Pancake Breakfast

DATE: October 31st, 2015

PLACE: Ocean City Lodge 171, 940 Wesley Avenue Ocean City, NJ 08226

TIME: 8:00 AM to 11 AM

Ocean City Masonic Lodge No. 171 will be serving an all you can eat pancake breakfast on October 31st from 8 AM to 11 AM.   Cost is Adults $8, Children under 12 $4.

All proceeds will benefit the Ocean City Lodge Building Renovation Fund.

pancake_guy

 

 

Advertisement

Freemasonry: The World’s First Global Social Network

AHA Annual Meeting graphic

Bro. Richard Berman, the Grand Lodge of England 2016 Prestonian Lecturer, will chair a session titled “Freemasonry: The World’s First Global Social Network” at the American Historical Association’s annual meeting in Atlanta Friday, January 8, 2016.

Additionally, the New Jersey Lodge of Masonic Research and Education No. 1786 will host the United Grand Lodge of England’s Prestonian Lecturer for 2016 on Thursday, January 14, 2016.
Bro. Richard Berman will present “Foundations: New Light on the Formation and Early Years of the Grand Lodge of England.”  Location, dining fee, and other details to come shortly.

From the AHA Session Abstract:

In the 1700s, Masonic lodges and freemasons could be found from the East Indies to the West Indies to the Indian Country of the North American frontier, all across Europe, and throughout the farthest flung colonial possessions of the British, French, and Dutch empires. By the end of the century it had become an important organizing tool and intellectual force in the African Atlantic diaspora as well. Fremasonry was an emergent, self-created social movement of the 18th century Englightenment which boasted its own faux history, republican ideology, international diplomacy, meta-economy, and extensive organizational structures. Within a few decades of the formation of the Grand Lodge of England in 1717 there were Masonic lodges and grand lodges throughout the Americas, the Caribbean, India and in some parts of Africa. Ideologically and socially, freemasonry connected men across political, ethnic, racial, religions and class borders. It served as a vital fraternal link in the lives of Atlantic seafarers, soldiers, planters and craftsmen and formed a vast network of overlapping networks which greatly impacted social and commercial relations both within and between far flung communities in every corner of the global in which European culture had penetrated.

This panel will seek to explore the role of freemasonry as an international phenomenon, elucidating the nature and implications of the overlapping social, commercial and intellectual networks created by freemasons, white and Black, on both sides of the Atlantic.

The Magpie Mind

American Historical Association