Showing posts with label GL of New Hampshire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GL of New Hampshire. Show all posts
Thursday, January 9, 2025
‘The other ALR’
There’s another “ALR” in the research lodge world. The Grand Lodge of New Hampshire set to labor Anniversary Lodge of Research 175 in 1964. This lodge offers several eye-catching events each year, and I really want to visit sometime.
For starters, it has received dispensation to open a table lodge next month. The brethren will gather on Friday the 28th at six o’clock in the Masonic Temple in Concord. Book your seat here, but hurry because only thirty can be accommodated.
What I really want to check out is the annual Tri-State Masonic Day of Light, set for Saturday, August 9. This event unites the research lodges of Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont for a meeting of sharing their best papers. From what I understand, the location rotates among those three states, and this year it too will be in Concord. (There’s a possibility of the Masonic Restoration Foundation hosting its symposium in, I think, Ontario that weekend, but that date is yet to be announced. I’d like to be there too, so I’m hoping these won’t coincide.)
But the ALR event I most want to attend is its annual meeting. This happens every July 8 at the William Pitt Tavern in Portsmouth—the very place and the anniversary in 1789 of the founding of the Grand Lodge. This sixty-first birthday will land on a Tuesday, so I doubt 2025 is my year to be there, but some day.
Friday, July 8, 2022
‘Millions for Manchester’
Happy anniversary to the Grand Lodge of New Hampshire! It was on this date in 1789 when the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the State of New Hampshire was organized at the William Pitt Tavern in Portsmouth.
John Sullivan |
Commemorative token courtesy of Bro. Tim. |
But this edition of The Magpie Mason concerns today’s needs, namely millions of dollars to restore the Manchester Masonic Temple and keep it in service, perhaps to 2089 and beyond.
The cornerstone was laid with Masonic ceremony on St. John Baptist Day 1925, but as its hundredth birthday nears, the temple shows its age and is in need of extensive modernization. I was there last month for Masonic Con; despite never having seen the place before, I recognized it intimately.
The growth of the Masonic fraternity in the United States during the 1920s was fantastic and almost incomprehensible to today’s Mason. To accommodate the tens of thousands of new brethren nationwide, our rapidly multiplying lodges acquired and developed real estate all over the place, in many instances constructing two or three-story temples of marble or limestone or granite or whatever. Buildings that could stand for centuries.
They contained multiple large lodge rooms, with murals on the walls, decorative carpeting, balcony seating, and other clues indicating a big and monied membership. A spacious banquet hall and impressive commercial kitchen. An elevator, coat room, billiard parlor, library, sitting room, and more.
In their prime, these temples silently boasted of Freemasonry’s prominence, but today those which remain standing and in Masonic custody are in “the days of trouble,” as Ecclesiastes 12 phrases old age.
The Manchester Masonic Temple’s caretakers aim to raise about $5 million to transform a faded palace of the Roaring Twenties into a proper home for today’s Masonic Order. Out with hazardous electrical wiring, and in with LEDs. Do away with century-old plumbing, and go with twenty-first century flushing. And the HVAC? They didn’t even have the AC back then, and the HV are antique curiosities.
Elevator operator station. |
A heating vent beneath each seat in lodge. |
With only about 4,400 Masons comprising the jurisdiction, the Grand Lodge of New Hampshire, I’m certain, would appreciate your support. Donations may be mailed to:
Manchester Masonic
Community Center
1505 Elm St.
Manchester, NH 03101
Or click here.
I wouldn’t be surprised if the brethren are seeking community block grant dollars, but every bit you contribute will get all the work done.
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