Showing posts with label Good Samaritan Lodge 336. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Good Samaritan Lodge 336. Show all posts

Sunday, October 6, 2024

‘Civil War Dinner at Gettysburg’

    

Rest assured peace and harmony will prevail at the Civil War Dinner next month in Gettysburg.

The brethren at Good Samaritan Lodge 336 will host their fourth such occasion—and the second this year. I think this would make a fine start to a great weekend for visiting the historic battleground town. From the publicity:


Good Samaritan Lodge will host our fourth Civil War Dinner on Friday, November 15.

These events continue to grow in popularity with excellent presentations and delicious dinners. You don’t want to miss out!

Dinner choices will be Union or Confederate.

Come hear the stories of Nick, an Adams Express agent; Liberty Hollinger Clutz, a young girl who witnessed the Battle of Gettysburg; and two others.

Proceeds to benefit the clothes-for-kids program and other charities. Buy tickets here. $50 per person or a $250 for a table of six.


I don’t know exactly what the menu will offer, but click here to get a possible idea.
     

Monday, May 6, 2024

‘Civil War Dinner at Gettysburg this month’

    

Good Samaritan Lodge 336 in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania has another creative collation planned for later this month. From the publicity:


We will be hosting a Civil War Dinner on Friday, May 24 at our lodge. Presentations from our Civil War guests will begin at six o’clock, and dinner will be served at 6:30. Menu: Union or Confederate.

Union will be Maj. Gen. James Wilson’s Beef Loaf specialty with Benjamin Wade’s lima beans and tomatoes.

Confederate will be Capt. Franklin Buchanan’s favorite Spanish Chicken with John Hunt Morgan’s Plantation Style collard greens.

Both will be served with a simple green salad and roasted potatoes. Dessert will be strawberries with whipped cream.

Join us for a great meal and excellent in-character presentations on Masons in the Civil War.


Tickets, at $50 each, can be had here. The lodge is perfectly situated at 9 Lincoln Square in Gettysburg.
     

Sunday, November 5, 2023

‘Gettysburg’s lodge to host Civil War-period dinner’

    

Good Samaritan 336, the lodge in Gettysburg where Civil War Lodge of Research met four months ago, has its annual Civil War Dinner with a Soldier planned for two weeks. I’d love to go back, but it’s too far for just a dinner. You should go though, if within the length of your cable tow, etc. From the publicity:


Civil War Dinner with a Soldier
Sunday, November 19
Good Samaritan Lodge 336
9 Lincoln Square
Gettysburg Pennsylvania
Limited seating, at $50, here

Good Samaritan Lodge 336 will host its second annual Civil War Dinner on Sunday, November 19 at the Lodge on the Square. Presentations from our Civil War guests will begin at six o’clock. Dinner will be served at 6:30. Dessert and additional presentations will follow.

Dinner will be prepared by our chef from a Civil War era cookbook. Choice of meat will be venison loaf or pigeon (we will substitute Cornish game hen, as the bird used historically is difficult to source), plus potatoes and vegetables, with pumpkin pie for dessert. Enjoy hot mulled cider, and try traditional hard tack, if you dare.

Come hear the stories of:

  • Elizabeth Thorne, who while six months pregnant, buried nearly 100 soldiers at the Evergreen Cemetery.
  • Pvt. Sherwood, from Co. K, 2nd Division, 5th Corps, the Pennsylvania Reserves, who returned home to fight.
  • Daniel Skelly, a teenager who witnessed the Battle of Gettysburg and the aftermath.
  • Cpl. Chester Judson, 24th New York “Orange Blossoms,” who fought at Gettysburg.
  • Cornelia Hancock, a nurse tending to the wounded at Gettysburg.
  • Nicholas, a newspaper man from New York City observing the war and reporting back.
  • Dr. Jelks, a Confederate physician with the 26th Georga, who treated the injuries of the war.
  • Cpl. J.R. Bennet, 6th New York Independent Battery, an artillery soldier killed in battle.
     

Friday, September 15, 2023

‘Advance one step…’

   
W. Matt Rancosky
The Master of Good Samaritan Lodge in Gettysburg will be out of town for a week and a half as he takes a hike across Pennsylvania to raise funds for several Masonic causes.



Matt Rancosky will advance one step, for starters, from Connellsville, not far from Ohio, and proceed to the Masonic Temple in Philly. From the publicity:


Walk My State
September 30 through October 9

Walking My State is a walk across the State of Pennsylvania to raise money for Masonic youth groups, the Masonic Widows Fund, and other charities of Good Samaritan Lodge 336. Brother Matt Rancosky, Worshipful Master, will walk 265 miles from the Pleasant Valley Masonic Center to the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania in a ten-day journey.

Matt will track his progress daily on our Facebook page. Please come and join him for a little bit when he is in your area. This walk is not just about raising money for great charitable causes, but also about meeting brothers across the state and maybe even a chance to explain Freemasonry to others.


The fundraising part is understood in three denominations: Gold, Silver, and Bronze. Click here to learn more about that. Gifts of other generous amounts are welcome too, of course, so click here to contribute thusly. On Monday, Matt will be the guest on the Masonic Lite podcast, so we’ll learn more about this after the weekend.

Headshot courtesy Darryl Wheeler/Gettysburg Times.
     

Monday, August 21, 2023

‘Thirty years war memorial’

    

It was thirty years ago today when the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania dedicated the Friend to Friend Masonic Memorial inside the Gettysburg National Cemetery Annex—and it took me almost as long to go see it.


Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 met at Good Samaritan Lodge 336 in Gettysburg last month and, during some down time at the end of that weekend, I finally had a minute to visit it. Very easy to find, I should say. Go to Tommy’s Pizza (itself marking fifty years in 2023) at 105 Steinwehr Avenue; walk across the street to enter the Cemetery Annex; and you can see it from the sidewalk. Just walk in.


The sculptures are more impressive in person than from most photos I’ve ever seen because everyone kind of shoots the same photograph: a front-on shot from about twenty feet out, to get the entire monument in the frame. But it’s art, so it tells a story. Here, I’ll intersperse my photographs amid the history imparted on Good Samaritan’s website:



The Friend-to-Friend Masonic Memorial was originally commissioned by the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, and was finished and dedicated as a memorial to the Freemasons of the Union and the Confederacy in the National Cemetery Annex on August 21, 1993. This date marked the first time that a private organization had been permitted to erect a monument in a national historic park.


The dedication of the Monument was the culmination of almost a decade’s worth of work planning, obtaining approval from Congress, coordinating various resources, and the bringing together of various agencies such as the National Park Service and the National Historical Society. All of this was accomplished by various members of Good Samaritan Lodge 336.

It also carried on a tradition of Masonic involvement with the monuments here in Gettysburg. Prior to the Friend-to-Friend Monument, on July 4, 1865, only two years after the battle, the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania dedicated the cornerstone to the Soldiers’ National Monument in the National Cemetery. That monument was the first of any type to be placed on the battlefield in Gettysburg.


The Friend-to-Friend Monument depicts Confederate Brigadier General Lewis A. Armistead, a Freemason, wounded after crossing the wall during the climax of Pickett’s Charge on July 3, 1863, being attended to by Union Captain Henry H. Bingham, also a Freemason. Shown on the wall surrounding this monument, are the names of the States whose soldiers fought at the Battle of Gettysburg.



The story behind the monument goes that: prior to the war, General Armistead served with Union General Winfield Hancock in the Federal Army, and considered him a “valued personal friend.” However, when the Civil War broke out, General Armistead refused to raise his sword against fellow Southerners and he joined the Confederate Army in 1861. After 27 months of fighting the war, the units the two generals commanded met on the battlefield here in Gettysburg during Pickett’s charge. Both of the Generals were injured during the fight that day, but General Armistead was left to the mercy of the Union solders as he lay injured and the Confederate forces had been pushed back.


During the lull after the charge, a staff assistant to Winfield Hancock, Capt. Bingham of the Union, was riding past General Armistead who was lying on the ground where he fell. Capt. Bingham inquired as to who the wounded Southern General was, and General Armistead himself responded. After some conversation between Capt. Bingham and General Armistead, Armistead discovered whom Capt. Bingham worked for, and that Capt. Bingham was also a Freemason. Due to this, Armistead entrusted his personal possessions, including a pocket book, a watch, his spurs, and a chain with a masonic emblem on them to Capt. Bingham. These items were asked to be given to Capt. Bingham’s superior officer, Union General Winfield Hancock, so that they could in turn be returned to General Armistead’s family.

General Armistead succumbed to his wounds shortly thereafter, dying at Gettysburg on July 5, 1863. General Hancock survived the war and finally died in 1886. Captain Bingham attained the rank of General, and later served 32 years in the United States House of Representatives. He was known as the “Father of the House.”

Naturally, everything looks different, ambiguous, from the rear.

This story epitomizes some of the most time-honored virtues of Freemasonry and highlights the unique bonds of friendship, which enabled these men to remain brothers undivided. Even as they fought in a divided nation, they faithfully supported the respective governments under which they fought while seeking to help each other in their time of need.
     

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.
     

Thursday, May 26, 2022

‘Explore gastronomical Gettysburg’

    
I’ll go ahead and guarantee you’ll be more enthusiastic about the meal than this.

For the 159th anniversary of the decisive day of the Battle of Gettysburg, the local Masonic lodge invites you to a historical re-enactment dinner.

Good Samaritan Lodge 336 is preparing an authentic 1863 meal for Sunday supper on July 3, its Civil War Soldier Dinner. A Civil War re-enactor will complement the period fare with tales of the Masonic experience of the war years.

That’s $50 per person at 90 Lincoln Square in Gettysburg. Seating at five o’clock. Click here to book your seats.