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View Full Version : Anyone a member of this org.?



Big Muddy
07-20-2014, 09:51 AM
We are starting a chapter here in my hometown....got to be a Master Mason, CO, Senior NCO, or WO.

Just wondering, if any of you guys are members.



http://www.nationalsojourners.org/

Captain
07-20-2014, 10:27 AM
No Eddie I'm not. Never hear of them. Looks like a good outfit and one that has their goals in order.
I could not get the history page to load however. I'll have to try it on my real computer. History is where I go first... :-)

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Niner
07-20-2014, 12:10 PM
Wowsers, looks to be a pretty exclusive group too.
I ain't no Mason, and I wasn't in the Navy long enough to become a Chief.....so I recon I'll have to sit on the side and just watch as the parade goees by.

quercus alba
07-20-2014, 12:40 PM
I watch Perry Mason, does that count? How about if I stayed at a holiday Inn Express?

Big Muddy
07-20-2014, 12:53 PM
Cap, I'll save you the download time.....

History

National Sojourners, Inc., has an unequaled military Masonic history. Born of the requirements of wartime, the Order has been nurtured by the desire of displaced military Masons to seek each other’s company, counsel and aid.

Early in 1900, after the North Dakota Regiment departed the Philippines with its Field Lodge dispensation, a group of Masons organized an informal club and named it “Sojourners.” In 1901, these Sojourners provided the impetus, funds and paraphernalia to charter Manila Lodge under the Grand Lodge of California. One of the original Sojourners, Surgeon Captain Harry Eugene Stafford, 33˚, Chartering Master of Manila Lodge, in 1913 became the first Grand Master of the newly created Grand Lodge of the Philippine Islands.

The Philippine “Sojourners Club” resurfaced in 1907, open to Masons who were not members of local Lodges; within a year it had nearly 200 members from every state and territory and eight foreign countries. Most of the Philippine Sojourners eventually became scattered throughout the United States. A group of these Masonic military officers sojourning in Chicago in 1917 formally organized the “Chicago Sojourners Club.”

Additional clubs were quickly formed at Army posts and Naval bases under the name “National Sojourners Club.” In 1927, the word “Club” was dropped and we became “National Sojourners, Incorporated” in 1931.

The “Purposes of National Sojourners” affirm our responsibilities to our Brothers, our Fraternity and our Nation. In the absence of local Blue Lodges, Sojourner chapters have in effect, replaced the military Lodges of the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries. Sojourner actions, similar to those in the Philippines, have been directly responsible for chartering numerous Blue Lodges and other Masonic bodies worldwide.
Whenever regular Masonic Lodges are present, active duty Sojourners routinely affiliate and energetically participate. Sojourners traditionally sponsor the majority of military personnel petitioning for Masonic membership and stimulate our military Brothers, past and present, to reestablish and strengthen their Masonic ties.

Sojourner efforts are directed toward Americanism and Masonic activities. Patriotic activities include speeches, flag ceremonies, presentations and other actions intended to promote national security and true love of country, with special emphasis on youth. Our service to the Craft through our Bridge of Light Program strengthens Masonry by involving Sojourners in all Masonic activities, especially in the Blue Lodges.

Our National Headquarters is located at the Collingwood Library and Museum on Americanism, north of Mount Vernon on part of George Washington’s original River Farm. It is appropriate that our dedicated military-Masonic Order is permanently associated with our country’s most distinguished soldier-Mason and the ideals that he represented.