Metropolitan Grand Lodge of London
Freemasons’ Lodges have been meeting in London since the early 1700s. On 24th June 1717, four London Lodges met at the Goose and Gridiron alehouse in St Paul’s Churchyard to form the Grand Lodge of England, thereby establishing the first governing body for Freemasonry.
Initially, the jurisdiction of
Grand Lodge was limited to Lodges meeting in London, specifically an
area within 10 miles of Charing Cross. Within a few years, Lodges
outside London were also acknowledging the authority of Grand Lodge.
However, it was the members of London Lodges who, attending Grand Lodge
meetings in greatest numbers, played such a prominent role in its
affairs.
Freemasonry expanded across England
and Wales and developed an administrative structure through Provinces
(essentially the historic county shires). London Freemasonry remained
outside the Provincial structure and was administered by the Grand
Secretary’s office. Between 1851 and 1911 the population within the
10-mile radius increased from 2.5 million to over 7 million and
Freemasonry had to deal with this rapid growth. Many new London Lodges
were formed. A larger building was required and the modern Freemasons’
Hall was built in Great Queen Street as a memorial to those who
Freemasons who had died in the First World War. It is the home of
Freemasonry in England and Wales (see www.ugle.org.uk).
In 1971 the 10-mile radius was reduced to five miles; Lodges in the
band between five and 10 miles opted either to remain a London Lodge or
transfer to the relevant Province.
In 1767-8 a plan to establish a Province
of London was considered but rejected after objections were raised by
London Lodges and a review in 1913-14 included the proposal to create 10
Metropolitan Grand Lodges: that plan was shelved when war broke out in
1914. Despite subsequent discussions about the administration of London
Lodges by the Grand Secretary’s office it was only in the late 1990s
that the Grand Master (HRH Duke of Kent) set up a formal review.
The outcome was the formation of
Metropolitan Grand Lodge (MetGL) on 1 October 2003, as an independent
administrative body under a Metropolitan Grand Master. It supports
Freemasonry in London in a similar way that the various Provincial Grand
Lodges support Lodges elsewhere in England and Wales. Metropolitan
Grand Lodge has over 1,400 constituent Lodges comprising nearly 40,000
members; the offices are situated in Freemasons’ Hall, Great Queen
Street, London which is also the home of the United Grand Lodge of
England.