Showing posts with label Shelby Chandler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shelby Chandler. Show all posts
Saturday, November 9, 2024
‘New research DDGM and lodge for Virginia’
And, speaking of research lodges (see post below), a transition of authority in the Grand Lodge of Virginia will be achieved in a few hours. Not only will there be a new Grand Master, but with a new administration there will be a new District Deputy Grand Master for the Research District also.
RW Shelby Chandler completed his tenure yesterday, and will be succeeded by RW Jason “Jake” Trenary. The Magpie Mason sends his best wishes to all, and aims to continue serving as this weird distant unofficial publicist.
Shelby circulated the following valedictory statement a few days ago:
Greetings my Brethren,
First off, I wish to say thank you to each and every one of you for making my time as District Deputy Grand Master a cherished memory; I truly enjoyed working with each and every one of you. Because of our work together, every Research Lodge is now getting more attention than ever before, not just in Virginia, but throughout Masonry world-wide like it never has before.
The idea of having a Research District is not just innovative, but is appropriate for us and other jurisdictions. Masons can identify Research Lodges as not just educational, but as resources that can be both geographical and themed-oriented to the needs of Freemasonry. And others are considering usage of such a district elsewhere.
I can say that, like my predecessors, I am very blessed to have had an opportunity to help mold this awareness of the potentials of having both Research Lodges and a Research District.
Understand, that between Right Worshipful Brothers Marc Hone, Brian Croteau, myself, and now Jake Trenary, there has been a slow process, not just to standardize and make uniform the operating procedures of each Research Lodge, but to develop a culture and familial relationship among all Virginia Research Lodges. And we have made much progress and have been doing well in this endeavor, but remember my Brothers, it takes each and every one of you to make such a family.
Another point to make is that we, as Research Lodge members, focus on ourselves and our ability to produce research papers, but let us not forget that, as Masons, it is our duty to continue to help the outside world as well. So let us, as Research Lodges, work to support other charitable programs within Masonry as well, because everyone has a claim upon our kind offices.
Here in Virginia, these opportunities to shine our Masonic Light in a new ways would have not been possible without the brilliant vision of two men: Most Worshipful George Chapin, who first envisioned a Research District back in 1999; and Most Worshipful William Hershey, who was Chapin’s Administrative Aide in 1999 and re-introduced the idea of a Research District during his time as Grand Master in 2019. I bring this to your attention because last week, Lady Constance “Connie” Chapin was laid to rest, and today I received word that MW Hershey also laid down his working tools yesterday. So please keep MW George Chapin and Lady Michele Hershey, and their families, in your prayers and let us send to them and their families all the love we can offer to them. And as both these dear Brothers were patrons of our Research District, let us as a district remember, “whence we came.”
Finally my brethren, you will have a new District Deputy Grand Master in Jake Trenary, and a new sister Research Lodge in what is to be the Blue Ridge Lodge of Research No. 1738, out of Blacksburg, Virginia. Please welcome both into your Research Lodges and into your hearts and give them all the support and kindness that you have shown me. Let us wish them all the best and all happiness, and let us give our new Grand Master and his Grand Lodge officers, the very same love and support as well.
I wish each of you all the best and I pray for the success and happiness of every Research Lodge in Virginia. Thank you for all your good works and every cherished moment with each of you. You are each in my memories and in my heart.
May the Great Architect watch over each of you.
Fraternally,
Shelby Chandler,
DDGM-Research
That a sixth research lodge is chartered in the Grand Lodge is amazing. Located in Blacksburg, Blue Ridge Lodge of Research will serve the western part of the Commonwealth.
Bro. Shelby, you have been a terrific ambassador for research lodges and research Masons. I look forward to seeing your coming adventures in the Craft.
Sunday, October 20, 2024
‘Retired Senator made Mason on Sight’
A longtime reader—there literally are several of those—saw the post the other day about Naval Lodge, and took the opportunity to tell me about something novel in the Grand Lodge of Virginia.
Last Wednesday, the sixteenth, Grand Master Jack Lewis exercised a prerogative very rarely seen in the jurisdiction by “Making on Sight” retired U.S. Senator Pat Roberts a Mason. He is a member of Andrew Jackson Lodge 120 in Alexandria. This lodge, now in its 170th year, meets inside the George Washington Masonic National Memorial.
Sometimes it is called “at Sight,” and it is found among Mackey’s Landmarks, although not every grand lodge permits it.
There was no mention of this on the Grand Master’s schedule, and I don’t see anything official about it. I was able to find a few mentions on Facebook. I guess we’ll have to wait for the next issue of The Herald. All I know about Sen. Roberts is he represented Kansas in the Senate from 1997 to 2021, and served in the House of Representatives for sixteen years beforehand.
Congratulations to all involved!
The Grand Annual Communication is a few weeks away. Richmond is too far for me, but I hope to attend someday.
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. |
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.
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. |
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. |
Monday, January 8, 2024
‘Masonic Research District meeting’
Sunday afternoon brought the long-anticipated Zoom meeting of the Grand Lodge of Virginia’s Masonic Research District hosted by District Deputy Grand Master Shelby Chandler.
Virginia has five lodges of Masonic research (with a sixth on the way), and they were grouped into one district several years ago rather than each remaining an oddball within its geographical district. The purpose of this meeting, very prudently, was to allow the District Deputy to present his DDGM program once to all these lodges to avoid taking time away from their chosen presentations during his individual Official Visits. (My lodge, Civil War Lodge of Research 1865, will receive RW Chandler at our July 13 meeting at Jackson Lodge 19 in Delaware, likely the only lodge meeting I’ll be able to attend this year.)
The Grand Master’s Official Visit to the Masonic Research District will be February 3 at George Washington Lodge of Research 1732 at Fredericksburg. |
Chandler’s discussion yesterday consisted of a detailed introduction of MW Jack Kayle Lewis, the new (and 178th) Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, including his very impressive resume of academic and professional achievements, plus his family life and other notable points, including his ambitious plans for his term. If you were wondering about the police badge design of Lewis’ Grand Master pin, it is inspired by his many decades in law enforcement.
Then came the designs upon Chandler’s trestleboard. I won’t cover it all, but here are some of the slides he displayed during his talk:
Click to enlarge. |
Sorry for the blur. |
I am starting to see the wisdom of us New Yorkers having our own DDGM for our four research lodges. (There is interest in starting a fifth in the Hudson Valley.) It is wise to have an ombudsman representing the research lodges to the Grand Lodge, bringing assistance when needed.
Of course we have our own festivities planned for New York, but if you’re in Virginia, get to this one. |
I know it’s far off, but add to your calendars the Grand Lodge of Virginia’s Lafayette Bicentennial Gala on October 5.
Labels:
GL of Virginia,
Jack Kayle Lewis,
research,
Shelby Chandler
Tuesday, November 21, 2023
‘Great news for researchers in Virginia’
The Masonic research domain is expanding under the Grand Lodge of Virginia, the jurisdiction with—I’d bet anything—the most lodges of Masonic research of any grand jurisdiction in this country. Currently, the brethren have five research lodges on the rolls, with another soon to be granted dispensation to begin its labors.
The reasoning behind having so many of these unique groups is twofold: spreading them around allows the brethren great access to education; and having a variety allows each to pursue a specific study.
If you’re not familiar, a Masonic research lodge is a combination historical society and literary society, but with a warrant from a grand lodge. Members are regular Freemasons from their respective Craft lodges, and they delve into history and write their findings for presentation to the research lodge, which hopefully publishes a book of these papers annually, or otherwise periodically.
In Virginia, those five research lodges at labor are:
George Washington Lodge of Research 1732 (at Fredericksburg Lodge 4), chartered in 2012, it focuses on Scottish Freemasonry, American Colonial Freemasonry, and Masonic military history.
Peyton Randolph Lodge of Research 1774 (at Williamsburg Lodge 6), chartered in 2007, its focus is dispersed on matters historic, philosophic, and even the practical aspects of the Craft.
Virginia Lodge of Research 1777 (at the Babcock Masonic Temple in Highland Springs), chartered in 1951, it is the eldest of Virginia’s research lodges and it looks into almost any Masonic subject.
Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 (at Babcock Temple also), chartered in 1995, its brethren concentrate on the U.S. Civil War’s intersections with Masonic history. I’m a member of this one, and I think it’s safe to say CWLR does most of its work on the road, traveling to Civil War historic sites in Virginia and beyond.
A. Douglas Smith, Jr. Lodge of Research 1949 (at the George Washington Masonic National Memorial), chartered in 1983, it is named for one of the top scholars of his day. The lodge studies the philosophical and the practical sides of Freemasonry.
And what about this sixth research lodge?
This will be named Blue Ridge Lodge of Research. You might guess from the name it will be located in western Virginia, and it in fact will meet at Hunter’s Masonic Lodge 156 in Blacksburg. Its field of study will be the history of Freemasonry in that very beautiful part of the Commonwealth. Maybe Virginia Tech has Masonic materials in its library and archives?
Six lodges of Masonic research, each doing its thing, and dispersed about the face of Virginia. It is important work they do. There has to be an outlet for the Masons who have the drive and talent to pursue facts, however obscure and elusive, and piece them into narratives that can be shared with others.
Most Masons don’t get it. Because research lodges do not confer degrees, these lodges go overlooked or even forgotten among the many moving parts of a grand jurisdiction.
RW Chandler on Facebook last week. |
“We are real lodges. We open and close tiled meetings,” he added, “but because we are nerd-oriented, we are seen as a red-headed stepchild.” (He was preaching to the choir. I’m a Past Master of New Jersey’s research lodge, am Senior Warden of New York City’s, and recently joined CWLR under his jurisdiction in Virginia.) Another distinction that baffles many of the brethren is a research lodge’s lack of voting ability at Grand Lodge.
Such distinctions hardly separate research lodges from the mainstream of the fraternity, Chandler also said. Every Mason is charged with learning and sharing his knowledge, and the lodge of research is the ideal forum for that. For the brethren who prefer these activities, maybe to the exclusion of others, the place for education can unlock possibilities. “Have you reached your potential?” he asked hypothetically. “If not, maybe you’ll find it here.”
Furthermore, Chandler continued, these lodges serve myriad purposes. They often are custodians of ritual. They are the places to find experienced writers and editors. (I can tell you how H.L. Haywood, one of Freemasonry’s top educators a century ago, was lured to New York to launch our Grand Lodge’s first magazine—and he soon was made a Fellow of The American Lodge of Research.) Similarly, but maybe more importantly, research lodges provide skilled public speakers who can visit lodges and other groups to lead discussions of all kinds of subjects. And, essential today, research lodges are where we find the talent in communications technologies—video conferencing, social media, and even just plain websites—to organize Masonic thought and share it.
Virginia’s Masonic Research District was created four years ago. For management purposes, the research lodges were separated from their geographic districts and were grouped together because of their singular but shared purpose.
Not a bad idea for us larger jurisdictions!
Here in New York, we are fortunate to have four research lodges at labor. (There used to be a fifth.) I am told there is desire for another in the Hudson Valley. I’m sure there’s room for one on Long Island. The possibilities are endless. Someone tell the guys on the seventeenth floor!
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