Sylvania Masonic Lodge #301

Sylvania Masonic Lodge #301 Sylvania Lodge #301 welcomes all Masonic Brothers to visit our Lodge as we have open Lodge the second Thursday of every month at 8:00pm.

We are incredibly grateful to everyone who supported our local Toys for Tots drive. Your generosity and kindness helped ...
12/22/2025

We are incredibly grateful to everyone who supported our local Toys for Tots drive. Your generosity and kindness helped bring joy to children in our community this Christmas season.

From all of us at Sylvania Masonic Lodge #301, thank you for showing up, giving back, and making a difference.

Merry Christmas and God bless!

Help us make Christmas brighter for children in our community! 🌟We are partnering up with Sylvania Ford to collect toys ...
11/18/2025

Help us make Christmas brighter for children in our community! 🌟We are partnering up with Sylvania Ford to collect toys for children local to us.

We’ve made giving easier than ever — simply shop our Amazon Toys for Tots link, choose a toy you’d like to donate, purchase, and we’ll handle the delivery to Toys for Tots for you. 🙌

Every gift makes a difference. Let’s show our community what WE can do when WE come together! ❤️

👉 Shop the Amazon link: https://www.amazon.com/registries/gl/guest-view/164IPECVF4C8H?ref_=cm_sw_r_apin_ggr-subnav-share_TWB52GVJYVK3KWYZSJ8K&language=en-US
📅 Donations accepted through December 10th

Sylvania Lodge held their annual Ladies and awards night this past Saturday. Brother Charles Lee-65 year award, Robert F...
09/22/2025

Sylvania Lodge held their annual Ladies and awards night this past Saturday. Brother Charles Lee-65 year award, Robert Fruitticher - 60 year award, Ronald Nunnally - 50 year award and J W Black - 50 year award. Their awards were presented by Patrick Sweet, District Deputy to the Grand Master of Georgia. Congratulations to these fine men and their ladies for their service to Freemasonry.

We are proud to introduce and welcome the newest Master Mason, Derrick Parker, to Sylvania Lodge  #301. Please join us i...
06/13/2025

We are proud to introduce and welcome the newest Master Mason, Derrick Parker, to Sylvania Lodge #301.

Please join us in extending a heartfelt congratulations to our Brother as he reaches this honorable milestone in his Masonic journey.

Welcome, Brother!

May your path in Freemasonry continue to be guided by light, brotherhood, and service.

2024 Lodge Officer Installation
01/08/2024

2024 Lodge Officer Installation

Congratulations to the 2024 Lodge Officers! Worshipful Master | Jake ThompsonSenior Warden | Chris HudsonJunior Warden |...
01/08/2024

Congratulations to the 2024 Lodge Officers!

Worshipful Master | Jake Thompson
Senior Warden | Chris Hudson
Junior Warden | Ashley Corbin
Treasurer | Rodger Clealand
Secretary | David Wells
Senior Deacon | Ivey Williamson
Junior Deacon | Ben Tapley
Senior Steward | Mike Bond
Junior Steward | Larry Dugger
Chaplin | Floyd Williams
Tiler | Ronald Nunnly

10/18/2021

Today in Masonic History we discuss The Chamber of Reflection

The Chamber of Reflection is often a small room adjacent to the lodge room.

The origins of the Chamber of Reflection is not known. Although since it's inception it has been used in a variety of masonic ritual works, both in the Blue Lodge and in appendant bodies. Regardless of when a candidate encounters the Chamber of Reflection certain features are the same. The room is generally darkened with little light or perhaps only candlelight. There are various types of items in the room with the candidate. The candidate is expected to sit and mediate or contemplate on what is happening around them.

Some of the items may confront the candidate in the Chamber of Reflection can include, a skull, symbolizing death, a scythe or hourglass, symbolizing time or various other items symbolizing concepts the candidate needs to contemplate. There may also be aphorisms written on the walls. Among the most common is the phrase V.I.T.R.I.O.L. which generally stands for the Latin "visita interiora terrae, rectificandoque, invenies occultum lapidem." This translates into "visit the interior of the earth, and purifying it, you will find the hidden stone." This reminds the candidate to look within themselves for the truth they seek.

The Chamber of Reflection, particularly in the United States rarely gets used. Although in jurisdictions outside the United States it does occur more frequently. The idea of the Chamber is meant to give the candidate an opportunity to reflect upon the degree work and information they receive during a degree. It teaches the candidate to contemplate what is being said in the degrees. Like most ritualistic societies, Freemasonry has deeper meanings to the words being used in it's ceremonies. The Chamber of Reflection gives the candidate an opportunity to help them better understand what has been said, and potentially to raise more questions to be asked.

08/11/2021

Today in Masonic History we discuss the 'Grand Poobah'.

The term 'Grand Poobah has it's origins closer to Freemasonry than many may think.

Most people recognize the term 'Grand Poobah' from the popular cartoon series from Hanna-Barbara The Flintstones. In the cartoon, the two main characters Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble regularly appear at their lodge meeting. In the cartoon it is the Loyal Order of Water Buffalo, not a masonic lodge. The Loyal Order of Water Buffalo is a send up though of Freemasonry and other fraternal organizations.

In the 70's people also recognized it from the show Happy Days. In the show the patriarch of the family is a member of a leopard lodge. Often he is seen heading off to his meeting wearing a fez with leopard spots. Again the head of the leopard lodge is the 'Grand Poobah.'

It is easy to assume the origin of the 'title 'Grand Poobah' came from a pop culture reference such as the ones mentioned above or in some of the other ways it has been used in pop culture. Especially over the last few decades.

Instead the origin of the term Grand Poobah comes to us from March 1885. It also comes to us from two masonic brothers, Gilbert and Sullivan in their comedic opera The Mikado. In the opera one of the character's name is Pooh-Bah and he holds a variety of titles which include First Lord of the Treasury, Lord Chief Justice, Commander-in-Chief, Lord High Admiral, Archbishop, Lord Mayor and Lord High Everything Else. The opera begins with the town ex*****oner, in a Japanese town, being sentenced to death himself. It is decided the ex*****oner can not perform any more ex*****ons until he executes himself, since he is next in line. The towns people are too proud to serve under the ex*****oner and perform the ex*****on. Eventually all of the town leaders resign their positions and Pooh-Bah ends up with all of their titles.

The Mikado uses Japan as a back drop to satirize British politics of the time.

In modern times the term Grand Poobah is meant to be a mocking term generally. Either to describe someone who has an inflated self-regard or someone who has a grandiose title with little true power behind it.

07/19/2021

Today in Masonic History we discuss Cowans and Eavesdroppers.

Cowans and Eavesdroppers are two common names used in Freemasonry.

We cannot have a masonic meeting without the words Cowans and Eavesdroppers being used. As Freemasons we are reminded on a regular basis to be on guard for both. But what are they really? The etymology of both words are lost to time, so let's look at them one at a time.

First let's talk about Eavesdroppers. The origin of the word is believed to refer to the water that drips from a roof, or eaves drippings. If you have ever seen a house or building that that doesn't have gutters on it, there is a line around the structure where the water running off the roof has eroded the ground. The idea of an eavesdropper came from someone who would stand so close to the structure that they would be on or inside that line and able to hear what was going on inside the house or structure. Another definition of eavesdropper, possibly due to Henry VIII, were people who would hide up in the beams of the house by the eaves.

Henry VIII had wooden figures carved and placed in the beams of his palace. The idea was to make all in his court feel like that they were being listened to and the information was being reported back to the King. This may have something to do with the fact that in old lodges, the Deacons were charged with checking the rafters of the meeting room with their staff. Making sure that no one was listening to the meeting and unlawfully obtaining the secrets of masonry.

Ironically a Cowan could very well be a successful Eavesdropper. The origin of the word Cowan is believed to be old Scottish. A Cowan was a person, often someone who worked as an operative mason, who was not part of a lodge and not formally trained. Extending from the fact that operative lodges were trade guilds (unions), a Cowan in modern terms would be a "scab", someone who either refused to join a union or in some way went against a union. A Cowan wold be any individual who would present themselves as a Freemason, having never joined the Fraternity. In a real sense a Cowan is a clandestine Mason. A Cowan may have all of the right answers to be able to get in to the door of a lodge room, although never became a Freemason.

Albert Mackey stated in Mackey's Encyclopedia of Freemasonry that Cowan was a word that was uniquely Masonic in it's origin.

Regardless of the origins of the words, Cowans and Eavesdroppers for Freemasons might as well be one word. It reminds us of our obligations to the fraternity and to remind us that we should be careful of who we let into our lodge room, and by extension those we let into our life.

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411 Frontage Road E
Sylvania, GA
30467

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