Link to the UGLE website
Link to the PGLC website
“The Forget-
As early as the year 1934, soon after Hitler's rise to power, it became apparent
that Freemasonry was in danger. In the same year, the German Grand Lodge of the Sun
in Bayreuth (one of the pre-
Throughout the entire Nazi era a little blue flower in a lapel marked a Brother. In the Concentration Camps and in the cities a little blue Forget Me Not distinguished the lapels of those who refused to allow the Light of Masonry to be extinguished.
In 1947, when the Grand Lodge of the Sun was reopened in Batyreuth by Past Grand
Master Beyer. A little blue pin, in the shape of a Forget Me Not, was proposed and
adopted as the official emblem of the first annual convention of those who had survived
the bitter years of semi-
At the first Annual Convent of the United Grand Lodges of Germany in 1948. The pin
was adopted as an official Masonic emblem honouring those valiant Brethren who carried
their work on under adverse conditions. Thus did a simple flower blossom forth into
a meaningful emblem of the Fraternity and became perhaps the most widely worn pin
among Freemasons in Germany. In many Lodges, the Forget-