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NATIONAL SOJOURNERS, INC.
SERVING AMERICA
National
Sojourners, Inc. is a national fraternal organization meeting the needs of
military Masons and advancing programs that promote love of country.
Membership in National
Sojourners is open to citizens of the United States who are Master Masons in
good standing in a duly constituted Lodge of Master Masons recognized by and
maintaining fraternal relations with a majority of the Regular Grand Lodges
in the United States and who are serving or have served honorably as;
a Commissioned Officer
or Warrant Officer of the uniformed services of the United States, a Senior
Non-Commissioned Officer of the uniformed services of the United States,
(E5, 6 & 7 prior to 1958 - E7, 8 & 9 as of 1958), have served in time of war
as a Commissioned Officer or Warrant Officer or the equivalent in an armed
service of a nation allied with the United States, or are regularly elected
to Honorary Membership.
A Brief History:
Although the term "sojourner" is common in Freemasonry, it takes on new
meaning under the aegis of National Sojourners, Inc. This Order, founded to
meet the needs of the Military Mason in war and peace, has as one of its
precepts the words of George Washington, who once said: “When one assumes
the soldier, he does not lay aside the citizen. “The Order traces its origin
to the time when the North Dakota Regiment departed the Philippines taking
with it the Field Lodge Dispensation which had filled the needs of Masons
while they were there. In its place a club of Masonic “sojourners” was
formed. In 1901 sixteen of these “Sojourners,” representing 13 Grand
jurisdictions, demitted from their home Lodges and were granted a Lodge
Charter by the Grand Lodge of California. Of course, by instituting a formal
Blue Lodge, they negated their purpose for being and, therefore, ceased to
exist. In 1913, Surgeon Capt. Harry Eugene Stafford, 33°, Chartering Master
of the Manila Lodge which replaced the “Sojourners Club,” became the first
Grand Master of the new Grand Lodge of the Philippines.
The idea for a
sojourners club to serve the needs of displaced military Masons revived,
however, when, in 1917, a group of Masonic Military Officers met in the
Hamilton Club in Chicago. They agreed that, in the absence of the Military
Lodges of earlier times, there was a need for a national Masonic
organization which would serve the requirements of Masonic Brethren from
various parts of the country who were thrown together by virtue of their
military service. The Order they started grew rapidly, from a 15-man club in
1917 to a national corporation in 1927 with membership then approaching
20,000.The purposes of National Sojourners, Inc., affirm their
responsibilities to Brother Masons, the Masonic Fraternity, and the nation.
Sojourners traditionally sponsor and coach most military personnel
petitioning for Masonic membership, thus providing a bridge between the
local military and the Masonic Lodges. Sojourner efforts are directed toward
Americanism
and support of Masonic programs and policies. Americanism activities include
patriotic ceremonies, speeches, presentations, and other actions intended to
promote love of country with special emphasis on the youth of the nation.
More information can be found by visiting
the National Sojourner's
website.
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