David Harrison is a UK-based Masonic historian who has written numerous books on the history of Freemasonry, and has contributed articles on the subject to various magazines which deal with the topic of Freemasonry around the world, such as the UK based Freemasonry Today,[1] MQ Magazine,[2] the US based Knight Templar Magazine,[3] Philalethes[4] and the Australian-based New Dawn Magazine.[5] Harrison has also appeared on TV and radio discussing his work.[6][7]
Having gained his PhD from the University of Liverpool in 2008 which focused on the development of English Freemasonry,[8][9] the thesis was subsequently published in March 2009 entitled The Genesis of Freemasonry by Lewis Masonic, a UK-based publisher who specialise in Masonic works.[10] The work put forward the origins of Freemasonry and discussed its development throughout the eighteenth century, Harrison championing what has been termed the 'river theory'; Freemasonry originating from the Stonemason's Guilds in England, becoming influenced by an influx of different popular ideas throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries such as Alchemy, the search for the true dimensions of Solomon's Temple and Natural philosophy.[11][12]
Harrison put forward that the French Huguenot and natural philosopher John Theophilus Desaguliers created the Masonic three degree system in the 1720s, being in part, influenced by the research of Sir Isaac Newton on the dimensions of Solomon's Temple.[13] Harrison's work and style, though academic based, has become controversial and his first book has been criticised for not having the traditional layout of a PhD thesis, for his writing technique and for publication choice.[14][15] On the whole however,[citation needed] the work received positive reviews.[16][17][18]
His second book The Transformation of Freemasonry continues the historical analysis of English Freemasonry through the nineteenth century, looking at how the society fell out of fashion after the French Revolution and how it adapted to become a popular networking society as the Victorian era progressed.[19] Harrison has admitted to being a Freemason in a TV interview.[20]