Walter Hunt, Freemason’s
Information Age Pioneer
By Worshipful Brother
Frederic L. Milliken
R. W. Walter Hunt
If this is all Hunt did it would be quite an
accomplishment. Yet this man is also an active Freemason. Grand Historian,
Right Worshipful Walter Hunt is a member of
Norumbega Fraternity Lodge, Grand Lodge of Massachusetts AF & AM,
which was originally a merger of Norumbega and Brookline Lodges,
03/12/1984, where Hunt was Master in 1993-1994 and then that merger
merged with Fraternity
& Fuller Lodge to form Norumbega
Fraternity Lodge,10/05/2001. Hunt is also Past Master of Mount Hollis
Lodge of the same jurisdiction where he served as Master in 1999 and 2006.
Hunt writes for the Trowel, the magazine of the
Grand Lodge of Massachusetts AF & AM. He has an ongoing series right now of in
depth looks at Massachusetts Past Grand Masters you have never heard of. When
the editorship of the Trowel became available recently Hunt was one of two
semi finalists for the position.
Here is a list of articles that he has authored
for the Trowel:
- Summer 2009: “A Grand Historian For Our
Grand Lodge.”
- Winter 2009: “Masonic Team-Building.”
- Spring 2010: “Our Grand Master Visits Our
Brothers in Panama.”
- Fall 2010: “Grand Masters of Massachusetts:
John Cutler and Samuel Dunn.”
- Winter 2010: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Isaiah Thomas, Benjamin Russell – Printers, Patriots,
Freemasons.”
- Spring 2011: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Joseph Jenkins, John Abbot – The Builder of the Temple and
the Defender of the Craft.”
- Summer 2011: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Joshua B. Flint.”
- Winter 2011: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Paul Dean – Careful Steward.”
- Spring 2012: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: George Randall – Apostle in the Wilderness.”
- Summer 2012: “Browsing the Proceedings of
Grand Lodge.”
- Fall 2012: “Grand Masters of Massachusetts:
John T. Heard.”
- Winter 2012: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Augustus Peabody – A Profound Thinker and Good Man”
- Spring 2013: “Grand Marshal to Grand
Master.”
- Summer 2013: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Charles C. Dame – The Fraternity Rebuilds.”
- Fall 2013: “Grand Masters of Massachusetts:
William Sewall Gardner – Holding the Scales in Equipoise.”
- Winter 2013: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Sereno Dwight Nickerson – ‘Si Monumentum Requiris,
Circumspice.’ “
- Spring 2014: (pending): “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Claude LeRoy Allen – A Different Time.”
But his crowning Masonic achievement, the pièce
de résistance , is his website Masonic
Genealogy.
MasonicGenealogy is intended for use as
a research tool for Masonic historians. It is the synthesis of
readily-available sources presented in the form of a wiki, a searchable
database consisting of pages connected by links. The content is constantly
evolving and enlarging, and all material on the site is subject to change as
new material becomes available.
Here is how this project came about in Hunt’s
own words:
“The primary author was at the Grand Lodge
of Massachusetts at one of its Quarterly Communications in the fall of 2009,
and met three Brothers from Rufus
Putnam Lodge in Rutland,
Massachusetts. These Brothers were interested in finding out information
about their Lodge’s history.”
“Their initial inquiry ran up against one
of the greatest problems with our otherwise-terrific Grand Lodge Library and
its extensive records, the Proceedings which chronicle the doings of our
Grand Lodge from 1733 to the present: there is no comprehensive index. There
are indexes in some of the more than 140 volumes of the Proceedings (though
not all), and there is a card catalog (incomplete) composed around 1951 that
covers some (but not all) of the topics – people, places, lodges, events –
from our long history. But there is no overall, up-to-date index.”
“And so began the quixotic notion of
creating an index – by, as another of Masonic Genealogy’s
principals says, “turning every page.” Thus, over a series of months, every
page of the Proceedings from 1792 to the present has been turned (the work
is ongoing). The site now contains pages for every lodge ever chartered, and
virtually every lodge for which a dispensation was ever issued, in
Massachusetts. Similar data sets exist for other states. There is a page for
every year of the Grand Lodge’s history (the work is ongoing), listing all
of the events of that year, in some cases illustrated by pictures from
the Proceedings and elsewhere. Other topic pages are being developed; see
the Current
events page to see what exists and what’s new.”
It is real genius placing a cataloging
system into a wiki. Hunt explains some of the benefits:
- By referencing a Year page,
the user can readily see the events of that year, including the Grand
Master, the dates and events of Quarterly Communications, elections and
decisions, and necrology information from that year. Each year also includes
a summary of all lodges in existence during that year, both chartered and
under dispensation.
- By referencing a Location page,
the user can see a list of all lodges that met in that place, along with the
years they met there. It is intended eventually to list the building
locations and information about those buildings, but that is not yet in
place.
- By referencing a Lodge page,
the user can see information about the lodge of that name, along with a list
of years the lodge was active; where the date appears in bold, there
is a reference for that lodge in the corresponding year. Each lodge page
also includes the charter and dispensation date, the Grand Master issuing
the charter, the places it met, and the current disposition of its charter,
if known.
From a layman’s point of view the wiki format
has obvious advantages. It is on a database not web pages. It doesn’t exist
until you click on it. There is no realistic limit to how much data you can
enter. It’s easy to set up and has the ability to rapidly locate things. It is
very fast!
And the links, did I mention the links? You can
put links on a page which link to another page which has numerous links to
other pages which when you link onto them have still more links. And this goes
on forever and can bring you back to where you started. It’s like one big
circle. Hunt says, “Think of a wiki as a roll top desk with pigeon holes.”
Some of the other advantages are that a wiki
has an edit link for every page. It writes the html for you. Most wikis store
old copies of pages and often will show you what changes you have made on
those pages.
Nathan Matias at
Sitepoint – has some further wiki advantages to mention.
- Creating New Pages Is Simple With Wikis: Wikis
let you link to pages that don’t yet exist. Click on a link that points to a
nonexistent page, and the wiki will ask you for initial content to put in
the page. If you submit some initial content, the wiki will create the page.
All links to that page (not just the one you clicked) will now point to the
newly-created page.
- Wikis Simplify Site Organization: As
wikis work like hypertext databases, you can organize your page however you
want. Many content management systems require you to plan classifications
for your content before you actually create it. This can be helpful, but
only if what you want to convey fits a rigid mould. With a wiki, you can
organize your page into categories if you want, but you can also try other
things. Instead of designing the site structure, many wiki site creators
just let the structure grow with the content and the links inside their
content. But you don’t have to have it either way. I do all three on my own
site. Visitors can navigate the site by following a storyline, drilling down
through a hierarchy, or they can just browse with the natural flow of the
internal links. Without the wiki, such complexity would be a nightmare. Now
that I use a wiki, I also find my site structure easier to manage than when
I used a template system and a set of categories.
- Wikis Keep Track of All Your Stuff: Because
a wiki stores everything in an internal hypertext database, it knows about
all your links and all your pages. So it’s easy for the wiki to show back
links, a list of all the pages that linking to the current page. Since the
wiki stores your document history, it can also list recent changes. Advanced
wikis like the Wikipedia can
even show a list of recent changes to pages that link to the current page.
Hunt tells us again, “A wiki grows
organically. Take things in any order, in any time. Look at any page and see
its history.”
Some come with me now to explore
Masonic Genealogy. Under regional sections on the right click on
Massachusetts. Click on Lodges and we will look up one of my former
Lodges. Go to the P’s and click on Paul Revere. Now under Anniversaries or
Visits by Grand Master, take your pick, click on 2006- 150th
anniversary. Now we find ourselves on the Jeffrey Hodgdon Grand Master page
for 2006. Scroll down the page to Special Communications and find 10/14 2006
Brockton. Click on Brockton and then Paul Revere and we are back where we
started.
Now this is a very simple route that we took.
But you might have noticed along the way all the options you had to go
elsewhere and make a bigger circle or a longer route. The cross referencing in
this wiki presents you with the best cross referencing you have ever seen and
you can use it without getting lost.
Lately Hunt is working on expanding and
explaining all the annotations in the pages of the Grand Constitution.
The bottom line is that this is a tremendous
tool for research and getting to know your Grand Lodge. It is the new Grand
Lodge Search Engine!
Walter Hunt, a historian, writer, author,
science fiction buff, board game aficionado and Freemason is making his mark
on society and Freemasonry. His Masonic Genealogy will be a model for every
Lodge in the United States if not the world and will bring Grand Lodges fully
into the 21st century Information Age with both feet.
Interesting people do interesting things and
some of the most interesting to me are Masonic artisans or craftsmen. The
cream of the crop are those who are multi talented having expertise across a
number of fields. When I wrote about Patrick Craddock I noted:
Successful people are multi- talented and
multi-faceted people. If you take a look at Brothers David Naughton-Shires
and Ryan Flynn you will notice that they have interests and expertise in a
wide range of different areas. What they do in one field is buttressed by
what they know in another. When you combine a working knowledge of
mathematics, science, history and religion with such sub headings of
scholarship perhaps such as numerology, sacred geometry, historical
preservation, symbology, ancient mystery schools, Gnosticism, computer
science and other such studies, you become a well rounded person able to
pull from other areas for your vision.
Here are some of these multi talented Freemason
artisans and craftsmen who have graced the pages of Freemason Information and
Phoenixmasonry.
Shot From The Cannon – David Naughton-Shires And
The Masonic Art Exchange
Patrick Craddock And The Craftsman’s Apron
The Multi Talented Masonic Graphic Artist Brother
Ryan J. Flynn
Brother Jim McBeth, Masonic Knife Craftsman
Now it is time to add another multi talented
Masonic artisan to the group, Right Worshipful Brother
Walter Hunt, Grand Historian for the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts AF & AM.
Hunt is a most remarkable man who has been a writer all his life and a full
time professional since 2001. He is the author of four science fiction novels
by Tor Books –
The Dark Wing series,
which has been compared to the works of,
Orson Scott Card, Frank Herbert, David Weber, and
J.R.R. Tolkien. The series has been published in English and German and
The Dark Wing has also appeared in Russian.
Since these works he has written
“A Song In
Stone,” which deals with the mystery of
Rosslyn Chapel and the secrets of the Templars.
Hunt writes of his inspiration for
A Song In
Stone:
“In the summer of 2005, I had the
opportunity to visit Rosslyn
Chapel, an extraordinary site just seven miles from Edinburgh. The final
scenes in the best-selling novel The
DaVinci Code take place there; it’s said to be the resting place of the
Ark of the Covenant and the Grail, among other things. It also has Masonic
and Knight Templar connections. My tour guide that day was a fellow Mason,
who was very knowledgeable about the place – both the traditional lore and
the somewhat more esoteric stories. While I was standing with him in the
northeast corner of the chapel – highly significant, that, as my fellow
Masons will attest – he and I had a conversation similar to the one below.”
“Look up there,” he said, pointing to the
ceilings. I could see the pendant bosses hanging down from the place where
four arched supports met; each arch was decorated with hundreds of boxlike
projections and an assortment of carvings and decorations – animal and human
figures, angels and devils, nature emblems and Green men.
“Extraordinary,” I managed.
“Unlike anything else,” he said. “There
are countless numbers of places of worship, holy places, all across Europe
and the world. But this is different, Ian. This is not merely a work of art:
it’s a text written in stone. More than that – it’s a song.”
“I don’t quite get your meaning. A song?”
“Take a look around the arches. There are
seven slightly different shapes for those boxes. There are seven notes in
the scale. In fact, if you’ve a good ear, you could strike each of them and
hear a slightly different sound.
“Now imagine if all of them – there are
more than fourteen hundred – were arranged as music . . . It’s the healing
music of Rosslyn,” Madson said softly, looking away from me as if he were
trying to remember something.
“I don’t think that was in my briefing.”
“No, it wouldn’t be,” he said. “But if it
could be found . . .” “What happens then?”
“It heals the world.”
. . . And, as sometimes happens in my line
of work, I had a moment of inspiration. A song, I thought. A whole plot
dropped into my head; what if that song was truly the key to healing the
world – what if it unlocked something of great importance? People have been
trying to unlock the music for centuries; someone claims he’s actually done
it, though my guide suggests that this falls short of the true “healing
music”. But if the music was more complex, there might be an even more
complex reason for it to have been encoded in the stones of the Chapel. From
such small things are great things born. By the time I headed for home a
week and a half later, I’d sketched out a plot for a new novel; by Labor Day
there were five chapters. Within a year, there was an entire book. It was
the first book I’ve written that isn’t part of the Dark Wing universe. The
quoted portion above is from that book.
He goes on to describe Rosslyn Chapel:
Even the dimensions have meaning. As I began
to plan out the plot of A Song In Stone, I became more and more aware of the
strange field of sacred geometry – the way in which medieval builders created
remarkable structures without resorting to advanced mathematics,
computer-aided design, or any other modern convenience. There is a great
confluence between the Gothic architectural style and the mathematics of
music. It shows at Rosslyn, at the great cathedrals such as Chartres (explored
later in the book, and to be described in a later post) . . . and at Rosslyn
as well. Rosslyn is rightly called a “mystery chapel” – and it deserves better
than to be an anticlimactic footnote. From the Lady Chapel to the decorated
ceiling, from the pillars to the sacristy, Rosslyn is full of little mysteries
waiting to be discovered.
Lately Hunt has a few more irons in the fire.
He is writing a sequel to A Song In Stone titled
A Word In The Air. He is also
working on another novel titled King &
Country. “It’s an alternate-history timeline” he says, “an America
with no United States; the American Revolution never happened. In fact, there
is no hint of a revolution: the Atlantic colonies never consider the
possibility of separation, because their relationship with the mother country
is on a fundamentally different footing.”
Now so as you get the picture that is a very
serious author who does not just dash off a bunch of words and slap them into
a book, here is his reading list for research for this undertaking:
The Earlier Colonial Period
- Andrews, Charles M. The Colonial
Period of American History. This work is the definitive text on the
colonial period. It is in four volumes, though Volume 1 and Volume 2 are the
most important, as they provide the most complete descriptions on the
origins of the British colonies (including offshore and Caribbean ones).
- Bourne, Russell. Gods of War, Gods
of Peace. An excellent insight into the religions of native societies as
they came into contact with European ones.
- Cordingly, David. Under the Black
Flag. A real-life history of piracy, with considerable information on
the lives of the most notorious pirates.
- Fischer, David Hackett. Albion’s
Seed. An excellent study of the cultural origins of English-speaking
colonies in America. While not as historically in-depth as the Andrews book
for facts and details, it’s an easier and more fluid read. 0195069056
- Jones, Daniel P. The Economic and
Social Transformation of Rural Rhode Island. A dry discussion of early
Rhode Island economics, particularly informative for the period just after
King Philip’s War. 1555531210
- Mandell, Daniel. Behind the
Frontier. A study of the role of native peoples in Massachusetts Bay
Colony during the eighteenth century. This is a good companion piece to the
excellent Taylor book on New York natives (see below). 0803282494
- McCormick, Richard P. New Jersey
From Colony To State. A Rutgers University study of the transformation
of the Jersey shore settlements up to the creation of the United States.
(New Jersey’s development is less linear and more complex than other
colonies, so this is a very useful book.) 081350662X
- Mason, Laura. Sugar-Plums and
Sherbet. Subtitled “The Prehistory of Sweets”, this book is an
insightful discussion of the development of sugar and sugar products.
1903018285
- Peckham, Howard H. The Colonial
Wars: 1689-1762. Detailed discussion of the “forgotten wars” in America
(not forgotten here, needless to say!) prior to the French and Indian War.
0226653145
- Salinger, Sharon V. Taverns and
Drinking in Early America. A well-researched book about the culture of
taverns and the social mores of drunkenness in colonial America. 0801878993
- Singleton, Esther. Social New York
Under the Georges. A wonderful source of information on New York life –
furnishings, etc. – with pictures. Great stuff. 1406770493
- Taylor, Alan. American Colonies.
One of the best all-around books about colonial development in America. I
had a conversation with a reenactor at Jamestown in the summer of 2007 who
had some issues with Taylor’s conclusions, but the book is comprehensive and
detailed. 0142002100
- Vaughn, Alden P. The New England
Frontier. A detailed discussion of relations with natives in New England
during the seventeenth century (before King Philip’s War). 080612718X
- Warden, G.B. Boston 1689-1776.
The 19th of April was famous in New England long before the Revolution – it
was the day that Bostonians took Sir Edmund Andros prisoner in Fort William.
This very informative book begins with that event and takes the reader all
the way through the coming of the American Revolution. B000NOYL1M
- Zemsky, Robert. Merchants, Farmers
and River Gods. Zemsky’s book is a study of leading citizens in
Massachusetts Bay Colony prior to the Revolution. This B000KLXLY6
Eighteenth-Century Britain
- Buchan. Crowded With Genius.
- McLynn. Bonnie Prince Charlie.
- Preble. Glencoe.
- Preble. The Highland Clearances.
- Schama, Simon. A History of Britain (3 vols,
DVD)
- Treasure. Who’s Who In Early Hanoverian
Britain.
- Treasure. Who’s Who In Late Hanoverian
Britain.
French and Indian War
- Anderson, Paul Crucible of War
- Harvey A Few Bloody Noses
- Jennings. Empire of Fortune
- Parry Trade and Dominion
American Revolution Era
- Allgor Parlor Politics
- Middlekauff. The Glorious Cause
- Middlekauff. Benjamin Franklin and His
Enemies
- Schecter. The Battle for New York
Early 19th Century
- Key, Jane Holtz. Lost Boston. A photographic
essay on the city of Boston, 1558495274
Middle 19th Century
Land and Sea Warfare
- Black, Jeremy Warfare in the Eighteenth
Century
- Herman To Rule the Waves
- Lavery, Ship of the Line (2 vols)
Hunt says this
bibliography is a bit out of date as he has added to it. My goodness, that is
a lot of reading to do for one book!
But before he completes this epic work he is
going to publish a 1632 novel with the help of Eric Flint. It is set in 1636,
and takes place mostly in the New World.
Hunt has still another work in progress, this
one almost complete. The Book is title
“Elements of
Mind,” a novel that is set around 1860, and deals with mesmerism – a
sort of pseudoscience that swept England in the middle 19th century. The
principal characters are almost exclusively real people, though in many cases
their histories have been altered or elaborated to fit the story.
Hunt doesn’t just limit himself to writing,
however. He is also the designer of a board game called Rails of New England.
If this is all Hunt did it would be quite an
accomplishment. Yet this man is also an active Freemason. Grand
Historian,Right Worshipful Walter Hunt is a member of
Norumbega Fraternity Lodge, Grand Lodge of Massachusetts AF & AM,
which was originally a merger of Norumbega and Brookline Lodges,
03/12/1984, where Hunt was Master in 1993-1994 and then that merger
merged with Fraternity
& Fuller Lodge to form Norumbega
Fraternity Lodge,10/05/2001. Hunt is also Past Master of Mount Hollis
Lodge of the same jurisdiction where he served as Master in 1999 and 2006.
Hunt writes for the Trowel, the magazine of the
Grand Lodge of Massachusetts AF & AM. He has an ongoing series right now of in
depth looks at Massachusetts Past Grand Masters you have never heard of. When
the editorship of the Trowel became available recently Hunt was one of two
semi finalists for the position.
Here is a list of articles that he has authored
for the Trowel:
- Summer 2009: “A Grand Historian For Our
Grand Lodge.”
- Winter 2009: “Masonic Team-Building.”
- Spring 2010: “Our Grand Master Visits Our
Brothers in Panama.”
- Fall 2010: “Grand Masters of Massachusetts:
John Cutler and Samuel Dunn.”
- Winter 2010: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Isaiah Thomas, Benjamin Russell – Printers, Patriots,
Freemasons.”
- Spring 2011: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Joseph Jenkins, John Abbot – The Builder of the Temple and
the Defender of the Craft.”
- Summer 2011: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Joshua B. Flint.”
- Winter 2011: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Paul Dean – Careful Steward.”
- Spring 2012: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: George Randall – Apostle in the Wilderness.”
- Summer 2012: “Browsing the Proceedings of
Grand Lodge.”
- Fall 2012: “Grand Masters of Massachusetts:
John T. Heard.”
- Winter 2012: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Augustus Peabody – A Profound Thinker and Good Man”
- Spring 2013: “Grand Marshal to Grand
Master.”
- Summer 2013: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Charles C. Dame – The Fraternity Rebuilds.”
- Fall 2013: “Grand Masters of Massachusetts:
William Sewall Gardner – Holding the Scales in Equipoise.”
- Winter 2013: “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Sereno Dwight Nickerson – ‘Si Monumentum Requiris,
Circumspice.’ “
- Spring 2014: (pending): “Grand Masters of
Massachusetts: Claude LeRoy Allen – A Different Time.”
But his crowning Masonic achievement, the pièce
de résistance , is his website Masonic
Genealogy.
MasonicGenealogy is intended for use as
a research tool for Masonic historians. It is the synthesis of
readily-available sources presented in the form of a wiki, a searchable
database consisting of pages connected by links. The content is constantly
evolving and enlarging, and all material on the site is subject to change as
new material becomes available.
Here is how this project came about in Hunt’s
own words:
“The primary author was at the Grand Lodge
of Massachusetts at one of its Quarterly Communications in the fall of 2009,
and met three Brothers from Rufus
Putnam Lodge in Rutland,
Massachusetts. These Brothers were interested in finding out information
about their Lodge’s history.”
“Their initial inquiry ran up against one
of the greatest problems with our otherwise-terrific Grand Lodge Library and
its extensive records, the Proceedings which chronicle the doings of our
Grand Lodge from 1733 to the present: there is no comprehensive index. There
are indexes in some of the more than 140 volumes of the Proceedings (though
not all), and there is a card catalog (incomplete) composed around 1951 that
covers some (but not all) of the topics – people, places, lodges, events –
from our long history. But there is no overall, up-to-date index.”
“And so began the quixotic notion of
creating an index – by, as another of Masonic Genealogy’s
principals says, “turning every page.” Thus, over a series of months, every
page of the Proceedings from 1792 to the present has been turned (the work
is ongoing). The site now contains pages for every lodge ever chartered, and
virtually every lodge for which a dispensation was ever issued, in
Massachusetts. Similar data sets exist for other states. There is a page for
every year of the Grand Lodge’s history (the work is ongoing), listing all
of the events of that year, in some cases illustrated by pictures from
the Proceedings and elsewhere. Other topic pages are being developed; see
the Current
events page to see what exists and what’s new.”
It is real genius placing a cataloging
system into a wiki. Hunt explains some of the benefits:
- By referencing a Year page,
the user can readily see the events of that year, including the Grand
Master, the dates and events of Quarterly Communications, elections and
decisions, and necrology information from that year. Each year also includes
a summary of all lodges in existence during that year, both chartered and
under dispensation.
- By referencing a Location page,
the user can see a list of all lodges that met in that place, along with the
years they met there. It is intended eventually to list the building
locations and information about those buildings, but that is not yet in
place.
- By referencing a Lodge page,
the user can see information about the lodge of that name, along with a list
of years the lodge was active; where the date appears in bold, there
is a reference for that lodge in the corresponding year. Each lodge page
also includes the charter and dispensation date, the Grand Master issuing
the charter, the places it met, and the current disposition of its charter,
if known.
From a layman’s point of view the wiki format
has obvious advantages. It is on a database not web pages. It doesn’t exist
until you click on it. There is no realistic limit to how much data you can
enter. It’s easy to set up and has the ability to rapidly locate things. It is
very fast!
And the links, did I mention the links? You can
put links on a page which link to another page which has numerous links to
other pages which when you link onto them have still more links. And this goes
on forever and can bring you back to where you started. It’s like one big
circle. Hunt says, “Think of a wiki as a roll top desk with pigeon holes.”
Some of the other advantages are that a wiki
has an edit link for every page. It writes the html for you. Most wikis store
old copies of pages and often will show you what changes you have made on
those pages.
Nathan Matias at
Sitepoint – has some further wiki advantages to mention.
- Creating New Pages Is Simple With Wikis: Wikis
let you link to pages that don’t yet exist. Click on a link that points to a
nonexistent page, and the wiki will ask you for initial content to put in
the page. If you submit some initial content, the wiki will create the page.
All links to that page (not just the one you clicked) will now point to the
newly-created page.
- Wikis Simplify Site Organization: As
wikis work like hypertext databases, you can organize your page however you
want. Many content management systems require you to plan classifications
for your content before you actually create it. This can be helpful, but
only if what you want to convey fits a rigid mould. With a wiki, you can
organize your page into categories if you want, but you can also try other
things. Instead of designing the site structure, many wiki site creators
just let the structure grow with the content and the links inside their
content. But you don’t have to have it either way. I do all three on my own
site. Visitors can navigate the site by following a storyline, drilling down
through a hierarchy, or they can just browse with the natural flow of the
internal links. Without the wiki, such complexity would be a nightmare. Now
that I use a wiki, I also find my site structure easier to manage than when
I used a template system and a set of categories.
- Wikis Keep Track of All Your Stuff: Because
a wiki stores everything in an internal hypertext database, it knows about
all your links and all your pages. So it’s easy for the wiki to show back
links, a list of all the pages that linking to the current page. Since the
wiki stores your document history, it can also list recent changes. Advanced
wikis like the Wikipedia can
even show a list of recent changes to pages that link to the current page.
Hunt tells us again, “A wiki grows
organically. Take things in any order, in any time. Look at any page and see
its history.”
Some come with me now to explore
Masonic Genealogy. Under regional sections on the right click on
Massachusetts. Click on Lodges and we will look up one of my former
Lodges. Go to the P’s and click on Paul Revere. Now under Anniversaries or
Visits by Grand Master, take your pick, click on 2006- 150th
anniversary. Now we find ourselves on the Jeffrey Hodgdon Grand Master page
for 2006. Scroll down the page to Special Communications and find 10/14 2006
Brockton. Click on Brockton and then Paul Revere and we are back where we
started.
Now this is a very simple route that we took.
But you might have noticed along the way all the options you had to go
elsewhere and make a bigger circle or a longer route. The cross referencing in
this wiki presents you with the best cross referencing you have ever seen and
you can use it without getting lost.
Lately Hunt is working on expanding and
explaining all the annotations in the pages of the Grand Constitution.
The bottom line is that this is a tremendous
tool for research and getting to know your Grand Lodge. It is the new Grand
Lodge Search Engine!
Walter Hunt, a historian, writer, author,
science fiction buff, board game aficionado and Freemason is making his mark
on society and Freemasonry. His Masonic Genealogy will be a model for every
Lodge in the United States if not the world and will bring Grand Lodges fully
into the 21st century Information Age with both feet.