Where the Rubber Meets the Road

For the members of the Seekers of Light, motorcycling and Masonry go hand-in-hand. Armin Houshmandi, a master Mason with the Golden Rule Lodge No. 479 and the founder of the riding association, puts it this way: “The asphalt is unforgiving and physics are unforgiving, and you have to learn to work within the rules and laws of life… Where do you really do that, aside from Masonry?”

Read more about our seasonal celebration of adventure-seekers, wanderlusters, and outdoorsmen wringing every last drop out of summer!

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The July/August issue of California Freemason magazine is now available on our newly redesigned online edition: californiafreemason.org! Search for your favorite topics, peruse past issues and find the latest news from the fraternity all in one convenient place.

Read the Newest Issue of California Freemason!

The July/August issue of California Freemason magazine is now available on our newly redesigned online edition: californiafreemason.org! Search for your favorite topics, peruse past issues and find the latest news from the fraternity all in one convenient place.

Read more about our seasonal celebration of adventure-seekers, wanderlusters, and outdoorsmen wringing every last drop out of summer!

READ NOW


Executive Message – Stepping Out

Getting out—or better yet, inviting others in—is the perfect way to strengthen lodges’ relationship with their community, says Grand Master Stuart A. Wright.

Our Inverted World
What a curious passage in the first degree explains about Masonry’s relationship to the outside world.

Feeling the Sun on Their Skin
From fishing selfies to BBQs and fun-runs, brothers across the state share their favorite summer snaps.

Making Waves
A schoolbus-turned-surf wagon is helping one Southern California Mason explore the coast in style.

The Forever Place
A 100-mile footrace around Mount Fuji is all in a day’s work—literally 24 hours—for ultramarathon runner Loren Newman.

Meet Me Outside
Once a year, members of the Temecula Catalina Island Lodge head for the hills for a very special degree ceremony.

Where the Rubber Meets the Road
Meet the South Bay Mason who’s tapped into his spiritual awareness—and built a community—on two wheels and some twisted iron.

Have Craft, Will Travel
How a gift from one Mason to another launched a fellowship of camping enthusiasts.

The Other Butterfly Effect
A little slice of nature is transforming care at the Masonic Homes’ campuses.

Giving It As Good As You Get
A successful career in business has taught Bill Prentiss an important lesson: The greatest reward is in paying it forward.

 

Have feedback you’d like to share? Email editor@freemason.org.

Symbols of Femininity

On aprons and teapots, in the first degrees and the virtues and lessons of Freemasonry, feminine symbols are threaded into the very fabric of Freemasonry. Visit here to read this article!

The California Freemason digital magazine has gotten a high-tech makeover! You can now read the beautifully redesigned online edition on your computer, tablet, or phone by going to one simple web address: californiafreemason.org. There’s no need to download an app. Search for your favorite topics, peruse past issues, and find the latest news from the fraternity all in one convenient place.

Of Their Free Will and Accord

Removing a loose brick in the wall separating the family library from the parlor, Elizabeth St. Leger had a full view of what was transpiring in the next room. Her curiosity stirred. Until then, she’d never witnessed a meeting of her father’s Masonic lodge. She was enthralled. But as the proceedings wound down, Elizabeth began to fear she would be detected. She bolted from the library – and ran into the butler, who, unbeknownst to her, was the tiler of the lodge. She screamed and fainted. The butler summoned her father. Realizing his daughter had witnessed their secret work, Lord Doneraeil determined that the best remedy was to pass her through the ceremonies she had just witnessed, ensuring her discretion by the obligation that would bind her.

This is the story of the “The Lady Freemason” receiving the degrees of Masonry in Cork, Ireland in the early 1700s, several years before the premier grand lodge was formed in London. It is but one of several stories of incidental female Masons – women secreting themselves in clocks and closets to witness the mysteries of Masonry, only to be discovered and then initiated by the reluctant master. But the history of women in Freemasonry is much deeper and much richer than these amusing tales suggest.

OPERATIVE MASONRY​

Women appear in the fraternity’s history from its earliest, operative days. While membership in the building trades of the Middle Ages was typically male, both men and women worked together on certain building sites and in some instances men apprenticed under female masters. In “The Legend of Good Women – Medieval Women in Towns and Cities,” German professor Erika Uitz sheds light on the prevalence of women builders in the Middle Ages. Early rulings restricted female guild membership to wives and widows, and sometimes limited their work to lighter duties, but sources also “suggest that women were employed in the hard physical work” including mortar-mixing, roof-making, and glazing. An early 16th-century woodcut depicts a man and woman lifting a large stone completing a chapel roof. Uitz explains that by the late Middle Ages, independent women were allowed membership in building trades in central Europe, a practice that spread as economic and demographic conditions changed.

The records of the Worshipful Company of Masons in London list numerous women on the rolls of apprenticeships in the late 1600s and early 1700s. Many were widows continuing a husband’s trade or supervising a minor son – but not all. For example, the rolls of 1714 include Mary Banister, who was neither the widow nor daughter of a Mason. Her father was a baker and she was not married. Wives and widows were offered discounted membership fees, however, Mary paid the company five schillings for a seven-year apprenticeship, the same as the men.

Researchers point to the language in surviving manuscripts of the Medieval trade guilds, including the Regius Poem and other Old Charges, which are esteemed by Masons, as a record of the evolution of the craft; some grand lodges consider them part of Masonic law today. The Regius Poem describes the scholar Euclid who “ordered that whoever was a better worker should teach even the slowest learner to become perfect in the respectable Craft; so each one should teach the other and love one another like sister and brother.” The minutes of the first lodge in Edinburgh uses the terms “he” and “she” when referring to operative Masons.

MASCULINE MASONRY

Some researchers use the above examples as evidence of mixed gender in the Medieval building trades, while others dispute the idea. There are also claims that speculative lodges of men and women, called “androgynous lodges,” were operating in London in the early 18th century, but, here too, evidence is scant.

Notwithstanding these debates, there is no doubt that masculine Masonry was formalized in 1723 when the London grand lodge adopted Anderson’s Constitutions. It reads, “The persons admitted members of a lodge must be good and true men, freeborn, and of mature and discreet age, no bondsmen, no women, no immoral or scandalous men, but of good report.” It could not be clearer. This new grand lodge was for men only.

The new constitutions provided lodges with the structure, order, and consistency lacking in the crude craft of speculative Masonry then blooming in the British Isles, and masculine Freemasonry spread around the globe like wildfire. By the mid-20th century, membership reached an all-time high: tens of thousands of lodges and millions of Freemasons, exclusively male. This masculine tradition was passed faithfully from one continent to the other and one generation to the next – in many cases, without any knowledge that women were practicing in the same fraternal society all the while, albeit in smaller numbers.

LODGES OF ADOPTION​

As lodges formed in France in the 1730s, the grand lodge there wrestled with how to address the interest by women in their masculine craft. Androgynous lodges already existed in Paris, and other lodges performed separate degrees for women. By the 1740s, in answer to this interest, the grand lodge established Lodges of Adoption, a separate system of degrees for women called the Adoptive Rite.

Apparently there were several variations of the Adoptive Rite. “The Perfect Mason,” published in 1744, describes three degrees. According to Michael Segall, former grand chancellor of the Grand Lodge of France, the Primitive Rite had four degrees (Apprentice, Companion, Mistress, and Perfect Mistress); the French Rite, the most prevalent, had five degrees (adding Elect Sublime Scottish Lady to the former); and there was also a Ten Degree rite, which Segall said was “seldom worked and copying in part the [Scottish Rite] degrees.”

French Masons debated the propriety of the Adoptive Rite. Some men disfavored the practice altogether. But, according to Albert Mackey, these androgynous lodges “became so numerous and so popular that a persistence in opposition would have evidently been impolitic, if it did not actually threaten to be fatal to the interest and permanence of the Masonic Institution.”

The Adoptive Rite flourished in France and eventually made its way to America. One of the first known adoptive lodges in America was St. Anne’s Lodge in Boston. One of its founders, Hanna Crocker, authored “A Series of Letters on Free Masonry,” published in 1815 under the penname “A Lady of Boston.” In her first letter, dated September 7, 1810, Crocker wrote, “I had the honor some years ago to preside as Mistress of a [lodge], consisting of females only; we held a regular lodge, founded on the original principles of true ancient Masonry, so far as was consistent for the female character.”

For Crocker, the aim of Freemasonry was to elevate the human mind and she believed Masonry was a stimulus for the feminine consciousness at a time when there were few inducements for it. Describing the times, she wrote, “If women could even read and badly write their name it was thought enough for them… But the aspiring female mind, could no longer bear a cramp to genius.” On Freemasonry, she concluded, “I have reason to believe this institution gave the first rise to female education in this town, and our sex a relish for improving the mind.”

She was not alone in her thinking. Albert Pike, one of the most referenced Masons in Masonic history, wrote:

“Our mothers, wives, sisters, and daughters cannot, it is true, be admitted to share with us the grand mysteries of Freemasonry, but there is no substantial reason why there should not be also a Masonry for them, which may not merely enable them to make themselves known to Masons, but by means of which, acting in concert through the tie of association and mutual obligation, they may cooperate in the great labors of Masonry by assisting in, and, in some respects, directing their charities and toiling in the cause of human progress.”

By the early 19th century, Masons in a number of states were writing and performing female degrees, and Pike himself is credited with translating a form of the Adoptive Rite into English. Unlike other forms then practiced, this variation was very similar to the masculine lodges of his time, down to the details of the aprons the “sisters” wore.

Most female degrees at the time were conferred upon the wives, daughters, and widows of Masons – but Pike seems to have performed the degrees for at least one person with no Masonic relation. In 1866, 18-year-old sculptor Vinnie Ream Hoxie was selected by the U.S. Congress to create a statue of Abraham Lincoln, making her the youngest artist and the first woman to receive such a commission. She became a prominent figure in Washington, DC, and met and befriended Pike, who was living there. At some point, Hoxie was made a Mason, and a few years after completing the Lincoln statue, she completed one of Pike.

In “Haunted Chambers: The Lives of Early Women Freemasons,” Karen Kidd describes Hoxie’s enthusiastic support of the Adoptive Rite. She writes, “Vinnie took on Pike’s project of establishing an American Adoptive Rite, as he imagined it, with as much energy as ever she committed to her art. She soon was quoted in the press as pointing out the roots of the American Rite in the French Rite of Adoption.” The attention Hoxie drew was not always positive. In fact, she faced significant opposition by male American Masons. Her and Pike’s hopes to expand the Adoptive Rite in Washington, DC were never fully realized, perhaps in part because of this negative sentiment – or perhaps because there was a stronger adoptive brand already developing in the United States.

Despite facing criticism of his own, Rob Morris, a past grand master of Kentucky, was a steadfast advocate of the Adoptive Rite in America – even publishing a magazine titled “The Adopted Mason.” By 1855, Morris created the Supreme Constellation of the American Adoptive Rite, a new form of Freemasonry that evolved into the Order of the Eastern Star (OES). OES was very successful, and ultimately grew to more than 500,000 members, which, at its apex, was the largest mixed fraternal organization in the world. This might explain why other forms of mixed and feminine Masonry have not been as prevalent in the United States as elsewhere in the world. (See “A Voice During the Women’s Movement” on page 20 for more.)

Except for the success and growth of OES, the popularity of the Adoptive Rite in the United States and around the world waned in the late 19th century. Men and women in adoptive lodges were no longer content to practice a different rite; they longed to partake in the same ceremonies as the masculine lodges. In France, they were about to.

MIXED MASONRY​

Maria Deraismes was initiated into Les Libres-Pensuer Lodge in Paris in 1882, using the same ritual the men had been using for more than 150 years. George Martin, a doctor and politician, was among the brothers present for the historic occasion: one of the first recorded instances of a woman’s initiation into a regular lodge of Masons. It’s not surprising that Deraismes, who was active in France’s women’s rights movement and nascent humans’ rights organizations, claimed the distinction. Her initiation met with such acrimony that she eventually withdrew from the lodge – but she was not deterred. She and Martin worked together to found the first grand lodge of “mixed Masonry” a decade later, the Scottish Symbolic Grand Lodge – Human Right, which would soon become the International Order of Mixed Freemasonry – Human Right (Le Droit Humain, in French, or LDH).

Today, LDH operates lodges in more than 40 countries on each of the five main continents. In the United States, the first of these was established in Pennsylvania in 1903 under the leadership of French Freemason Francois Goaziou, a newspaper editor. A few years later, he led the creation of a subsidiary grand lodge called the American Federation LDH, which now has lodges in more than 20 states, including several lodges in California.

Meanwhile, England’s first LDH lodge was founded by Annie Besant, a leader in the women’s rights movement in the United Kingdom. Besant and a number of friends received their Masonic degrees from LDH in Paris in 1902, and returned to London to establish England’s first lodge of mixed Masonry the same year. Besant became the grand commander of a subsidiary LDH grand lodge, and during her tenure, English mixed Masonry developed Mark Masons lodges, the Holy Royal Arch, and a past master’s degree – aligning their additional bodies as the masculine grand lodge in England had and differentiating it from their French counterparts. A splinter grand lodge, which also practiced mixed Masonry, was created in 1908: the Honorable Fraternity of Ancient Freemasonry (HFAF).

As the 20th century dawned, men and women were practicing Freemasonry together, in the same lodges, using its ancient rituals and ceremonies. Soon, though, there would be the Great War and women would play an increased leadership role in the world – and in the lodge.

FEMININE MASONRY​

Great Britain entered World War I in August of 1914, eventually conscripting the majority of all fit men ages 18 to 51. Women filled the jobs the men had left – and in the case of the mixed grand lodge HFAF, women also filled the lodges.

Despite the lack of male applicants during the war, HFAF still attracted new members under its transformative female grand master, Marion Halsey. Eighty-eight women – mostly single women and women without children – were initiated during the war years, compared to just 12 men. Soon, most everyone in the lodge was female. When the war ended, the men who survived returned home and returned to lodge. About the same time, HFAF requested formal recognition from the United Grand Lodge of England, but it was not granted. Halsey and her leadership team realized they were destined to stand on their own – as women. Between 1919 and 1925, HFAF initiated 253 women and just two men. By 1935, the last male member died and pure feminine Masonry was born. In 1958, its Golden Anniversary, HFAF added “Order of Women Freemasons” to its name. Today, the order has more than 6,000 members in the United Kingdom and other parts of the world.

Across the channel, French Freemasons were on a similar path. In 1935, the Grand Lodge of France granted autonomy to a number of adopted lodges to form a women’s grand lodge in France. World War II interrupted their plans, but eventually in 1952, the Women’s Grand Lodge of France was formed. This new grand lodge cast aside the Adoptive Rite, preferring to work in the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite. Soon, feminine lodges were created throughout France and other parts of Europe, including Belgium.

Across the Atlantic in Mexico, the first women’s lodges were founded in the late 19th century, dissolved, and returned in other forms. These original efforts by women were followed in 1958 by the United Women’s Grand Lodge “Alma Mexicana,” which remains one of the largest feminine grand lodges today, with 87 lodges in 18 Mexican states and the Federal District.

Here in California, in 2017, three Los Angeles lodges associated with Alma Mexicana formed the Women’s Grand Lodge of California, complementing the French and Belgian feminine lodges already established in the state.

Indeed, feminine Masonry today only seems to be growing. In 2008, French Grand Master Yvette Nicolas articulated her view on its purpose:
“To be a women’s grand lodge does not mean withdrawal nor unwillingness to share Masonic work with men. This choice meets the need to find a specific time-space unit for thought and expression, allowing women to fully engage with their feminine identity and responsibility as women in the world.”

Surely, there are men who can relate. Masculine grand lodges around the world are learning more about the various distinctions created over the centuries regarding gender in Freemasonry. In fact, the world’s premier grand lodge is leading the way.

MODERN ENGLISH VIEW​

Considered the mother grand lodge of the world, the United Grand Lodge of England (UGLE) draws the constant attention of the fraternity. Masculine grand lodges (and perhaps mixed and feminine ones, too) regard UGLE actions and practices as the original, leading form of Masonry. Twenty years ago, on the threshold of the 21st century, the premier grand lodge formally addressed gender. In a statement on March 10, 1999, UGLE explained the existence of feminine and mixed Masonry in England and informed their members that they were “free to explain to non-Masons, if asked, that Freemasonry is not confined to men” even though UGLE does not admit women – that is, unless the woman was a man when initiated. Indeed, UGLE later acknowledged that gender is not always a permanent status. On July 17, 2018, UGLE published a policy stating that a person who has undergone gender reassignment and becomes a man may apply for membership in their lodges. Further, a Mason who after initiation becomes a woman is entitled to maintain her active membership in the lodge. The instructions to lodges include a dress code for women at meetings.

It’s impossible to know how the fraternity’s ideas about gender distinctions while practicing Freemasonry will evolve in the future. From the outset of Freemasonry, both men and women have participated in its mysteries and advanced its aims. In all parts of the globe, including in the state of California, there exist today three streams of Freemasonry distinguished by gender – masculine Masonry for men only; feminine Masonry for women only; and mixed Masonry for men and women together. As long as the human mind finds happiness in experiencing and learning from Freemasonry’s initiatic rites and rituals in a gender specific environment, the three streams are likely to continue.

While countless questions remain for the future of gender and Freemasonry, this much is certain: Today, a woman doesn’t have to peek through loose bricks or hide in a cabinet to become a Mason. Women and men alike can knock directly at the door of Freemasonry, of their own free will and accord.

FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION

Longtime members and new brothers can use these questions as the starting point for a discus-sion in lodge, or in one-on-one conversations.

  1. We know that there are three streams of Freemasonry today distinguished by gender (masculine, feminine, and mixed). What are the benefits of these three streams?
  2. In explaining feminine lodges, PGM Yvette Nicolas explains that their lodges provide a space and time for women to engage with their feminine identity and understand their roles as women in the world. Does your lodge provide a similar experience for you – to understand your role as a man? If so, how?
  3. Hanna Crocker believes her lodge was the first source of education for women in Boston. Does your lodge provide education for its members? Is the lodge improving society in some way?
  4. Our evolution from early operative Masonic guilds has had a profound impact on the character of the fraternity. Our heritage is both dear to us and useful as we look back to gain insight into our present, and to help us chart a path toward our future. In light of recent scholarship that suggests the presence of women on the membership rolls of operative Masonic guilds, how does your understanding of speculative Masonry change?
  5. Have your daughters or wives ever asked whether they are allowed to become Masons? How have you answered them? If you haven’t yet been asked, how would you answer such a question?

The Flame Within a Heart

How Demolay Shapes Its Members, and How They Shape the World

By Laura Benys

Two or three times a week, 17-year-old Brett Grimm finishes afternoon classes at his high school in Reno, Nevada, climbs behind the wheel of the family car, and heads west for California. On the long drive – anywhere from one and a half to six hours – he’ll return phone calls, mentally prepare for upcoming events, and if all else fails, listen to music. When he arrives at his destination, he’ll spend a few memorable hours meeting with young men who have spent months planning for his visit. At the close of an evening filled with ritual, service, and friendship, he’ll turn around and make the drive back. Many days, he won’t pull into his driveway in Reno – where he lives with his parents, twin brother, and younger sister – until one or two in the morning. He spends more weekends in California than Nevada. He doesn’t know how many miles he’s logged on the road. “I stopped counting when I saw the look of concern on my parents’ faces,” he jokes.

Grimm is a leader in DeMolay, a character-building and leadership organization for young men ages 12 to 21. The youth order, which is part of the extended Masonic family, is having a big year: 2019 marks its centennial anniversary. The milestone is being celebrated in chapters in 25 countries around the globe, including about 15,000 active members in the United States and Canada alone.

 

“These seven cardinal virtues are “lights to illuminate our pathway as we journey ever onward down the road of life.”

 

– DeMolay Ceremony of Light

 

In addition to being a full-time high school student and treasurer of his junior class, Grimm is serving in the highest office of the DeMolay jurisdiction of Northern California, Hawaii, and Northern Nevada. (And for the record, his parents are incredibly supportive; his dad has been so inspired, he’s currently going through his own Masonic degrees.) As jurisdictional master councilor, Grimm’s responsibilities include traveling with fellow officers to each local chapter to check in on their programs, find out what kind of support they need, and make lifelong connections. This is where the long days on the road come in. Grimm doesn’t mind a bit. “It’s a pretty beautiful experience,” he says. “After an event, young men have reached out to ask questions or talk about something personal, whether they’re having trouble at school or anything else. They trust in you when they talk about these things, which is exactly what we want them to do. It means we’re doing our job right.”

Like many young men who join DeMolay (and for that matter, Masonry), he didn’t always imagine himself as such a role model and all-around leader. Being in DeMolay showed him that he could be.

“I used to think that being a jurisdictional leader was way beyond what I could do,” he says. “But as time went on, my chapter gave me opportunities to grow. The older DeMolays helped me come out of my shell. My advisors were always motivating me to take a step forward. DeMolay helped me grow from a timid young man into who I am today.”

From time management to public speaking to event planning, the skills Grimm learns in DeMolay will be valuable throughout his life, priming him to be a leader at almost anything he tries. But within the day-to-day activities of the youth order, he has also been practicing something else, which will make him the very best kind of leader to have: strong values.

Sometimes, at a public occasion where it’s appropriate to summarize the basic teachings of DeMolay, one or a few members will perform a short ritual called the Ceremony of Light. In it, seven candles are lit to symbolize the youth order’s seven cardinal virtues: love of parents and family, reverence for sacred things, courtesy, comradeship, loyalty, cleanness (including respectfulness in thoughts, words, and actions), and patriotism. They are “symbols of all that is good and right with the world.”

“We live in troubled times…” the ritual explains, “in danger of sinking into the waste of doubt and uncertainty… when trust and justice and brotherhood may not be considered the most virtuous of qualities…” But these seven cardinal virtues are “lights to illuminate our pathway as we journey ever onward down the road of life.”

 

Land’s vision was to develop leadership skills in the young men.

 

In 1919, when DeMolay was first created, the world had indeed seen troubled times. Nations around the globe were recovering from the horrors of World War I, and the tens of millions of lives that had been lost. Americans looked to each other to reclaim some sense of strength and stability, embracing community activism and social institutions like never before. Membership in organizations like Freemasonry soared.

During this time, Frank Land, a Freemason in Kansas City, Missouri met a young man whose father had recently died. Land had hired 16-year-old Louis Lower to do odd jobs around the local Scottish Rite building, but soon he saw that the teenager needed more than employment: He needed the support of adult males, and a wholesome environment where he could learn skills, serve his community, and have fun. Many of Lower’s friends were also fatherless, and Land had an idea that could help them all. He had Lower round up eight of his friends, and together, they made plans for a boys club. The young men named themselves the Order of DeMolay in honor of Jacques DeMolay, a Templar Knight martyred in the Middle Ages for refusing to betray his friends. The first meeting was held on March 24, 1919, attended by 31 local boys.

DeMolay – and the other Masonic youth orders that followed, namely Job’s Daughters and Rainbow for Girls – was among a growing number of youth organizations in America in the 1920s, including church groups and clubs like the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts. But the Masonic youth orders were unique, in part because they incorporated symbolic rituals like the Ceremony of Light. Inspired by Freemasonry’s initiatic process, Land had a friend and fellow Mason write the ritual for two DeMolay degrees and a host of other ceremonies. Sure enough, the symbolism, pageantry, and solemnity ingrained in the youth order’s rituals captured the young men’s imaginations, and sealed the bond between them.

DeMolay’s rituals and welcoming environment immediately appealed to young men, who began joining in droves, and its lessons in virtues and good citizenship were readily embraced by American society. Chapters sprang up throughout the United States, then in Canada, and by the 1960s, around the globe. Today, it has enriched the lives of more than 1 million young men worldwide.

But its lessons don’t end with a discussion of morals. From the beginning, Land’s vision was to develop leadership skills in the young men by empowering them to lead themselves. The members elect their own officers to run meetings; discuss and vote on decisions; and plan their own activities. Older members act as mentors to younger boys.

Each chapter is sponsored by a local Masonic lodge or appendant group, which provides adult volunteers – who are both men and women, and needn’t have a Masonic connection – to serve as advisors. They’re integral to a chapter’s success, but their role is largely in the background, leaving the overall direction and operation of each chapter to the young members.

This approach prepared Avery Brinkley for his current responsibilities as DeMolay’s international master councilor. When Brinkley first encountered DeMolay in Southern California at age 14, he was “super shy,” he says. His cousin dragged him to an event, and at first, he didn’t consider joining because “I knew it would make me have to talk to other people.” Then he saw a public installation ceremony that featured the “arch of steel,” a processional and recessional framed by two columns of older DeMolays, who draw swords and hold them aloft in an arch. That did it, Brinkley says: “I was like, Where do I sign up?” He came up through Yorba Linda Chapter.

It’s funny to him to think back to a time when he was afraid of talking. Now, it’s one of his main responsibilities. At age 21, Brinkley is serving a one-year term as the head of the global organization of DeMolay International, traveling to chapters around the world to promote the youth order and celebrate the centennial. A little while ago he was in Boston manning the phones in a telethon fundraiser, then traveled straight to Ohio for the jurisdiction’s “WinterFest” convention, then a few days later headed to Paraguay for a special countrywide initiation: 100 new members were initiated in honor of DeMolay’s 100 years. Suffice it to say, his travel calendar is booked. (When he was installed in his office in June, he signed up for a frequent flyer account, and it took less than five months to rack up the 30,000 miles for gold status.) In any spare time, whether on the ground or up in the air, he works on his speeches, reviews the upcoming agendas for numerous committees, and replies to an ongoing stream of DeMolay emails. He spends hours each day discussing DeMolay business with his international congress secretary and leading adult advisor, and juggles conference calls scheduled across time zones with about nine youth committees.

“It’s a job,” he says. “I have to really have a good grip on time management. I have to make sure that I’m delegating.”

One of his primary initiatives is to create a year-round membership drive on the international level. He’s also passionate about improving the youth order’s use of social media and technology: DeMolay International launched an app in January, and has energized its social media presence, now posting daily on popular platforms like Instagram. The increased activity has already attracted new members, brought back others who had drifted away, and increased overall energy and enthusiasm for DeMolay. He’s also excited about launching a variety of member surveys, aimed at strengthening chapters and improving the DeMolay experience around the world. He and his fellow leaders are confronting the same question that Masonic lodges ask every day: How to evolve for modern times while still preserving what’s most important?

“We’re changing our marketing, and how young men find out about DeMolay,” Brinkley says. “We’re changing how the members get involved: They used to get together to play baseball, now they might play video games. But the experience they have in DeMolay, the bonds that they make – that’s not changing.”

 

“We’re changing how the members get involved. But the experience they have in DeMolay, the bonds that they make – that’s not changing.”

–Avery Brinkley

 

Neither are the values. “It’s important to educate the youth of today on morality and our obligations to each other. I think that everybody who joins DeMolay realizes that they’re getting something out of it that they could not get anywhere else,” Brinkley says. “Our ideals are ageless and timeless. That’s why DeMolay still has a place in our society. That’s why I think it will carry on forever. The fact that we’re reaching 100 years is concrete proof of it.”

As he travels to chapters around the world, he reminds the young men of DeMolay that they’re now part of the legacy. “We need to lay the foundation for the next 100 years of DeMolay,” he tells them, “and the next hundreds of 100 years.”

The age range for DeMolays, 12 to 21 years old, coincide with some of the most formative years in their lives. During this time, they affirm and reaffirm their commitment to the seven cardinal virtues – in the words of the Ceremony of Light ritual, “the standards upon which we as DeMolays have pledged to base our lives.” Such promises, repeated again and again to dear friends and trusted adults, make a lasting impact. It’s no wonder that DeMolay alumni have a habit of leading inspirational and value-driven lives, and have risen to prominence across all industries and sectors of society; this roster includes Walter Cronkite, John Wayne, John Steinbeck, Paul Harvey, Fran Tarkenton, John Cameron Swaze, Bob Mathias, Burl Ives, and Mark Hatfield.

William Hoover is on this list. At age 29, Hoover is the recipient of some of the military’s highest honors for bravery, including the Purple Heart, the Army Meritorious Service medal, and the bronze star. While deployed in Afghanistan as a sergeant in the U.S. Army, he was shot nine times while shielding three other officers from an assassin’s bullets. He saved their lives, and almost lost his own.

Hoover is originally from Sacramento, where he was raised by his grandmother and mother. When he discovered DeMolay (by accident – he and his mother were lost and stumbled into a youth order event), it gave him a family of another kind.

“My dad wasn’t in my life, so the dad advisors played a big part in turning me into the man I am today,” he says, “teaching me the DeMolay core values, teaching me how to be a good man and a good member of society.”

When the attack happened in Afghanistan, he says, those lessons flashed through his mind. “When you’re in a state like that, your mind reverts back to what it knows best. DeMolay had been drilling those lessons into me for years, to think about everyone else first and think about yourself last,” he says. “I honestly don’t know if, without DeMolay, I would’ve had the strength of character and the strength of mind to do what I did.”

 

“DeMolay had been drilling [me] to think about everyone else first and think about yourself last.”

– Avery Brinkley

 

Few DeMolays will ever be tested as Hoover was on that day. But there are other kinds of battles, and other kinds of tests, whether it’s navigating the hallways of a high school, standing in front of a boardroom, or simply treating others with respect.

None of these is easy – which is why the Ceremony of Light concludes by imploring each member to embody the seven cardinal virtues every day, and to inspire others to do the same. “[E]ach of you, as a DeMolay, holds within your heart a flame, a beacon to guide you through the darkness. If you can make this light shine upon another, if you can reach into the innermost depths of his soul and set his flame afire, then therein lies the purpose of the Order of DeMolay, and therein lies your purpose for living.”

In 2017, Hoover was inducted into DeMolay International’s Hall of Fame for his heroism. These days, one of his favorite things to do is travel to DeMolay events to speak with members. He talks about how DeMolay taught him how to be a leader who encourages rather than intimidates, and how important that approach was when he joined the military. He shares how much support NorCal DeMolay and his Masonic lodge, Sacramento Lodge No. 40, have given him during the long recovery from his injuries. He says that once you’re a DeMolay or Mason, your brothers “will always have your back.” He tells them that the values they are learning in DeMolay make them who they are – and that, in turn, will affect the lives of everybody they touch.

Hoover recently gave a speech at Minnesota DeMolay’s centennial celebration. It had been a heartening weekend, leaving him with the sense that DeMolay was as vibrant as ever, and poised for a great future. When he took the stage to speak, he could make out individual faces in the audience. “I love when I can see everybody’s faces,” he says. “When I’ve said something that hits one of the DeMolay’s hearts, and his face lights up, I think, ‘I got to him.’”

For Your Consideration

Longtime members and new brothers can use these questions as the starting point for a discussion in lodge, or in one-on-one conversations.

  • How do the experiences of the Masonic youth leaders in this article parallel your experiences within Freemasonry – as an officer, mentor, or other role? Have these experiences positively impacted your professional life?
  • William Hoover found that he could call upon the strengths of his Masonic values at a moment of crisis. Have you ever been in the same position? How did you harness your strengths?
  • Masonic youth orders like DeMolay rely on adult mentorship. What lessons do you have that you would like to pass on to DeMolay or other youth in your community? How might you and your lodge find opportunities to mentor youth?

Coming Together to Give Back

In the 2017-2018 fraternal year, 18 lodges made the decision to support the Let’s Write the Future campaign as Pace Setter donors, pledging between $100,000 and $300,000 to the California Masonic Foundation. These unprecedented gifts truly set a new example of philanthropic leadership in our fraternity. Learn why three lodges chose to write a better future for California communities.

We Are Driven to Serve

Nevada Lodge No. 13

coming togetherWe are an older lodge, and many of our members are children of the Great Depression. We are conservative about spending money for any purpose because so many of us remember a time when our lodge was barely able to meet its financial obligations. As recently as the 1970s and 1980s, we were nearly broke. But mixed with that, we are a very generous membership. We want to be fiscally responsible, but we are even more driven to be of use to others. When we came together to discuss making a gift, the overriding theme was that we aren’t here to amass wealth; we are together to help each other and our communities; to take care of our brothers and their wives and children. Our Pace Setter gift was an ideal opportunity to do just that.

Coming together to make our gift has renewed our commitment to actively engaging in service within our own community. We are reaching out to our elderly brethren and widows, actively seeking opportunities to support them better and provide hands-on services. For the first time in several years, we partnered with our local Masonic youth for a service project. The last time we did so, four members attended. This time, there were more than 20. This gift has truly renewed a sense of community within our lodge.

– G. Sean Metroka, 2018 Lodge Master

We Give Our Best

Beverly Hills Lodge No. 528

we give our bestDuring a Foundation presentation at our lodge, we learned that presently, residents at the Covina Masonic Home might be sent to other facilities to get the care they need, thus separating couples. Our hearts went out to those seniors who would have to endure such a separation, while at the same time, the anxiety of being in a strange place. Together, we decided that it was extremely important for us to support advanced care at the Masonic Homes. The idea that there is a place that any of our brothers can turn to if we are in need makes us proud to be Masons.

Through the process of making our gift, every one of our brothers had the willingness in his heart to help; having a way to show this spirit collectively gave us the capability to participate as a team. It has been the culture of our lodge to help or lend a helping hand. Being a Pace Setter Lodge is something that we cherish. Through the years, we have always supported Masonic charitable causes, because we believe helping others is of utmost importance. Where we are able to extend a helping hand, we try to give our best.

– Ricardo Z. Escalante Jr., 2018 Lodge Master

We Set an Example

San Diego Lodge No. 35

we set an exampleWhen we learned about the campaign’s goals, and that the fraternity needed our lodge to step up, we basically said, “Yes, we’ll figure it out.” In the end, it was an easy decision: We have always seen ourselves as leaders in California Masonry, and philanthropy is no exception. We strive to set an example for other lodges. It wouldn’t do for us not to give.

Raising A Reader is near and dear to our hearts, as many of us have seen how reading has developed our children’s critical thinking skills and thirst for knowledge. As the saying goes, we spend the first seven years of our lives learning to read; the rest reading to learn. We have to foster a love of reading at an early age, so children can succeed at school and grow into productive adults. And, as Masons, we are obligated to care for the men and women who have supported our lodges for the entirety of their adult lives. To do it well, we need the Masonic Homes, and the new advanced care and memory care facilities we’re building. Philanthropy is just what we do. It’s part of our lodge culture.” – W. Jay Sener IV, 2018 Lodge Master

Memorable Moments

ORANGE GROVE LODGE NO. 293: FUTURE FOCUSED

By Laura Benys

Each year, a brave contingent of past masters from Orange Grove Lodge No. 293 make their way through a sea of Hawaiian shirts, past a sno-cone machine and kiddie bounce house, and to the perch of a dunk tank. Then, some 60 or 70 brothers, spouses, kids, and friends line up to take aim. The proceeds go to a good cause; the memories alone are worth the price of admission.

This is a group that loves an excuse to get together. At each stated meeting, the old opera house where the lodge meets is brimming with the three youth orders and allied Masonic groups, not to mention kids and grandkids. “You can see just by looking at the sidelines: Friendship and family are embedded in this lodge,” says Master Mark Allen. “These relationships are what attract brothers to our lodge, and keep them coming back. They’re what’s truly important and essential in Masonry.”

With all the kids and grandkids running around, the future is never far from mind. The lodge’s charitable legacy already includes enthusiastic support for causes such as Raising A Reader and honoring civil servants – and brothers are eager to give more, for the future of both fraternity and community. “Our forefathers were wise men, making sure the foundation of our lodge was sound and secure,” says Allen. “We want to build on that foundation and secure the future for the next 100 years of Masonry in Orange Grove.”

Q&A WITH MARK ALLEN, 2018 MASTER OF ORANGE GROVE LODGE NO. 293

How did the lodge’s Hawaiian luau come about?
It’s a special event we came up with to commemorate a third degree. We also do a Past Masters’ Degree, where all the past masters deliver the third degree, and a Mountain Man Degree, where we rent a rustic lodge and cabins up in Twin Pines. These events elevate the degree experience for the candidate, and create special memories that strengthen the bonds and relationships of the whole lodge family. They bring together brethren from near and far, young and old, in different atmospheres.

What are some of Orange Grove Lodge’s favorite ways to give back?
We love to help and recognize those around us in the community, from honoring civil servants to providing Child ID to supporting Masons4Mitts. We’re especially committed to Raising A Reader and public school support. We host Public Schools Night every year to celebrate teachers and students from the five local high schools. Many of these students have overcome great adversity in order to succeed at school, and hearing their stories can be a tearjerker. Recently I was able to attend a Raising A Reader event where local students and their parents thanked the Masons for the program and shared how it’s helping them. It was phenomenal. We look forward to working even more closely with Grand Lodge to take care of students and make things a little better here in California.

How has Masonry affected you personally?
I would never have met the friends I have now if it weren’t for the fraternity. I’m a quiet person. Before Masonry, I wouldn’t go up and reach my hand out to introduce myself to someone; that social challenge was a kind of block between me and other people. But one day I was courageous enough to knock on the lodge door. A brother answered, and the rest is history. I can’t describe how incredible Masonry has been for me. Something had been missing in my life. Masonry was it.

Welcome Grand Master Wright!

Last Sunday, October 21, Most Worshipful Brother Stuart A. Wright was installed as grand master of Masons in California. We look forward to a year of growth and prosperity under his leadership, inspired by his theme: “Freemasonry… the difference is you.”

Grand Master’s Biography
A third-generation Freemason, Most Worshipful Brother Stuart Alexander Wright was raised a Master Mason in Henry Know-Westlake Lodge No. 392 (now Wisdom Lodge No. 202) on October 22, 1986. He served as master of the lodge in 1990 and in 1998 was presented with the Hiram Award.

Brother Wright has served the Grand Lodge of California in several capacities over the last 25 years. He served on the Insurance Committee from 1990-2014 and was the chairman for a total of 10 years. In 2011, he was appointed to Masonic Homes of California Board of Trustees and elected vice president in 2014. Brother Wright served as grand sword bearer from 2004 to 2005 for Most Worshipful Brother David R. Doan. He has served on each of the constitutional boards.

In addition to his service to his lodge and our Grand Lodge, Brother Wright has been very active in the concordant and appendant bodies. In 1988, he joined Al Malaikah Shriners in Los Angeles, where he served as potentate in 2000. His service extended to the Imperial Shrine. He served on the Imperial Athletic Committee; as director general of the Imperial Shrine Convention, held in Anaheim, California in 2007; and as the chairman of the Board of Governors of the Shrine Hospital in Los Angeles for three years.

Brother Wright is a 33° inspector general honorary in the Pasadena Scottish Rite Bodies. He is a member of Signet Chapter No. 57, Royal Arch Masons; Omega Council No. 11, Cryptic Masons; and Los Angeles Commandery No. 9 Knights Templar. He also belongs to Dr. Rob Morris Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star; St. Gabriel Conclave, Knights of the Red Cross of Constantine; the National Sojourners; and the Heroes of ’76.

After a long career with the Insurance Company of North America, Brother Wright is the owner and president of Stuart A. Wright Associates Insurance Service. Brother Wright is an avid golfer and has enjoyed playing hockey for a number of years, including five years with the L.A. Senior Kings. He and his wife, Julie, live in Woodland Hills. They have five adult children and seven grandchildren.

From Enlightenment to Revolution

Freemasonry’s fledgling years had an enduring impact on the future of Western civilization

By Kenneth Loiselle

Originally published in the May/June issue of California Freemason. Read the digital magazine here!

It takes a strong institution to abide for more than 300 years.

But it takes a remarkable one to endure through 300 years of social change and political upheaval on the scale Western civilization has seen. During the eras between the Enlightenment and the French and American revolutions, society experienced a transformation in how it was organized, how political institutions were formed, and, perhaps most importantly, how individual citizens interact with one another. Throughout this profound global change, not only did Freemasonry continue to exist; it served as a catalyst for positive change. How did Freemasonry evolve into the cornerstone of society today, and what factors have contributed to its endurance?

THE BROTHERHOOD BEGINS

The first Masonic lodges emerged in 17th-century Scotland when men who were not stonemasons by trade began to seek membership in stonemasons’ lodges. These “speculative Masons” emerged from a wide swath of society, but many were of the gentry. Although there are few definitive records, it appears that upper-class men – like Sir Robert Moray, a statesman and scientist – were attracted to lodges’ ritualized practices, intriguing secrecy, and friendships among members. In turn, these elite outsiders offered stonemasons a reliable source of dues and greater social prestige. Although speculative members joined at varying paces throughout the 1600s, the end result is clear: By the opening decade of the 18th century, at least 25 lodges comprising both stonemasons and non-stonemasons were established throughout Scotland.

Early Scottish lodges governed themselves autonomously and shared few standard operating procedures; each established its own rules of conduct and customs. This contrasted sharply with the Dutch, English, and French lodges that appeared at later dates, all of which followed regulations emanating from The Hague, London, and Paris respectively. The first efforts to standardize Masonic practices under a central authority began in 1716, when a group of London Masons agreed to hold an annual meeting and banquet on the feast day of Saint John the Baptist in order to encourage socialization between lodges. On June 24, 1717, masters of these same lodges constituted the first grand lodge. During the first half of the 1720s, 24 lodges affiliated with the Grand Lodge in the capital, and additional lodges arose throughout continental Europe. Over the following two decades, the Grand Lodge of England continued to assume regulatory powers, transmitting basic guidelines for lodges and candidate admission over lodges throughout the entire kingdom, continental Europe, and colonial America.

A SPREADING FRATERNITY

As Voltaire’s “Letters Concerning the English Nation” (1733) and Montesquieu’s “Spirit of the Laws” (1748) testify, British politics and culture fascinated continental Europeans during the first half of the 18th century. There was a deep interest in Britain’s freedoms of religion, opinion, and association – with Freemasonry embodying the latter. In the 1720s and 1730s, lodges popped up in all corners of continental Europe, from Sweden to Italy. Bustling cities like Madrid, Paris, and Rotterdam, Holland were major Masonic hubs, but Freemasonry also spread to smaller locales with an established military presence or commercial ties to the Atlantic or Mediterranean worlds, such as the French regions of Le Havre and Valenciennes.

Like European Freemasonry, many American lodges were formed by British ambassadors, military personnel, and merchants. In 1730, the Grand Lodge of England appointed Colonel Daniel Coxe to charter lodges in the British colonies of New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania (though he apparently never exercised his authority). A few years later, Bostonian merchant Henry Price was appointed the “provincial grand master of New England and dominions and territories thereunto belonging,” responsible for cultivating Freemasonry’s North American growth.

After working under the aegis of Boston during the 1730s and 1740s, Philadelphia received a deputation from London. The Grand Lodge also allowed some American lodges to function independently from provincial authority, such as one in Savannah, Georgia, which began meeting in 1733. By the late 18th century, Freemasonry had grown along North America’s eastern seaboard and throughout the Caribbean, from Nova Scotia, Canada to the West Indies. Over the next century and a half, the craft spread westward. In 1848, the first lodge was formed in California; the state’s grand lodge was established in 1850.

EARLY DIVERSITY

Unlike the first speculative lodges, American and European lodges after 1750 welcomed diverse social tiers to their ranks. Founded in 1772, Saint Luke Lodge in Dijon, France, included skilled artisans, like plasterers and silversmiths. In the United States, clockmaker Emanuel Rouse of Philadelphia and printer Thomas Fleet of Boston were active Freemasons. Freemasonry appealed to many different types of men because it was a hybrid – amorphous sociability blended with diverse content. Fashionable cultural currents of the time, like mesmerism, occultism, and the pseudo-scientific teachings of colorful figures like Count Cagliostro (who claimed to possess psychic powers and created an esoteric ritual system of 90 dizzying degrees) found their place within Enlightenment-period lodges. In continental Europe, the variety of ritual styles contributed to Masonry’s allure. It was not considered to be a secret society – Freemasonry depended upon publicity to attract new members and to defend itself from accusations ranging from sodomy to atheism – but one that could impart hidden knowledge of the supernatural.

One colorful member was Robert Samber (1682-1745) of Hanoverian England. After briefly considering a clergy position, he began translating French works to English, including Charles Perrault’s children’s favorite, “Tales of Mother Goose,” but also pornographic tracts, such as the ribald “Venus in the Cloister,” the publisher of which was later condemned for obscenity. Samber’s Masonic connections were printed for all to see. A 1722 translation was dedicated to the earl of Burlington, likely a member of a York lodge in northern England. Samber was closely associated with two English Masonic leaders: the duke of Montagu, grand master in 1721, and the duke of Wharton, grand master in 1723. During this period, Samber also translated from French a treatise entitled, “Long Livers.” Keeping a Masonic audience in mind, he dedicated the alchemical text – which promised to reveal “the rare secret of rejuvenescency” – to the “Fraternity of Free Masons of Great-Britain and Ireland.” Within its opening pages, “Long Livers” praised Masonry as a “royal priesthood”; a universal religion, free of pagan idolatry but nonetheless maintaining “pompous sacrifices, rites and ceremonies, magnificent sacerdotal and levitical vestments, and a vast number of mystical hieroglyphics.”

This emphasis on religious tolerance within the controlled setting of the lodge reflected the inclusive universalism that preoccupied European and American Freemasons in the Enlightenment. Brethren were building upon a tradition of ecumenism that traced back to the mid-17th century. They particularly admired theologians Henry More and Ralph Cudworth, who emphasized religious tolerance among Christians. One of the founding fathers of French Freemasonry, Andrew-Michael Ramsay, placed Freemasonry squarely in the history of Christian brotherhood, for like “our ancestors, the crusaders,” he hoped Masonry would unify Christians into a “spiritual nation” that would transcend national, linguistic, and denominational differences.

ERASING RELIGIOUS DIVIDES

A notable difference between Anglo-American Masons and their continental counterparts was that the circle of tolerance was wider among the former than the latter. An anonymous orator from Boston spoke of his lodge in 1734 as “a paradise,” promoting a “universal understanding” among men of “all religions, sects, persuasions, and denominations…” This sharply contrasts a Berlin speech of the same period, which restricted Masonic membership to “all those who believe in Jesus Christ…” Non-Christians, even those who were initiated elsewhere, routinely found the doors of the fraternity closed to them in Germany, France, Spain, and Italy.

In 1746, the “English” lodge in Bordeaux, France, debated: “Can one initiate Jews into the order?” Bordeaux was a port city with an important Iberian Jewish population who were interested in Freemasonry. But the lodge secretary recorded that the proposition was “completely rejected.” Throughout the century, there was little evolution on this question. In 1783, a master in Le Mans stipulated that brethren must profess “ordinary religion.” But he went on to explain that this meant “to be good, sincere, modest, and a man of honor AND be baptized in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.” (The clarifying “and” was capitalized for emphasis.) This policy resulted in Jews’ and Muslims’ continued exclusion from many 18th century continental lodges.

Despite discrimination against non-Christians in some regions, however, Freemasonry overall clearly resonated with the Enlightenment ideals of religious tolerance among Christians of all stripes, which was first espoused by Pierre Bayle, a French Protestant living in exile in the Netherlands, and especially by John Locke in his landmark “Letter Concerning Toleration” (1689). Locke’s call for religious freedom was partly the inspiration for the American first amendment drafted 100 years later.

CORNERSTONE OF CIVIC SOCIETY

Notable Freemasons like George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, the Marquis de Lafayette, and others famously participated in both the French and American Revolutions; however, Masonry’s connection to these conflicts is complex. It is true that in officer elections and selective mixing of wealthy commoners and aristocrats, lodges were a quasi-democratic arena. But this did not contradict the ruling status quo of early modern Europe, since most Enlightenment-era Freemasons were remarkably deferential to existing political regimes and both absolutist and constitutional forms of monarchy.

Perhaps the most tangible connection between Enlightenment Freemasonry and revolutionary politics was Freemasonry’s emphasis on fostering civic virtue among brethren. When Washington wore his Masonic apron at the U.S. Capitol inauguration in 1793, he was sending an unambiguous public message that Freemasonry constituted the cornerstone of the new republic. He stressed that it taught “the duties of men and citizens” and represented a “lodge for the virtues.”

During the tumultuous times of the late 1700s, American Freemasonry sought to be a beacon of stability. Members hoped that Masonic values and strong friendships could heal fractions caused by Republican and Federalist politics and form the bedrock of the new nation. They looked to classical philosophers, reviving Aristotle and especially Cicero (who became one of the most popular classical authors during the 18th century). Greco-Roman antiquity celebrated friendship as a private bond that expanded to strengthen society as a whole. Freemasons believed friendly relations could strengthen the body politic, uniting American men outside their family orbit and into the realm of national civic life. They hoped sociability within their lodges would “cement together the whole brotherhood of men, and build them up an edifice of affection and love.”

THE LASTING IMPACT OF BROTHERHOOD

French brethren saw their lodges as utopias of friendship and civic virtue. On the eve of the French Revolution, Masons expressed deep anxiety about the moral corruption plaguing the kingdom. They believed friendship and morals could only be regenerated if the selfishness that corrupted human social relations was expunged. And, their surprising approach to rebuilding French society was to better one man at a time by identifying men whose virtue and upright morals stood out, then bringing them into the brotherhood. They believed that Freemasonry was the best possible environment for nurturing civil discourse and propagating friendships that benefited brethren and larger society; that virtue and friendship could impact the entire political system. As one lodge officer wrote: “We cultivate virtue. Offering the sovereign of the fatherland loyal subjects… adding to all the links that connect one man to another the most precious of all ties, that of a true and disinterested friendship. These are not futile tasks, but useful and precious ones, and it is Masonry that imposes them upon us.”

Freemasonry’s detractors during this time disavowed these rosy assessments. They saw Masonic friendship as dangerous to the nascent political order; as a rival set of allegiances echoing the powerful aristocratic networks of earlier days. A Committee of Public Safety representative closed all lodges in one French city during the Reign of Terror stating that Freemasonry: “prizes a far too intimate friendship over the austere rigidity that anchors the inflexibility of republicanism… Covered by the cloak of friendship, conspirators can take up arms against freedom.” In other words, while Masonry could form the bedrock of a new state, it could just as easily birth contrary political allegiances or trump patriotic sentiment. This statement is disparaging, but almost equally validating: Revolutionaries on both sides of the Atlantic recognized the immense power and possibility of Masonic brotherhood.

Since the Enlightenment, Freemasonry has continued to evolve into a worldwide fraternity, yet it remains anchored in the foundational values out of which it arose: philanthropy, friendship, and religious tolerance. Although these ideals are embraced throughout much of the world today, Freemasonry continues to play an important role in ensuring that these universal values remain at the core of our society. Just as we are not able to definitively chronicle Masonry’s role in the past, we cannot predict its capacity to shape the future. It is up to each Mason, and each lodge, to harness Freemasonry’s ability to effect lasting change.

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Freemasonry Set Free

DECIPHERING THE CONNECTIONS BETWEEN PRINCE HALL MASONRY AND THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD.

By Tyler Ash

For nearly 200 years, the Underground Railroad has been an elusive, almost mythical aspect of American history, shaping the way we view the cultural and sociopolitical landscapes of the American psyche during the 1800s.
A key question continues to elude historians: How did such a large network of people help nearly 100,000 slaves gain freedom while still maintaining a secretive, almost clandestine, status? One fascinating insight may be found by studying some of the leading Prince Hall Masons in Boston during the pre-Civil War period through the post-Reconstruction era. As the sediment of time is gradually lifted from the artifacts of historical truth, researchers are rediscovering fundamental relationships between key conductors of the Underground Railroad and leaders of Prince Hall Freemasonry.

One of those researchers is James R. Morgan III, a past master of Corinthian Lodge No. 18 and the worshipful associate grand historian and archivist of the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of the District of Columbia. Morgan, who was also recently a keynote speaker at the 16th Annual California Masonic Symposium in June of 2016, is a scholar of African-American history and a member of the Phylaxis Society, the only independent research organization dedicated to the study of African-American Freemasonry.

“One of the formulating hands of Prince Hall Masonry was the trans-Atlantic slave trade itself and the effort of people of African descent to find their freedom and gain liberty,” Morgan says. “It was in the best interest of Prince Hall Masons to aid that struggle.” The relationship between Prince Hall Masonry and the Underground Railroad was symbiotic, says Morgan. A number of the earliest Prince Hall leaders were once enslaved themselves. “Many of these men were considered ‘runaways’ even as they were advancing in Masonry,” Morgan says. “They were aware that their freedom could be revoked at any time.”

FROM SLAVES TO LIBERATORS

Lewis Hayden is one example. Born a slave in Kentucky in 1811, he taught himself to read. In 1844, he and his enslaved family were aided by white abolitionists Calvin Fairbank, a Methodist minister, and Delia Webster, a teacher from Vermont, along the Underground Railroad from Lexington, Kentucky to Ripley, Ohio. Assisted by additional abolitionists, the Hayden family continued north to Canada, where thanks to the Canadian Act Against Slavery of 1793, slavery was outlawed. After attaining their freedom, the Haydens moved to Boston – the center of the abolitionist movement at the time, as well as one of the most active communities of free African-Americans in the country. Boston was also where Prince Hall, the individual, founded African Lodge No. 1 (now No. 459) with 14 other African-American Freemasons in 1782.

Hayden soon became a key figure in Bostonian society and the Underground Railroad. He was extremely passionate about the abolitionist movement, even willing to risk his life in support of the cause. He sheltered more than 100 fugitive slaves at his Boston residence and clothing store, which became known as “the temple of refuge.” John J. Smith, a freeborn African-American from Virginia, played another vital role. After testing his luck in the gold fields of California, Smith moved to Boston between 1849 and 1850, and became a barber. His shop soon served as a hotbed for abolitionist activity and as another key stopping point for runaway slaves. Like Hayden, he was a member of the first Prince Hall lodge, African Lodge No. 1.

As Prince Hall lodges became more established, the education they provided for their members offered a launchpad to higher social status, despite the prejudicial climate of American society in those days. Hayden and his Prince Hall contemporaries harnessed this newfound power to advocate for social justice and lift up brothers who tried to follow in their footsteps. In 1843, George Latimer, a fugitive slave from Virginia, escaped to Boston through the Underground Railroad but was captured upon his arrival and sent to state prison. Prominent Masons, including Hayden and Smith, began a blitzkrieg in the media. A group of abolitionists formed the “Latimer Committee,” issuing several lengthy petitions to the Massachusetts State Assembly. This resulted in the Personal Liberty Act, or the “Latimer Law,” which prevented officials from aiding slave catchers by detaining suspected fugitive slaves in state facilities.

After the ruling, Latimer was viewed as a hero in the abolitionist community and his freedom was purchased for $400. Propelled by immense gratitude, he became a Prince Hall Mason himself and began aiding Underground Railroad efforts. One well-publicized example of Latimer’s contributions is the freeing of a fugitive slave named Shadrach Minkins. In a daring rescue, Hayden, Smith, Latimer, and Edward G. Walker – all Prince Hall Masons within the Boston Vigilance Committee – forcibly retrieved Minkins from courthouse officials after he was arrested under the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. Through the Underground Railroad, they ensured his safety to Canada.

“The Latimer and Minkins rescues are perfect examples of symbiosis between Prince Hall Masonry and the Underground Railroad,” Morgan says. “These men fulfilled a unique social role.”

Without Prince Hall Masonry, there would not have been an Underground Railroad as it is understood today.

 

LAUNCHING A LEGACY

Boston’s Prince Hall leaders continued to have lasting and widespread effects both in Masonry and in American politics – accomplishments that were, as Morgan notes, remarkable for their time. After founding numerous Prince Hall chapters, Hayden served twice as grand master of the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Massachusetts, from 1852 to 1855 and 1857 to 1858. After the Civil War, he published several works on Freemasonry in the African-American community and traveled throughout the Reconstruction-era South, working to create new Prince Hall lodges and to support those that had been newly established.

Smith went on to serve as a state legislator, a recruiter for African-American segregated regiments and cavalries during the Civil War, and as grand master of the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Massachusetts in 1859, the year after Hayden was reelected. Today, John J. Smith Lodge No. 14 in Massachusetts bears his name.

Walker exemplifies the value of Prince Hall Masonry to African-American men of his generation. He was one of the first African-American men to pass the Massachusetts bar exam, and later became one of the first African-Americans elected to the Massachusetts State Legislature. In 1896, he was nominated as a U.S. presidential candidate by the Negro Party.

The connections between Prince Hall Masonry, the Underground Railroad, and the rise in African-American social status continues to thrill contemporary historians. Secrets of this fascinating era are still being unearthed; yet, it is clear that without Prince Hall Masonry, there would not have been an Underground Railroad as it is understood today, and that other political and social achievements would have likely been delayed. “These men put their lives on the line to stand up for what they believed in,” says Morgan. “It was a Masonic thing to do.” And, as contemporary scholars may attest, early Prince Hall Masons’ devotion to championing and living the Masonic ideals of freedom and equality profoundly impacted the course of our nation’s history.