Showing posts with label gerald ford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gerald ford. Show all posts

A Profile In Courage

by Midnight Freemason Contributor
Bro. Steven L. Harrison 33˚, FMLR


Author's note: This is in no way meant to be a political post. It is an account of events that occurred nearly a half-century ago with no intent to imply any relationship to events of today.

The 1956 Pulitzer Prize-winning book, Profiles in Courage, is a series of biographies of eight United States senators who endured criticism and personal loss after unpopular acts they each thought were the right thing to do. Among those accounts are courageous votes of Masonic Brothers Thomas Hart Benton and Sam Houston, both of whom opposed extending slavery into the US territories, and subsequently lost elections because of their actions.

Such politicians taking action against the majority views of their constituents in spite of the consequences are a rare breed. Another of our Masonic Brothers, Gerald Ford, falls into that category.

Living in an intensely divided nation today, it is hard to imagine a time when the mood of the country, short of the Civil War era, may have been more politically separated or rancorous, but the Vietnam/Watergate era of the early to mid-1970s clearly qualifies for that.

In 1968, Richard Nixon, after losing a close presidential race to John Kennedy in 1960, made the political comeback of the century. He won the presidency with a promise to end the unpopular Vietnam War. Instead, he expanded the war, even taking it into countries neighboring Vietnam. With those actions, war protests, which had been going on for years, hit a new level of intensity.

At the same time, Nixon's acerbic Vice President, Spiro T. Agnew, who himself had been intensifying the divisions in the country, came under fire for corrupt practices while Governor of Maryland. After a two-year acrimonious battle, Agnew pleaded nolo contendere to felony tax evasion, was fined, and placed on probation. With that, Agnew resigned from the vice presidency and President Nixon selected long-time Republican congressman Gerald Ford to succeed him.

With all that going on, the 1972 presidential elections saw Nixon's re-election. Subsequently, his involvement in and cover-up of the 1972 break-in at Democratic headquarters gradually came to light, in what has now become known as the Watergate Affair.

So with the Vietnam War in full swing, war protests raging, the vice-president battling accusations of corruption, and Watergate grinding on, the US went through a three-year period of political meltdown. Nixon's involvement in Watergate, his lies, and attempts to cover up his actions finally brought him down. Leaders of his own party convinced him there were sufficient votes in both Houses of Congress to impeach and convict, leading him to resign the presidency before that happened. Brother Ford took office on August 9, 1974.

Ford took charge in the midst of all the political turmoil, wanting to put it in the past. Some of his first words to the country were, "Our national nightmare is over." But it wasn't. The country would now have to turn its attention to a laundry list of charges being brought against former President Nixon. The aftermath of his actions could have lasted for months, possibly years, through indictments, trials, endless rehashing of events, and a plethora of incessant and merciless windbags debating it all.

Ford saw it as his responsibility to end the turmoil and get the nation back to some semblance of normalcy. With that, he granted Richard Nixon a "full, free, and absolute pardon." Political opponents and even members of Ford's Republican party leveled a firestorm of criticism at the new president. They accused him, among other things, of making a deal with Nixon that would lead to Ford becoming president. That was not the case. The only deal Ford made was that Nixon had to admit guilt. Nixon accepted the pardon and withdrew to his home in San Clemente, removing himself from further involvement in the political arena.



Historians agree Brother Ford's decision to pardon Richard Nixon was one of the main reasons contributing to the fact he lost the 1976 presidential election to Jimmy Carter. Ford simply said he knew the aftermath of Nixon's actions could go on and on, and he knew he was the only one who could end it.

John Kennedy, along with Ted Sorenson, wrote Profiles in Courage. Had they written it today, they might have included more than senators, and they may well have included Gerald Ford.

In fact, in a sense, he was included. In 1989, the Kennedy family established the "Profiles In Courage Award" in order to recognize the kind of political courage emphasized in the book. Then, in 2001, they named Ford the recipient of the honor, "for his courage in making a controversial decision of conscience to pardon former President Richard M. Nixon."

Brother Gerald Ford, 33°, was a member of Malta Lodge No. 465, Grand Rapids Michigan.

~SLH

Bro. Steve Harrison, 33°  is Past Master of Liberty Lodge #31, Liberty, Missouri. He is also a Fellow and Past Master of the Missouri Lodge of Research. Among his other Masonic memberships is the St. Joseph Missouri Valley of the Scottish Rite, Liberty York Rite bodies, and Moila Shrine. He is also a member and Past Dean of the DeMolay Legion of Honor. Brother Harrison is a regular contributor to the Midnight Freemasons blog as well as several other Masonic publications. Brother Steve was Editor of the Missouri Freemason magazine for a decade and is a regular contributor to the Whence Came You podcast. Born in Indiana, he has a Master's Degree from Indiana University and is retired from a 35-year career in information technology. Steve and his wife Carolyn reside in northwest Missouri. He is the author of dozens of magazine articles and three books: Freemasonry Crosses the Mississippi, Freemasons — Tales From the Craft and Freemasons at Oak Island.

Other Bare Facts

The Lighter Side of Freemasons

 by Midnight Freemason Contributor
Steven L. Harrison, 33°, FMLR

Some outside the Fraternity see Freemasons as being stiff, formal, archaic and arcane.  One of the great Masonic secrets is that isn't true.  Oh, we have our moments of formality, but here are a few examples of what might be called the lighter side of Freemasons' lives:

Richard Locke's Moon People
Richard Locke was so irritated by outlandish claims of discovering life on the moon, he fabricated the discovery of an entire race of moon beings, which took the science community and public by storm in 1835.

Chic Sale published a book, The Specialist, in the early twentieth century, which was nearly banned.  The carefully worded book was a humorous but risqué treatise on the subject of outhouses.

Astronaut Gus Grissom also ran into a bit of censorship.  After his first space capsule sank at the end of a mission, Grissom named his second craft the Molly Brown because the original Molly was "unsinkable." When the NASA board balked, Grissom submitted a new name, Titanic.  After due consideration, the board approved Molly Brown.

Will Rogers was not so lucky in escaping the censor's ax.  After visiting the Soviet Union he published a book entitled, There's Not A Bathing Suit In Russia.  The censors were not at all amused by the second part of the title when they cut it from naughty Will's book: And Other Bare Facts.

Rogers worked with "Blue Boy," a champion hog, in his 1933 movie, "State Fair." At the end of filming director Henry King gave Blue Boy to Rogers to slaughter and eat.  Rogers instead donated the hog to an agricultural college saying, "I refuse to eat a co-star."

As if that's not enough on Will, he is also known to have dated all seven of the Blake sisters before settling down and marrying the youngest, Betty.  Family gatherings must have been interesting...

In the 1948 presidential race, Thomas Dewey's campaign came up with the world's first political   It read, "Dew It With Dewey."  The electorate, instead, decided to "Dew It" with Truman.
T-Shirt.

Clifton Truman Daniel didn’t learn his grandfather Harry Truman had been the US President until his first day of school, when the other kids confronted him with the news.  Clifton rushed home at the end of the day and asked his mother Margaret, "Did you know Grandpa was the President of the United States?" With all the timing of a great comedian, Clifton will then tell you, "She knew."

Clifton's life as Harry's grandson wasn't all a bed of roses.  On one occasion, playing with a popgun inside the Truman house in Independence, he fired a shot and knocked a vase over.  Grandpa sent Clifton and his brother outside to play.  Within minutes Clifton rounded the corner of the house and came face-to-face with a scowling Secret Service agent who, from a house across the street, had seen two shadowy figures with guns sneaking around the former President's property.

England's Prince Phillip has a famously caustic and non-politically-correct sense of humor.  On one occasion when told he would be attending a Madonna concert he said he would have to bring some ear plugs.  He is also known for the quote, "If you see a man opening a car door for a woman, it means one of two things: it's either a new car or a new woman."

In the mid 1960s the Grand Lodge of California brought a member up on Masonic charges for participating in a college panty raid.  The judges allowed that such behavior could be dismissed as collegiate hi-jinx, but felt the situation warranted further investigation when the member in question was found to have 181 pairs of the delicate undergarments.

After losing the world championship in a brutal fight to Gene Tunney in 1926, a battered Jack Dempsey told his wife, "Honey, I forgot to duck." As medics wheeled Ronald Reagan (an honorary Scottish Rite Mason) into the operating room after a 1981 assassination attempt, he looked at his wife Nancy and used Dempsey's quote.

Ford VS Chicken
Finally, there is the case of the giant chicken that hounded Gerald Ford in his 1976 presidential   Instead of becoming irritated, Ford played along with the prank even to the point of inviting the chicken on stage for an interview.  Today, that same "chicken" who made his national debut campaigning with Gerald Ford has gone on to fame in his own right.  He is now known as The San Diego Chicken.
campaign.

These stories aren't all that unusual.  Part of the reason we are members of this Fraternity is the fellowship we enjoy when we get together.  If you're looking for more Masonic stories that bring a little chuckle, just attend your next Lodge meeting.  You're sure to find them there.

~SLH


Bro. Steve Harrison, 33°, is Past Master of Liberty Lodge #31, Liberty, Missouri. He is the editor of the Missouri Freemason magazine, author of the book Freemasonry Crosses the Mississippi, a Fellow of the Missouri Lodge of Research and also its Worshipful Master. He is a dual member of Kearney Lodge #311, St. Joseph Missouri Valley of the Scottish Rite, Liberty York Rite, Moila Shrine and a member and Past Dean of the DeMolay Legion of Honor. Brother Harrison is a regular contributor to the Midnight Freemasons blog as well as several other Masonic publications. His latest book, Freemasons: Tales From the Craft, is available on amazon.com.