonry and the Society of Jesus are (a) humanist religious orders, (b) secretive, (c) fraternal, (d) socially conscientious and politically active—questing, like Aeneas, the prototypical Roman, for the greatest good for the greatest number. Both orders (e) hold Tradition, Reason, and Experience in equal if not greater esteem than the Bible, (f) employ carefully structured programs of gnostic visualization to achieve and ever-increasing knowledge of the divine, (g) condone “the end justifies the means,” and (h) require absolute obedience, secured by a blood oath, to a hierarchy of superiors culminating in the Jesuit [Superior] General, whose orders are so wisely suited to the recipient that they are obeyed as though willed by the recipient himself. ~ Rulers of Evil: Useful Knowledge About Governing Bodies; F. Tupper Saussy, pp 120-121

The initiate sports the blindfold, the noose, the open shirt exposing the left chest, the left pant-leg rolled ... before the proclamation of a ritual blood-oath.




Bro Tyrrell—Joseph Burr Tyrrell (November 1st, 1858 - August 26th, 1957), Canadian, a Member of the GSC, Member of the Builders Lodge No. 177, No. 496.





https://www.encyclopedia.com/people/history/canadian-history-biographies/joseph-burr-tyrrell

Tyrrell was born on November 1, 1858, in Weston, Ontario, a town his father had founded. It later became part of metropolitan Toronto. His father's family was an esteemed Irish clan that hailed from Castle Grange in County Kildare. The elder Tyrrell emigrated to Canada and made a fortune as a stonemason in Ontario before marrying Elizabeth Burr, whose family roots in the New World dated back to 1682. In Weston, the Tyrrell family lived in an immense 24-room stone house. As a child, Tyrrell suffered a bout with scarlet fever that left him partially deaf; his vision was impaired as well, but he wore glasses to correct it. He studied at Upper Canada College as a teen and went on to an arts course at the University of Toronto.

The senior Tyrrell steered his son into a career in law, but Tyrrell was fascinated by the natural world and studied biology, botany, and other branches of science in his spare time. He even conducted research on his own with a microscope and published a paper in the Ottawa Field Naturalist on mites that cause feline ailments. Professors introduced him to associates of the Geological Survey of Canada (GSC), the government agency formed in the 1840s with a mandate to search out coal fields and other potential sources of revenue for what was then the province of Quebec and Ontario. The agency and its staff expanded considerably over the next few decades as Canada became a full-fledged confederacy.

After Tyrrell finished at the University of Toronto in 1880, he began studying for the bar and working at a local firm, as was the custom in the era before law schools became commonplace, but he was still weak from a bout with pneumonia a few years earlier. His physician suggested that outdoor work would restore him to health, so Tyrrell found a temporary post as an assistant at the GSC, which was moving its offices from Montreal to Ottawa and needed additional staff. His first task was to unpack and sort through hundreds of specimens of Canadian rocks.

One of the GSC's leading names was George Mercer Dawson, a member of the International Boundary Commission. While surveying lands along the 49th Parallel, Dawson discovered the first dinosaur bones in southern Saskatchewan and Alberta in 1874. Such fossil finds were a relatively recent development. In 1770 in Holland, the first ancient skeleton of what was thought to be an immense marine lizard was unearthed. In 1800, the first ancient specimen uncovered by Europeans in North America was a set of fossilized dinosaur tracks in Connecticut.


https://www.mountpleasantgroup.com/en-CA/General-Information/Our%20Monthly%20Story/story-archives/toronto-necropolis/joseph-burr-tyrrell.aspx

Born in Weston in 1858, the son of an Irish immigrant who was a successful builder and contractor, and close friend of John A. Macdonald, as a young man, Joseph Burr Tyrrell crossed the continent several times, and astonished the scientific world by his discovery that dinosaurs had once roamed Alberta’s Bad Lands. In 1893, through his father’s influence with the prime minister, he secured a job with the government’s Geological Survey of Canada, and set out on a journey across the Barren Lands to Hudson Bay.


https://www.yukon-news.com/letters-opinions/biographers-honour-two-prominent-yukon-geologists/

Michael Gates  January 19, 2008

Tyrrell must have passed the test because he was assigned work in Alberta, where he mapped portions of the province and collected the first specimen of an Albertasaurus skull.

Interpreting evidence he found during his field work, Tyrrell correctly postulated the presence of a massive continental glacier, a theory not widely popular at the time because it contradicted a literal interpretation of the Bible.

In 1893 and 1894, he made two highly acclaimed trips into the Barrens along the west side of Hudson’s Bay, which sealed his fame as a northern explorer, and for which he received the Back Award from the Canadian Geographical Society in 1896.


http://www.thebuilderslodge.org/featuredMember.shtml

Joseph Tyrrell has been variously described as the doyen of Canadian mining men, the dean of mining, the man who conquered the Canadian North, Canada's senior geologist, and the last of the great breed of map­making explorers and first of the modern mineral­-finders and technologists. His life spanned the 19th and 20th centuries and embodies the romantic adventures of the former, and the industrial developments of the latter.

Not as well known is his connection to masonry and The Builders’ Lodge. Bro. Tyrrell was in fact a member of our lodge, many years ago. He remained active in masonry throughout his life even though his career took him around the country. 

He, along with Brethren of Ivanhoe Lodge No. 142, convened the first Masonic Lodge meeting ever held north of the Arctic Circle in Canada, at Coppermine, 67°48’ North Latitude, 115°15’ West Longitude. Emil John Wali, manager of Eldorado Gold Mines, was initiated by a multi-Lodge team including Bro. J.B. Tyrrell as Chaplain. When Bro. Tyrrell moved to Toronto, he affiliated with University Lodge No. 496 GRC. 



Bro Tyrrell "Discovered": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albertosaurus

Since the first discovery in 1884, fossils of more than 30 individuals have been recovered, providing scientists with a more detailed knowledge of Albertosaurus anatomy than is available for most other tyrannosaurids. The discovery of 26 individuals at one site provides evidence of pack behaviour and allows studies of ontogeny and population biology, which are impossible with lesser-known dinosaurs.







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