| THE REBECCA MASONIC DIRECTORY The first ever easy-to-use guide to freemasonry. The Directory is part of the paid-for content of REBECCA. |
| PROVINCES Details of the 47 provinces in England and Wales and the Metropolitan Grand Lodge of London. |
| LODGES by NAME An alphabetical list of lodges and the places where they meet. |
| LODGES by PLACE An alphabetical list of cities and towns with full details of the lodges which meet there including identified members. |
| A to Z of Masons An alphabetical list of identified freemasons. |
There are a quarter of a million masons in England and Wales. The governing body, the United Grand Lodge of England, holds computerised registers and it would be a simple matter for them to place these online.![]() |
| The basic unit of masonry is the craft lodge. They meet, in secret, in special rooms called Temples. This is the Edgar Rutter Temple in Cardiff. |
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| The Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England is the Duke of Kent. A cousin of both the Queen and the Duke Of Edinburgh, he’s been Grand Master since 1967. He continues a long line of Royal freemasons although Prince Charles is not a member. The Duke has supported greater openness about freemasonry: “this change in culture towards open communications has rsulted, for the good, in a greater understanding of Masonic affairs by the general public …” |
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| Hanging from the ceiling of masonic temples is the letter G. It stands for the Great Architect in the sky, in other words the God that an individual believes in. The Supreme Being is the ultimate mason… |
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| Jim Bevan is secretary of the Provincial Grand Lodge of South Wales. Each of the 47 provinces in England and Wales have the right to decide how it deals with the media. Some provinces, such as Essex and South Wales, make their yearbooks available to journalists. Others, including West Lancs and North Wales, do not... |
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| In 1997 the Commons’ Home Affairs Committee investigated the role of freemasonry in the police and the judiciary. The Committee called for a register but the Blair government decided against despite a promise to introduce one … |
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| HOW YOU CAN HELP REBECCA needs the help of supporters to continue the work of building up the Masonic Directory. If you have copies of provincial yearbooks or lodge summonses, please email us with details so we can decide if they will be useful. ANOTHER important role is to tell us when we have made mistakes. There are hundreds of thousands of separate pieces of information in the directory and there are bound to be errors, some of them in the original masonic source material but also ones that REBECCA has made. |
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| The United Grand Lodge told the Home Affairs Committee there were 349,213 individual masons in February 1997. When REBECCA asked for the current number of masons, a spokesman said “I regret I do not have these statistics and it would take me an age to get them.” REBECCA was able to estimate the number by working out what has happened to membership in South Wales. In the last 13 years the number of masons in the province has fallen by 22 per cent. If that figure was accurate across the whole of England and Wales, the number of masons would have dropped to around the 270,000 mark. In fact, that’s probably an overstatement -- the UGLE website itself refers to 250,000 masons… |
| THE REBECCA MASONIC DIRECTORY The first ever easy-to-use guide to freemasonry. The Directory is part of the paid-for content of REBECCA. |
| PROVINCES Details of the 47 provinces in England and Wales and the Metropolitan Grand Lodge of London. |
| LODGES by NAME An alphabetical list of lodges and the places where they meet. |
| LODGES by PLACE An alphabetical list of cities and towns with full details of the lodges which meet there including identified members. |
| A to Z of MASONS An alphabetical list of identified freemasons. |