Other Famous Masons
GENERAL JOSHUA L. CHAMBERLAIN On
Sunday, April 9, 1865 General Robert E. Lee agreed to the terms of
surrender set by General Ulysses S. Grant. General Joshua L. Chamberlain
of United Lodge No. 8 of Maine was Grant's excellent choice to accept
the surrender. Three days later the Confederate Army of Northern
Virginia, led by the Old Stone Wall brigade, sorrowfully stacked their
arms. Much of their bitterness left when Chamberlain ordered his troops
to give their former enemy soldiers a full military salute!
GOVERNOR LELAND STANFORD Governor Leland Stanford of
California, a member of Michigan City Lodge No. 47 of California drove
the Golden Spike. The Golden Spike was the last spike that linked the
tracks of the Intercontinental Railroad. According to historians, a
regimental band played, with workers, saloon keepers, gamblers,
prostitutes, money lenders, cooks, dishwashers and many other characters
looking on. FREDERIC A. BARTHOLDI
Frederic A. Bartholdi, a Frenchman who was a member of Lodge
Alsace-Lorraine of Paris, France designed the Statue of Liberty.
GEORGE PULLMAN George Pullman, a member of Renovation
Lodge No. 97 of New York, built the first railroad sleeping car in 1863;
he devised dining cars in 1868; chair cars in 1875; and vestibule cars
in 1887. LEWIS & CLARK Meriwether Lewis,
a member of Door to Virtue Lodge No. 44 of Virginia, and William Clark,
a member of St. Louis Lodge No. 111 (Pennsylvania Charter) explored the
Louisiana Purchase for president Thomas Jefferson.
WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN William Jennings Bryan, famed
attorney and presidential aspirant, became a Master Mason in Lincoln
Lodge No. 19, in Nebraska, in 1902. JOHN J. "BLACK
JACK" PERSHING "Black Jack" Pershing, Commander in Chief
of the Expeditionary Forces in World War 1, became a Master Mason in
Lincoln Lodge No. 19, in Nebraska, on December 22, 1888.
EDDIE RICKENBACKER Eddie Rickenbacker, who became a
Master mason in 1922 in Kilwinning Lodge No. 297 of Michigan, was
credited with shooting down 21 enemy planes, along with 4 balloons.
J. EDGAR HOOVER J. Edgar Hoover became
a Master Mason in Federal Lodge No. 1 in the District of Columbia on
November 9, 1920. He would later serve the longest tenure ever as
Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
HENRY FORD The great automaker Henry Ford was raised in
Palestine Lodge No. 357 of Michigan by a team composed of men wearing
overhauls on November 28, 1894.
JOHN PHILIP SOUSA The renowned leader
of the United States Marine Band, and later the March King, became a
Master Mason in Hiram Lodge No. 10 in the District of Columbia on
November 18, 1881. WILLIAM F. "BUFFALO BILL" CODY
Buffalo Bill became a Master Mason in Platte Valley Lodge No. 32 of
Nebraska. He was buried with Masonic Rites on Lookout Mountain,
Colorado, on January 10, 1917 DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS
HAROLD LLOYD GENE AUTRY ROY ROGERS
CECIL B. DEMILLE ERNEST BORGNINE WILL
ROGERS William Penn Adair Rogers, better known as Will
Rogers, received the three degrees of Masonry in Lincoln Lodge No. 19 of
Nebraska, in 1902. CHARLES LINDBERGH The
famed aviator who flew the first non-stop transcontinental flight in the
Spirit of St. Louis, was made a Master Mason in Keystone Lodge No. 243
in St. Louis, Missouri, on December 15, 1926. |