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From the Grand Secretary

From the Grand Secretary & Grand Scribe E

Afew years ago, when I wrote my first Welcome column, I spoke of the three key tasks I was charged with as the newly appointed CEO for UGLE. The first was to bring together the operational and masonic sides of UGLE headquarters, the second was to modernise the way in which we administered the organisation and the third was to change the public perception of Freemasonry. The first and second were achievable using well-worn change management and people management tools. The third, however, requires something significant from you, and is far more difficult to realise.

I meet many people who ask me about the ‘Enough is Enough’ campaign – a line in the sand that declared the way we talk to the public about ourselves was about to change. Since that campaign we have reshaped the UGLE Communications team, polled and ‘focus grouped’ our way to realising precisely what the public think of us, and looked carefully at how we should portray ourselves.

It shouldn’t surprise you to learn that we need to start talking openly and proudly about who we are and what we do – what is our purpose? We don’t need to reinvent ourselves or pretend to be something we’re not, for we have a fabulous story to tell and more than 300 years of heritage and history to be proud of. We now have the resourcing, the will and the understanding to stop apologising for all those things which we are supposed to ‘be up to’ and start portraying the positive image we deserve. We don’t need to spoil the experience for prospective members by going into detail about our ceremonies; neither should we repeat the mistakes of other institutions by thinking that ‘modernising’ our language will solve all our problems. But is there anything wrong with explaining that the First Degree teaches us that all are created equal; the Second, that there is merit in improving ourselves; and the Third, that we have but one life to use wisely? Who could argue with such fundamental truths? Here’s where you come in. We are an organisation with 48 ‘branch offices’. Each and every one of them must start to work with each other, and with us, to portray a coherent message to the public. We need to give you the tools to tell your stories in the best and most consistent way possible.

National campaigns will be much more effective if we understand the power in acting together with the same goal and purpose. This will be a first for UGLE, which has always jealously guarded the federated structure we have operated for centuries. But communications is a funny beast, and one or two dissenting voices will be seized upon and become the national story.

We are tentatively dipping our toes into interesting – and dangerous – times, and we do not expect it to be all plain sailing. To help steer our path, we have the Communications and Marketing Working Party of the Board, chaired by RWB Ian Chandler, the Provincial Grand Master for Surrey, which consists of Provincial Grand Masters from each of the nine Regional Communications Groups. At an operational level, each Province has Provincial Communications Officers reporting to the PGMs but tied directly to the Communications Department here at UGLE. They act as a link between the centre and Provincial Communications structures and help us to ensure we are all pulling in the same direction.

In this way, we hope the strategy is set by our most senior members, with hundreds of years of masonic experience between them, advised appropriately by subject matter experts, and implemented in a professional, coordinated and timely way nationally.

For the first time in our history, we will be producing an Annual Report – but this will not be a bland corporate glossy. It will be a

‘We don’t need to reinvent ourselves or pretend to be something we’re not, for we have a fabulous story to tell and more than 300 years of heritage and history to be proud of’

document with two main objectives: to show you, our members, what UGLE does with your membership fees and how we are administered and run, and what we hope to achieve in the future. It will also act as a reference document for the press and public, expanding on our core leaflets, website and messaging to show the breadth of what our members do: over 18 million hours of unpaid charitable, civic and voluntary activities a year. At National Living Wage, that would equate to over £167 million worth of activity – all in addition to our annual charitable spend of some £50 million!

More than half of Freemasons are actively encouraged to participate by our lodges or other lodge members and, despite being clearly predisposed to charitable giving, 58 per cent of our members have increased their charitable activities since becoming Freemasons. We have always been charitable, but for too long we have hidden our light, and we won’t do so any longer. So hold on to your hats, because in the next 18 months you’re going to hear a lot about Freemasonry. Look out for our Annual Report, to be published around the April Investitures, and get involved in the national campaigns we will be running to position us where we once were, firmly in the public gaze. We are an organisation which is proud of the integrity of its members, the friendships and connections they will make, the good they do for the communities from which they are drawn and the fun we have along the journey.

Dr David Staples Grand Secretary and Grand Scribe E

The official journal of the United Grand Lodge of England Issue 49 ~ Spring 2020

Editor-in-Chief DKS Editor Donna Hardie Editorial Panel Michelle Worvell, Dr Ric Berman, Dr James Campbell, Guy Roberts, Shaun Butler, Dean Simmons, Barry Hughes, Julian Perry (Culture editor) Published by Sunday for the United Grand Lodge of England, Freemasons’ Hall, Great Queen Street, London WC2B 5AZ Editorial Manager Shaun Butler editor@freemasonrytoday.com Freemasonry Today, Freemasons’ Hall, Great Queen Street, London WC2B 5AZ Advertising contact Mark Toland mark@square7media.co.uk 020 3283 4056 Square7 Media Ltd, 3 More London Riverside, London SE1 2RE Circulation fmt@freemasonrytoday.com 020 7395 9392 Masonic enquiries editor@freemasonrytoday.com 020 7831 9811 www.ugle.org.uk

Printed by Walstead Roche © United Grand Lodge of England 2020. The opinions herein are those of the authors or persons interviewed only and do not reflect the views of the United Grand Lodge of England or Sunday.

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3 From the Grand Secretary Dr David Staples welcomes you to the spring issue Out and about

7 News and views from the Provinces  Stories

16 In the scrum A look at Wales’s first rugby lodge and its support of grassroots rugby

20 Comforting children The Teddies for Loving Care initiative has given 2.5 million soft toys for children in distress in A&E wards

23 Civic celebration Metropolitan Grand Lodge is represented at the Lord Mayor’s Show in London

24 Historical discovery Rare antique tracing boards found in Bank of England Lodge’s vaults

26 Medical breakthroughs The Freemasons Fund for Surgical Research supports groundbreaking work by surgeons

28 Speaking up

Freemason James Innes on talking openly about depression

32 The Interview: John Tully

As Director of Masonic Services, John helps UGLE run like clockwork A daily advancement

38 Clerk and Craft William Cowper was an 18th-century Freemason with a strong sense of duty

40 Lucky finds Favourite treasures at the Museum of Freemasonry

42 Was Isaac Newton a Freemason? Exploring the natural philosopher’s links to the Craft

44 On the side: Royal Ark Mariners The degree based on the story of Noah and the ark  Grand Lodge

48 In Quarterly Communication Pro Grand Master Peter Lowndes on making the most of masonic halls

51 Project Hermes Progress on the web-based system designed to make lodge life easier

52 What’s on From a new museum exhibition to a Grand Temple organ concert

54 An iconic jewel The history of the Hall Stone jewel tells the story of Freemasons’ Hall  Culture

59 Reviews, cartoons and crosswords  In the community

65 Building better lives Showcasing how the Masonic Charitable Foundation supports Freemasons, their family members, and local and national charities  Fraternal world

69 Home and abroad UGLE lodges around the world

72 Letters and social media

82 Thēsauros Unusual views from masonic history

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