It is perhaps pertinent to note Hughan's note re 'York Masons':
NOTE.- The earliest roll of Masters preserved on the ancient Lodge held at York commences 1705, when Sir George Tempest was "the chief officer;" and down to the year 1724 the chairman was either styled Master or President, in which capacity Lord Bingley, Sir William Robinson, Bart., Sir Walter Hawkesworth and others served the lodge, but it was not until 1725 that the members constituted themselves into the "Grand Lodge of all England, held at York," at which date the list of their Grand Masters begins.
Source: Hughan, W J, Memorials of the Masonic Union, page 10 of 2nd ed., Leicester, 1913, 'edited and augmented' by J T Thorp.
Preston's 1781 edition of IoM should be considered in the light of his expulsion from GLE, his activities in the Lodge of Antiquity, and his withdrawal from Freemasonry, as far as attendance at lodge meetings was concerned, as of 1780.
See Dyer, C F W: William Preston and His Work, Lewis Masonic, 1987, pages 79 - 86.