Masonic Facts
Independence Hall in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
has many, many Masonic connections. It stands on land purchased
by Wm. Alllen, Grand Master of PA. The ground was staked by Edmond
Wolley, a Mason. Thomas Boude, the brick mason, was the first Secretary
of St. John's Lodge of Philadelphia and later Deputy Grand Master.
Benjamin Franklin laid the cornerstone while Grand Master (1734)
with the assistance of St. John's Lodge. Brother Andrew McNair of
Philadelphia rang the bell to call the populace on July 8, 1776,
to hear the reading of the Declaration of Independence. The Liberty
Bell cracked in 1835 when it tolled the death of Chief Justice John
Marshall, Past Grand Master of Virginia.
Jean Sibelius (1865-1957) the great composer of 'Finlandia' and
other immortal musical works, composed the ritualistic music used
by the Grand Lodge of New York and presented it to them in appreciation
for the part played by Grand Lodge in establishing Masonry in Finland.
He was a member of Suomi Lodge #1, Helsingfors.
Masonic emblems appear on the Giuseppe Garibaldi Monument in Rome
having been restored after they were removed by Mussolini who substituted
Fascist symbols for them. Garibaldi, great Italian liberator, was
Grand Master of Italy.
Robert Newman, Sexton of Christ Church also known as the "Old
North Church" in Boston was the man who hung the lantern to
signal 'The Red Coats Are Coming'. Paul Revere then rode through
the countryside to warn the colonists of the impending danger. Both
were Masons. The present Rector, after arriving at the Church heard
the frequent stories of Freemasonry's involvement there. After investigation
of the organization, he too became a member!
"Oscar of the Waldorf", internationally famous chef was
born in Switzerland Oscar Tschirky and was a member of Metropolitan
Lodge #273, New York City.
The author of "Bambi" and other immortal stories for
children was Brother Felix Salten (1869-1945), a member of the Lodge
"Zur Warheit" in Vienna, Austria.
The United States' Anti-Masonic Party (1827-abt.1834) had as it's
first Presidential Candidate a MASON! In 1831, the Anti-Masonic
Party nominated William Wirt as their candidate for the presidency
at their first national convention which was held in Baltimore,
Maryland. Wirt was not only a Freemason, but even defended the Order
in a speech before the convention that nominated him.
"The first group of the Resistance {during World War II} was
founded by five Masons. This body, "Resistance," soon
merged with "Liberation." The organization thus formed
succeeded in contacting London after ascertaining that there were
Masons in the London broadcasting station, the broadcasts of which
began with the motto "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity."
Brother Roig succeeded in contacting London through Englishmen who
escaped. This liaison was effected as the result of the visit of
a Canadian aviator. Unfortunately, Brother Roig was arrested, imprisoned
at Fresnes, and shot ten weeks later. However, the work was well
under way. New Brethren joined the movement and the organization
took the name of C.A.M. (Masonic Action Committee. This committee
worked as both a patriotic and a Masonic organization. The patriotic
section chose for its name "Patriam recuperare" and had
a paper, The New Republic. Valuable information on the location
of troops and the sites of the ramps from which the V-1 bombs were
launched, as well as the memoirs of Paul Reynaud, were sent to London.
One Brother succeeded in joining General De Gaulle at Algiers. Information
was furnished concerning the German counter-espionage. Work was
done towards the organization of a secret army in Paris. Shelter
was given to numerous escapees and parachutists." - From the
May, 1946 Philalethes Society Magazine
Major General Benjamin Lincoln of Revolutionary War fame, who received
the sword of Cornwallis in the surrender of Yorktown, was initiated
on Christmas Day, 1780, in St. Andrew’s Lodge, Boston, Massachusetts
The American flag was ordered made by Brother George Washington.
It was sewn by Betsy Ross, whose husband was a member of St. John’s
Lodge, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Out of fifty-one Grand Lodge jurisdictions in the United States,
twenty-seven have eighteen years old as their minimum age requirement
to become a Mason. Six have nineteen years old, and eighteen (Massachusetts
included) have twenty-one years old as their minimum age requirement.
Most people are aware of the fact that the Statue of Liberty was
a gift of the French people after their own republic came into existence.
However, many are not aware that there is a Masonic link to the
statue. Frederic Bartholdi, a Mason, designed it and the Grand Lodge
laid the cornerstone of its base with Masonic Rite.
The Republic of Texas had four Presidents: David G. Burnett, 1836;
Sam Houston, 1836-1838; Mirabeau B. Lamar, 1838-1841; Sam Houston,
1841-1844; Anson Jones, 1844-1846. All were Freemasons.
Brother Edwin E. (Buzz) Aldrin, Jr., a member of Clear Lake Lodge
# 1417 in Texas, when he stepped onto the surface of the moon, carried
a special deputation from his Grand Master to claim the moon as
being in the territorial jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Texas.
And so it is.
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