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THE ORDER OF TRUE KINDRED
Aims
The
Order of True Kindred is incorporated under the laws of the State of Illinois.
It's purposes are to encourage the practice of the principles of fraternal love,
relief and truth, to confer the ritualistic degrees; to promote the moral and
intellectual advancement of its members; and to administer acts of charity.
Membership
Membership
in the order is limited to Master Masons in good standing in regularly
constituted lodges of Freemasonry and to their kindred who have attained the age
of eighteen. These include wives, widows, mothers, daughters, sisters,
grandmothers, granddaughters, blood nieces, half-sisters, legally adopted
daughters.
Membership
in the True Kindred requires belief in the Fatherhood of God, the brotherhood of
man, and the immortality of the soul. Members of the True Kindred realize the
solemnity of their vows, their binding responsibilities and the penalties if
broken.
Organization
Local,
or subordinate, bodies of the Order of True Kindred are called
"conclaves." They are found in many communities in the United States
and in Canada. They usually meet in
Masonic temples.
These
local conclaves are under the jurisdiction of “Grand” bodies, which more or
less follow state lines for jurisdictional purposes. Each Grand body has an annual meeting for business and
ritualistic work.
The
Supreme Conclave has jurisdiction over the Grand and Subordinate conclaves
wherever they may be organized in the world.
The Supreme body meets annually to carry on the necessary business and to
confer the ritualistic work of the third degree.
Degrees
There are
three degrees in the Order of True Kindred:
1)
The "True Kindred" degree;
2)
The "Heroine of Jericho" degree;
3)
The "Good Samaritan" degree.
When
a candidate petitions the Order of True Kindred, the local conclave confers the
degree. The ritualistic work is beautiful and impressive, and draws its
inspiration from the tenants of Freemasonry.
Most
True Kindred choose to take the additional degrees, both of which are based on
the Bible. The Grand Conclave confers the "Heroine of Jericho" and the
Supreme Conclave confers the "Good Samaritan." Both of these degrees
are conferred at least once a year.
History
The
origins of Free Masonry are lost in antiquity, and it is certainly true that the
principles of the fraternity and most of its signs and symbols have been revered
from time immemorial.
By
the same token, True Kindred degrees are linked to rites and ceremonies that
have existed for centuries. Some have tried to link these degrees to rites and
events of Biblical times, but no records exist which substantiate this
hypothesis.
Nevertheless,
it certainly is true that the kindred degree had existed in Europe, in its
present form, since early in the 1700’. This
so-called “Adoptive Masonic” degree is of great value to the Kindred of
Freemasons because by it Masons can readily recognize their Masonic kindred, to
whose protection and care, if necessary, they are pledged.
In
Europe the degree was conferred on only a favored few, the wives and daughters
of the nobility, and their Masonic husbands and fathers always conferred the
degree on their kindred.
There
are conflicting reports on the introduction of the True Kindred degrees into the
American colonies, although all sources agree that this occurred around the time
of the Revolutionary War.
It
has been affirmed that Benjamin Franklin brought the degrees to America from
France. Other sources credit Lafayette with bringing them, and he is said to
have conferred the degree on George Washington and he in turn, on Martha
Washington. The name "Martha Washington Degree" stayed with the True
Kindred in America till the 1890's, when a Supreme body was established in
California.
In
America it was realized that the wives, widows, daughters, mothers and sisters
of all Free Masons were as entitled to the degree as the kindred of nobility and
of the rich and powerful; and possibly needed its instruction and benefits even
more.
All
Masons understood its rightful benefits and many were eager for their loved ones
to have this means of recognition, that if circumstances should place them in
peril, or among strangers, they might find friendship and safety. Masonic
brethren in America continued to confer the True Kindred Degrees on their kin
from the time of Washington on, and always with the intent to give them a means
of recognition and protection.
During
the Civil War, many women received the degrees; presumably to be of aid to them
in case of enemy take-over and hopefully to protect them from harm.
Virginia at the time claimed many True Kindred.
In
earlier years the ritual consisted largely of unwritten work, but by 1847 a
printed ritual existed. However,
many decades before this time the degrees, as we now know them had been
conferred, both in Europe and in America and Canada.
Robert
Morris, the sweet and beloved Masonic poet, whose fertile imagination and gifted
pen added many adoptive degrees to Masonry -but who did not write any True
Kindred ritual was thoroughly familiar with the True Kindred degrees. Rob Morris
is quoted in Mackey's Encyclopedia of Free Masonry as saying in 1850 he could
rite a "better" ritual for women. He said at that time of the
"Good Samaritan" degree, it possessed dramatic elements and machinery
equal to those that are in the Templar's Orders, the High Priesthood and the
Cryptic Rite. I have always recommended the Good Samaritan and a thousand times
conferred it in various parts of the world."
Note
the really important thing in this statement by Robert Morris so far as the
history of True Kindred is concerned: the three degrees of True Kindred were
well known to him. They had existed at least much more than a hundred years
before he wrote his adoptive rite rituals.
True
Kindred are, indeed, the oldest of the Ladies' degrees, as we know them. But
unfortunately, no attempt was made to organize True Kindred into conclaves,
lodges or chapters. Master Masons continued to confer the degrees on their lady
kindred all during the 1800's. But eventually True Kindred did become an
organization.
Mrs.
M.E. Degeer Gilmore, a young lady of Toronto, Canada, received the degrees from
her father, and she became very interested in the study of its history and
precepts. She visited the San Francisco World’s Fair and while there she
interested a number of Master Masons and their wives in the degree and in the
possibility of organization and incorporation.
A Supreme Conclave was founded in San Francisco in 1894, but expansion of
the organization failed to occur.
Interest
in organizing True Kindred conclaves sprang up in Chicago at the turn of the
century, and in May 1901 the first conclave in Illinois was organized. Other
conclaves in Chicago and in down-state Illinois were organized, and by the close
of 1902 a Grand Conclave of Illinois under the jurisdiction of the
California-based Supreme Conclave was formed.
Because
interest in operation of a supreme body in the California area had waned, all
connection of the Illinois Grand Conclave was severed, and the present Supreme
Conclave was incorporated under the law's of the State of Illinois in 1905. All
conclaves anywhere in the world, and all degrees conferred are completely under
its jurisdiction.
Charities
"Though
I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become
as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal." So said St. Paul almost 2000
years ago. And this precept is fundamental in True Kindred belief and practice.
True
Kindred members and conclaves take an active part in contributing to civic
charities, orphans' homes, homes for the aged, churches, hospitals, and the poor
and unfortunate. Many members sew and mend garments, make layettes and blankets,
and donate goods to alleviate the suffering of those in need.
Contributions
are regularly made to organized charities and to groups dedicated to helping the
sick, the disabled, the destitute and the lonely. Primarily organizations dealing with children.
With
hope in a blessed immortality, and charity to all mankind, fraternal love, and
helpfulness to one another, improving our time in acquiring that knowledge that
will make us better, wiser and happier, that as we go hence to enter that bourne
whence none return, may we feel that we have made the world better and our loved
ones and neighbors happier, for our living here; and that the beautiful temple
of eternal truth upon which we have been builders, whose Divine Architect is
God, shall never pass away.
Revised
by the authority of the Supreme Conclave
April
28, 2001
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