National Grange publishes a special daily issue of the Patrons Chain during the Annual Convention. Each issue contains a wide array of articles ranging from convention reports to entertainment. If you’ve been curious about what happens, here’s a way to find out! We won’t be adding a new post every day but will add to this list as the week progresses.
Day 1, Monday, November 14, 2022 – one of the exciting stories is (are ready for this?) for the first time in 67 years, there is a net increase in Grange membership! (3.1%).
Day 4, Thursday, November 17, 2022 – includes an article about the National Grange Rural Minds Project and an article summarizing some of the department workshops.
โElections belong to the people. It’s their decision. If they decide to turn their back on the fire and burn their behinds, then they will just have to sit on their blisters.โ
Use the icons below to share this Grange Heirloom on social media and help others understand what the Grange stands for! If this heirloom has a particular meaning for you, click the responses link at the top right and share your comment with us!
Grange Heirlooms are snippets from the lessons of the Grange as taught in the Rituals and Declaration of Purposes.
For additional information and resources regarding the Heirloom Program, visit the Heirloom Resource Page on the Maine State Grange Website.
โNatural history is replete with both the wonderful and beautiful, and its study enables us the better to carry out the principles we inculcate of Faith, Hope, and Charity. Cultivate an observing mind. It is delightful to acquire knowledge and much more so to diffuse it. It is sad to think that any human soul should fail to perceive the beauty that every where abounds. Nature preaches to us forever in tones of love, and writes truth in all colors, on manuscripts illuminated with stars and flowers.โ
From the Lecturer’s Lesson in the Third Degree
The Third Degree represents autumn and the harvest season. And we are fortunate here in Maine that nature literally โwrites truth in all colorsโ each fall. The candidates are seen as harvesters and gleaners and the lecturer also reminds them that nature sings the song โBe faithful, be hopeful, be charitable.” Interestingly, the chaplain closes instruction with, โBe faithful in gathering, that you may be liberal in dispensing.โ
Too often, we think of fall as the ending of summer. Of course, thatโs accurate but the Chaplain is not going to let us forget that endings are also beginnings. The changes in agriculture and farming can make it easy to lose sight of that. At one time, harvesting and gleaning also meant selecting and saving the best seed to repeat the cycle by planting it in the spring. We were much more aware of the cyclical nature of life and nature. We didnโt gather and harvest solely to consume. We gathered being mindful of spring when the cultivation cycle would begin again.
โHarvestingโ knowledge is meant to be no different. Gaining knowledge is not an end. We gain to dispense or diffuseโto share. The Chaplain also reminds us that โa manโs life consists not in the abundance of things he possesses, but in the right use of Godโs blessingsโฆ that we may be the stewards of His bounty.โ In practical terms, nature teaches us to harvest seeds responsibly, keep some to plant in the spring, and share some with our neighbors. The master reminds the candidates that โyour faithful work will soon entitle you to still further advancement.โ
One of the distinct advantages of celebrating the Four Degrees at one time is it becomes possible to catch the connectedness of the seasons and the lessons. The Steward describes the cycle. โThe seasons of preparation, culture, and harvest have passed. It is in the home that we enjoy the fruits of our labors in the fields of the farm and fields of life. In winter, the season of rest from active toil, we sit down with our families, our friends and neighbors, and enjoy together the good things our labors have brought usโฆโ
We have much to enjoy.
Any degree or ritual quotations are from the forty-sixth edition of the 2013 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 TraditionsโCelebrating the Grange Way of Life” can be found at http://abbotvillagepress.com,on Mr. Boomsma’s Amazon Author Page, or by contacting the author.
Gleaned from an email written by Phil Vonada, National Grange Communications Director
Facebook Page Zoom-torial Recorded
Phil Vonado, National Grange Communications Director, recently led a Zoom-torial on โHow to Create a Facebook Page,โ which also included some information on the free design website Canva, as well as how to create a Facebook Event. This video is now available on the National Grange YouTube channel and can be viewed here: https://youtu.be/-F3iqXyN5Lo. (We’ll be adding this link/video to the Grange Resources Page.)
National Grange Guide to Contests
A National Grange Guide to Contests, with contests from the Junior, Youth, Lecturer, and Communication Departments. (A legislative department contest will also be added shortly.) This Guide is available on the Program Books and Information Page of the MSG Website in the National Section.
Is Your โElevator Pitchโ Helping You?
by Phil Vonada, National Grange Communications Director
An elevator pitch is your 30-second โcanned speechโ or โstump speechโ to give perspective members or curious minds a taste of who we are as an Order and organization. Elevator pitches are used with people or businesses all the time, whether you know it or not – theyโre used when trying to court a donor to your fundraiser, when working at a membership booth or food stand at a fair or festival, or when riding an actual elevator at the National Grange Convention (I know I personally had an actual elevator pitch in Wichita last year!)
The goals of your elevator pitch should be to (a) to ignite and encourage further conversation about the aims and mission of the Grange and your Grange in particular and (b) to let the other person do some research on their own.
But what does your elevator pitch sound like?
Does it start with โWell, in 1867, Oliver Hudson Kelley was sent to the southโฆโ? Or maybe โThe Grange is a farmerโs organizationโฆ?” A lot has changed since then! While we hold onto our roots as an agricultural organization, we are also known as an advocacy and community service organization for all of rural America.
Letโs start with the Grangeโs mission statement: The Grange strengthens individuals, families and communities through grassroots action, service, education, advocacy and agriculture awareness.
And then tailor it for your own Grange – State, Pomona, or Local.
I also note that we are the nationโs oldest agricultural fraternal organization. My pitch sounds something like this: โThe Grange is Americaโs oldest and foremost agricultural and rural service organization, focused on supporting and advocating for rural America in nearly 1,500 communities nationwide. At Penns Valley Grange, we believe in supporting our community through direct action and service that builds up families.โ
Your elevator pitch shouldnโt be a membership pitch. Thereโs no โโฆ and hereโs why you should joinโ at the end, but rather the pitch is the seed that will hopefully take root and grow – through a partnership or an eventual membership.
I encourage Granges to take time to work with one another to build their elevator pitches – and I look forward to hearing them!
Gimme a “G!” — Just make sure it’s capitalized!
“Grange” is a proper noun and it should always be capitalized!
A Quarter’s Worth
The next deadline for A Quarterโs Worth submissions is November 1st. Please send these to Ann Bercher (lecturer@nationalgrange.org). (A Quarter’s Worth is the National Grange Lecturer’s Newsletter.)
New Member Recognition in Good Day Magazine
Want to see your new members recognized in Good Day Magazine? Anyone who has not been recognized as a new member in the past year can be included. Use this link to share the news. The deadlines for the next issue is November 30, 2022
National Grange Convention
156th National Grange Convention will be held at the Nugget Casino Resort in Sparks, Nevada, from November 15-19, 2022. Visit the National Grange Website for information and to register.
National Grange Heirloom Program
Grange Heirlooms are snippets from the lessons of the Grange as taught in the Ritual and Declaration of Purposes. Please share โsuccess storiesโ about the use of the program with us, or if you come up with other innovative ways to incorporate the Program in your Granges. Information and materials are now available on the National Grange Website.
“Notes from National” is based on a monthly email received from the National Grange Communications Department.
156th National Grange Session is scheduled for November 15-19, 2022 in Sparks, NV
Use the icons below to share this Grange Heirloom on social media and help others understand what the Grange stands for! If this heirloom has a particular meaning for you, click the responses link at the top right and share your comment with us!
Grange Heirlooms are snippets from the lessons of the Grange as taught in the Rituals and Declaration of Purposes.
For additional information and resources regarding the Heirloom Program, visit the Heirloom Resource Page on the Maine State Grange Website.
โLet me caution you, that you keep the eye of the mind open among your members. Encourage improvement; remember that Natureโs motto is โonward.โ She never goes backward.โ
From the Installing Masterโs Charge to Masters
The installing officerโs charge to the masters being installed is one of the longer ones. As a result, itโs easy to stop listening. As with the Grange Ritual in general, there is much to learn.
Not every member is destined to hold the office of master, but every member could benefit from what masters are taught during the installation ceremony. Iโve chosen just a few sentences for consideration.
โKeep the eye of the mind openโฆโย is a skill that can be developed. Here, we are talking about being observant of our members. Thatโs consistent with being a fraternal organization. By most definitions, a fraternalย organizationย is a social club or membership organization formed around a common bond, ideology, or personal background. We might do well to consider how strong that bond is. But one of the things that makes it stronger is โkeeping the eye of the mind openโ or, in other words, โkeeping an eye on each other.โ Can you answer these questions?
Who, now, is the happiest person in your Grange?
Who, now, is the most discouraged person in your Grange?
You get the idea, right?
โEncourage improvement.โ I suspect this is a two-word sentence by design because it allows us to be broad in our thinking. What do we want to improve? This is not subtractive thinking designed to get us focused on whatโs wrong. Itโs opportunity thinking. What can we make better? Iโve thought it would be fun (a lecturerโs program, maybe) to spend some time during a meeting asking everyone to identify one thing relative to the Grange he or she could improve. It doesnโt have to be monumental. Does the fridge need cleaning?
โNatureโs motto is โonward.โโ Sometimes I think the Grange is stuck in the fall season and has become focused on declining. One of the saddest emails Iโve read recently included, โOur Grange seems to be falling apartโฆ how can I bring back the excitement that I still feel in our Grange?โ Itโs a simple but not easy question to answer. โEncourage improvement and remember that Natureโs motto is onward.โ Nature uses fall and winter to her advantage. We often think of winter as a time for rest. In Maine, we may well โhunker down.โ But just as sure as winter arrives, so does spring together with an awaking and a time for growth and blooming.
โYou may encounter difficulties. Overcome them, remembering that difficulties are but opportunities to test our abilities. As Master of this Grange, your fellow laborers will look to you to devise work. A judicious Master will use due care that no time is lost in labor. Let all labor and all time tend toward improvement. Your laborers will come in contact with their minds; if they are left uncultivated, if neglect is allowed, the moral weed crop will baffle and torment you.โ
Any degree or ritual quotations are from the forty-sixth edition of the 2013 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 TraditionsโCelebrating the Grange Way of Life” can be found at http://abbotvillagepress.com,on Mr. Boomsma’s Amazon Author Page, or by contacting the author.
Use the icons below to share this Grange Heirloom on social media and help others understand what the Grange stands for! If this heirloom has a particular meaning for you, click the responses link at the top right and share your comment with us!
Grange Heirlooms are snippets from the lessons of the Grange as taught in the Rituals and Declaration of Purposes.
For additional information and resources regarding the Heirloom Program, visit the Heirloom Resource Page on the Maine State Grange Website.