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Fun Freemason Facts

A POEM – THOUGHTS OF A MASON’S WIFE
Fun Freemason FactsPoetry

A Poem – Thoughts of a Mason’s Wife

by Steven Noble May 4, 2022
written by Steven Noble

This article appears on The Masonic Journey website

 

How many wives of Masons have ever given much thought?
To the wonderful biblical lessons that Masonry has taught?
Have you asked yourself this question, when you sit alone at night,
While hubby is at Lodge: is my reasoning straight and right?
I know the nights are lonely and long, but this question comes to me,
“If my husband weren’t a Mason, what kind of man would he be?”

I know nothing of their secret work, but this much I understand
That the lessons taught in Masonry have made a better man.
So, ask yourself this question, which has always come to me,
“If my husband weren’t a Mason, what kind of man would he be?”

They call us Masonic Widows; I’ve been one foe many a year.
I’ve spoken my piece on lonely nights, and berated hubby dear.
But, then again, I regret my words, and with wisdom try to see,
“If my husband weren’t a Mason, what kind of man would he be?

So I try to be a patient wife, as alone I meditate,
And see his point, as he leaves for Lodge, with these words,
“I won’t be late!”

Some say that men make Masonry, and this I understand,
But, deep in my heart I still maintain, “That Masonry makes the man.”
And as we journey the highway together, to the inner things of life,
May their teachings go on forever……….

Sincerely,
A MASONS WIFE
(Author Unknown)


Suzan Erickson made a response to this poem when her husband Robert Erickson was installed as Master of San Juan Lodge #175.

This is an awesome poem and most of it I can relate.
I have whined many nights to Bob, “Will you be very late!”

I have been a daughter of a Mason, A Jobie and now a Masons Wife
I never in my wildest dreams, believed this would be part of our life.

God has to have a master plan, Larger than any of us can see,
Because, If my husband weren’t a Mason what else would he be?

Life doesn’t always offer us everything we have in mind
Allot of times we wonder, Is life very kind?

We all experienced this, especially these last few years
We have lost so many members, and shared so many tears.

Now to get on a lighter subject and something we can all understand
Is what this Lodge has done for people, is lend a helping hand.

I came before the lodge one day, to ask for a huge flavor,
I asked the lodge to help me raise, some money for my Neighbour.

I told them what my goal was, ten thousand dollars for kids and her
And they put on a spaghetti feed, that was more than words can confer

They worked so hard that night to full fill the original goal,
The fruit of their labour, gave a gift from their sole

It was a huge success, and it opened many eyes,
We had lots of questions that night, who are these Masonic guys?

I cannot begin to tell you, how proud I am to be
Associated with such Godly men, for other eyes to see.

So Bob, as you are now Master of this lodge for a whole year
I’ll do my best not to grumble to much, ok hubby dear.

And as we Journey this highway together, this special time in your life
I promise to support you

Sincerely, your Wife
By Suzan Erickson

May 4, 2022 0 comment
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Fun Freemason FactsGeneral News

Frederick Arthur Stanley and the Hockey Trophy

by Steven Noble December 22, 2021
written by Steven Noble

Did you know the Stanley Cup is named for a Freemason?

Frederick Arthur Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby was a British politician and sportsman.
January 15, 1841 – June 14, 1908

Stanley was born on January 15th, 1841 in London. He was educated at Eton College and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. He received a commission in the Grenadier Guards and rose to the rank of captain.

Stanley left the military to run for Parliament. He served as a member of Parliament for Preston, North Lancashire and Blackpool from 1865 until 1886. He also served as the Civil Lord of the Admiralty, Financial Secretary to the War Office, Secretary to the Treasury, War Secretary and Colonial Secretary.

In 1888, Stanley was appointed Governor General of Canada and Commander in Chief of Prince Edward Islands. He traveled extensively in Canada during his term as Governor General. In 1889 he traveled to the western part of Canada which allowed him to meet with farmers and members of First Nation, the aboriginal people of Canada. During his travels he also became an outdoors man and became very fond of fishing, which he did whenever his schedule allowed. As Governor General Stanley was only the third person, out of six, who Queen Victoria allowed to have power over granting pardons, remitting sentences and the power of mitigating capital or any other sentences.

Stanley was also the one who cemented the non-political role of the Governor General position. He did this by refusing to get involved with a controversial Quebec’s Jesuit Estates Bill. The bill was to give $400,000 as compensation to the Jesuit order for lands which had been given to them by the King of France. Other provinces opposed the bill, not trusting the Roman Catholic influence in the in Quebec. Stanley declined to interfere, citing the proposed denial as unconstitutional. In holding to this decision, he gained popularity by refusing to compromise the viceregal position of political neutrality.

Stanley’s sons became avid hockey players while they were in Canada. Stanley and his wife became staunch hockey fans. In 1892, Stanley donated a cup which was to be used a challenge cup between the amateur hockey clubs in Canada. In 1909 it turned into a trophy contested only by professional teams. It was not until 1926 when the Stanley Cup became a trophy only for National Hockey League teams. The original cup Stanley donated was 7 inches. The current cup is now more than 36 inches and weighs 35 pounds (16kg).

Stanley’s term was due to end in September of 1893, unfortunately Stanley’s brother who was the 15th Earl of Derby passed away in April of the same year. Because of this Stanley had to accelerate his return to England, which he did in July of 1893. Once back in England Stanley became Lord Mayor of Liverpool, the first Chancellor of the University of Liverpool and was elected Mayor of Preston in 1901.

A voice recording of Stanley which dates to 1888 is possibly, with the exception of Thomas Edison, the oldest recording of a human voice which still exists. In 1945 Stanley was inducted into the Canadian Hockey Hall of Fame in the “Honoured Builders” category.

Stanley passed away on June 14th, 1908.

Stanley was a member of Royal Alpha Lodge No 16 in London, England.

December 22, 2021 0 comment
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Fun Freemason FactsGeneral News

Admiral McRaven | One of the Best Motivational Speeches

by Steven Noble June 5, 2021
written by Steven Noble

It's been a tough year and a half for all of us, and I saw this the other day and felt motivated to share with you my Brothers.

US Navy Admiral William H. McRaven, one of the most decorated US commanders, delivers one of the best motivational speeches you will ever hear.
“Life is a struggle and the potential for failure is ever present, but those who live in fear of failure, or hardship, or embarrassment will never achieve their potential. Without pushing your limits, without occasionally sliding down the rope headfirst, without daring greatly, you will never know what is truly possible in your life.”
― William H. McRaven.

If you know someone who could use this video, share it with them!  Scroll down to video

June 5, 2021 0 comment
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Fun Freemason Facts

A Conversation About Perceived Value.

by Steven Noble May 14, 2021
written by Steven Noble

A customer asked a contractor friend of mine how much it would cost to do this project.

My friend gave him a proposal: $4500

The customer responded:  That’s seems really high.

My friend asked:  What do you think is a reasonable price for this job?

The customer answered:  $2500 maximum

My friend responded:  Ok, then I invite you to do it yourself.

The customer answered:  I don’t know how to.

My friend responded:  Alright, then how about for $2500 I’ll teach you how to. So besides saving you $2000, you’ll learn valuable skills that will benefit you in the future.

The customer answered:  Sounds good! Let’s do it!

My friend responded:  Great! To get started, you are going to need some tools. You will need a chop saw, table saw, cordless drill, bit set, router, skill saw, jig saw, tool belt, hammer, etc..

The customer answered:  But I don’t have any of those tools and I can’t justify buying all of these for one job.

My friend responded:  Ok. Well then for an additional $300 I can rent my tools to you to use for this project.

The customer answered:  Okay. That’s fair.

My friend responded:  Great! We will start the project on Monday.

The customer answered:  I work Monday through Friday. I’m only available on the weekends.

My friend responded:  If you want to learn from me then you will need to work when I work. This project will take 3 days so you will need to take 3 days off work.

The customer answered:  That means I’m going to have to sacrifice my pay for 3 days or use my vacation time!

My friend responded:  That’s true. Remember, when you do a job yourself you need to account for unproductive factors.

The customer answered:  What do you mean by that?

My friend responded:  Doing a job completely from start to finish includes time spent to plan the project, pick up materials, travel time, gas, set up time, clean up, and waste disposal amongst other things. That’s all in addition to the actual project itself.  And speaking of materials, that’s where we will start on Monday so I need you to meet me at the lumberyard at 6:00am.

The customer answered:  At 6am?!! My work day doesn’t usually start until 8am!

My friend responded:  Well then you’re in luck! My plan is to start on the deck build by 8am. But to do so we have to start at 6am to get materials picked up, loaded and delivered to your job site.

The customer answered:  You know, I’m realizing that a lot more goes in to a job than what a customer sees in the finished project. Your proposal of $4500 is very reasonable. I would like you to handle the project.

CONCLUSION:

When you pay for a job, especially a custom job, (whether it’s a physical project or digital project) you pay not only for the material and the work to be completed. You also pay for:

Knowledge

Experience

Custom Skills

Tools

Time to plan

Time to prepare

Professionalism 

Work Ethic

Excellence 

Discipline 

Commitment 

Integrity 

Taxes

Licenses 

Sacrifices 

Liabilities 

Insurance 

If you request a proposal for custom work to be done, please don’t disrespect a service provider by trying to get them to lower their prices.

If their proposal exceeds your budget, there’s nothing wrong with getting other proposals.

Just remember.. you get what you pay for.

SERVICE PROVIDERS:  Know your worth and be confident in it.

CONSUMERS:  Recognize their worth and be respectful of it.

May 14, 2021 0 comment
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Fun Freemason Facts

The “Vatican” of the Knights Templar? – BBC REEL

by Steven Noble January 21, 2021
written by Steven Noble

Hidden within sight of a Unesco-inscribed Templar castle, this tiny church may just be one of the world’s most important – if overlooked – haunts of the mysterious order.

By Izabela Cardoso & Fernando Teixeira

18 September 2020

For nearly 900 years, the soaring spires and fortified walls of the hilltop Convent of Christ citadel have stood guard over the sleepy central Portuguese city of Tomar. Built in 1160 as a headquarters of the mysterious Knights Templar Catholic army that served the Pope, this sprawling, Unesco-inscribed Romanesque, Gothic and Baroque stronghold served as a fitting centrepiece of the Templar’s power in Portugal for 400 years.

But if you gaze down from the convent’s lofty ramparts and search outside the city walls for a tiny church across the Nabão river, you’ll find one of the world’s most important – if overlooked – Templar sites: the Church of Santa Maria do Olival.

Predating the castle, this seldom-visited Gothic church was built at the behest of crusader and Knight Templar Gualdim Pais to serve as the holy pantheon for the Order of the Knights Templar. In addition to becoming an important site for underground Templar initiation rites over the centuries, the church also holds the remains of some of Portugal’s most famous Knights – including Pais. And because Tomar helped launch Portugal’s 15th-Century maritime expansion, spearheaded by Henry the Navigator (a well-known Knight himself), this unassuming stone church became the spiritual centre of all Portuguese churches built overseas – leading some to declare it the “Vatican” of the Templars.

Today, from the five-pointed star above the main entrance to the fact that the church itself is built below ground, this Portuguese National Monument remains coded with Templar symbolism. A labyrinthine system of tunnels is also rumoured to connect the hilltop castle with the church, roughly 1.5km away. These underground tunnels even helped local Templars evade a Moorish siege in 1190. These days, many of the secret chambers that Pais and the Knights used to escape their invaders are still visible in the forests surrounding the hilltop castle.

BBC Travel’s Mysteries of the Knights Templar tracks down the secret sites and mysterious ceremonies of what was once one of the most powerful and wealthy organisations in Europe.

This video is also part of BBC Reel’s Hidden Histories playlist.
—
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If you liked this story, sign up for the weekly bbc.com features newsletter called “The Essential List”. A handpicked selection of stories from BBC Future, Culture, Worklife and Travel, delivered to your inbox every Friday.

January 21, 2021 0 comment
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EducationFun Freemason Facts

Arthur Currie – How an Overweight, Failed Victoria Real Estate Agent Won the Great War

by Steven Noble January 2, 2021
written by Steven Noble

How an Overweight, Failed Victoria Real Estate Agent Won the Great War

For Remembrance Day, we remember how an unassuming Victorian found himself in command of one of the world’s deadliest armies
By Tristin Hopper

How an Overweight, Failed Victoria Real Estate Agent Won the Great War
Source: Library and Archives Canada

Victoria’s Arthur Currie wasn’t charming, well-connected or well-educated. He got crippling stomach pains during periods of high stress, which had caused him to miss the Boer War. In an era of wiry men with distinguished moustaches, Currie was doughy and clean-shaven; few would encounter him without mentioning his enormous girth. In the words of one author, he was “embarrassingly unassuming in appearance and bearing.”

The 40-year-old had been a disastrous real estate developer; on the eve of the First World War he was so ridden by debt that he would embezzle the equivalent of $250,000 from the reserve militia where he was an officer.

Within only two years, however, this was the man picked to stand as the most powerful Canadian who had ever lived. Currie was placed in supreme command of the deadliest army his home country has ever assembled. And in one of the most meteoric ascensions in Canadian history, a man who had exuded little more than stable mediocrity in Victoria would become an unparalleled bringer of death and destruction to Europe.

When Currie had first come to Victoria from Ontario in the 1890s, he had gotten work in Victoria and Sidney as a schoolteacher. He then left to get into real estate, following a path familiar to many modern Victorians: Effortless climbing a real estate bubble, only to be left over leveraged and in ruins when it burst.

Arthur Currie poses with his Victoria class in 1899. It’s highly likely many of these boys would later serve under his command in the First World War (Source: B.C. Archives)

But it was Currie’s extracurricular activities as a member of the local militia that would unwittingly place him in the limelight. Joining a Canadian militia in the 1890s was akin to joining a yacht club; it was mainly a good place to find business contacts and secure dinner invitations. But Currie ended up taking the militia far more seriously than most. He pored over military textbooks and absorbed every class or exercise the military could serve up. “When some of my associates were playing lawn tennis or swinging golf clubs, I was at the armouries or on the rifle ranges with the boys,” he would say later.

Under normal circumstances, Currie’s martial enthusiasm would have amounted to little more than an unusual hobby. But Currie lived in the early 20th century, just as Europe was descending into armed, mechanized chaos. As Canada scrambled for officers to command its rapidly swelling volunteer army for the Western Front, Currie found himself on a troopship in charge of the 2nd Infantry Brigade.

The S.S. Princess Sophia, with soldiers aboard including Arthur Currie, leaves Victoria enroute for Vancouver. Only weeks before the end of the war, the vessel would sink with the loss of more than 300 people; still the deadliest Pacific sinking in Canadian history (Source: Library and Archives Canada).

Once in Europe, the Victorian quickly rocketed through the ranks until he was commander of all Canadian soldiers in Europe. Not only did Currie keep orchestrating battlefield successes, including the legendary victory at Vimy Ridge, but in a war of tragically mediocre generals, fellow allies began to notice that the overweight Canadian seemed to be the only one who knew what he was doing.

“There was something great and terrible in his simplicity and sureness of judgment, and this real—estate agent … was undoubtedly a man of strong ability, free from those trammels of red tape and tradition which swathed round so many of our own leaders,” wrote the British war correspondent Philip Gibbs.

The British prime minister of the time, David Lloyd George, would call Currie “the only soldier thrown up by the British side who possessed the necessary qualifications for the position.”

Currie at Vimy Ridge in July, 1918, explaining to a visiting delegation of journalists how the battle had been won (Source: Library and Archives Canada).

In Victoria, Currie had been unable to hold together a minor real estate concern. But when thrown into the worst carnage humanity had ever seen, he thrived as a master of strategy, organization and calm.

“He has made war a business,” one British general would explain of the Canadian. “He is the managing director; his working capital is the lives of 125,000 Canadians. He carefully watches his expenditure and mentally keeps a profit and loss account of each engagement, and his dividends are many.”

Currie was surrounded by fellow Allied commanders who refused to acknowledge the realities of modern war. Sir Douglas Haig, commander of the British Expeditionary Force, never abandoned the romantic notion that the war would be won with cavalry charges. French commanders had been so wedded to tradition that they had sent their soldiers into battle wearing bright red trousers. Even generals in the savvier German ranks had sent countless doomed infantry charges into machine gun fire.

Currie and Douglas Haig in early 1918 (Source: Library and Archives Canada).

But Currie approached war like a math problem. He had no military pedigree and hadn’t even attended Canada’s Royal Military College. His inexperience made him see the First World War for what it was; a completely new kind of war demanding a completely new kind of tactic.

He grilled fellow allied generals on strategy. He relentlessly picked apart prior battles and had a particular genius to determine what caused certain attacks to succeed and others to fail.

One of the most telling indicators of Currie’s eerie meticulousness came in the aftermath of the Battle of Passchendaele. Currie had attempted to resist Douglas Haig’s orders to capture the inconsequential Belgian village, arguing that it would cost 16,000 Canadian casualties. When he was overruled, he turned out to be almost exactly right; the battle ultimately cost 15,654 Canadian casualties.

Currie may have been fighting an analytical war, but it was no less brutal. He followed the cold calculus of killing as many Germans as he could – as often as he could – believing it the fastest way to restore peace to Europe and bring his men home. Under his leadership, the Canadian Corps became the most enthusiastic users of poison gas on the Western Front. Canadians shot at anything that moved, and bombarded rear German positions constantly.

Currie analyzing a battered German helmet in July, 1917, only a few months after the Battle of Vimy Ridge (Source: Library and Archives Canada).

After the war Currie would shock audiences with his raw, visceral descriptions of battle. “We gassed him on every conceivable occasion, and if we could have killed the whole German army by gas we would gladly have done so,” he would say in one speech. But the general wasn’t being boastful; he was trying to debunk any remaining 19th century notion that war was a glorious spectacle.

“I want you to understand what war is and you cannot have war without the inevitable price,” he told a Toronto audience less than one year after the surrender. “I want you to understand that war is simply the curse of butchery, and men who have gone through it, who have seen war stripped of all its trappings, are the last men that will want to see another war.”

One of Currie’s legacies is that he didn’t needlessly waste the lives of his soldiers. Unlike so many other First World War battles, Curries’ didn’t feature human wave attacks against entrenched German defences. He intricately planned every offensive, ensuring he never sent men into battle without proper training and artillery cover. But it didn’t mean that Currie showed any hesitancy in wiping out whole towns’ worth of young men in pursuit of ultimate victory. “General Currie … did not spare his men,” wrote Philip Gibbs. “He led them forward whatever the cost.”

To this day, nobody has sent more Canadians to their deaths than Arthur Currie. On virtually every cenotaph across the country, there is likely at least one name of a soldier who died fulfilling a strategy that was conceived, planned or approved by Currie. The general’s orders would doom thousands more to lives without limbs, without faces, without sight and without sanity.

Currie with his mount (Source: Library and Archives Canada).

This earned Currie no friends among the men he commanded. They began to suspect, quite accurately, that their fates were in the hands of a cold, emotionless tactician. Most notoriously, Currie had continued to order attacks right up to 11 a.m. on November 11, hours after it was announced that an armistice had already been signed. One soldier, Jim Mills, would even vow to kill Currie after his brother Tom was killed only minutes before the ceasefire. The assassination was only derailed by a quick-thinking officer getting Mills so drunk that he became unable to hunt the Canadian Corps commander.

Currie, in turn, was known to show a stunning lack of empathy for what he had put his men through. In one instance, he observed a group of exhausted Canadians returning from the trenches and said cheerfully “that’s the way I like to see you, covered with mud and blood.”

The war had shattered a young Canada, but it had set Currie on a dizzying path to power. Only four years after he had been a small town militia officer with financial problems, the bookish, overweight Victorian had been transformed into a conqueror.

By the end of 1918, Currie would be on horseback, triumphantly leading an army of occupation over the Rhine River into the heart of a defeated Germany. Europe showered him with awards, including the French Legion of Honour, the Belgian Croix de Guerre and a knighthood. He was the era’s Wayne Gretzky; the one Canadian most foreigners could name.

His home country, however, wasn’t nearly as enthusiastic. Canada may have liked the victory that Currie won for them, but the war had been so destructive that the general often found himself cast aside as a symbol of all that had been lost.

Currie would get a few plum postwar positions such as principal of McGill University, but he quickly found himself unwelcome in a peacetime army. The federal cabinet refused to award him a pension. At public events he occasionally faced hisses from widows. Sir Sam Hughes, an MP and rival of Currie, accused him in the House of Commons of “needlessly sacrificing the lives of Canadian soldiers.” In the late 1920s, Currie sued an Ontario newspaper for libel for making the same claims, and although he won, the jury only awarded him a token $500.

Arthur Currie returned to Victoria few times after the war. One of the only times he did, in 1919, he was made to pose on the front steps of the Empress with Muggins the dog. Source: Saanich Archives

Nowhere is Currie’s vanished reputation more visible than in the city that produced him.

He is one of the most consequential figures to ever emerge from the B.C. capital. Without Currie in the picture, it’s arguable that Remembrance Day wouldn’t even fall on November 11th. And yet even Victoria seems to have been eager to forget him. The city has no Arthur Currie School or Arthur Currie Armoury. In fact, the only landmark that seems to bear his name is Arthur Currie Lane, the short, Vic West street where he used to live.‍

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