What was interesting to me was that the whole plot takes place in a limited geographical location and over a very short time period. This is a testament to Brown's writing ability because the characters are very well developed and you still get sucked into the plot easily. I also had a feeling that he wrote the book almost like a screenplay, I guess that would make it easy to eventually make this into a movie at some point in the near future.
I love how you never know what's real and what's fiction in Brown's books. Although he mentions that all locations are real, you still have a strange feeling that some of it has to be fiction. Could these images and places actually exist and be out there in plain sight for all to see? I guess so.
This novel revolves around the Masonry and Freemasons. I've somehow always been aware of this fraternal group, but never gave them a lot of thought. Just a bunch of guys in aprons sitting around and talking about religion, right? Well, not according to this book or any of the numerous conspiracy theories out there. You can find a lot of information (and mis-information) out there these days. You just have to Google it.
While scanning some cemetery photos a couple of weeks ago I noticed that my wife's 2nd-great grandfather's headstone had a Masonic symbol on it:

Atlanta Constitution - 1/12/1910 - Rev. Milton B. Tuggle died at a private sanitarium yesterday afternoon. He lived at 17 Ashland Avenue. He is survived by his wife and five children, Mrs. Mary King, Mrs. Vining, Dave G. Vining, Mrs. Princey Mines and Paul L. Tuggle. The funeral will be at 2:30 pm from Barclay & Brandon's chapel, the Gate City lodge, No 2, Masons, being in charge. Interment will be in Oakland Cemetery.So I did a quick Google search for Gate City Lodge, No 2 and found out they actually have a website and a blog. You can navigate those pages and see who the current members are as well as the history of the lodge and more. Apparently they have been in the news lately for filing a civil suit against the Grand Lodge of Georgia:
The Grand Lodge of Georgia Free and Accepted Masons, a fraternal organization, is being sued by an Atlanta chapter and its senior officer who say the group’s state leaders are trying to disband the local affiliate because it accepted a black man as a member.You can read more about that here. Anyway, they withdrew their suit and all is well I guess.
I also found a contact email and sent them an email to see if they have any information about Milton Tuggle that they could share. I have never gone down this path before and not sure where it will lead just yet, but I hope I can get some more information this way.
Do you have any Masons in your tree? Any interesting stories or experiences? Let me know in the comments.
I have ordered my great-grandfather's Masonic record. It told his birthdate, country of birth, how many years and days he had been active in the lodge, a history of his status, and any offices he had held. I could also order my great-grandmother's Eastern Star and my grandmother's and grand-aunt's Rainbow records, but there was no record of them joining.
ReplyDeleteI discovered my great-grandfather was a Mason through his obituary, which listed that his lodge had participated in his services. I asked my sister-in-law, who is a member of the Order of Eastern Star, for information on how to order his record.
I found it all very interesting!
Thanks for the comment Miriam!
ReplyDeleteIt seems like the Masons would be good at keeping records. I wonder if this is a regular genealogical avenue that other researchers take.
Strange that his daughter, Pattie Stone Tuggle, was not listed as a survivor in the article from the newspaper. Any thoughts? :)
ReplyDeleteStrange that his daughter, Pattie Stone Tuggle, was not listed as a survivor in the article from the newspaper. Any thoughts? :)
ReplyDelete