Province of East Kent |
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HISTORY OF OUR PROVINCE
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Between 1723 and 1815 some 90 English Lodges (about half of which were military) were consecrated or met in Kent.
Freemasonry in Kent did not, as one might suppose, spread out from London. It was strongest in naval and military towns such as Dover, Sheerness and the Medway towns of Chatham and Gillingham, before expanding into the larger inland towns, such as Canterbury, Maidstone and Ashford. Some of the oldest surviving Lodges, the oldest of which is the Royal Kent Lodge of Antiquity, No. 20, meeting in Chatham, moved from London.
The Province of Kent was formed by the Grand Lodge of the Moderns in 1770, with the Hon. Robert Boyle Walsingham as its first Provincial Grand Master. The Moderns amalgamated with the Grand Lodge of the Antients in 1813 to form the United Grand Lodge of England.
The increase in the number of Lodges meeting in Kent was quite slow until the mid 19th century. Originally Woolwich, Greenwich, Deptford and Old Charlton were in the Kent Province, but these areas were taken into London in 1815. By 1973 there were so many Lodges that the decision was taken to divide the Province into two, East Kent and West Kent. This was intended to set an example to other large Provinces: the example has not been followed. The two new Provinces flourished and retain a firm friendship and interchange of membership. The boundary between the two new Provinces was drawn so that East Kent lies approximately east of a line, between Greenhithe and Gravesend, from Dartford via Wrotham to Tunbridge Wells. By 2006 there were about 185 Lodges meeting in East Kent and nearly 200 in West Kent, with about 8000 and 7000 members respectively.
Provinces serve two main functions, principally that of administration but also as a focus of identity being based, as they are, upon historic counties. There are too many Lodges and brethren meeting under the United Grand Lodge of England to be readily administered from its headquarters in London. Some of the administration, powers and responsibilities are delegated to Provincial Grand Masters, who are appointed and hold office under a patent granted by the Grand Master. The Lodges in each Province regulate the Province under bylaws approved by them, whilst the Provincial Grand Master, his Deputy, Assistants and administrative team, all appointed by him, lead and conduct the business of the Province. East Kent is administered from its offices at Canterbury which is also the location of the Masonic Museum.
John Andrew Porter TD JP DL, from Gravesend, was appointed as Provincial Grand Master in 1981 and served until 1992, carrying the Province forward into the modern era, when John Bonomy OBE JP, from Folkestone, was appointed. He led the Province, with great distinction, until 2004, meeting the many challenges which emerged during his time in office
The present Provincial Grand Master, Michael Robin Bailey, from the Medway towns, was invested in October 2004 and is vigorously addressing the need to adapt to a rapidly changing society in which Freemasonry has an increasingly public profile.
The Freemasons of East Kent are determined that when the manner in which they have met the challenges of today becomes history, it will be one in which pride will be taken.
Further information upon the history of Freemasonry in Kent can be obtained from the Library and Museum at Canterbury
A Provincial Meeting at
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