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A B C
D E F G
H I J K
L M N O
P Q R S
T V W Y
Z
A
|
Aasen, John |
Abbott, Sir John J.C. |
Abbott, William "Bud" |
Acuff, Roy |
|
Norwegian 'giant' (said to be 8' 9" tall) who was a movie actor
in the US. When he joined Freemasonry over 1,500 attended. An
effort to raise a statue of this Mason is underway in Norway
now. |
Canadian politician who served as Prime Minister (1891-1892). |
Famous half of the Abbott & Costello comedy team. |
"King of Country Music" |
|
Adams, Sherman |
Aguinaldo, Emilio |
Aldrich, Nelson Wilmarth |
Aldrin, Edwin E.
"Buzz" |
|
Governor of New Hampshire and US Congressman |
President of the Philippines, he declared their independence in
1898. |
U.
S. Senator, known for his extensive impact on banking reform. He
also served as Treasurer of the Grand Lodge of Rhode Island. |
American astronaut who as a crew member of Apollo 11 became the
second human being to walk on the moon (July 20, 1969). |
|
Alfond, Harold |
Allen, Charles H. |
Allen, Ira |
Althouse, Monroe |
|
Owned famous 'Dexter Shoe Company' and noted philanthropist.
Sports complexes throughout Maine made possible by his generous
contributions bear his name. |
First Governor of Puerto Rico (1800-1802) when it was freed of
its 400 year despotic rule by Spain. |
Known as the 'Father of Vermont', he played a significant role
in the acceptance of Vermont as a State and then gave land to
help found the University of Vermont. |
Director, Ringgold Band of Pennsylvania. |
|
Ames, Ezra
|
Anderson, Brad
|
Anderson, Robert
|
André, Major John
|
|
Portrait painter who painted portraits of Washington, Alexander
Hamilton, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, Martin
Van Buren, George Clinton, DeWitt Clinton. |
Cartoonist and creator of the popular 'Marmaduke' comic strip |
Major General U.S. Army who was in command of Fort Sumter at
time of Confederate attack. Known as "Hero Of Fort Sumter."
|
British soldier who attempted to assist Benedict Arnold in his
treasonous betrayal of West Point. He was sentenced to death and
hanged in 1780. |
|
Annanc, Louis |
Antheil, George |
Archer, Dennis |
Arlen, Richard |
|
Chief of the Saint Francis Tribe of Indians. (D: 1876 after
having been a Mason for over 40 years.) |
Eccentric composer of the 1920s. His trademark work was the 1924
work "Le Ballet Mecanique", which incorporated sounds from
machines like airplane propellers and car horns. |
Mayor of Detroit, Michigan |
Movie actor, best known for his role as a pilot in "Wings". |
|
Arnold, Eddie |
Arnold, General Henry "Hap" |
Arthur William Patrick Albert /
Prince Arthur |
Asher, Max |
|
Country Music legend and member of the Grand Ole Opry. |
Medal of Honor recipient and American general whose efforts
helped establish what is now the U.S. Air Force. Commander, Army
Air Force in World War II. |
Third son of Queen Victoria and the longest serving Grand Master
of the United Grand Lodge of England. |
US
movie actor - Keystone Kop. |
|
Astor, John Jacob |
Atchison, David |
Audubon, John James |
Auker, Elden |
|
A
German immigrant to the US, he at one point was considered the
wealthiest man in America. He was Master of Holland Lodge in New
York and served as Grand Treasurer for that Grand Lodge. |
US
Senator, probably now best remembered for the Urban Myth that he
was President for one day - as stated on his tombstone. |
American ornithologist and artist known for his imposing works
in full color of Birds of America. He referred to himself as a
"Mason" and "Brother" in his diary but no proof has been found
of his membership. |
US
baseball 'submarine' pitcher |
|
Austin, Stephen F. |
Autry, Gene
|
|
|
|
American colonizer and political leader who worked to make Texas
a state of Mexico but later helped Texas settlers gain their
independence (1836). Known as the 'Father of Texas'. |
American actor who made some 90 movies from the 1930s through
the 1950s, cowboy singer ("Back in the Saddle Again" and more),
and professional sports team owner (original owner of the
California Angels baseball team). Many young people today have
grown up listening to his rendition of "Rudolph, the Red-Nosed
Reindeer". Brother Gene was a "true gentleman". |
|
|
B
|
Bagley,
Edward E.
|
Bahamonde, Ramon Franco
|
Bahr, Hermann
|
Baldry, Tony
|
|
Composer of 'National Emblem' march. |
An
aviator and Spanish politician, he was the brother of dictator,
General Francisco Franco. He was Commander of Aviation and
received the Aerial Medial for his valiant action in the Morocco
conflict. He was one of the Masons who refused the initiation of
General Franco into Freemasonry. |
Austrian writer, essayist and critic, he was an intellectual
interpreter of his time.
|
Current (1999) UK Member, House of Commons |
|
Baldwin, Henry |
Balfour, Lloyd |
Banks, Sir Joseph |
Barnard, Lawrence "slim" |
|
American jurist who served as an associate justice of the U.S.
Supreme Court (1830-1844). |
Jewelry Manufacturer. Millions of students have for generations
chosen class rings from Balfour Jewelry. |
Noted naturalist who accompanied Capt. Cook on his journeys
around the world. |
Creator and host of TV's 'The Happy Wanderer' travelogue show of
the 1960s. |
|
Barnes, Roy |
Barnes, W. W. |
Bartholdi, Frederic A. |
Barton, Edmund |
|
80th/Present (1999) Governor of Georgia. |
Professor of church history at Southwestern Seminary 1913-1953. |
French sculptor best known for his figure of Liberty
Enlightening the World, the Statue of Liberty, in New York
Harbor. |
First Prime Minister of the Commonwealth of Australia, Speaker
of the legislative assembly, New South Wales, Australia,
Attorney General, and judge of the Australian high court. |
|
Basie, William "Count" |
Bass, Edward |
Bates, Frederick |
Bayh, Birch |
|
Orchestra leader/composer. |
First Protestant Episcopal Bishop of Massachusetts. |
Governor of Missouri. |
US
Democratic Senator from Indiana from 1962-1981. |
|
Baylor, Robert E. B. |
Beard, Daniel Carter |
Bell, Lawrence |
Bellamy, Francis J. |
|
Founder of Baylor University, Texas' first Baptist college. |
American writer and illustrator. In 1905, he founded the Sons of
Daniel Boone which in 1910 became the first Boy Scout
organization in the US. |
Bell Aircraft Corp. |
The Baptist Minister who created America's Pledge of Allegiance. |
|
Benes, Eduard |
Bennett, Viscount R. B. |
Benton, Thomas Hart |
Bentsen, Lloyd M. |
|
President of Czechoslovakia elected in 1935, he led his nation's
government into exile after the outbreak of World War II. He
resigned in 1948 when he was forced to yield to a Communist
directed cabinet. |
12th Prime Minister of Canada 1930-35. |
U.
S. Senator from Missouri for 30 years and Grand Master of Iowa. |
A
life member of his Masonic Lodge in Texas, Bro. Bentsen served
the U. S. with honor and distinction as a bomber pilot in WWII,
a US Congressman, Senator and Secretary of the Treasury. His run
for the presidency in 1976 allowed the country to meet this kind
and considerate man. He was the Vice Presidential candidate with
Michael Dukakis in the 1988 campaign where, during the debate
with his opponent he used the now-famous phrase "I knew John
Kennedy....". He was honored by his country when he received the
Medal of Freedom. His daughter Tina was a member of Rainbow and
is now an Eastern Star. Her daughter is a Rainbow Grand
Representative so the Masonic connection runs deep. Bro. Bentsen
passed to his eternal rest in May, 2006. |
|
Berlin, Irving |
Berthold, Bartholomew |
Black, Hugo L. |
Blair, Jr., John |
|
Entertainer and songwriter who wrote more than 1,500 songs
including "Alexander's Ragtime Band" (1911) and several musical
comedies like Annie Get Your Gun (1946). |
Businessman who organized the first territorial bank in the
Louisiana Territory. |
U.
S. Senator and Supreme Court Justice. |
U.
S. Supreme Court Justice and member of the Constitutional
Convention. |
|
Blanc, Mel |
Blatchford, Samuel |
Boaz, Hiram Abiff |
Bond, Shadrach |
|
If
you've heard cartoon characters Bugs Bunny, Elmer Fudd, Barney
Rubble of the Flintstones, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Sylvester the
cat or others, you've heard the voice this 50+ year Mason who
brought so much pleasure to so many children for so many years. |
U.
S. Supreme Court Justice. |
Bishop of the Methodist Church, one of the first presidents of
Texas Wesleyan University and a member of two Texas lodges. |
First Grand Master of Freemasons and first Governor of Illinois. |
|
Boone, Daniel |
Borden, Sir Robert Laird |
Borglum, Gutzon & Lincoln |
Borgnine, Ernest |
|
Mythologized early U. S. pioneer responsible for the exploration
of Kentucky. Although his Masonic membership is unprovable, here
is what Nathan Boone had to say about his father's funeral:
"Father's body was conveyed to Flanders Callaway's home at
Charette, and there the funeral took place. There were no
military or Masonic honors, the latter of which he was a member,
as there were then but very few in that region of the country."
(Hammon, Neal O. (ed.) "My Father, Daniel Boone- The Draper
Interviews with Nathan Boone." Lexington, Kentucky: The
University Press of Kentucky, 1999. p. 139.) |
Prime Minister of Canada during World War I. |
Father and Son who carved the presidential busts on Mt.
Rushmore. |
Film and television actor. In 1955 received the Oscar as Best
Actor for the film Marty. Known to a generation of
television fans for his role as the Skipper in McHale's Navy.
He actively serves Freemasonry and is presently the Honorary
Chairman of a program to support the Scottish Rite Childhood
Language Center in Richmond. |
|
Bortnyansky, Dimitry Stepanovich |
Bowell, Sir Mackenzie |
Bowie, James |
Bradley, Omar N. |
|
Genius Russian composer, author of many religious musical works
and the song "How Glorious is Our Lord in Zion" which served for
a considerable time as the national anthem of the Russian
empire. |
British-born Canadian Prime Minister 1894-96 who later led the
Conservative opposition. |
American-born Mexican colonist who joined the Texan forces
during the struggle for independence from Mexico. He died during
the defense of the Alamo. |
American general. Played a major part in the Allied victory in
World War II. |
|
Brant, Joseph |
Breckinridge, John C. |
Brown, Major General Charles E.
Jr.
|
Brown, Foster V. |
|
Chief of the Mohawks 1742 - 1807. Supported the British in the
French and Indian War and the American Revolution. |
American Vice President, he ran as the pro-slavery candidate and
lost to Abraham Lincoln. His bust is in the Senate wing of the
US Capitol. |
Served as US Army Chief of Chaplains. |
US
Congressman from Tennessee, he served as Attorney General for
Puerto Rico. |
|
Brown, Joe E. |
Bruce, James of Kinnaird |
Bryan, William Jennings |
Buchanan, Edgar |
|
Immensely popular actor with the BIG mouth! |
Scottish explorer who made an epic voyage to Abyssinia in the
18th century. Not as widely known, however, is that he was a
considerable scholar who brought back from Abyssinia three
copies of the Book of Enoch, the apocryphal book which relates
to the Royal Arch Degrees, certain of the Scottish Rite Degrees
and to the Royal Order of Scotland. The book did not make it
into the Biblical canon primarily because no complete copy
existed in Europe prior to Kinnaird's journey. The copies he
brought back were in the Abyssinian language which he learned
before going there although no one knows how! |
US
Secretary of State under President Woodrow Wilson. |
Dentist and actor in the US television series "Petticoat
Junction" |
|
Buchanan, James |
Bullock, Bob |
Burbank, Luther |
Burke, Arleigh |
|
15th President of the U.S. (1857-1861). |
Texas Lt. Governor. |
Horticulturist and Naturalist, the practical result of his
experiments was the 'Burbank potato'. |
Highly decorated US Navy Admiral whose leadership helped win the
battle in the Pacific during World War II. He was known as "31
knot Burke". |
|
Burnett, David G. |
Burrows, Lansing |
Burns, Conrad |
Burns, Robert |
|
1st President of the Republic of Texas. |
President of the Southern Baptist Convention (1914-1916),
secretary of the SBC from 1881-1913, and pastor of 8 Southern
Baptist churches. |
US
Senator from Montana. |
The National Poet of Scotland. His lyrics, written in dialect
and infused with humor, celebrate love, patriotism, and rustic
life. Freemasonry was more important to him than any other
institution in Scotland! |
|
Burton, Harold H. |
Burton, Ron |
Bush, Vannevar |
Butterfield, Daniel |
|
Supreme Court Justice (1945-1958) |
Professional football player with the Boston Patriots, Past
Master of his lodge, and involved in the Grand Lodge of
Massachusetts. |
Pioneer in development of atomic and nuclear energy; he is
considered by many to be the 'godfather of the internet'. A Vice
President and Dean of Engineering at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT); frequent speaker at Massachusetts Masonic
Lodges of Instruction. |
Major General in the Civil War Union Army; holder of the
Congressional Medal of Honor but known especially for his
writing of America's best known bugle call, "Taps" |
|
Byrd, Admiral Richard E. |
Byrd, Robert C. |
Byrnes, James F. |
|
|
American naval officer and explorer. He was the first to fly
over the North Pole (with Floyd Bennet in 1926). |
The "Dean" of the US Senate. |
Supreme Court Justice and Secretary of State. He tried
unsuccessfully to ease post-WW2 tensions between the US and the
USSR. |
|
C
|
Calvo, Father Francisco |
Canham, Erwin D. |
Cantor, Eddie |
Carroll, B. H. |
|
Catholic Priest who started Freemasonry in Costa Rica 1865. |
Rhodes Scholar; Editor of The Christian Science Monitor;
Governor of Guam. |
Popular vaudevillian. |
First president of Southwestern Seminary and instrumental in the
creation of the Department of Evangelism of the Home Mission
Board of the Southern Baptist Convention. |
|
Carnahan, Melvin E. |
Carson, Christopher "Kit" |
Cass, Lewis |
Catton, John |
|
Mel Carnahan was the State Treasurer, Lieutenant Governor and
from 1993 to 2000 when he was killed in an airplane crash, the
Governor of Missouri. He was so popular he was elected even
after his untimely demise. |
Frontiersman, scout and explorer. |
American solider, politician and diplomat. Served as Secretary
of War, Secretary of State, and U. S. Senator. He was a Grand
Master of Iowa and the first Grand Master of Michigan. |
U.S. Supreme Court Justice. |
|
Chamberlain, Joshua L. |
Chase, Carlton |
Chennault, Clair Lee |
Christian, John T. |
|
The Union General who received the only battlefield promotion to
general during the US Civil War and was credited with the
victory in the crucial Battle of the Little Round Top for which
he was awarded the Medal of Honor for his bravery. He was
chosen to receive the surrender of the arms and colors of the
Confederacy. A chivalrous man, he had his troops salute the
defeated army as they marched by. Many believe that this
singular act was crucial to begin the healing process at the end
of that horrid war. He later served as Governor of his home
state of Maine for four terms and was the President of Bowdoin
College where he taught every subject in the curriculum except
mathematics. He was the last soldier to die of wounds received
in the War and even today is used as an example in leadership by
the US Army. |
First dedicated bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New
Hampshire. |
American General nicknamed "Old Leather Face", he organized the
daring "Flying Tigers" and was a heroic symbol to the Chinese
throughout World War II. |
Baptist Minister; Professor of Church History and Librarian of
the Baptist Bible Institute. The Library on the New Orleans
seminary campus bears his name. |
|
Chrysler, Walter P. |
Churchill, Winston |
Citroen, Andre |
Clark, Mark Wayne |
|
American automobile manufacturer who founded the Chrysler
Corporation. |
British politician and writer. Prime Minister (1940-1945 and
1951-1955). His inspiration is often credited with helping
Britain survive under the onslaught of Hitler's evil. |
French engineer and motor car manufacturer. |
US
Army General who commanded the American Fifth Army when it made
its initial landings on the Italian mainland. Later commanded
the 15th Army Group consisting of the British Eight and American
Fifth Armies as it effected the conquest of Italy. |
|
Clark, Montague Graham, Jr. |
Clark, Roy |
Clark, Tom C. |
Clark, William |
|
Presbyterian minister and President of the
School of
the Ozarks.
|
Country-Western star and singer; member of the Grand Ole Opry. |
Supreme Court Justice (1949-1967) |
American explorer and frontier politician who joined another
Freemason, Meriwether Lewis on the Lewis and Clark expedition
(1804-6), the first overland exploration of the American West
and Pacific Northwest. Clark was responsible for the careful
mapmaking. He later served as Native American agent and governor
of the Missouri Territory (1813-1821). |
|
Clarke, John H. |
Clay, Henry |
Clayton, Lou |
Cleaveland, Moses |
|
Supreme Court Justice (1916-1922) |
Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives and Grand Master of
Kentucky. |
Vaudevillian. He was part of the "Clayton and Durante"
Vaudeville act with Jimmy Durante. |
Active in the Revolutionary War, he was the Founder of
Cleveland, Ohio. |
|
Clemens, Samuel L. - Mark Twain |
Clinton, De Witt |
Clinton, George |
Cobb, Ty |
|
Writer and humorist. His famous works include the characters of
Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn. |
Mayor of New York City, Governor of New York, and presidential
candidate, he also served as Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of
New York. |
Third Vice President of the United States and first to die in
office. |
U.
S. baseball player and manager who was the first player elected
to the National Baseball Hall of Fame. |
|
Cody, "Buffalo Bill" William |
Cohan, George M. |
Cole, Nat 'King' |
Coleman, Frank |
|
American guide, scout and showman, he founded the "Wild West
Show" which toured Europe and America. Cody, Wyoming is named
after him. |
American composer and lyricist, famous for such songs as "Yankee
Doodle Dandy". |
Great pianist and ballad singer. |
Founder of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. |
|
Collins, Ray |
Collodi, Carlo |
Colt, Samuel |
Combs, Earle Bryan |
|
Actor who played "Lt. Tragg", the cop who was Perry Mason's
nemesis. |
Writer of 'Pinocchio'. |
Firearms inventor and manufacturer. He invented the first
revolver. |
Baseball Hall of Fame. |
|
Conner, W. T. |
Conz, Brian |
Craig, John B. |
Crockett, David 'Davy' |
|
Taught theology at Southwestern Seminary 1910--1949. |
NASCAR driver, he'll pilot the car being sponsored by the 32nd
Degree Scottish Rite Masons during 2007. |
Career US foreign service officer and current (1999) Ambassador
to the Sultanate of Oman. |
Frontiersman and politician. US Representative from Tennessee
who joined the Texas revolutionaries fighting against. Mexico.
He died at the siege of the Alamo. |
|
Crawford, James |
Crosby, Norm |
Crosley, Powel Jr. |
Crowe, William J. Jr. |
|
Rose from the lowest ranks to the top rungs of both the
Minnesota State Patrol (Chief 1973-1979) and the US Army
Reserves (Brig. General) and then served two terms as Mayor of
Forest Lake, MN. |
Comedian and entertainer best known for his malaproprisms.
Always seen on the Jerry Lewis telethons for muscular dystrophy
in the US. He is a Past Master of a Lodge in Massachusetts. Has
a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. |
Inventor, businessman, radio pioneer, and owner of a major
league baseball team, all in the city of Cincinnati, Ohio.
Senior citizens may well remember the very popular Crosley Radio
although this Mason achieved fame in many, many areas including
creation of his own automobile company and department store
chain. |
Served as Commander-in-Chief, US Pacific Command; Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff and sworn in as U.S. Ambassador to the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland on May 19,
1994. |
|
Cushing, William |
|
|
|
|
Supreme Court Justice. |
|
|
|
D
|
Dallas, George M. |
Darrah, Delmar |
Daub, Hal |
Dearborn, Major General Henry |
|
12th American Vice President, he also served as Minister to
Russia (1837-39) and to Great Britain (1856-61). |
Stimulus, imagination and drive for the founding of the American
Passion Play, a vivid portrayal of the life of Jesus of
Nazareth, for more than four decades, one of the Midwest US's
greatest religious dramas and the forerunner of all such plays
in the United States. |
Mayor of Omaha, Nebraska (2001). |
Ranking US Army commander during the War of 1812. |
|
DeBar, Ben |
Decroly, Ovide |
Delaney, Martin |
delPilar, Marcelo |
|
One of the most famous of the early day US actors and one of the
first of prominence to play in 'talkies'. |
Noted developer of educational psychology. |
African-American abolitionist and arguably the first proponent
of American Black Nationalism. Commissioned as a Major during
the Civil War, he was the first African-American Line Field
Officer in the United States Army. |
The "Father of Philippine Masonry", a lawyer who founded the
first daily newspaper published in the native Tagalog language. |
|
DeMille, Cecil B. |
Dempsey, (William Harrison) Jack |
Desaguliers, John Theophilus |
Devanter, Willis Van |
|
Film director. DeMille directed the first Hollywood film, The
Squaw Man, in 1914. DeMille became the creative genius behind
Paramount Pictures and was integral to Hollywood's development
as the film capitol of the world. Two of his greatest film
successes were The Ten Commandments (1923, remade 1956) and The
Greatest Show on Earth (1952). |
Became a professional boxer in 1912 and fought in more than 100
semi-pro and professional bouts before winning the heavyweight
championship in 1919. He successfully defended his title five
times before losing to Gene Tunney in an upset in 1926. In the
rematch in 1927, Dempsey knocked Tunney down in the seventh
round but delayed going to a neutral corner, so the referee gave
the controversial "long count" (estimated from 14 to 21 seconds)
and Tunney went on to win on points. Later became a restaurant
owner in New York. |
Inventor of the planetarium. |
Supreme Court Justice. |
|
Dickens, Little Jimmy |
Diefenbaker, John G. |
Dirksen, Everett M. |
Dixon, Lt. George |
|
Grand Old Opry member. |
Prime Minister of Canada 1957-63. |
American political leader, he served eight terms in the US House
of Representatives and became Republican minority leader of the
Senate. |
Commander of the ill-fated submarine Hunley during the US Civil
War. Lt. Hunley's love of Freemasonry was shown by the artifacts
recovered when the Hunley was found. |
|
Dole, Robert J. |
Dodge, Henry |
Doolittle, General James |
Douglas, James |
|
Decorated Veteran, World War II; U.S. Congressman and Senator
from Kansas, 1961–96; Majority and Minority Leader, U.S. Senate;
Nominee for President of the United States 1996; Humanitarian
and Philanthropist. |
First U.S. Marshal in Missouri, Governor of Wisconsin Territory,
Senator from Wisconsin. |
American Army officer and aviator, he led the daring raids on
Tokyo. |
Became Governor of Vermont in 2003. |
|
Douglas, William O. |
Dow, Herbert Henry |
Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan |
Drake, Edwin L. |
|
US
Supreme Court Justice for 36 years. |
Founded Dow Chemical Co. |
British physician and writer, creator of the famous "Sherlock
Holmes". |
American pioneer of the oil industry. |
|
Driver, Captain Thomas |
DuBois, W.E.B. |
Dunant, Jean Henri |
Dym, Jack |
|
In
1831 received a delegation of ladies aboard his ship, the SS
Charles. They presented him with a new flag which they had just
made. Touched by the unexpected gift, he immediately ordered the
new colors run up the mast and as he saluted declared, "I name
thee Old Glory." The name stuck and Bro. Driver carried "Old
Glory" twice around the world. |
Educator/Scholar and co-founder of the NAACP. |
Philanthropist who inspired the founding of the Red Cross. |
Known to New Yorkers as "Jack The Hack". Brother Dym was forced
to leave high school just days before his graduation to serve in
World War II. Upon his return, he became a New York City taxicab
driver - possibly the only friendly one, who gives
smiley face balloons to his passengers - and has been doing that
for some 57 years. Despite his own lack of a diploma, he put his
children and grandchildren through college even selling a rare
NYC taxi medallion (signifying ownership) for this purpose. In
2002, he wrote to his former high school and asked if he could
attend their graduation, having missed his so many years before:
the school welcomed his attendance with open arms and he even
'danced the night away' with the his wife of 50+ years and other
high school graduates at the senior prom - wearing (what else?)
the tuxedo he uses for Masonic events. Brother Dym was profiled
by Correspondent Bill Geist on a June 30, 2002 segment of the
nationally-aired CBS television program, Sunday Morning. Yet
another famous Mason! |
E
|
Easton, Rufus |
Ebbets, Charles H. |
Edson, Carroll A. |
Edward VII |
|
First postmaster west of the Mississippi River. |
Owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers baseball team and President of the
National League for 27 years. He build Ebbets Field. |
Co-founder of the Order of the Arrow, the Boy Scout honor
fraternity. |
Prince of Wales and subsequently King of England. |
|
Edward VIII |
Elgin, Lord |
Ellington, Duke |
Ellison, Sr., Dr. John Malcus |
|
King of England who abdicated the throne in less than 1 year in
order to marry the woman he loved. |
In
addition to being the Chief of the Name of Bruce, he is the
Convenor of the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs, retired
Brigadier General in the Scots Guard Reserve, and is a Knight of
the Thistle. He is a former Grand Master Mason of Scotland (the
Grand Master as styled in Scotland) and has been head of the
Royal Arch Chapter in Scotland for many years. Additionally he
is the worldwide head of the Royal Order of Scotland. |
American jazz composer, orchestrator, bandleader, and pianist,
considered the greatest composer in the history of jazz music
and one of the greatest musicians of the 20th Century. |
Past President of Virginia Union University and an author of
various Masonic publications. He was an active member of the
United Supreme Council - Southern Jurisdiction and a member of
Jonathan Lodge #112 F&AM, Richmond, VA. |
|
Ellsworth, Oliver |
Enzi, Michael B. |
Ernette, James L. |
Ervin Jr., Samuel J. |
|
The third Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court and responsible
for the term "United States" appearing in the Constitution. |
United States Senator (Wyoming) whose father was also an active
Mason and whose mother was a member of the Order of Eastern
Star. |
Pennsylvania State Trooper also served as Grand Master of the GL
of PA (1998-99). |
As
U.S. Senator from North Carolina, he led the "Watergate"
committee during the Nixon presidency and was widely praised for
his fair-handed behavior. |
|
Evanko, Col. Paul J. |
Evans, Bob |
|
|
|
Current (1999) Commissioner of the Pennsylvania State Police. |
Famous restaurateur, his eateries are found throughout the
United States. |
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F
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Faber, Eberhard |
Fairbanks, Douglas |
Farragut, David G. |
Feller, Bob |
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Head of the famous Eberhard Faber Pencil Company. |
American silent film actor known for his performance in
swashbuckling adventures such as 'Robin Hood'. |
Admiral, US Navy. Leading Union naval officer of the US Civil
War. |
Hall of Fame baseball pitcher with the 28th most winning record. |
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Fernández-Juncos, Manuel |
Fiala, Anthony |
Field, Stephen J. |
Fields, W. C. |
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Hero of Puerto Rico, the capital's second most important
boulevard is named after him. |
War correspondent and famous photographer of Brazilian and polar
expeditions. |
US
Supreme Court Justice (1863-1897). |
American entertainer known for his raspy voice, bulbous nose,
and sardonic disposition. His films include My Little
Chickadee (1940) and Never Give a Sucker an Even Break
(1941). |
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Fisher, Geoffrey |
Fitch, John |
Fleming, Sir Alexander |
Foelsche, Paul |
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English churchman, the 99th Archbishop of Canterbury. He became
Bishop of London in 1939, and archbishop of Canterbury in 1945.
Fisher was a distinguished pastor and administrator, helping to
reorganize the work of the Church of England after World War II.
As President of the World Council of Churches (1946-54), he was
a vigorous proponent of ecumenism. |
American inventor, who probably developed the first American
steamboat, an achievement often attributed to American inventor
Robert Fulton. |
British bacteriologist who discovered penicillin in 1928. He
shared a 1945 Nobel Prize for this achievement. |
First police inspector in Australia's Northwest Territories. |
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Ford, Gerald R. |
Ford, Glenn |
Ford, Henry |
Francis, Russell Ross |
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25
year Congressman and Minority Leader of the US House of
Representatives, he was appointed Vice President of the U.S. in
the wake of the Spiro Agnew scandal. When President Richard
Nixon resigned, he became the 38th President of the United
States. |
Famous US movie actor. |
Invented the first gasoline powered automobile in 1893, founded
Ford Motor Company in 1903 and mass-produced the first widely
available and affordable car. |
Professional football player: New England Patriots and San
Francisco 49ers. |
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Franklin, Benjamin |
Francona, Tito |
Frederick II "The Great" |
Fulton, Robert |
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American printer (he published the first book to come off the
press in the colonies - Anderson's Constitutions of 1723),
author, diplomat, philosopher, and scientist, whose
contributions to the American Revolution (1775-1783), and the
newly formed federal government that followed, rank him among
the country's greatest statesmen. He held the Masonic title of
Grand Master of Pennsylvania and was one of the 13 Masonic
signers of the Constitution of the United States. |
US
baseball player for the Cleveland Indians. He held a record for
the most hits for a player in under 400 at bats. |
King of Prussia (1712-1786) Effective military commander, music
composer, patron of literature and the arts and institutor of
many social reforms. |
Often referred to as a Mason (as a member of Hiram Lodge in New
York City), his Masonic membership cannot be established
factually. At least one Masonic Lodge was named for him -
Robert Fulton Lodge #104, New York, NY. |
G
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Gable, Clark |
Gardiner, William Tudor |
Garfield, James A. |
Gatchell, T. James (Jim) |
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American actor who played opposite nearly every major female
star during the 1930's. Perhaps best remembered for his role as
Rhett Butler in 'Gone with the Wind', he had received an Academy
Award as Best Actor (in the Best Movie) of 1934 ('It Happened
One Night'). |
Former Governor of Maine, USA later Brigadier General, US Army.
He was one of two American soldiers to enter Rome while still in
the hands of the enemy to negotiate the Italian surrender. |
The 20th President of the United States, he was assassinated in
1881 and his death was the cause of considerable mourning in the
US. |
With no formal post high school education, he became a
pharmacist, historian and collector. As a volunteer fireman, he
was injured twice and he acted as a physician during the 1918
flu epidemic and was involved in early skin graft. He was a
musician and was fluent in Lakota and Plains Indian sign
language. He collected historical objects from white pioneers
and Indians from the Buffalo, Wyoming area. He died in 1954 and
his collection is now the basis for a 2002 AAM accredited
facility collection. |
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Gates, John |
Gatling, Richard J. |
George VI |
Gerry, Elbridge |
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Known as "Bet-a-million" Gates, he was the founder of Texaco Oil
Company and popularized barbed wire. |
Inventor of the famous "Gatling Gun". |
King of England during World War II. |
American politician. Signer of the Declaration of Independence
and a delegate to the Continental Congress, he served as
Governor of Massachusetts (1810-1811) and Vice President of the
United States until his death (1813-1814). |
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Gibbon, Edward |
Gilbert, Sir William S. |
Gillette, King C. |
Gilman, Benjamin A. |
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Writer, perhaps best known for the classic 'Decline and Fall of
the Roman Empire'. |
British playwright and lyricist known for a series of comic
operas including "H.M.S. Pinafore" and "The Pirates of Penzance"
written with composer Sir Arthur Sullivan. |
American inventor and manufacturer who developed the safety
razor and founded the Gillette Safety Razor Co. |
One of the highest ranking members in seniority, a U.S.
congressman from the 20th New York District who in 1978 was
successful as a champion of human rights. |
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Girard, Stephen |
Glickman, Dan |
Godfrey, Arthur |
Goldwater, Barry |
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Born in France, he was an enormously successful merchant,
mariner and banker. He largely financed the U.S. government
during the War of 1812. |
US
Congressman from Kansas and Secretary of the US Department of
Agriculture. |
American television personality and one of the medium's dominant
stars throughout the 1950s as host of variety show programs.
This redhead's songs and skits with his ukulele entertained
millions. |
American politician, a conservative Republican he served as
Senator from Arizona and unsuccessfully ran for president in
1964. |
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Gompers, Samuel |
Goodman, E. Urner |
Goodnow, David |
Gorham, Bradford |
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He
led in the formation of the American Federation of Labor and
(with the exception of one year) headed it from 1886 to 1924. He
opposed socialism and communism and radicalism generally and
kept the movement focused on economic goals and job security. He
saw several reforms in child labor. |
Co-founder of the Order of the Arrow, a Boy Scout honor
fraternity. |
Newscaster and former long-time news anchor on CNN News. |
Former Rhode Island House Minority Leader, he served as Master
of his Masonic lodge. |
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Gorham, Nicholas |
Gowdy, Curtis E. "Curt" |
Graham, Albert Belmont |
Gray, Harold Lincoln |
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Son of Bradford and a RI State Representative. |
National television and radio sports announcer and commentator,
well known as the 'voice' of the Boston Red Sox. President of
the Basketball Hall of Fame. |
Father of the 4-H Rural Youth Program. |
Creator of "Little Orphan Annie". |
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Greeley, Adolphus |
Griffith, D. W. |
Grissom, Virgil "Gus" |
Grock |
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Noted polar explorer, a US stamp honors his achievements. |
Pioneer filmaker. |
Astronaut who made the second crewed spaceflight in 1961, he was
tragically killed in a launch pad explosion in 1967. |
Swiss Circus Clown, known as the "King of Clowns" and recognized
for his virtuosity in both circus and theatre. |
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Guillotin, Joseph Ignace |
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French physician and revolutionary who advocated for a more
humane method of death which came to bear his name. |
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H
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Hahnemann, Samuel |
Hall,
Prince |
Hamilton, Frederick William |
Hamilton, William W. |
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German physician and founder of homeopathy. His full name was
Christian Frederich Samuel. |
The man whose name is honored by generations of black Freemasons
who follow in his footsteps. There are several conflicting
stories of his life and achievements. |
Unitarian minister and President of Tufts College. |
Named the Southern Baptist Convention's Home Mission Board's
first head of the Department of Evangelism in 1906. He served as
president of Baptist Bible Institute (BBI), now the New Orleans
Baptist Theological Seminary, from 1927to 1943. While president,
he saved BBI from bankruptcy in 1932 when the school defaulted
on $353,000 in bonds. President of the SBC from 1940 to 1942. |
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Hampton, Lionel |
Hancock, John |
Harding, Warren G. |
Hardy, Oliver |
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Best known for playing the vibraphones, he is a jazz giant. |
One of nine Masons - and the first signer of the
Declaration of Independence, he was President of the Continental
Congress and served nine terms as Governor of Massachusetts. |
The 29th President of the United States. His political
appointments engaged in serious corruption leading to the
"Teapot Dome" scandal. He died in office. |
American comedian, famous for the slapstick abuse he inflicted
upon his partner, Stan Laurel. |
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Harlan, John M. |
Harrington, Jonathan |
Haydn, Franz Joseph |
Helms, Jesse |
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U.S. Supreme Court Justice. |
Last survivor of the Battle of Lexington. |
Austrian composer who exerted great influence on the development
of the classical symphony. |
Well-known conservative US Senator from North Carolina, he has
been a leader in the field of US foreign relations for decades. |
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Henry, Patrick |
Henley, Vernard W. Henley Sr. |
Henson, Matthew |
Herkimer, Nicholas |
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American colonial patriot, member of the Continental Congress,
he spurred the creation of the Virginia militia with the famous
words "Give me liberty or give me death". Later served as the
Governor of Virginia. |
C.E.O. and President, Consolidated Bank and Trust Co in
Richmond, Virginia, the oldest Black owned Bank in the United
States. Made a Mason at Sight in 1997 at the Annual Grand Lodge
Session held in Arlington, Va. by The Most Worshipful Grand
Master Of Virginia. (P.H.A.). |
Sole companion of Bro. Adm. Robert Peary when he discovered the
North Pole in 1909. He authored the book "A Negro Explorer at
the North Pole" and was honored by the White House before his
death. Celestial Lodge #3, PHA, NYC. |
Brigadier General of the US Revolution. |
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Herrmann, Alexander |
Hershey, Lewis |
Herter, Christian |
Hoban, James |
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"King of Magic". |
Director of the U.S. Selective Service for 30 years. |
Diplomat and Journalist; Under Secretary of State, Governor of
Massachusetts and United States Congressman. |
Irish-born American architect who designed and supervised the
construction (1793-1801) and renovation (1815-1829) of the White
House in Washington, DC. |
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Hobbs, Herschell Harold |
Hoe, Richard M. |
Holland, Leonard |
Holliday, Frank Jr. |
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An
ordained Southern Baptist minister for 69 years, he wrote at
least 147 books and Bible commentaries used in Southern Baptist
churches. He preached more than 700 sermons on the syndicated
radio program, the "Baptist Hour" between 1958 and 1978. He was
president of the Southern Baptist Convention from 1961-63. He
was raised a Master Mason in Siloam Lodge No. 276 in Oklahoma
City at the age of 54, which was during his first term as
president of the Southern Baptist Convention. He became a
Scottish Rite Mason in 1966 while a preacher on the "Baptist
Hour". |
Inventor and businessman. |
Longtime Adjutant General of the Rhode Island National Guard. |
American motion picture actor of the 1930s. |
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Hoover, Frank |
Hoover, J. Edgar |
Hornish, Jr., Sam |
Hornsby, Rogers |
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A
brand of vacuum cleaners is named after him. |
American Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(1924-1972). He is remembered for fighting gangsterism during
the Prohibition ear (1919-1933) and for a vigorous
anti-Communist campaign after World War II. |
Race car driver, he was the youngest champion of a major, North
American open-wheel series in modern racing history. In 2001, he
lead the Indy Northern Light Series from start to finish. |
US
baseball player, led the National League in hitting for 5 years
and had a lifetime batting average second only to Bro. Ty Cobb. |
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Horton, Frank Reed |
Horton, Tim |
Houdini, Harry (Ehrich Weiss) |
Houston, Sam |
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Lawyer, textbook author, Scouter, and Founder of the Alpha Phi
Omega service fraternity, an organization at the forefront of
college service fraternities. |
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