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  Updated 09/16/2008

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Irvine Valley Lodge #671

Irvine Valley Lodge #671  Free & Accepted Masons

Lake Forest, Orange County, California

 

 

GERALD  RUDOLPH  FORD,  Jr.

(July 14, 1913 - December 26, 2006)
38th President (1974-1977)

40th Vice-President (1973-1974)

 

Brother Gerald Ford  

 

MASONIC RECORD

Initiated: September 30, 1949, Malta Lodge No. 465, Grand Rapids, Michigan, along with his half-brothers Thomas Gardner Ford (1918-1995), Richard Addison Ford (1924-) and James Francis Ford (1927-).

The Fellow Craft and Master Mason Degrees were Conferred by Columbia Lodge No. 3, Washington, D.C., on April 20 and May 18, 1951, as a courtesy to Malta Lodge.

Brother Ford was made a Sovereign Grand Inspector General, 33°, and Honorary Member, Supreme Council Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite Northern Jurisdiction at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia, on September 26, 1962, for which he served as Exemplar (Representative) for his Class.

Brother and President Ford was unanimously elected an Active Member of the International Supreme Council, Order of DeMolay and its Honorary Grand Master, at its Annual Session held at Orlando, Florida, April 6-9, 1975; Brother Ford held this post until January 1977, at which time he became a Past Honorary Grand Master, receiving his Collar and Jewel on October 24, 1978 in Topeka, Kansas, from the Hon. Thomas C. Raum, Jr., Grand Master, Order of DeMolay.  DeMolay is a masonic fraternity for boys aged 12-21, teaching leadership and public speaking.

Brother Ford was a Royal Arch Mason and a Cryptic Mason, having received those degrees while President.  He was also a Shriner (As a college student he also played at the East West Shrine game in San Francisco on January 1, 1935 benefiting the masonic Shrine Hospitals for Crippled Children, He was inducted into the East-West Hall of Fame in 2002).

photo by Mark Gibson

In 2003 he was presented with Michigan's 50 Year Membership Award by M. William Holsinger, Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of California  and District Inspector Mark Newell Gibson at  President Ford's office in Rancho Mirage, California.

Gerald Rudolph Ford passed away on December 26, 2006, the 34th anniversary of President Harry Truman's death, also a Mason and Past Grand Master of Masons in Missouri.   

Requiescat In Pace

Below are remarks given by President Ford on February 17, 1975 (George Washington's Birthday) at the George Washington Masonic National Memorial on the occasion of the unveiling of the bronze Gerald R. Ford Masonic Medallion and plaque now displayed in the auditorium at the Memorial:

 

Photo taken by a Navy photographer.
 
Left to right in the picture is: Gerald R. Ford, Raymond Ellis, PGM 
of New York and President of the GWMNM Assoc, Don Robey, WM of 
Alexandria-Washington Lodge No. 22, (unknown), Marvin E. Fowler, PGM 
of District of Columbia and Executive Secretary-Treasurer for the 
GWMNM Assoc. and (unknown).

"Most worshipful Brother Ellis, most worshipful Brother Fowler, Grand Masters and other officers of the fraternity, Brothers, and friends:

Let me, at the outset, express my deepest personal gratitude to Brother Ellis for his more than generous observations and comments, and I truly hope that my performance in the future will bear out the comments that he has made concerning the past. I am deeply grateful for those very kind words.

The dedication of this medallion gives me a great personal pleasure and, of course, is an honor that I will always cherish.

When I took my obligation as a Master Mason - - incidentally, with my three younger brothers * - - I recalled the value my own father attached to that order. But I had no idea that I would ever be added to the company of the Father of our Country and 12 other members of the order who also served as Presidents of the United States.

Masonic principles - - internal, not external - - and our order's vision of duty to country and acceptance of God as a Supreme Being and guiding light have sustained me during my years of Government service. Today especially, the guidelines by which I strive to become an upright man in Masonry give me great personal strength.

Masonic precepts can help America retain our inspiring aspirations while adapting to a new age. It is apparent to me that the Supreme Architect has set out the duties each of us has to perform, and I have trusted in His will with the knowledge that my trust is well-founded.

As our Nation approaches its 200th anniversary, we do live in very challenging times. It was almost 200 years ago, in the darkest days of our war for independence, that George Washington answered a question that is sometimes asked today. The question is whether things are as bad as some say.

George Washington answered, and I quote: "We should never despair. Our situation before has been unpromising and has changed for the better, so I trust it will again. If new difficulties arise, we must only put forth new exertions and proportion our efforts to the exigency of the times."

Let us today rededicate ourselves to new efforts--as Masons and as Americans. Let us demonstrate our confidence in our beloved Nation and a future that will flow from the glory of the past.

When I think of the things right about America, I think of this order with its sense of duty to country, its esteem for brotherhood and traditional values, its spiritual high principles, and its humble acceptance of God as the Supreme Being.


Today we honor our first President, who was also our first Masonic President.


In a letter in 1798 to the Grand Lodge of Maryland, Washington used some words that are now especially appropriate. Washington told the order that he "conceived it to be the indispensable duty of every American ... to come forward in support of the government of his choice, and to give all the aid in his power towards maintaining that independence which we have so dearly purchased."

Such involvement by every American is as essential today as it was in George Washington's day.

I do express to all of you my deepest thanks for this tribute, and I ask that we resolve together to honor George Washington and America by perpetuating the national heritage he engendered through the principles which guide our order-friendship, morality, and brotherly love.


I thank you very, very kindly."

Note: The President spoke at 12 noon at the unveiling of the Gerald R. Ford Masonic Medallion. In his opening remarks, he referred to Raymond Ellis, president, and Marvin Fowler, executive secretary of the memorial.

 

* In fondly remembering his initiation on the occasion of receiving his recognition for having been a member for 50 years, President Ford laughed and said that the initiation of all four Ford brothers on the same night was quite the "talk of the town".


Citation: John Woolley and Gerhard Peters,The American Presidency Project [online]. Santa Barbara, CA: University of California (hosted), Gerhard Peters (database). Available from World Wide Web: http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=5485 .

Photo from Don Robey, PGM through Mark Tabbert, Director of Collections, George Washington Masonic National Memorial.

 

Many thanks for Br. Fred Kleyn for researching and emailing much of the biography information provided above, and Mark Gibson for the photograph of President Ford receiving his 50 year membership award.

Sources include the Pennsylvania Grand Lodge web site for Masonic Presidents at  http://www.pagrandlodge.org/mlam/presidents/ford.html , and http://www.ford.utexas.edu/grf/fordbiop.htm