Trestle Board. Saint Andrew s 56. July 4th! Independence Day!

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Saint Andrew s 56 Trestle Board JULY 2018 JULY 2018 Inside this issue: Up Coming Events Upcoming Events 1 Masters Message 2 More Light: Happy independence Day! 3,4 2018 Officers 5 Past Masters 5 Contact 5 July 4th! Independence Day! July 8, Saint Andrews by the Sea. Please join us for a special Sunday service. We will attend the 10am service. Meet up at the Lodge at 8:30 am to pick up regalia and dress, we ll carpool over to the Church in Rye. Officers Attire: tux July 9, Saint Andrews Stated Communication. 6pm Dinner, 7pm Business. Officer s attire: Tux July 25th, Masters Class. 7pm - 9pm. Star In the East Lodge, Exeter. Back Page 6 Stated Communications will be held on the 2nd Monday of each month. Dinner at 6:00 P.M Meeting at 7:00 P.M, Officers Attire: Tux, Reservations to Craig Brown 436-9208 Special Communications may be called at the pleasure of the Worshipful Master. *Examinations may be held at Stated or Special Communications

PAGE 2 NEWS LETTER TITLE JULY 2018 Masters Message Greetings Brothers and friends, Thank you to everyone who came out for our annual Strawberry Festival. After enjoying a great BBQ from chef Phil, we were treated to a program and demonstration from the NH State Police, Trooper Kevin Devlin and his partner Wyatt. While Wyatt was busy showing off his obedience skills, Trooper Devlin shared his training and live being a Canine Officer with the State Police. Many questions were asked, and a good time was had by all. Saint Andrew s Lodge will be traveling again this year to Saint Andrew s by the Sea on Sunday July 8 th. Services are at 10:00. The chapel is located at 30 Church Road in Rye. Officers attire is tuxedo with apron and jewel. We should meet up at the Lodge at 9:00 and carpool down. At our stated on the 9 th we will be having hamburgers, hotdogs and sausage. RW Brother William Sawyer will be joining us and presenting a program on his experiences traveling to England and visiting Lodges there. It proves to be a great program. At the latest Masters and Wardens Association Meeting the Visitation schedule was set. Saint Andrew s Visitation will be on September 10 th. There is a new format for visitations this year. As part of the evening the Officers will be performing the first section of the Fellow Craft degree. Plans are underway for a baseball trip in August, so stay tuned. Also, in August we will be conferring the Fellow Craft Degree on Brother Browne on our stated meeting. This is also our Inspection and rehearsals are scheduled for August 6 th and the 11 th or 12 th. I hope that you all get a chance to spend some time enjoying the summer and get in some great cook outs and fun. I hope to see you in Lodge, Daniel Perry

NEWS LETTER TITLE JULY 2018 More light Happy Independence Day, July 4! (or was it July 2, or August 2, or was it.) On every July 4 th we, as a nation, celebrate the signing of the Declaration of Independence, or as many have come to call it over the past century-and-a-half, the birth certificate of the United States. The glorious fourth, a term first used at a Philadelphia dinner party on July 4, 1777 in celebration of the first anniversary of independence, rapidly spread as a Secondary name for Independence Day. It wasn t until 1783 however, that the fourth was recognized as an official holiday when North Carolina Governor, and Mason, Alexander Martin became the first American governor to issue a state order for celebrating the Fourth of July. Although it was celebrated in the majority of states by the mid 1800s, in was not until July of 1870 the Glorious Fourth became an official Federal Holiday. In 1968 Congress realigned most federal holidays so as to fall on a Monday, with the exception of four (due to the significance of the date the holiday fell on): New Years, Christmas, Independence Day, and Veterans Day. Even though it took Congress nearly a century to make the Glorious fourth a holiday, as far back as the summer of 1776 there were visionaries like John Adams who knew the future of Independence Day would be a major day of celebration in America. While the Second Continental Congress met during that hot Philadelphia summer, Adams frequently wrote to his wife Abigail updating her on what was going on in the Congress. On July 3, 1776 Adams wrote a three page to his wife that included this passage: The Second Day of July 1776, will be the most memorable Epocha, in the History of America. I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival. It ought to be commemorated, as the Day of Deliverance by solemn Acts of Devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more. Wait a minute. What did Adams mean by July 2 nd didn t he mean the fourth??? And did he lose track of time and by mistake date his letter to Abigail the third instead of the fourth? The answer to both questions is no: Adams was accurate about both the second and the third. And for those who insist he had to be wrong about the second, than how does one account for the fact that in the late afternoon of July 2, 1776 the Philadelphia Evening Post published the story that the Continental Congress had, that day, declared the American colonies independent of the British Empire? Maybe we need to go back and retrace events to figure out what actually occurred on and near the Fourth

When the Second Continental Congress convened in May of 1775, the British army and American militia forces had already clashed at the battle of Lexington-Concord in Massachusetts. By the late spring of 1776 Massachusetts two irritating little neighbors to the north and south (New Hampshire and Rhode Island, respectively) had already established state governments: both declaring themselves independent of British authority. By early June of 1776 the Congress felt it was losing control of the political situation in the colonies. With a third of the delegates to the Congress still wanting to find a way to patch things up with the mother country and near another third not sure what to do, the independence faction found it still had an uphill struggle on its hands. A breakthrough came in mid-june when an agreement was finally made to appoint a sub-committee of five men to draft an independence document that would state Congress reasons for severing the political bonds between the thirteen colonies and England. This did not necessarily mean independence was going to be declared, but if that did happen Congress would at least have a document ready that explained the break and the reasoning behind it. Most of that document was written by committee member Thomas Jefferson, but it was heavily edited and sent back several times for revisions. In mid-june a Virginia delegate and Mason, Richard Henry Lee made a motion to declare the colonies independent of Great Britain, but it was tabled for a period of two weeks. On July 2, 1776, Lee s resolution was again before Congress: this time it passed America had declared itself independent. A problem surfaced though in that the resolution was passed ahead of the supporting document being finished. Now a scramble started to get a final draft of the declaration completed. What came before Congress on July 4 th was a document that was marked-up with numerous editorial and last minute wording changes. After a heated debate, the final version was agreed to and the declaration accepted - but now several other problems surfaced. The declaration Congress passed had, mark-ups, editorial, and wording changes in just about every paragraph of the document with the exception of the preamble: a clean copy was needed for signing. It would take two painful weeks to hand copy the completed document on to parchment, and get it to Philadelphia printer and Mason John Dunlap to have 200 copies made. In addition the New York legislature would not allow their delegates to vote or sign for anything until it had a chance to review the final draft. Together these two delays held-up the signing of the Declaration until August 2, 1776, when the majority of delegates to the Congress showed up to endorse the Declaration on behalf of their respective states. This of course included the then President of Congress and Mason John Hancock as well as two of the three New Hampshire delegates who were also Masons, William Whipple and Matthew Thornton. Sought this all out, and what you have is a resolution calling for independence from England being passed by the Second Continental Congress on July 2, 1776; a final draft document declaring that Independence being agreed to on July 4 th ; and the signing of that Declaration of Independence taking place on August 2 nd. Thus we are left with the question which day really is Independence Day?? I guess you could build a case for any one of those three days, but since the fourth has been with us so long, let s just leave it and move on. I m sure John Adams would be more concerned with the fact we recognize and celebrate what the Second Continental Congress accomplished during that summer of 1776, than debate exactly what day should be designated Independence Day. Rod MacDonald, St. Andrew s Lodge No. 56, Historian

JULY 2018 NEWS LETTER TITLE Officers 2018 R. Daniel Perry Worshipful Master Joseph J. Rella, PM Senior Warden Christopher E. Lillicotch Junior Warden Winston Gouzoules, PM Treasurer Robert L. Sutherland Jr. PM Asst. Treasurer Craig I. Brown, PM Secretary George Milliken, PM Asst. Secretary Robert Canney Grand Lodge Representative PAGE 5 Robert Canney Richard Perry, PM Andrew Gosselin Jim Lee, PM Nelson Hersey, PM Terry Long, PM Robert McGuire Rod Macdonald, PM Ronald E. Metcalf, PM Jack D. Hartman, PM Senior Deacon Junior Deacon Senior Steward Junior Steward Chaplain Associate Chaplain Marshal Historian Tyler Electrician Past Masters Nelson Hersey 1961 Knute Lundgren 1967 William Reed 1968 Ronald Metcalf 1969 Florido R. Katsanos 1972 Gerald Philbrick 1973 Robert L. Sutherland Jr. 1974/1978 Frederick Smith 1975 Gerald Buehrer 1976 Arthur Weeks 1982 George Milliken 1983/2012 Mark Goodman 1988 William Burke 1994 Philip Fraser 1996/2001/2011/2013 Thomas LaBerge 1998 Brian Sanderson 1999/2005/2006 Craig I Brown 2000/2003/2004/2007 Winston Gouzoules 2009/2010 Terry T. Long 2014/2015 Dale A. Mills 2016 Joseph J. Rella 2017 Contact Worshipful Master: R. Daniel Perry (603) 799-6996 Senior Warden: Joseph J. Rella P.M. (603) 957-8119 Treasurer: Winston Gouzoules, P.M. (603) 436-5008 Junior Warden: Chris E. Lillicotch (478) 998-2307 Secretary: Craig I. Brown P.M. (603) 436-9208

SAINT ANDREWS LODGE 351 Middle Street Portsmouth, NH 03801 Saint Andrews Lodge #56 c/o Craig Brown, Secretary 76 Nimble Hill Road Newington, NH 03801 Return Service Requested