Truman
Lecture Series The
Lodge of Research has extended its
program of having a speaker at its
annual communication, to bringing
nationally and internationally known
Masonic speakers and authors to
present an informational lecture to
the members of the Lodge of
Research.
September 28, 2010
- Columbia, MO - Holiday Inn Executive
Center
The Missouri Lodge of Research is pleased to announce that the next "Truman Lecturer" will be well-known author, scholar and speaker,
Trevor Stewart
Trevor Stewart is a retired lecturer who was educated at Birmingham, Sheffield, Durham and Newcastle Universities. His academic work specialised in English eighteenth-century
English literature and his doctoral research focused on a coterie of Enlightenment gentlemen freemasons who lived in the north of England.
Bro. Stewart continued to give fully documented papers on various masonic subjects in American, Belgian, French, German and Scottish lodges – at both lodge and Provincial Grand Lodge levels - as well as in many English Lodges, Royal Arch Chapters and in London’s ancient Guildhall. He has also taught in history seminars at Cambridge, Oxford and Harvard Universities (2004) which focused on newly discovered contributions made by early eighteenth-century English freemasons to the development and spread of ‘Newtonianism’. In October 2007 he was invited by the Pennsylvania Grand Lodge Masonic Academy to give his paper on ‘A Way Forward – some seminar techniques’. He was the keynote speaker at the 2010 annual dinner of the Philalethes Society in Minneapolis. He was invited by the Grand Lodge of Romania to address their May 2010 communication in Huniazilor Castle and by the National Grand Lodge of Greece in June 2010 at their communication in Athens.
Bro. Stewart contributed papers on Freemasonry in the Enlightenment period to international conferences held at the Canonbury Masonic Research Centre (London), the University of Bordeaux and the first and second international UK conferences on the history of Freemasonry in Edinburgh (2007 & 2009). He has published several papers in the annual transactions of the Quatuor Coronati Lodge (AQC) and of the Leicester Lodge of Research, in Hibiscus (GL of Florida) and in The Ashlar, the leading Scottish masonic quarterly. He edited two volumes of The Canonbury Papers (2005 & 2006) for the Canonbury Masonic Research Centre (London). He has published numerous lectures in bound pamphlet format, a world-renowned English translation of Martinez de Pasqually’s crucial esoteric text Treatise on the Reintegration of Beings; and he has recently published a fully illustrated monograph on the famous 1702 Haughfoot Lodge, which formerly existed in the Scottish Borders region. He is planning three new books on the hitherto unpublished non-masonic writings of William Hutchinson (1732-1814), the founder of English masonic symbolism.
In 2004 Bro. Stewart was appointed by the United Grand Lodge of England to be its Prestonian Lecturer. He is a Past Master of three English Lodges, including the Quatuor Coronati Lodge No. 2076 (English Constitution) and in June 2010 was installed as the Right Worshipful Master of Lodge ‘Sir Robert Moray’ No. 1641 (the leading Scottish research lodge - Edinburgh).
In December 2007 he was elected to Honorary Membership of both The Alpha Lodge No. 116 (New Jersey) and St. John’s Lodge No. 1 (New York City). He was elected subsequently to Honorary Memberships of the Cincinnati and the Atlas-Pythagoras Lodges (New Jersey) and he is particularly delighted to be associated so strongly with such distinguished New Jersey masonic bodies. He was created Right Worshipful Grand Lecturer (Honorary) by the Grand Lodge of New Jersey in September 2009. He was created a Ninth Grade (Magus) by the SRICF in Washington DC (February 2007). He edited ‘From Across the Water’ an anthology of eight past papers from AQC on North American Freemasonry in the colonial era (copies may still available from the Scottish Rite Research Society, Washington DC).
Bro. Stewart has held office in all of the Orders which grace the English Masonic landscape, is a Life Member of various Scottish Orders - including the Grand Lodge of the Royal Order of Scotland - has been honoured in the Rectified Scottish Rite in Belgium and in the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite in Germany. In SRIA he was a member of its High Council, a Chief Adept of a Province, the Director-General of Studies and an active member of its Executive Committee. He edited the SRIA Transactions (2005).
Dr. Stewart is an entertaining speaker who is able to inject energy and enthusiasm into his educational programs. Trevor has announced that he will deliver a lecture entitled "Ripples in a Pool".
Abstract:
This new research paper presents a tentative model for doing masonic
research. Using the image of a stone creating concentric ripples in a
pool of water, Bro. Stewart examines narrative, contextual and philosophic
approaches to masonic history - as ever widening frames of
historiographical reference - and illustrates this model with detailed
reference to an actual event,something awful which was done to a little
inconsequential and modest Austrian-born freemason, Bro.Gustav Petri, in
England in 1915 just after the outbreak of the First World War. Bro.
Stewart outlines the narrative, contextual and philosophic implications of
this incident and uses it to propose a general model for others wishing to
do their own masonic research.
May 22, 2010 -
Columbia, MO - Masonic Complex
The Missouri Lodge of
Research is proud to present for its
next Truman Lecture Series speaker:
Author,
Editor and Scholar
Michael
A. Halleran
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Michael
A. Halleran is a freelance
writer and a practicing attorney
in the Flint Hills of
East-Central Kansas. A
lecturer at Emporia State
University, he is also an active
Freemason, belonging to both
Emporia Lodge No. 12, A.F.&
A.M., and Mount Zion Lodge
No. 266 A.F.& A.M.,
Topeka, Kansas.
Halleran received the Mackey
Award for Excellence in Masonic
Scholarship by the Scottish Rite
Research Society for his article
on Civil War Freemasonry in that
society’s journal: Heredom,
vol. 14 (2006). In addition, he
is the author of a regular
column for The Scottish Rite
Journal.
He is a member of the Quatuor
Coronati Correspondence Circle,
and the Scottish Rite Research
Society where he studies
American military Masonry and
the traditions of military
lodges worldwide."
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Bro. Halleran is
the author of the book The
Better Angels of Our Nature;
Freemasonry in the American
Civil War: |
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One
of the enduring yet little
examined themes in Civil War
lore is the widespread
belief that on the field of
battle and after, members of
Masonic lodges would give
aid and comfort to wounded or
captured enemy Masons,
often at great personal
sacrifice and danger.
This work is a deeply researched
examination of the recorded,
practical effects of
Freemasonry among Civil War
participants on both sides.
From first-person accounts
culled from regimental
histories, diaries, and
letters, the author has
constructed an overview of 19th
century American freemasonry in
general and Masonry in the
armies of both North and
South in particular, and an
exploration of how Masonic
fraternization worked in
practice. Halleran details the
response of the fraternity to
the crisis of secession and war,
and examines acts of assistance
to putative enemies on the
battlefield and in POW camps
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More information on
Bro. Halleran and his works are
available at his website http://michaelhalleran.com
Bro. Halleran will have his books
available for purchase and will be
available to personally autograph
them.
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September 22, 2009
- Columbia, MO - MO Lodge of Research
Breakfast at Annual Grand Lodge
Communication
WB Christoper L.
Hodapp author of Freemasons for
Dummies
EXCLUSIVE!
2009 Lodge of Research Breakfast -
Author Christopher Hodapp on "The
Dan Brown Effect" - Freemasonry
& The Lost Symbol - Audio
presentation
A
special note from Author Christopher
Hodapp
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