Lodge St Alban at Work in our Community
Lodge St Alban is a lodge affiliated with the Grand Lodge of SA & NT
History of Lodge St Alban in South Australia
Open th link for a brief summary of the history of Lodge St Alban
Lodge St Alban meets at Freemasons Hall, 254 North Terrace, Adelaide.
Visitors will be made especially welcome.
The next meeting will be held on the 8th March 2018 tyling at 6.30pm.
This will be a short meeting Agenda conducting the usual essential administrative business as well as a ballot for Affiliation, election of a Joining Member, reading the Lodge Warrant and any other business the Worshipful Master desires to conduct.
The meeting will be followed by the annual off site Festive Board. Bookings and payment in advance are essential to be made by the 26th February to enable your registration with the formal private club facilities.
The Summons of meeting can be made available from early February through the Lodge Secretary who may be contacted for any further details.
Welcome to Lodge St Alban
About Lodge St Alban and Freemasonry
Freemasons are ordinary Australian men who care for their community and believe that a shared set of strong values help make better people. We have many rich traditions with a moral code that is still relevant today.
Next Meeting 8th September 2016 – Second Degree
Membership
Membership enquiries, on a confidential no commitment basis, may be made with the Secretary. If you are 18 years & over, male and with a belief in a supreme being then you can apply. A Police Clearance will be required should matters proceed.
There are no barriers to culture, creed or ethnic background.
St Alban
The Lodge is named after a Saint named Alban, who was a Romano-British citizen in the 3rd century. He gave shelter to, and ultimately his life for, an itinerant early Christian priest. He refused to denounce the priest and Alban’s conversion to Christianity and so was beheaded by the Roman authorities. He was buried in the cemetery near Abbey Church and Cathedral in St Albans, Hertfordshire, which is the oldest site of continuous Christian worship in Britain today (300 years before the much celebrated St Augustine went to Canterbury).



