Tribute to: W. Bro Bill Frost TD (Major: R.E.M.E: Retd) |
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On a personal level W. Bro Bill Frost and I were close | ![]() |
friends for more than 40 years, we even went to the | |
same school, but we didn’t know each other at that | |
time. | |
Bill had to retire from work when he was engineering | |
manager at Jacobs biscuits and I know that he was | |
very well thought of by Jacobs during his time there. | |
He became a freemason before I did and it was Bill | |
that introduced me to the craft in Dormer Lodge. It | |
should also be remembered that he did great service | |
in Royal Arch Masonry, becoming “Z” several times. | |
He joined Clarence lodge of MMM in March 2003; |
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I can’t believe that more than 9 years have passed | |
since then. | |
When a person becomes a freemason, they join an | W.Bro. Bill Frost, T.D. |
organisation which is diverse, some rich, some poor, | 6th January 1949 ~ 3rd October 2012 |
and lots in between. | |
We aspire to give comfort to those not as fortunate as us, “those on the lowest spoke on fortunes wheel”, | |
and that is what Bill did. Bill did almost of all the various jobs in Dormer lodge, becoming Worshipful | |
Master in 1996, and again in 2004. | |
When Bill left the Masters chair in 1996, he became lodge almoner and continued his almoner work through | |
his second mastership. He also took on the job of Treasurer in Clarence lodge, and did a splendid job. He | |
became Master of Clarence in 2010, and did a great job of that too. | |
In addition to his duties connected to Dormer Lodge and Clarence Mark, he did a lot of work for the friends | |
of Tithebarn care home in Crosby, which is his nominated charity for donations after his death. His work for | |
people who needed help was tireless, whether it was somebody who had fallen on hard times, or one of our | |
widows needing support. | |
This was all the more remarkable when you consider that Bill couldn’t walk. I never heard him complain | |
about it once. It goes almost without saying that the support of his wife Pauline was vital to his work. Bill | |
was a proactive almoner, and rooted out people who needed assistance; he didn’t wait for people to | |
approach him. Whatever was needed, it was always done with good humour, but if the bureaucrats got in | |
the way of a just cause, they could look out. | |
Bill and Pauline were also foster career's, and they touched the lives of many, Indeed, one of their sons | |
was a looked after child that they adopted. | |
It was only Bill’s rapidly declining health that made him resign from Freemasonry, it was a blow for him, he | |
was a Mason through and through. | |
Worshipful Brother Bill Frost will be greatly missed, not only by his family, but by me personally, and of | |
course his all his friends, whether they be freemasons or not. | |
He lived respected and died regretted. |
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Alan Hughes 3/12/12 | |
Clarence Lodge of MMM 447 | |
This tribute was delivered in Clarence Lodge MMM, on the 3rd December 2012 by Alan Hughes | |
The report on that meeting can be viewed on this link. | |