Georgia Child Identification Program (CHIP)
A parent’s worst nightmare is the disappearance of a child. Statistics demonstrate that a child is reported missing in the U.S. alone every 43 seconds. With well over one million children being reported missing each year in the U.S., child identification programs are needed to assist authorities in finding and returning children to their homes. The Georgia Freemasons are committed to helping address this problem.
Freemasons have long been committed to children and families through our scholarship and student assistance programs, children’s learning centers, Masonic Homes for Children, and sponsorship of various youth groups. In 2007, the Georgia Freemasons launched pioneered a groundbreaking child identification program called the Georgia Child Identification Program (GA CHIP). Whereas many other child identification programs consist of a single photo and fingerprinting, GA CHIP adds video interviews and dental imprints (“toothprints”). Toothprints is a technique developed by David Tesini, a Massachusetts children’s dentist, and incorporated into GA CHIP by Dr. David Harte, a Massachusetts Freemason. These additions make GA CHIP the most comprehensive child identification program available in the United States; and all at absolutely no cost to the children or their families.
GA CHIP is designed to provide families a measure of protection against the ever-increasing threat of missing children and offer important tools to assist in the speedy and safe recovery of a missing child. Through the benevolence of the Grand Lodge of Georgia and its membership, we are pleased to present this service free of charge to children and their families and are committed to offering GA CHIP on an ongoing basis.
Georgia Masonic Home for Children
“The Heart of Georgia Masonry”… Our Children’s Home
Overlooking the Ocmulgee River in the city of Macon (Bibb County), Georgia is one of the most beautiful buildings in the entire state of Georgia.
During the 1902 session of the Grand Lodge of Georgia, construction plans were approved and bids accepted for the erection of the Masonic Home on the one hundred acres of land donated to the Grand Lodge of Georgia by the late Senator Augustas O. Bacon.
Brother Max Meyerhardt, Grand Master of Masons in Georgia, laid the cornerstone in July, 1903 and construction of the Home was finally completed in 1904 at a total cost of $22,232.00. The home was dedicated during the 1904 session of the Grand Lodge of Georgia and the first residents, consisting of adults as well as children, were accepted in 1905.
In the 1920s, more than five hundred additional acres of land were purchased by the Grand Lodge at a cost of $33,000.00. This additional land was used to produce food, and to pasture cattle for milk and beef for the residents of the home. In 1929 the home housed and cared for 207 children, the most for any year before or since.
The Shellman’s Bluff camp property was acquired by the Children’s Home Board of Trustees in 1938.
The decision to accept children of non-Masonic parents was made during the 1942 Grand Lodge session.
The Masonic Home is governed by an elected board of trustees consisting of 12 Master Masons, one from each of the 12 Masonic districts of Georgia. These 12, together with the Grand Master, the Deputy Grand Master, and the Senior Grand Warden, who serve as ex officio members of the board, comprise the governing body of the Children’s Home. Day-to-day home operations of the home are managed by a full-time superintendent.