by Christopher Hodapp
(Thanks to Chris Ruli, author of The White House and the Freemasons for originally posting a story about this on Facebook.)
Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter passed away over the weekend at the amazing age of 100. Almost immediately upon the announcement early Sunday morning of Carter’s death, several social media posts made the erroneous claim that he had been both a Freemason and a member of the Shriners.
Whatever your political opinions or historical estimations may have been of President Carter, there can be no denying his dedication to service and philanthropy, and his lifetime of living by the tenets of his faith. His single term of office in the White House between 1977-81 was merely the beginning of another four and a half decades of serving countless causes and missions, all over the world.
He took on one such cause in 2016. That year, Shriners Hospitals named Jimmy Carter as an honorary Shriner and an Ambassador for their program that operates 22 hospitals in North America for treating disabled children. In the photograph above, you can see Carter wearing the signature headgear of the Shriners, the red fez. But you can also see that the normally black tassel dangling from the fez of the Shriner on his right differs from Carter’s yellow/gold tassel, signifying his Honorary Ambassador position.
That same year, he appeared in a TV commercial for Shriners Hospitals, and continued to support them for the rest of his lifetime (the press release can be seen below).
But Carter's association with the Shriners did not involve him being initiated, passed and raised as a Mason, nor was he ever made a Noble in the Shrine. Somewhere, someone made the claim online that he had been a member of our fraternity. And then A.I. algorithms immediately grabbed it and went to work.
Several A.I.-generated posts circulated the misinformation, and even went so far as to embellish the story. 'Poe,' the A.I. assistant on the Quora site, stated that Carter had become a member of “Tatum Lodge 333 in Plains, Georgia" in 1946; that Freemasonry had been "part of his public persona throughout his presidency"; and that “Carter is one of the few U.S. presidents known to have been a Freemason.” (See image below.)
There's a reason the Poe app is free. ALL of these statements are false.
Jimmy Carter was neither a Freemason nor a Shriner; there is no “Tatum Lodge 333” in the state of Georgia, or anywhere else, for that matter*; and he is not among the 14 U.S. Presidents known to have been a member of the Masonic fraternity.
(For the non-Masons in the crowd, a man must first be elected into a local Masonic lodge and complete the three degrees of Entered Apprentice, Fellow Craft, and Master Mason before he can proceed to join the Shriners. There is no known record that Carter did any of this.)
By Sunday afternoon, numerous Masons were forwarding this incorrect story around social media, and A.I. – being a sophisticated, computerized plagiarist – went right on repeating it, “verifying” the story with its very own A.I.-generated story as its source.
To clarify, Jimmy Carter did meet with groups of state grand lodges and Prince Hall Masons during his presidency, just as all presidents meet officially or unofficially with hundreds of groups throughout out their terms in the Oval Office. But none of those groups of Masons ever claimed him as a member, nor did any grand lodge make him a Mason "at sight" (a controversial shortcut used by some jurisdictions to confer the lodge degrees on candidates – frequently celebrities).
None of this detracts from Jimmy Carter's lifetime of accomplishments, and as Masons we should both respect his devotion to his fellow men, and honor his memory. But it's important to keep the record straight when it comes to the true history of our fraternity. Please don't rely on Artificial Intelligence to research factual information.
*Just to be as thorough as possible, there is a Tatum Lodge 1386 in the town of Tatum, Texas, not Georgia, and Jimmy Carter never joined it. Georgia has a lodge numbered 333 — Winder Lodge 333, located in the town of the same name. There’s no record of Carter joining it, either.
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