Membership Moments

Rick Grotton

By Rick Grotton,
Membership Committee Director
207 582-5915

Spring will be here soon, which means that Grange month in April is on our doorstep. ย Does your Grange have anything planned?ย If so, please let us all know by advertising on the Maine State Grange website. ย Over the years, our Granges have become more individualized and isolated from one another, even within their own Pomona.ย Aย Pomona meetingย is where the Granges in your area meet once a month to keep contact between Granges strong. However, many of our Granges do not have their Fifthย Degree and hardly ever see anyone from theirย area or a neighboring Grange. What has happened? Why are many not finishing their degrees? Are we encouraging them?ย What do our new members know about Grange other than what they seeย inย their own Grange?ย 

We need to startย bringingย back programs thatย bringย others to our different Grangesย to interact and to have fun.ย Some of the programs we used to beย the following:ย 

Three-point meetings. This is where a Grange invites two other Granges for a night of fun. Oneย Grangeย usuallyย provides dinner, another, theย program,ย and the third, the officers.ย 

Green Sash and Pink Sash nights. This is when a Grange invites the members ofย itsย Pomonaย or the State Officersย to take their offices for the eveningย while the host Grange provides the program.ย 

Youth Nights. Sadly, with the lack of youth in our Granges today, these nights are almost non-existent.ย To the youth of different Granges, it was their night to shine and provide a program.ย 

Ritualistic Night. When I was lecturer at my Grange years ago, this was my favorite program to present, so all members could learn or refresh their knowledge of rituals and traditions.ย ย 

Agricultural Nights and Legislative Nights. ย There were also fun nights in which the program was based on Ag or legislative issues. Resolutions wereย conceived,ย and we also learned aboutย planting,ย harvesting,ย and filledย withย skits,ย orย having aย speakerย as part of the program.ย 

Without theย aboveย programs, what do we have now? Do Granges still have programsย that invite others?ย How are we to take in new members if we have nothing exciting or beneficial for them?ย We need to startย interactingย more with one another through our Grange meetingsย (Community,ย Pomona,ย and State)ย to grow and prosper.ย ALL OF USย are responsibleย forย keepingย Grangeย alive,ย so ask this question at your next Grange meeting: What is our vision for the future?ย 

Grange Today! 2-13-2026

The Newsletter of the National Grange

Articles in this edition include:

  • Make a strong impression in your grant proposal
  • Apply for a Rural Life Initiative grant
  • Grange Heirloom for February
  • 2026 National Grange Programs now available online
  • Support the Grange Foundation through the Common Routes Challenge
  • Understanding Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors: Numbers to Know in 2026
  • Apply for the Ernestine Keiser Memorial Scholarship
  • Hamp Watch: Where is our National Grange President?
  • Recipes from the Heartland
  • Member Benefit: Aflac
  • Grange Store: Veteran Recognition Pin

Click the button below to read and/or subscribe to Grange Today!


Note that all recent issues are available on the National Grange Website. To save server space, we only post the table of contents on the MSG Website.

Changes at Enterprise Grange

Submitted by Marilyn Stinson

Enterprise Grange is located at 15 Alexander Reed Road in Richmond, Maine.

Enterprise Grange #48 has changed its meeting nights. It is now the third Tuesday of each month (except October, due to the State Session). Public Pot Luck Supper at 6:00, meeting at 7:00.

Our January meeting was close to February, and we held a candle-lighting ceremony to observe Four Chaplains Day with veterans reading the four paragraphs and Master CJ lighting the candles. As I researched the program and learned that the priest, two Protestant pastors, and a rabbi went down with the ship, praying and singing hymns, I wondered which hymns would be central to their different faiths. I settled on Faith of Our Fathers.

Enterprise Grange Public Super

Submitted by Marilyn Stinson

Enterprise Grange is located at 15 Alexander Reed Road in Richmond, Maine.

Public Corned Beef & Cabbage Dinner

Saturday, March 14, 2026, 5:OO PM – 7:00 PM

Corned beef OR ham, cabbage, potatoes, carrots, rolls, desserts, beverages, home made pickled beets. Served buffet style, but we will assist anyone; takeout available without the coffee.

Only $18.00 (cheaper than most restaurants and no tip), Seniors 65+ only $15.00, Family rates.
Reservations or FMI – Marilyn at 207-308-3901. Gluten-free dessert option.

Fraud Watch- The Rise of Friendship Scams

Reprinted with permission from AARP’s Fraud Watch Network.

You donโ€™t have to be looking for love to be targeted by a relationship scam. Increasingly, perpetrators take the friendship route, building deep connections over time, starting by claiming they share your interests, experiences, or struggles.

They may initiate contact by commenting on your social media posts, reaching out through direct messages, or even sending what seems like a text sent by mistake. Over time, they earn your trust before asking for money or pitching an investment opportunity.

Because these relationships appear platonic, they can be harder to recognize. Red flags include pressure to move conversations to encrypted apps and eventually urgent requests for money or encouragement to invest in cryptocurrency.

Make it a habit to talk to a friend or family member when new relationships bloom. Together, you may be able to see signs of a scam that you couldnโ€™t see alone.


Report scams to local law enforcement. For help from AARP, call 1-877-908-3360 or visit the AARP Fraud Watch Network at aarp.org/fraudwatchnetwork.

AARP Fraud Watch Network

Need a scam prevention speaker for your group? Click the link to fill out the AARP online form or email me@aarp.org.

Exploring Traditions – February, 2026

Meandering Around the Grange Way of Life


By Walter Boomsma, Guest Columnist

Dilemmas and Decisions

I confess to having recently watched several fictional movies about time travel. The science is interesting. The application is fascinating. When someone travels back in time, thereโ€™s usually a dilemma about whether to take an action that might alter the future. Seth Godin points out, โ€œWhen you give people a choice, they make a choice.โ€

Traditions rarely happen deliberately. But the development of the Internet is one example of how traditions will change dramatically. For example, somewhere along the way, Grangers developed an interest in cooking and recipes. Consider how many Grange Cookbooks exist and notice that recipes continue to be a feature in the National Grange Magazine. Itโ€™s not just limited to Grangers. You can probably find a recipe box and several cookbooks in most homes today. That may not always be the case.

It may not matter how many cookbooks you have. If you canโ€™t find (or donโ€™t have) a recipe box, AI (artificial intelligence) can create a new recipe for you in just a few seconds. It may not be unique or have secret ingredients. Without getting too technical, it will create your recipe by analyzing and combining vast pools of information. Some will no doubt see this as good news. Others will see it as bad news. Theyโ€™ll all be correct.

In a very real sense, this is one of the major challenges we face as an organization. No, not cookbooks and recipes, but balancing the old with the new.

 Old Hippie lyrics ยฉ Conexion Media Group, Inc.

We may not be time travelers to the past, but we have similar dilemmas and decisions. We are given choices and shouldnโ€™t ignore them.

Time-travel movies often make the point that small changes can have big effects in the future. Itโ€™s true for both organizations and individuals.

An individual who decides to read for ten minutes every day is potentially altering his future, and if you appreciate the ripple effect, the future of others, and, literally, the world.

The Grange decided in 1867 to give women equal standing (at least in theory), full voting rights, and leadership positions. We can rightfully claim that those radical decisions contributed to women gaining the right to vote fifty years later.

While our crystal ball is often cloudy, itโ€™s worth keeping an eye on it as we make decisions. Itโ€™s important for individuals and organizations to accept the idea that we can at least influence our future if not control it. As we travel through time, it might be fun to consider what the Grange Way of Life looks like in the future. The decisions we make and the actions we take will determine it.

โ€œAs we are again to separate, and mingle with the world, let us not forget the precepts of our Order. Let us add dignity to labor, and in our dealings with our fellow men be honest, be just, and fear not.

We must avoid intemperance in eating, drinking, and language, also in work and recreation, and whatever we do, strive to do well. Let us be quiet, peaceful citizens, feeding the hungry, helping the fatherless and the widows, and keeping ourselves unspotted from the world.โ€


Any degree or ritual quotations are from the forty-seventh edition of the 2023 Subordinate Grange Manual or the most recent edition of the Pomona Grange Manual. The views and opinions expressed in “Exploring Traditions” are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official doctrine and policy of the Grange. Information about the book “Exploring Traditionsโ€”Celebrating the Grange Way of Life” can be found at http://abbotvillagepress.com, on Mr. Boomsma’s Amazon Author Page, or by contacting the author.

Communications Column – February 2026

AI generated image

By Walter Boomsma
207 343-1842
Communications Director

Where Are You?

The name and number of a Grange should be on the building or on the sign at the road AND should include the day and time of the meetings.  This way someone passing by or visiting the area will know when you meet.

Master Sherry

One of my earliest attempts to visit a Grange had a somewhat humorous result. It was over two decades ago. I was relatively new to the Grange, and technology was still young. I drove to Lincoln, thinking that the Grange wouldn’t be too hard to find. I stopped for directions (more than once), and no one could help. In fact, no one had ever heard of a Grange Hall. It took a few phone calls to learn that Lincoln Pomona Granges were several hours away.

In more recent adventures, I’ve learned that some Granges appear to have multiple locations. It goes with the territory of rural life. There are countless examples where someone unfamiliar with the area could become mightily confused.

I’ve been guilty myself of giving directions like “turn left where the schoolhouse used to be.” When my sister and family from North Carolina first visited us, I talked them in and, without thinking, actually said that. After a short silence, my brother-in-law reminded me that this was their first visit to Maine and asked how they would know where the schoolhouse used to be.

Under the heading, “Nothing’s perfect…” I’ve also learned that travelers coming from a certain direction to our home need to ignore their GPS at one suggested turn. But the simple truth is, we need to make it easy for people to find us, and “us” includes our Grange Halls.

One way to do that is to know and use your hall’s street address. Street addresses in Maine are assigned by local municipalities (usually the code enforcement officer or town clerk), plantations, or county commissioners (for unorganized territories), adhering to E-911 standards. The E-911 system requires that each structure be linked to a unique physical address that clearly identifies the caller’s location (e.g., 35 Pine Road). Remember that dispatchers are often far away from the communities they serve.

The additional benefit of standards for street addresses make it possible for anyone to locate a building. Once you have your hall’s street address, please use it. I recommend placing the street number outside the building or on a post. It also wouldn’t hurt to have it posted inside the hall. There are additional steps you can take online, including locating your hall on Google Maps.

As an aside, the National Grange’s “Find a Grange” program does not include Maine; you should not rely on it. Our Maine State Grange online directory is based on the published roster. We’ll update it soon, when the roster is issued, but we can also make changes at any time.

Making your hall visible and easy to find is another great spring project!


FACT: During a recent seven-day period, more than fifty people visited the website from Facebook.

Kennebec Valley Grange Flea Market and More!

Every Saturday, 10 AM-4 PM, Kennebec Valley Grange hosts a flea market on two floors. Seamstress in attendance 10 AM-2 PM. You’ll find baked goods such as whoopie pies, regular pies, and Needhams. (Pies by preorder. Doris 399-1191) There are also baked beans, Dynamites, and haddock chowder available to go, by the pint or quart. Fresh local eggs. We also offer a small lending library of books and magazines on homesteading, cooking, and farming. FMI Diane Pinkham, Master, 314-5135

Kennebeck Valley Grange is located at 560 Main Street in Madison, Maine.

Charter Draping at Norway Grange

Submitted by Tina Thurston, 207 515-2361

Please forgive the last-minute notice and invitation, but we at Norway Grange 45 want to ensure we donโ€™t exclude anyone from our draping of the Charter this coming Saturday, February 14, in honor of our long-standing, now-at-peace Grange sister, Ethel Lacourse. She led the good fight and lasted 95 years. We will honor her memory with a noon meal, with the ceremony commencing at 1 pm.

Please join us. Even if youโ€™re unable to attend, please send us a written remembrance, and someone will read it in your proxy. Thank you, good brothers and sisters.

For more information, please contact Tina Thurston at 207 515 2361 or email us at norwaygrange45@gmail.com

Please let us know if you can come.

Norway Grange is located at 15 Whitman Street in Norway, Maine.

Maine Membership Notes

Information gleaned from Good Day! โ„ข Magazine, January 2026

Granges in Action

  • Harraseeket Grange #9
  • Mill Stream Grange #674

Membership Anniversaries

Fifty Years

  • Betty Heald, Tranquility #344
  • George Winslow, Tranquility #344
  • Rosemay Winslow, Tranquity #344

Welcome New members

  • None

To ensure anniversaries and new members are listed in Good Day!โ„ข Magazine, send the information to Philip Vonada at pvonoda@nationalgrange.org.