FREEMASONRY TODAY
Quarterly Communication of Grand Lodge
10 September 2008
Report of the Board of General Purposes
The Minutes of the Quarterly
Communication of Grand Lodge of 11
June 2008 were confirmed. John Hamill,
Director of Communications gave a talk on
the history of Freemasons’ Hall.
BOARD MEETINGS 2009
The Board of General Purposes will meet
on 10 February, 17 March, 12 May, 21
July, 15 September and 10 November.
ATTENDANCE AT LODGES UNDER
THE ENGLISH CONSTITUTION
BY BRETHREN FROM OTHER
GRAND LODGES
Only Brethren who are members of lodges
under recognised jurisdictions may visit
English lodges. They must produce a
certificate (i.e. a Grand Lodge certificate
or other documentary proof of masonic
identity provided by their Grand Lodge).
They should be prepared to acknowledge
that a personal belief in TGAOTU is an
essential Landmark in Freemasonry, and
should be able to produce evidence of
their good standing in their lodges.
It is the Master’s responsibility to ensure
that these requirements are met.
It is particularly noted that the hazard of
admitting a member of an unrecognised
constitution arises not only in connection
with overseas visitors (or individuals
resident in this country who belong to an
unrecognised constitution overseas).
There are lodges of unrecognised
constitutions meeting in England, and
care must be taken that their members are
not admitted to our meetings.
ATTENDANCE AT LODGES
OVERSEAS
The continuing growth in overseas travel
brings with it an increase in visits by our
Brethren to lodges of other jurisdictions,
and the Board welcomes this trend.
From time to time, however, Brethren
become involved with masonic bodies
which Grand Lodge does not recognise, e.g.
in visiting a jurisdiction which, quite
legitimately so far as it is concerned, accepts
as visitors Brethren from Grand Lodges
which are not recognised by the UGLE.
In this connection, Brethren are reminded
that it is part of their duty as members of
the English Constitution not to associate
masonically with members of
unrecognised constitutions, and should
such a situation occur, they should
tactfully withdraw, even though their visit
may have been formally arranged.
To avoid this danger, and potential
embarrassment to hosts, Brethren should
not attempt to make any masonic contact
overseas without having first checked
(preferably in writing) with the Grand
Secretary’s office at Freemasons’ Hall,
Great Queen Street, London WC2B 5AZ,
that there is recognised Freemasonry in
the country concerned and, if so, whether
there is any particular point which should
be watched.
The Board recommends that the terms of
this warning should be repeated verbally
in open lodge whenever a Grand Lodge
Certificate is presented, and in print once
a year in a lodge’s summons.
Brethren should also be aware of the
masonic convention that communications
between Grand Lodges be conducted by
Grand Secretaries. They should therefore
not attempt without permission to make
direct contact with the Grand Secretary of
another Constitution.
This does not preclude direct contact on a
purely personal level between individual
Brethren under different Grand Lodges.
AMALGAMATIONS
The following Lodges have resolved to
surrender their Warrants:
Finchley Lodge No. 5031 in order to
amalgamate with Arkley Lodge
No. 7720 (Hertfordshire) and Waldron
Lodge No. 6919 in order to amalgamate
with Justice Lodge No. 4763 (Cheshire).
The Board recommendation that the
lodges be removed from the register in
order to amalgamate was approved.
ERASURE OF LODGES
Fourteen lodges have closed and
surrendered their Warrants:
Streatham Lodge No. 2729 (London),
Thornton Heath Lodge No. 2985
(London), Cordiality Lodge No. 3982
(East Lancashire), Temple Lodge No. 3990
(East Lancashire), Unison Lodge No. 4051
(East Lancashire), Goodwill Lodge No.
4351 (East Lancashire), Welfare Lodge
No. 4780 (East Lancashire). Zodiac Lodge
No. 5207 (East Lancashire), Querna
Corona Lodge No. 5267 (London),
Accrington Lodge No. 6587 (East
Lancashire), Pro Juventute Lodge No.
6999 (Middlesex), Anselm Lodge No.
7685 (Middlesex), Grand Porchway Lodge
No. 8428 (Middlesex), Attenborough
Lodge No. 9109 (Nottinghamshire)
The Board recommendation that they be
erased was approved.
RECOGNITION OF A FOREIGN
GRAND LODGE
The Regular Grand Lodge of the Kingdom
of Morocco The Regular Grand Lodge of
the Kingdom of Morocco was formed on
15 June 2000 from three lodges meeting
in Morocco under the Grande Loge
Nationale Française.
Having shown that it is a descendant of a
duly recognised Grand Lodge and that it
conforms to the Basic Principles for
Grand Lodge Recognition, the Board,
having no reason to believe that it will not
maintain a regular path, recommended
that it be recognised. This was approved.
CONDITIONAL RECOGNITION OF
A FOREIGN GRAND LODGE
Ghana
The Grand Lodge of Ireland currently has
20 lodges meeting under its Provincial
Grand Lodge of Ghana, two of which
meet in Togo. The Grand Lodge of
Scotland has 28 lodges meeting under its
District of Ghana.
It is the intention of the Grand Lodges of
Ireland and Scotland, following
consultation with this Grand Lodge, to
constitute from their Province and District
respectively a Grand Lodge of Ghana, on
7 and 8 December 2008.
To date none of the 57 lodges under our
own District of Ghana has indicated a
desire to participate in the formation of
this new Grand Lodge, but nevertheless
the Board of General Purposes has agreed
that an English deputation should accept
an invitation to go to Ghana in order to
lend support to the Irish and Scottish
Grand Lodges.
By the time this Grand Lodge meets in
December, the Grand Lodge of Ghana
will have already been constituted. The
Board would prefer that the new Grand
Lodge be recognised from the moment of
its creation, rather than after a delay, even
if it is only a matter of days.
The Board recommendation that
recognition of the new Grand Lodge,
conditional upon its being constituted, be
granted prospectively, was approved.
NEW LODGES
Warrants have been granted to the
following new lodges with their dates:
12 March 2008: Blue Lamp Lodge No.
9840, Chepstow, Monmouthshire and 1
May 2008: Gates of Heaven Lodge Sarah
and Abraham No. 9842, Lopes Dias Hall,
London.
EXPULSIONS FROM THE CRAFT
Six Brethren have been expelled from the
Craft.
GRAND LODGE MEETINGS 2009
11 March, 29 April (Annual Investiture),
10 June, 9 September, 9 December.
GRAND CHAPTER MEETINGS
12 November 2008, 30 April 2009, 11
November 2009.
REPORT OF LIBRARY AND
MUSEUM TRUST
The Board had received a report from the
Library and Museum Charitable Trust for
the year ending 31 January 2008.
The 2007 summer exhibition Tokens of
Unwritten Lives – the Folk and Popular
Art of Fraternity was held at
Freemasons’ Hall, London from 2 July to
28 September 2007.
A free exhibition guide was available to
visitors. The changing series of exhibitions
in the Library and Museum itself included an
exhibition about the sheet music collection
to mark the completion of its cataloguing
and Squaring the Triangle – Freemasonry
and Anti-Slavery, an exhibition to mark
the 200th anniversary of the abolition of
slavery.
At the end of the year the exhibition
Recognising London, marking the
centenary of London Grand Rank, was
opened by Russell Race, Deputy
Metropolitan Grand Master.
Cataloguing and conservation
With funding support from Supreme
Grand Chapter, work commenced on
cataloguing the print and photograph
collection. Further funds for this project
were also received from the London
Grand Rank Association Heritage and
Educational Trust (LGRAHET).
Acquisitions
The LGRAHET also supported the
acquisition of an important miniature
painting by Henry Spencer of William
Wix, Provincial Grand Master of Essex,
which was purchased towards the end of
the year.
Donations of regalia, books and artefacts
have continued to enable the Library and
Museum to expand its collections.
Provision of research resources
Increasing use is being made of the
Library and Museum as a research
resource, with 238 new readers registered
during the year (2006: 193). The issue of
books and documents has continued to
increase steadily.
Many enquiries are dealt with by mail or
increasingly electronically. Family history
is an increasingly popular hobby and over
2,000 such enquiries were answered
during the year.
In October, the Library and Museum
organised a Family History Study Day for
family historians to provide guidance on
the use of Masonic resources.
Raising awareness of the collections
Library and Museum staff undertook a
programme of lunchtime talks in Spring
2007 which were free and open to all. The
response was again positive.
Members of staff also spoke at lodges
around the country and at meetings of
family history societies and local and
specialist history groups.
The Library and Museum was awarded a
grant of £22,325 by the Museums,
Libraries and Archives Council in March
2007 to develop the Subject Specialist
Network on Fraternal and Friendly
Societies and Associations.
During the year, work was completed on
visitor surveys and exhibition
development. The Library and Museum
also received £2,500 in May 2007 from
the London Museums Hub to assist with
publicity for Museums and Galleries
Month.
The commissioning of exterior signage,
funded with part of this grant, has been of
significant longer term benefit to the
Library and Museum by raising visitor
awareness.
The Library and Museum hosted the
Annual Conference of Archives for
London in November 2007.
Financial Review
As at 31 January 2008, the consolidated
net assets of the Library and Museum
Charitable Trust were £2,819,927 (2007:
£2,536,839).
The Library and Museum’s trading
subsidiary, Letchworth’s (Freemasons’
Hall, London) Limited (“Letchworths”),
made a Gift Aid contribution to the
Library and Museum of £52,000 (2007: £60,000).
Issue 46, Autumn 2008
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