... Commissioned Essays John Fetzer’s Washington DC and Freemasonry John Fetzer spent a considerable amount of time in ... in the Society of Free and Accepted Masons – i.e. Freemasonry – help him advance his advocacy case in the policy halls read more...

... north of Indianapolis. Did Fetzer, in 1934, suddenly begin Freemasonry and Spiritualism “out of the blue”? Or did he gradually ... Tesla’s self-described abilities as psychic (Ford was a Freemason and known to believe in reincarnation; we can surmise from read more...

... (as well as the Revolutionary War General Lafayette) were Freemasons, and he further mentions that Washington’s laying of the ... there are certain things we were told—and John Fetzer as a Freemason was told similarly, and he and I discussed this. Thomas read more...

... than merely dreaming about it. For John had been a Freemason since 1934, and had in fact attained the Masonic pinnacle ... in its primary meaning the symbol of immortality; so in Freemasonry, the rod of the Senior Deacon, or the Master of read more...

... prominent among them, in the Western world, are the Freemasons and the Rosicrucians. In John’s case, when he was 33-years ... 35 years, he attained the very top of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, the rare level of 33rd-degree Mason. What did John learn read more...

... in, that of an angel and George Washington (who was a Freemason). The book’s final words are: “Son of the Republic, look ... Dictionary it says: The Lost Word. The mythical history of Freemasonry informs us that there once existed a Word of surpassing read more...

... most impressed that John was a 33rd degree Scottish Rite Freemason, telling us, “John was a 33rd degree Mason and so was read more...

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