Showing posts with label Civil War LoR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Civil War LoR. Show all posts

Saturday, September 21, 2024

‘CWLR 1865 to meet at Lee Lodge’

    
Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 is staying in Virginia for its next meeting, heading to Lee Lodge 209 in Waynesboro on Saturday, October 12. It doesn’t look like a trip to a local historic spot is planned, but the brethren will hear a paper on Bro. William H. Harmon, the Grand Lodge of Virginia’s only two-time Grand Master—and the only Most Worshipful to be killed in the Civil War.

Secretary Bennett says the lodge has no hotel arrangements because of the number of nearby accommodations, so take your pick.

On Friday, catch up with the group for dinner at Heritage on Main Street. In the morning, get to lodge at nine o’clock for refreshments; the lodge will tyle at 10. Both lunch and dinner plans are yet to be determined.

Our next meeting will be December 7 for the Installation of Officers. The ensuing year looks like:
April 12 in Charleston, South Carolina;
July 12 at Chattanooga, Tennessee;
October 11 at Montgomery, Alabama; and
December 6, possibly in Highland Springs, Virginia.

That last one is likely the only one I’ll be able to attend, but we’ll see.

Interested in Freemasons’ significance in the U.S. Civil War? Membership information is here, and maybe I’ll see you there.
     

Saturday, July 27, 2024

‘Mystic Tie unites lodge, Army fort, and prison’

    
Masons from many states attended our meeting July 13 in Delaware.

It’s been two weeks already, so time for a recap of Civil War Lodge of Research 1865’s trip to Delaware.

The lodge is chartered by the Grand Lodge of Virginia, but it receives dispensations to travel outside the state, and this July 13 Stated Communication featured a visit to a significant historic site and an unusual Official Visit of the District Deputy Grand Master.

Our Master’s hat.
Jackson Lodge 19 in Delaware City hosted us with the assistance of several Grand Lodge of Delaware officers, one of whom, RW Michael Rodgers, also serves as Worshipful Master of Delaware Lodge of Research. He presented a talk on Fort Delaware’s origins and historical significance. I’ll summarize:

The fort stands on Pea Patch Island, which spans about a mile in length in the Delaware River. It was given its name during the late eighteenth century when, according to legend, a ship ran aground and its cargo of peas either spilled or was jettisoned to make the ship lighter to free it from the mud. Either way, those peas sprouted and grew, resulting in sand and silt accumulating and forming the land mass. I have to say, when you’re standing on this island, in and around the stone and brick fort, it is hard to believe this origin story, but that’s the local color of it.

Past Master Gary, our Tyler, noticed this artifact displayed on the wall outside the lodge room: this proclamation from the Virginia Craftsmen degree team commemorating the MM° it conferred October 23, 1976 at Fort Delaware on behalf of Jackson 19. This degree team was the precursor of Civil War Lodge of Research. That top signature is Allen Roberts, our first Worshipful Master.

What is historically factual is how the island first appears on a map in 1794, the year Bro. Pierre Charles L’Enfant chose it to be a key installation in the area’s fortifications. Of course L’Enfant is best remembered as the military engineer who designed Washington, DC.

The fort as seen from our approach via jitney…

…and from the walk to the entrance.

Development of Pea Patch Island for military use began in 1814. Perhaps a lesson learned from the War of 1812. “A five-pointed star fort was built between 1815 and 1824,” Rodgers explained, “but it was destroyed by fire in 1831.” A larger fort was started in 1836, but the current fort dates to 1848. It was completed in 1860, and was used during the Civil War as a prison for Confederate soldiers. By the end of the war, Fort Delaware warehoused nearly 33,000 prisoners.

“Conditions were relatively decent,” Rodgers said, “but about 2,500 prisoners died.” Smallpox was a main killer, but there also were typhoid, malaria, pneumonia, and scurvy, among other hazards. One of those deaths gave rise to the Mystic Tie intwining Jackson Lodge, the prison, and Virginia Freemasonry.

On April 11, 1862, the lodge opened to give a Masonic funeral to Bro. Lewis P. Halloway, a captain of the Twenty-Seventh Regiment of Virginia Volunteers, who died of typhoid while in custody. The care given to the deceased by the lodge inspired Capt. Augustus A. Gibson, commanding officer of the fort, to petition for the degrees of Freemasonry. He was initiated, passed, and raised in a single communication, by dispensation, later that year in Jackson Lodge.

RW Shelby Chandler, DDGM of the Masonic Research District, had the unique opportunity of traveling outside the Grand Lodge Jurisdiction for an Official Visit. “Today was a very special day, especially as a District Deputy Grand Master,” he told The Magpie Mason. “Right Worshipful John Butler, Worshipful Master of Civil War Lodge of Research, was gracious enough to receive me for the Official Visit at Jackson Lodge 19 in Delaware City. Not only were their Grand Lodge officers present from our host jurisdiction, but brethren from various other states, as far as Illinois, were present as well, and they watched, both the reception ceremony and the closing lecture, for the very first time.”

RW Carmine, with tobacco stick,
flanked by WM John Butler
and RW Shelby Chandler.
(A word about the receptions: Virginia likes them. To my mind, these formal intros, escorts to the East, remarks, etc. take too much time. In my more than twenty years of hanging around research lodges, I’ve noticed how we like to get to the point, leaving ceremonial filler to our Craft lodges. Still, aspects of these rites can be enjoyable, as when an honoree’s comments are on point or something else memorable arises. This was the case when Worshipful Master Butler received RW Robert Carmine, Assistant Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of Delaware, in the East and presented him the gift of a tobacco stick—a hardwood pole known in tobacco barns for hanging tobacco leaves to dry. A more practical and modern use these days is as a walking stick.)

After our meeting, we enjoyed a quick lunch together downstairs before driving down the street to catch the ferry to the island and its fort.

Since 1951, it is a Delaware State Park and it also has become home to the Pea Patch Island Nature Preserve with a famous heronry.


The Columbiad Cannon. They fire this sumbitch!

The fort is staffed by re-enactors in period wardrobe who tell you what is was like to have lived at the fort during its stint as a prisoner of war installation. Among them is Bro. Ed from Jackson Lodge, who gave his visiting brethren some additional insights gleaned from his fifteen years there.

Bro. Ed from Jackson Lodge with our WM.

CWLR 1865’s next Stated Communication will be Saturday, October 12 at Lee Lodge 209 in Waynesboro, Virginia, to be followed by a visit to the site of the Battle of Waynesboro, where the Union finally took the Shenandoah Valley in 1865. Click here for more information.

Finally a place to sit down on the hot day.
I hope those are ash trays in the back.

RW Shelby inspects an osprey nest on the island.
The island hosts the largest bird habitat outside of Florida.


     

Tuesday, July 2, 2024

‘Research lodge to visit Delaware’

    
The details of Civil War Lodge of Research 1865’s meeting this month in Delaware have been announced.

The brethren and their ladies will gather for dinner at six on Friday, July 12 at Texas Roadhouse in Middletown. The research lodge will meet at Jackson Lodge 19 in Delaware City the following morning. Refreshments at 9 a.m. The meeting at ten. Then we’ll go to lunch at 11:30.

University of Delaware

Then we will commute to Fort Delaware for an afternoon tour of the historic site, which will include a boat ride to the prison, where Confederate soldiers were interned.

The day will culminate with dinner at 6 p.m., although I’m sure there will be drinks at the hotel afterward.

I’ll simply drive down for the day.

The lodge’s calendar for 2025 also has been posted, and it looks like I won’t be able to attend any of the meetings in South Carolina, Tennessee, and Alabama. The lodge is chartered by the Grand Lodge of Virginia, but it receives dispensation to travel and hold meetings outside the Commonwealth, focusing on locales relevant to the U.S. Civil War.

RW Gary Heinmiller

A call for papers always is open, but I’m not sure if research papers comprise a big part of the lodge’s activities. At some point, likely after I exit the East of The ALR, I will look into the story of New York’s eleven short-lived military lodges during the war, and hopefully assemble a narrative out of that.
     

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

‘These Masons are going to prison’

     
It’ll be thirty next year.
I just read the minutes of Saturday’s Civil War Lodge of Research meeting, and it is confirmed that our July meeting will take place in Delaware, and will include a visit to the historic site prison at Fort Delaware.

This will be Saturday, July 13. The lodge will meet at Jackson Lodge 19 in Delaware City. Probably at 10 a.m., with refreshments before and lunch after. Then the group will travel the half-mile to Fort Delaware State Park for a look at the infamous former prison where captured Confederate soldiers were incarcerated.

Then dinner at a local restaurant is likely, but these details will be forthcoming in June, and I’ll share them all here.

I couldn’t get to North Carolina Saturday, but I will attend this meeting, and hopefully will bring brethren from New Jersey’s research lodge along.
     

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

‘Researchers to visit North Carolina’

    

Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 will meet this month, taking it on the road to North Carolina. The lodge, now in its twenty-eighth year, is chartered by the Grand Lodge of Virginia AF&AM, but it has dispensation to travel outside the Commonwealth in its pursuit of historical facts concerning the U.S. Civil War, especially where Freemasonry’s history intersects.

Bingham 272
On Saturday, April 13, the lodge will meet at Bingham Lodge 272 in Mebane, North Carolina. Worshipful Master John Butler chose the location for its proximity to Bennett Place, a short drive east to Durham. It was there where the Confederate commander, Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, and U.S. Gen. William T. Sherman met in a little farmhouse and negotiated surrender terms in April 1865, coming to an agreement on April 26. (The U.S. Civil War did not conclude with one single surrender of Lee to Grant. Commanders in four different theaters about the country negotiated surrenders eventually disbanding the Confederate States Army.)

It’s a little too far for me, so I’ll miss this one, but the lodge has a solid weekend plan including Friday night dinner in Burlington; the lodge meeting, followed by lunch on Saturday; the visit to Bennett Place afterward; and a Saturday night dinner yet to be worked out. This edition of The Magpie Mason is intended to encourage Masons in the area to attend the meeting and other stops. Bingham Lodge 272 meets at 309 East Center Street in Mebane. If I’m not mistaken, North Carolina Lodge of Research is no longer at labor, but there is the North Carolina Masonic Research Society, and hopefully they’ll get the word and come to our meeting.

Coincidentally, that weekend will be the anniversary of the attack on Fort Sumter.

I’ll be with the lodge again on July 13 when we’ll meet in Delaware.
     

Wednesday, December 6, 2023

‘Research officers now installed’

    
CWLR photo
Civil War Lodge of Research 1865, of Virginia, Installation of Officers, Saturday at Farmville Lodge 41.

“In consequence of your cheerful conformity to the charges and regulations of the Order, you are now to be installed…”


Congratulations to the officers newly installed at Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 in Virginia!

Our new Worshipful Master is Bro. John Butler. The first meeting of 2024 will convene Saturday, April 13 at Mebane, North Carolina.

That’s a little far for me, but the subsequent meeting will be July 13 in Delaware, and I’ll catch up with the brethren then.

Congratulations also to now Past Master Andy Wilson on a busy term now complete.
     

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

‘Research lodge 2024 dates’

    
Civil War Lodge of Research apron.

The call for 2024 dues for Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 has gone out, and the meeting schedule has been published. One of the Grand Lodge of Virginia’s five lodges of Masonic research, CWLR is the one that travels outside the Commonwealth to visit places significant to Civil War history.

There are two meetings to go in 2023: Saturday, October 21 at Harpers Ferry, West Virginia; and Saturday, December 2 at Farmville, Virginia.

Next year, plans are being made for:

April 13 at Bennett Place in North Carolina;

July 13 at Fort Delaware in Delaware; and

October 12 at the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis.

The meetings are held in nearby lodges, and then the brethren regroup at the historical sites. Sometimes plans change—in fact, I’m hoping that October date could be reconsidered someway because that’ll be Yom Kippur—so keep watch on the website. I definitely will attend the Delaware meeting.
     

Thursday, September 14, 2023

‘Research lodge headed to Harpers Ferry’

    
Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 will meet next month, this time traveling to Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. Logan Lodge 25 will host.
Change of plans: Hamilton Thompson 37 will host. I don’t have a meeting agenda yet, but so far the weekend will look like:


Accommodations at Days Inn by Wyndham Charles Town.

Friday, October 20

Dinner at 6:30 at White Horse Tavern

Saturday, October 21

Hamilton Thompson Lodge 37:

Officer Practice at 8:30
Refreshments at nine o’clock
Meeting at ten

Lunch at the Rabbit Hole at 11:30

1 p.m. National Park Service special event at Historic Lower Town

NPS

Dinner at six at Alfredo’s Mediterranean Grille & Steakhouse

Evening libations at Abolitionist Ale Works at 9 p.m.


I’ve been planning to attend since our meeting at Gettysburg in July, but I’m not yet sure I’ll be free.
     

Monday, July 17, 2023

‘CWLR invades Gettysburg’

    
Most of the brethren present July 8 at Good Samaritan Lodge 336 in Gettysburg.

Before too much time passes and I forget what happened, here is Magpie coverage of last weekend’s visit of Civil War Lodge of Research to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.

CWLR 1865 is chartered by the Grand Lodge of Virginia, so its various sojourns outside that state are legalized by dispensations from both the GLV and the grand jurisdiction being visited. And all that is read aloud in lodge, because this is a real lodge conducting a tiled communication. Anyway, the lodge had been to Gettysburg before, but this was my first trip there—and I definitely will be back. My stay lasted only forty-eight hours, and it’s obvious one needs more time than that to enjoy more than a snippet of all there is to see. Between the battlefield, the cemetery, and the town itself, there’s a lot to do. And I don’t think it’s necessary to be passionate about Civil War history to love this place.

A pipe before dinner

So, my itinerary began with a stop about 25 miles west in Chambersburg, where the famous J.M. Boswell’s Pipes & Tobacco shop serves the area’s discerning smokers. It’s one of those destination stores for us—a classic pipe shop, the way the Lord intended—with pipes and tons of tobaccos for sale, and a smoking lounge upstairs.

Some of Boswell’s proprietary pipe mixtures…

…and a lot of its tins.

I’m not really a shopper any more. My tobacco inventory is, uh, enough. But, I can’t walk into the business without putting any cash in the register, so I bought an ounce of something I never ordinarily would smoke: an aromatic mixture. That’s the favored style in the United States (vanilla, cherry, chocolate, rum, whiskey, etc.), whereas my favorites are the English, Balkan, and Oriental styles—again, how the Lord intended. So I purchased an ounce of Boswell’s own Cherry Smash. It’s okay, but I can’t understand the allure of aromatics. A terrific smoke shop, with a walk-in humidor of cigars too, although I didn’t even look at those.

That was the afternoon of Friday the seventh; later, I ventured into Gettysburg’s Lincoln Square to find the brethren at the Blue and Gray Bar & Grill, as arranged by the lodge. Busy place. So busy that they couldn’t seat the group, despite reservations, so the brethren headed around the corner to Borough BBQ, where I eventually caught up with them. This place was empty for some reason, but the food is good, and the service is friendly. (Everyone is friendly around there. Not what I’m used to, coming from the land of mindless, hyper-aggressive crazies and drug addicts.)

To walk around Lincoln Square is to realize you could reside in Gettysburg. Tons of nineteenth century (and some eighteenth) brick architecture along narrow streets forming a historic town that has benefitted greatly from preservation. Yeah, there’s a fast food chain represented somewhere in there, but Gettysburg is a smart example of planning.

CWLR meets

The lodge meeting was Saturday morning (July 8) at Good Samaritan Lodge 336, perfectly situated on Lincoln Square. The Master of Good Samaritan and others from the lodge were on hand to greet CWLR.

Good Samaritan dates to January 1, 1825 (its original number was 200). It was a popular and prosperous lodge in its early years, but during the anti-Masonry hysteria of the ensuing years, membership was halved. Read their history here.

Our research lodge meeting was brief. What CWLR 1865 does is more sightseeing than publishing. Research lodges basically are historical societies that hold warrants from competent Masonic authorities, and CWLR likes to get into the historic sites, be they battlefields or whatever, and soak it in.

When a lodge takes multiple trips per year, I think you have to expect spotty attendance among its members, and the CWLR officer line was batting about .500 that day. The Master, Treasurer, Secretary, Junior Deacon, and Tyler (Virginia spelling) were present, but the others couldn’t make it. Diverse Masons filled in where needed, resulting in a unique Opening ritual where each officer performed what he knew. It all works, of course, because the differences in some words and gestures do not interfere with the overall practice. The intended Virginia ritual is a lot like our New York, except with a certain due guard in the place of the Sign of Fidelity. Twenty-three were in attendance.

Research papers are welcome, but none were presented that day. The business was tackled. Seven petitioners, representing lodges in Maryland, New York (me), Pennsylvania, and Virginia were elected to membership. This research lodge has 330 members now. That’s a lot.

‘This is my appendant body’

Gary Laing, PM
Probably the highlight of this meeting was the presentation of a ceremonial replica saber to Tyler Gary Laing by Worshipful Master Andy Wilson commemorating Past Master Laing’s silver anniversary with the lodge. Wow! Most lodges give just a pin. Gary made an impromptu acceptance speech in which he explained how much CWLR means to him as a Mason and as a man. Through this lodge, he and his wife have built deep friendships with other CWLR couples. And he likened his initial attraction to Freemasonry to that of Union Army officer William McKinley’s, if you know that story. And he spoke of finding in CWLR the satisfaction that others seek through Masonry’s appendant bodies, which he declined to join. “This is my appendant body,” he said of this lodge. (As one who has sampled nearly all the groups in mainstream Masonry, finding most of them pointless, I certainly empathize.) Past Master Richard Burkman, one of those dear friends (and who kind of resembles Robert E. Lee), arose from the Senior Deacon’s place and spoke in tribute of Bro. Laing, and later told me about the many memorable times they and their wives have shared together over the years.

The battlefield and cemetery

Michigan Cavalry Brigade Monument.

Click here for more information.

The meeting was closed and we individually headed to Gettysburg National Military Park—the battlefield—to visit several specific sites. Not being a Civil War historian, most of what lodge Secretary/tour guide Bennett Hart imparted went over my head, but simply walking the grounds, and approximately on the dates of the fighting too, is an experience. We were in the East Cavalry Field, where U.S. and Confederate forces repeatedly clashed on July 3, 1863.

The monuments, statues, markers, cannons, and other historical spots are too numerous to see in any single visit. Those dedicated only to New York’s combatants number eighty-seven, if I understand. I couldn’t even find the New York State Monument, the 110-footer dedicated in 1893.

Click here for more information.

Monuments to New York soldiers are everywhere.

Later in the afternoon, the group had plans for a cookout elsewhere in the park, which I’d intended to attend, but the heat got to me. I returned to the hotel for a shower and change of clothes, and then returned to the Blue and Gray, successfully this time, for a seat at the bar for food and hard cider. I reported that already here.

Before heading home

The stock photo everyone shoots.

While I missed the New York State Monument, I was not going to leave before seeing the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania’s Friend to Friend Masonic Memorial. Luckily, it is very easy to reach. Just head to the vicinity of Tommy’s Pizza at 105 Steinwehr Avenue, cross the street, and enter the Gettysburg National Cemetery Annex. It’s right in front of you. (Aaaand it turns out that New York Monument is right near the Friend to Friend, but I still missed it!)

A future edition of The Magpie Mason will be a pictorial of this Masonic masterpiece.

On the downside

There was one negative to the weekend, something beyond our control: It was Bike Week!

This bike, with the S&C, was
parked in the garage all weekend,
and thus was silent
(as Masons are taught!).
I hear Gettysburg Bike Week is the biggest Bike Week in Pennsylvania, and I believe it. Unless it was the same hundred or so flabby old white guys with matching gray goatees riding in circles all weekend, there were maybe a thousand or more Harley-Davidson enthusiasts ceaselessly roaring around town the entire time. Whether it was one biker popping and thundering past or a herd of the hogs rumbling along, the cacophony was too much. It was clearly audible upstairs in the lodge room, and deafening on the street. And literally endless. The biker population likely more than doubled the traffic volume, making getting around difficult and annoying. Don’t schedule your visit knowing this.

And that’s it. I will return to this beautiful historic town before long for deeper sightseeing and other pleasures. (Union Cigar is owned by a Mason.) Good Samaritan 336 meets on second Thursdays, except summertime, if you want to attend.
     

Saturday, July 8, 2023

‘In the field with CWLR’

    

“This is what the research lodge is about: getting into the battlefields, seeing the monuments; and getting together with old friends, and making new ones.”

W. Bennett Hart, Secretary
Civil War Lodge of Research 1865

With those words, Bro. Bennett dismissed the muster today as we stood in the Gettysburg battlefield, specifically the earth where Gregg’s Union cavalry and Stuart’s Confederate cavalry slaughtered each other July 3, 1863.

Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 does not produce a mass of scholarly material. Our mandate, if I understand, is to complete one research paper per annum.

Our? Yeah, I enlisted today, so now I’m active in three research lodges. I’ll try to find an idea for a paper to submit. Not right away, but now it’s on the to-do list.

And I’m not sure how many CWLR meetings I can attend. Chartered by the Grand Lodge of Virginia, it meets in the Old Dominion mostly, with occasional reconnaissance in Maryland and other states significant to the U.S. Civil War. New York City is not insignificant in that historical context. The draft riots, Lincoln at Cooper Union (and McSorley’s), Grant’s Tomb, and other sites are things to ponder. In fact, the last time I attended a meeting was when Worshipful Master Phil Brown brought the lodge to Manhattan for a tour in 2010. Now that I’m a member, I’ll work at improving my attendance. There are no Civil War battlegrounds in New York, thank God, so I’ll probably write about the wartime economics or politics vis-a-vis Freemasonry.

More Gettysburg coverage to come. Right now I’m drinking hard cider and eating this burger at the Blue and Gray Bar & Grill:
     
The General Jubal Anderson Early Burger: quarter-pound of beef, with a fried egg, cheddar cheese, and maple syrup(!), on a ciabatta roll. Yeah, I had a heart attack later. So what?



Thursday, June 15, 2023

‘Masonic researchers to visit Gettysburg’

   
CWLR1865

And speaking of Pennsylvania (see post below), Civil War Lodge of Research 1865, chartered in Virginia, will meet at Gettysburg next month.

As it has done before, the lodge will travel to Good Samaritan Lodge 336 for a meeting before heading into Gettysburg National Military Park for a tour that will include little known facts imparted by local brethren, and then a cookout on the grounds. This will be the weekend following the calamitous battle’s 160th anniversary, so the area will be more crowded than usual. From the publicity:


Friday, July 7
Dinner at 6:30
2 Baltimore Street



Saturday, July 8
9 Lincoln Square
Coffee and pastries at 8:30 a.m.
9 a.m. - officer rehearsal
(time permitting)
10 a.m. - lodge meeting
Noon - lunch (TBD)
1 p.m. - Gettysburg battlefield tour
6 p.m. - Cookout at camp site MG4
3340 Fairfield Road

The Worshipful Master will grill burgers, brats, and hot dogs; and sides, soft drinks/beer, and dessert will be served. A good idea to bring a chair.
     

Friday, March 10, 2023

‘Historians to visit Fredericksburg’

    
Civil War Lodge of Research 1865, one of Virginia’s numerous lodges of Masonic research and education, will meet Saturday, April 1 at one of the Commonwealth’s most historic and cherished lodges. The brethren are headed to Fredericksburg Lodge 4, which already is home to George Washington Lodge of Research 1732, for its next Stated Communication.

As always, the meeting is one event in a busy weekend of sightseeing and fellowship. The lodge will tyle (Virginia spelling) at 10 a.m. Lunch (details TBD) will follow at noon, and at one o’clock everyone will take a tour of the Fredericksburg/Spotsylvania National Military Park and “Mule Shoe,” the site of the craziest hand-to-hand combat of the war.

Magpie file photo
Fredericksburg 4’s lodge room.

Click here to see the entire itinerary and the hotel booking info.

The following meeting will take place July 8 at Gettysburg (timed to avoid the hectic crowds on both the battle’s 160th anniversary and Independence Day), and I believe I’m going to get to that one.
     

Sunday, October 16, 2022

‘Loyalty and Kindness on research lodge’s agenda’

    
Williamsburg Lodge 6

Civil War Lodge of Research
is heading to Colonial Williamsburg for its next communication.

That’ll be Saturday, December 3 and of course will feature Colonial Williamsburg attractions to enhance the experience of meeting inside Williamsburg Lodge 6. From the publicity:


Friday, December 2

6:30—Dinner at Craft 31

Saturday, December 3

9 a.m.—coffee, etc. at the lodge

10 a.m.—lodge opens

Noon—lunch

1 p.m.—open installation of officers

Colonial Williamsburg will be open. (Most government houses, family homes, and historic trade areas charge for admission.) Bruton Parish Church will be open for self-tours until three o’clock.

Colonial Williamsburg
5 p.m.—Colonial Williamsburg’s Grand Illumination (musket fire, pyrotechnics at the Capitol, live music on several stages in the historic areas).

6:30—Dinner at Mellow Mushroom followed by libations at Precarious Beer Project across the street.

For the meals, please book your seats in advance by contacting the lodge secretary here.


I’d really love to attend, but it’s a little too far. It’s like driving to Masonic Week, but with another two hours to go. Plus, The American Lodge of Research will be at West Point Lodge on Thursday night, so it’s a busy time.
     

Tuesday, August 16, 2022

‘Civil War Lodge to bivouac in Maryland’

    

Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 will convene its September meeting to mark the 160th anniversary of the Battle of Antietam. This lodge is chartered by the Grand Lodge of Virginia to preserve understandings of Freemasonry’s varied ties to the U.S. Civil War, and the lodge travels to places significant to that war.

On Saturday, September 17, the brethren will visit Antietam National Battlefield after its meeting at Antietam Lodge 197, both in Maryland. I believe it is the only lodge in the country named for a Civil War battle.

The night before the meeting, everyone will get together for dinner at Captain Benders Tavern in Sharpsburg at 6:30.

The meeting will open at 10 a.m. Saturday at the lodge in Keedysville.

Lunch at 12:30 at Bonnie’s at the Red Byrd.

At two o’clock, the group will visit Antietam National Battlefield. This is exactly the 160th anniversary of what is termed “the bloodiest day in American history,” and at 3 p.m. there will be a commemoration ceremony.

The group will have dinner together at 6:30 at Rik’s Cafe.

Overnight accommodations have been arranged at Sleep Inn & Suites Hagerstown.

It sounds like a productive and memorable weekend. It’s a little too far for me, but hopefully some of you can participate and even join the lodge.

I hope the brethren consider New York City as a future destination. No official battlefield here, but other points of great interest are in abundance.
     

Saturday, November 14, 2020

‘Civil War meeting’

     
On this date in 1995, the Grand Lodge of Virginia issued a warrant to a lodge of Masonic research named Civil War Lodge of Research 1865, which has the unique mission of exploring historical facts of Freemasonry intersecting in the U.S. Civil War. Happy Silver Anniversary, brethren!

This morning they hosted a meeting via Zoom, and the lodge is scheduled to meet in person for a called communication in three weeks on December 5.

That will take place at Spurmont Lodge 98 in Strasburg. The custom weekend schedule is on, with dinner Friday night, lodge meeting and museum tour Saturday, and dinner that evening. Reservations are required. Click here for all the details.
     

Monday, March 9, 2020

‘Research lodge to meet at George Washington’s lodge’

     
The lodge that made George Washington a Mason will be the meeting place of the next “stated conclave” of Civil War Lodge of Research 1865.

That’s Saturday, April 4 at Fredericksburg Lodge 4, located at 803 Princess Anne Street in Fredericksburg, Virginia.

The brethren and their ladies will dine informally the night before at Deutschland Downtown at 6 p.m. Kindly RSVP to Worshipful Master G. Andrew Martinez here.

On Saturday the fourth, the research lodge will gather at 8 a.m. for coffee before setting up the lodge room. The meeting will open at ten o’clock and will be followed by lunch at noon. At 1:30 the group will visit the Fredericksburg Battlefield (half-mile walk) for a tour led by Bro. Smith.

At 5:30, everyone is welcome to gather at Paradise Diner for supper.

Hotel accommodations are planned (approximately $100/night) at the Hampton Inn & Suites Fredericksburg. Breakfast, wifi, etc. are included.