Freemasonry is a worldwide fraternal organization
whose members are joined together by shared ideals
of both a moral and metaphysical nature, and, in most
of its branches, by a common belief in a Supreme Being.
Freemasonry is an esoteric art – certain aspects
of its internal work and business are not generally
revealed to the public.
Freemasonry uses an initiatory
system of degrees to explore ethical and philosophical
issues. It often calls itself "a
peculiar system of morality veiled in allegory and illustrated
by symbols."
There are three initial degrees of Freemasonry:
- Entered
Apprentice
- Fellow Craft
- Master Mason
As one works through the degrees, one studies
the lessons and interprets them for oneself. There
are as many ways
to interpret the rituals as there are Masons, and no
Mason may dictate to any other Mason how he is to interpret
them. No particular truths are espoused, but a common
structure—speaking symbolically to universal human
archetypes—provides for each Mason a means to come
to his own answers to life's important questions.
It
has been said that: "the Freemason builds his
life around the moral principals that lie at the heart
of the Craft, and becomes in
his every word and deed the epitome of brotherly love, relief
and truth – he will thus respect the rights of
others to hold beliefs and attitudes that differ radically
from his own, for he knows that tolerance is an essential
part of brotherly love."

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Freemasonry is not a secret society and throughout
history prominent members of the fraternity have made
no secret of their involvement. As a result, many famous
(and infamous) Freemasons are well known, running the
gamut from dictators to revolutionaries, segregationists
to civil rights leaders, industrialists to labor activists.
The membership of Freemasonry is vast, diverse, and
resists any single characterization.
Masonic membership can sometimes be difficult to verify,
particularly for historical figures. Membership records
are most often kept at the individual Lodge level,
and may be lost due to fire, flood, deterioration,
or simple carelessness. Grand Lodge governance may
have shifted or reorganized, resulting in further loss
of records on the member or the name, number, location
or even existence of the Lodge in question. In areas
of the world where Masonry has been suppressed by governments,
records of entire Grand Lodges have been destroyed.
What follows is a sampling of famous Masons:
| US Presidents |
Notables |
James Buchanan
Gerald Ford
James A. Garfield
Warren G. Harding
Andrew Jackson
Andrew Johnson
Lyndon Johnson (Entered Apprentice)
Abraham Lincoln
William McKinley
James Monroe
James K. Polk
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Theodore Roosevelt
William Howard Taft
Harry S. Truman
George Washington |
Edwin E. "Buzz" Aldrin,
Jr.
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
P.G.T. Beauregard
Irving Berlin
Mel Blanc
Omar N. Bradley
William Jennings Bryan
Robert Burns
Aaron Burr
Joshua Chamberlain
Winston Churchill
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
Ty Cobb
William "Buffalo Bill" Cody
Samuel Colt
Davy Crockett
Cecil B. DeMille
Bob Dole
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Henry Ford
Benjamin Franklin
Clark Gable
George Gershwin
Edward Gibbon
Gilbert and Sullivan
John Glenn
Virgil I. "Gus" Grissom
John Hancock
Patrick Henry
J. Edgar Hoover
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Harry Houdini
Sam Houston
King Hussein of Jordan
Rudyard Kipling
Marquis de Lafayette
Lewis and Clark
Charles Lindbergh
Douglas MacArthur
George Marshall
Andrew W. Mellon
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Horatio Nelson
Arnold Palmer
John J. Pershing
George Pickett
Paul Revere
Peter Sellers
Winfield Scott
Sir Ernest Shackleton
Joseph Smith
Red Skelton
John Philip Sousa
Jonathan Swift
Voltaire
John Wayne
Oscar Wilde
Jonathan Winters
Steve Wozniak
Brigham Young
Cy Young |
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