SW Hackett Lodge No. 574 of San Diego California

SW Hackett Lodge No. 574 of San Diego California SW Hackett Serves San Diego S.W. As member's of the world’s oldest Fraternity, the Brothers of S.W.

Hackett Lodge in San Diego is a small band of diverse and vibrant brothers that strives to weave a tapestry of tradition and ceremony that provides each of our members a rich Masonic experience. Hackett Lodge view its inheritance of ritual, community service, and philosophy as a sacred trust. As a lodge we seek only to grow stronger; not necessarily larger.

During the weekend of May 29, Hackett Officers participated in the Leadership Retreat.  It was a productive and worthwhi...
06/07/2026

During the weekend of May 29, Hackett Officers participated in the Leadership Retreat. It was a productive and worthwhile weekend. Much was learned, new friends were made and good times were had.

On May 26th, after practice, some of the Brothers who were up for a late night met at The Casbah to see Bro. Tom Achenba...
06/07/2026

On May 26th, after practice, some of the Brothers who were up for a late night met at The Casbah to see Bro. Tom Achenbach's band "Cardboard Boxer." It was a great, late night!

Our outdoor adventures continued on May 24th when some of the Brothers and Ladies met to ride bikes at the beach.  Good ...
06/07/2026

Our outdoor adventures continued on May 24th when some of the Brothers and Ladies met to ride bikes at the beach. Good times!

Some Lodge Brothers and Ladies went on a spontaneous hike to Mission Trails - an early Saturday morning adventure.  Good...
05/16/2026

Some Lodge Brothers and Ladies went on a spontaneous hike to Mission Trails - an early Saturday morning adventure. Good times!

On Tuesday, May 5th, S.W. Hackett Lodge 574 continued our tradition of celebrating the Teacher/Employee of the Year at S...
05/07/2026

On Tuesday, May 5th, S.W. Hackett Lodge 574 continued our tradition of celebrating the Teacher/Employee of the Year at Sequoia Elem. This special night celebrated not only the teacher of the year (who was unable to attend) but also the Principal's secretary, Ms. Veronica Guzman-Garcia. Ms. Guzman-Garcia is a wonderful person who is extremely helpful when planning our Holiday food and present delivery and other Hackett-Sequoia events. Congratulations!!

Congratulations to Brother Coddington who received his Second Degree on Tuesday, April 21.
04/25/2026

Congratulations to Brother Coddington who received his Second Degree on Tuesday, April 21.

https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=122127252087151626&id=61584548790224
04/17/2026

https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=122127252087151626&id=61584548790224

236 years ago today, the most extraordinary American who ever lived died in his bed in Philadelphia at the age of 84. He had been a candle maker's apprentice, a runaway teenager, a printer, a scientist, an inventor, a diplomat, a philosopher, a Founding Father, and the man who talked France into helping America win its independence. Twenty thousand people came to his funeral. The French National Assembly went into mourning for three days. 🎖️🇺🇸
His name was Benjamin Franklin.
Born January 17, 1706, in Boston, Massachusetts — the fifteenth of seventeen children of Josiah Franklin, a candle and soap maker who had emigrated from England, and Abiah Folger, a woman of Nantucket. The family was poor. Benjamin had two years of formal schooling — just two years — before his father pulled him out because he could not afford the fees.
At ten years old he was working in his father's candle shop. At twelve he was apprenticed to his older brother James, a printer. At fifteen he was secretly writing essays for his brother's newspaper under the pseudonym Silence Dogood — a sharp-tongued, witty, fiercely independent widow who became one of the most popular voices in Boston without anyone knowing she was a twelve-year-old boy.
At seventeen he ran away.
He walked into Philadelphia on a Sunday morning in 1723 carrying everything he owned — hungry, tired, with three rolls of bread, one under each arm and one in his mouth. A girl named Deborah Read watched him from her front doorstep and thought he looked ridiculous. He noticed her. Seven years later they were married.
He spent the next sixty years building one of the most remarkable lives in the history of civilization.
As a printer and publisher he became one of the most influential voices in colonial America. The Pennsylvania Gazette — his newspaper — was the most widely read in the colonies. Poor Richard's Almanack — published every year from 1732 to 1757 under the pen name Richard Saunders — sold nearly ten thousand copies a year and filled American homes with the wit and practical wisdom that still echo in American culture. A penny saved is a penny earned. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy wealthy and wise. These were not folk sayings. They were Franklin's.
As a scientist he was the most celebrated in the world. He proved that lightning was electricity — through the kite experiment in 1752, flying a kite with a metal key in a thunderstorm and drawing the electrical charge down a wet string into a Leyden jar. He invented the lightning rod that protected buildings across the world. He invented bifocals. He invented the flexible urinary catheter. He invented the Franklin stove. He invented swim fins. He discovered the Gulf Stream. He invented a musical instrument — the glass armonica — for which Mozart and Beethoven both composed pieces. He did all of this with two years of formal schooling.
He was elected to the Royal Society of London — the most prestigious scientific body in the world — on the strength of his electrical experiments. The French philosopher Kant called him the Prometheus of modern times. David Hume called him America's first great man of letters.
But his greatest work was political.
When the American Revolution came he was already 70 years old — an age at which most men of his era were dead. He had spent years in London arguing the colonies' case to the British Parliament. He had helped draft the Declaration of Independence in 1776. He had signed it. Then Congress sent him to France — the most important diplomatic assignment in American history.
He spent nine years in Paris as America's minister to France. He was the most famous American alive and one of the most famous people in the world. The French adored him. He played the role perfectly — the plain Quaker hat, the simple clothes, the wit, the warmth, the total absence of European court pretension. He secured the military alliance with France in 1778 that was absolutely essential to American victory. Without French troops and the French fleet, Washington almost certainly could not have won at Yorktown in 1781.
Without Benjamin Franklin there is no Treaty of Paris. Without the Treaty of Paris there is no United States.
He came home in 1785. He was 79 years old. He served as president of Pennsylvania. At 81 he was the oldest delegate to the Constitutional Convention — carried to the sessions in a sedan chair because he was too frail to walk. He used his enormous prestige to broker the compromises that got the Constitution signed.
His very last public act — signed two months before he died — was a petition to Congress calling for the immediate abolition of slavery.
He died on April 17, 1790, at eleven o'clock at night. His last words, spoken to his daughter who had asked him to shift position in bed so he could breathe more easily, were: A dying man can do nothing easy.
Twenty thousand people attended his funeral. The French National Assembly went into three days of official mourning. George Washington wore black.
In his will he left money to the cities of Boston and Philadelphia — to be held in trust for two hundred years and then used for the public good. When the trusts matured in 1990 they were worth more than six million dollars. They funded trade schools, science museums, scholarships and community projects. He had planned it all before he died. Of course he had.
The candle maker's son who taught the world about lightning. The runaway teenager who helped create a nation. The old man in the sedan chair who used his last breath to say that all men deserved to be free.
Born with nothing. Built everything.
236 years ago today.

Here's the whole story... https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=1259298653075118&id=100069849860456
04/01/2026

Here's the whole story... https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=1259298653075118&id=100069849860456

When the Craft is mentioned in the wrong way… I don’t hide from it. I address it.

Brothers—and to anyone reading this—

You may have seen the headlines out of France.
Words like “Freemason lodge,” “mafia,” “hit squads”…

Let’s slow this down and speak plainly.

Because this deserves more than a reaction.
It deserves clarity.

First—what’s being described in that article…

Is NOT Freemasonry.

It never was, Never will be.

Yes, some of the accused were members of a lodge.
But what they are alleged to have done—murder, conspiracy, violence—

That stands completely outside everything Freemasonry teaches, demands, and represents.

Not just in one jurisdiction…
but anywhere in the world.

Let’s be honest about something,

Freemasonry teaches:

📐 Personal responsibility
🔨 Moral discipline
⚖️ Accountability for your actions

It does not teach blind loyalty.
It does not teach covering wrongdoing.
It does not place any man above the law.

We meet on the level…
and that means every man answers for his own actions.

And that’s exactly what is happening here.

Those accused are not being shielded.
They are not being protected.

They are being held accountable—
as they should be.

The Grand Lodge involved has already closed that lodge permanently
and is cooperating fully.

That alone should tell you something.

Now here’s where it gets uncomfortable…

And where we, as Masons, need to lean in—not away.

Because it would be easy to say:

“That’s not us. Move on.”

But that’s not the lesson.

The lesson is this:

No title…
no position…
no fraternity…

makes a man immune from becoming something he shouldn’t be.

That’s why the Work matters.

That’s why we’re taught to govern our passions.

That’s why integrity isn’t optional—it’s everything.

So here’s the message to every Brother reading this:

If you are ever asked to do something that feels wrong—
that goes against your conscience, your obligation, your integrity—

You say no.

No matter who asks.
No matter what it costs you.
Even if you stand alone.

Because at the end of the day…

You don’t answer to a Lodge.
You don’t answer to a man.

You answer for yourself.

And to those outside the Craft, seeing this and wondering—

No… this is not Freemasonry.

Freemasonry has, for centuries, stood for:

Brotherly Love
Relief
Truth

It has helped build communities, shaped nations, and encouraged men to become better—not worse.

Are we perfect?

No.

We are human.
And all men are flawed.

But we are also accountable.

And when men step outside the bounds of law and morality—
they face the consequences.

As they should.

This isn’t something to ignore.

It’s something to learn from.

A reminder that the teachings only matter…
if we actually live them.

Stay on your square, Brother.

Even when it’s hard.
Especially when it’s hard.

SMIB.

Source Articles :
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/30/trial-opens-masonic-lodge-network-paris-freemason-mafia-france #:~:text=Thirteen%20defendants%20%E2%80%93%20including%20former%20intelligence,the%20Paris%20suburb%20of%20Puteaux.

https://today.rtl.lu/news/world/french-masonic-lodge-at-heart-of-murky-murder-trial-1077813138

https://www.france24.com/en/france/20260330-french-masonic-lodge-at-heart-of-murky-murder-trial

On St. Patty's Day members and friends of S. W. Hackett Lodge gathered at Wor. Caskey's home to celebrate his many accom...
03/20/2026

On St. Patty's Day members and friends of S. W. Hackett Lodge gathered at Wor. Caskey's home to celebrate his many accomplishments. There are some significant changes on the horizon for Wor. Chuck, and it was a wonderful night of fellowship and fun.

In January a few members planned a trip to Little Blaire Valley in Anza-Borrego during March.  At the time we were worri...
03/20/2026

In January a few members planned a trip to Little Blaire Valley in Anza-Borrego during March. At the time we were worried there might be rain...turns out we didn't need to worry. Great time hiking, biking, and and enjoying the great outdoors!

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1895 Camino Del Rio S
San Diego, CA
92108

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