Freemasonry and Women
In Freemasonry, as in all other areas of life, women play
an important role. The opportunities for women to
participate in Freemasonry are widespread and meet a variety
of needs, from social interaction in the Orders for both men
and women, to the unique needs met in the "women
only" Masonic-related organizations. The moral and
ethical values that Freemasonry encourages are universal and
not gender-based.
Masonic Lodges maintain today a long-standing tradition
of restricting membership in Freemasonry to men. This
tradition is based on the historical all male membership of
stonemasons guilds. During the Middle Ages, men traveled far
from home and lived in lodges while constructing great
cathedrals throughout Europe.
However, in the middle 1800s the fraternity took the
progressive step, for that time, of creating organizations
that included women, so that men and women could share
Masonic fraternalism. The Order of the Eastern Star (the
largest of these Masonic-related groups) was established in
1855, the Order of the Amaranth in 1873, and the White
Shrine of Jerusalem in 1894.
Two national Masonic-related youth organizations are for
young women: the International Order of Job’s Daughters,
founded in 1920, and the International Order of Rainbow for
Girls, founded in 1922. Rainbow and Job’s Daughters are
involved with local charities, community services, and
educational programs.
Other Masonic-related organizations limit their
membership to women only, such as the Ladies Oriental Shrine
of North America, Daughters of the Nile, the Daughters of
Mokanna, and the Social Order of Beauceant. These
Masonic-related organizations, like many organizations in
North America, both social and professional, base their
membership on gender. Junior League, P.E.O., National
Association of Female Executives, and Girl Scouts, for
instance, are organizations created exclusively for women,
established to fulfill their unique interests and specific
needs.
Prepared by the Masonic
Information Center