
CTO & Telecoms Masonic Association
and the 1765 Demonstration TeamMembers of the CTO & Telecoms Masonic Association are also members of some 200 or more different lodges.
In the beginning, a number of Masons of various lodges worked at the Central Telegraph Office in the City of London. Their duties entailed shift working and this made attendance at their lodges of instruction (practice meetings) unachievable. To overcome this problem they formed themselves into a class of instruction.
Over the years the nature of business changed and the work of the CTO declined. Wishing to remain in contact with each other the brethren formed the Association, broadening the scope to include other freemasons involved with telecommunications.
The Association continues to flourish, with a healthy membership. We hold just one meeting a year, when the core of the meeting is designed to extend Masonic knowledge. This activity can take more than one form. There have been lectures on topics such as Sibelius and his Masonic music, Freemasonry in America, Philately and Masonry, the Mason at Arms, Masonry in Malta, the Building of the Temple, The Demonstration Team in Italy and many more. There have also been demonstrations; Hungarian Initiation, Russian Initiation, Ancient Rites and of course Initiation -- 1765.
The Demonstration Team The original demonstration "Initiation -- 1765" was given by members of the Association. It is the responsibility of the Master for the year to find a lecturer or demonstration team for each meeting. W Bro. Jimmy Stait was given a script (that had been written by W Bro. Brigadier A.C.F.Jackson) by the late W. Bro. Harry Carr and Jimmy decided this was ideal for his meeting. He persuaded other members of the Association to join in and the event was on its way.
The custom of the Association is that officers wear dinner jackets at the annual meeting and this was how the original team dressed. As it was intended to be a "one off" improvisation was the name of the game, with none of the props now used in demonstrations. Home made wine was drunk from pewter tankards filled by soup ladles. If one fires (brings the tankard forcibly down on the table) with a tankard that has not been completely emptied - one is splashed with the contents. Not recommended treatment for your DJ! We are told the demonstration was not completed and indeed the Senior Warden felt so unwell he went home without staying for his dinner!
Lack of success was a spur to our worthy originals so they decided to repeat the demonstration to show it could be done. They learned from their previous experience, props were fabricated by W Bro Frank Bredemeier and costumes made by wives and girlfriends. Most of the props and some of the costumes are still in use twenty-odd years later. More modest ladles were used and less intoxicating wine served. This time the demonstration was a great success. A visitor to the meeting asked if the demonstration could be given to his lodge. This was done and the practice has continued ever since, currently about ten lodges a year are hosts to the team. The team has visited over 150 lodges and raised tens of thousands of pound for charity.
There are two aims of the team, firstly to provide an advancement in Masonic knowledge in an entertaining manner and secondly to raise money for charity. In the process of achieving these aims the team members manage to enjoy themselves.
With regard to the charity, the team stipulate a minimum sum to be donated. The stipulation is that the greater of either a minimum sum from Lodge charitable funds or the broken column (collection on the evening), should be donated to a charity of the lodges choice. The donation should be made in the name of the Team. Both Masonic and occasional non-Masonic charities have benefited and in recent years the New Masonic Samaritan Fund has been the charity mostly nominated. It is only fair to point out that the parent Association also makes annual donations to charity, hence the proud heading on our notepaper.
The enquiries for the services of the team usually result from brethren attending a demonstration and taking their enthusiasm back to their own lodges. This was the case in London in 1994, with the difference that the visiting brethren were from Italy.
The Italians invited the team to perform in Italy and in June 1995 the demonstration was given in the Villa Ponti in Varese, Northern Italy. Despite some difficulties the demonstration was greatly enjoyed and received with enthusiasm and cordiality. Attending that meeting were the Grand Master and Grand Secretary of the Italian Grand Lodge. As a token of their gratitude the Italian Lodge, La Nuova Atlantide No 75, made two of the team members Honorary members of their Lodge. W Bros Frank Bredemeier and Dave Barton were very proud of this honor.
At the start of this note I mentioned that the members of the Association belong to a variety of Lodges. In like manner the team members belong to a large number of lodges, in and around London and beyond. Adding the the various orders the team members belong to it is obvious that finding dates for a demonstration is a tricky business. We usually find a way round the problem and it is not unknown for a lodge to get a dispensation for a date change in order to be able to book the team! To accommodate the numbers attending other lodges get dispensations to move their meeting to a more suitable venue.
Thanks are due to W. Bro. Dave Barton for the content of this page.
You can learn more at www.cto1765.co.uk or by emailing: enquiries (remove brackets and the text in between them from the email address).
BACK
'Lampman' image and text Copyright © 1998 CTO and Telecoms Masonic Association