... Jefferson, Adams, Madison, Monroe and Jackson were all masons; as were other significant figures like Paul Revere, John ... are one living, conscious whole. This reality, as many Masons have attested, is often palpable at Meetings in the read more...

... Fetzer’s membership in the Society of Free and Accepted Masons – i.e. Freemasonry – help him advance his advocacy case in ... had its own independent Grand Lodge of Free And Accepted Masons of the District of Columbia (Grand Lodge of Washington DC) read more...

... at times, self-induced poverty, and several single people—masons, tailors, etc.—resolved to try to see the New World. The read more...

... that many or most of these Deist Founding Fathers were also Masons and/or Rosicrucians. Holmes does mention that James Monroe, ... well as the Revolutionary War General Lafayette) were Freemasons, and he further mentions that Washington’s laying of the read more...

... in the Masonic lodges, and part of the initiations that the Masons go through. Part of the third degree initiation is one of read more...

Tom Beaver Oral History 4 of 9 December 10, 2017

... And, of course, the Founding Fathers were primarily Masons. They weren't all Masons but most of them were. Benjamin ... Um, George Washington was. Um, Monroe and Madison both were Masons. Uh, John Adams would have been but he was blackballed. read more...

Tom Beaver Oral History 3 of 9 December 10, 2017

... strong in Akram's interview with us too. So, um, during the Masons [unclear]. So he was getting this other influence. BRUCE ... he said about 5 percent of the population of D.C., was Freemasons. So 10 percent of the male population in D.C. was Freemasons at the time. And FDR was a Freemason. Henry Wallace, his read more...

... passages by earlier Indian tribes (ed. note: various Masons seemed to have gotten interested in ‘buried ancient ... from the Knights Templars, and/or the Aztecs, you name it … Masons who invested in such searches included FDR and John Wayne. read more...

... Professor Brian C. Wilson, as well as video projects on the Masons and on Camp Chesterfield, may in the future contribute to ... traveled through the colonies.” “By 1800 there were 18,000 Masons in the United States” (out of a population of 5 million) read more...

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