Yorkshire Freemasons make £58k donation to Castle Hill School so kids can ‘feel sounds’ in sensory pod
Castle Hill School kids can ‘feel sounds’ in £58k sensory pod
Promoting the Fraternity across the World
Castle Hill School kids can ‘feel sounds’ in £58k sensory pod
Windfall for Harrogate district charities as Freemasons celebrate 300th anniversary
Quarterly Communication 14 December 2016 An address by the MW the Pro Grand Master Peter Lowndes Brethren, our December meeting is always one of the…
Report from The Keighley News Donation from the Freemasons boosts IT provision at Worth Valley Primary, Keighley Geoff Smith, the Worshipful Master of The…
The Friendly Lodge, which meets in Eastgate, secured £5,000 from the Freemasons Province of Yorkshire West Riding grants fund, whilst lodge brethren and members of Friendly Chapter, raised a further £1,250 towards the Oaks Memorial Disaster Fund.
At the Annual Meeting held in Derby on 19th October 2016, WBro Peter Hodcroft stepped down as Chairman, an office he had held for six years since 2010….
On 12th September W. Bro. Peter Taylor presented A cheque for £750 and certificate to staff nurses at Sheffield Children’s Hospital Accident & Emergency Department and the Head of the Charity Fund Raising Department at the hospital, the money will go towards purchasing a 3-D games console and a mixture of games for the use of the older sick children who are too old for teddies, Sheffield admits children up to 15 years of age.
Freemasons’ Teddies Bring Loving Care – And A £1,000 Donation – To Leeds General Infirmary’s Paediatric A&E Department Staff at Leeds General Infirmary’s Paediatric A&E Department will be able to purchase new sensory equipment and update apparatus – thanks to the Freemasons.
Lord Barnard was initiated into Agricola Lodge in 1961 and became its Worshipful Master in 1968. He was appointed as Provincial Grand Master in December 1969 and installed in 1970, a position he held for 28 years, during which time, he performed his duties and responsibilities with impeccable distinction.
The Grand Charity has awarded a £100,000 grant to the Cancer Genetics team at the University of East Anglia to help fund research that will focus on distinguishing between aggressive and non-aggressive forms of the disease. Lead researcher Professor Colin Cooper explained that a critical problem in clinical management is an inability to distinguish this at the time of diagnosis.