Preston DuBose
Registered User
One of the things I inherited as W.M. this year was a handy spreadsheet with (among other things) each lodge member's birth date. I use spreadsheets every day as part of my job and I get a kick out of "data mining" with pivot tables. Here's some interesting trivia about our lodge:
We have 54 members who are Master Masons.
Of those...
-18 have endowed memberships
-21 have visited the lodge in the last 12 months
-10* are under the age of 50
-10* are 80 or older
-the average age of all members is 64*
-the average age of those who have visited in the last 12 months is 60*
I have enough data to calculate ages at the time members were raised, which I think would also be an interesting statistic. I'll probably do that as a follow up. I'd love to get my hands on this kind of data for the entire Grand Lodge and really crunch some numbers. What would be interesting to me would be looking at changes over time-- the average age and (average age when raised) in 2011 versus 10, 20, and 30 years ago, for instance. Maybe when my year as W.M. is done, I'll look at joining the Texas Lodge of Research and seeing what kind of data I can get my hands on. I think a paper on demographics would be both fascinating and useful from a practical standpoint.
*My spreadsheet is a little out of date. It doesn't have the statistics on 3 brothers who have joined in the last year. I have a general idea of their ages, though. Two are younger than the average and one is older.
We have 54 members who are Master Masons.
Of those...
-18 have endowed memberships
-21 have visited the lodge in the last 12 months
-10* are under the age of 50
-10* are 80 or older
-the average age of all members is 64*
-the average age of those who have visited in the last 12 months is 60*
I have enough data to calculate ages at the time members were raised, which I think would also be an interesting statistic. I'll probably do that as a follow up. I'd love to get my hands on this kind of data for the entire Grand Lodge and really crunch some numbers. What would be interesting to me would be looking at changes over time-- the average age and (average age when raised) in 2011 versus 10, 20, and 30 years ago, for instance. Maybe when my year as W.M. is done, I'll look at joining the Texas Lodge of Research and seeing what kind of data I can get my hands on. I think a paper on demographics would be both fascinating and useful from a practical standpoint.
*My spreadsheet is a little out of date. It doesn't have the statistics on 3 brothers who have joined in the last year. I have a general idea of their ages, though. Two are younger than the average and one is older.