Supreme Council Charities
32° Masonic Learning Centers
for Children, Inc.
The newest charity was established in 1994 to provide dyslexic children
with specialized one-on-one tutoring to enable them to cope with their
deficit in reading and writing. While dyslexia cannot be cured, it can
be treated. The 32° Masonic Learning Centers for Children are situated
throughout the 15-state jurisdiction. At the Valley of Fort Wayne, our
new center is located on the 2nd and 3rd floors of the Scottish Rite
Center.
Students are accepted into the learning centers program at no charge
to their parents or to any schools from which they are referred. Applicants
are not judged on the basis of economic status, race, religion or Masonic
affiliation.

New Scottish Rite
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information.
Leon M. Abbott Scholarships
In 1922, a college scholarship program was inaugurated with an initial
appropriation from Supreme Council funds. In 1932, Leon M. Abbott bequeathed
additional funds to establish an Education and Charity Fund. The first
Abbott scholarship was not awarded until 1951, when the fund reached
the financial goal set by Abbott.
For many years, the scholarships were presented to journalism students
at selected universities throughout the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction.
In 1984, it was voted to expand the scholarship program by awarding
grants to children and grandchildren of Scottish Rite members and to
young people active in the youth groups affiliated with the Masonic
fraternity. The first academic year was 1985-86, when the funds were
allocated for 68 scholarships. As the allocation increased, the number
of recipients has grown.
Schizophrenia Research
In 1934, the Scottish Rite Supreme Council appropriated funds for research
into the causes and potential cures for schizophrenia. At the time,
the disease was known as demential praecox. The funds were directed
through the National Committee for Mental Hygiene and later through
the National Association for Mental Health.
In 1970, administrative duties for the Scottish Rite Schizophrenia
Research Program were handled by a Supreme Council committee. A professional
advisory committee reviewed annually a substantial number of proposals
and recommended the recipients of the research grants. By 1998, the
emphasis shifted to fellowships presented to postgraduate students preparing
dissertations in fields pertinent to discovering a cure for schizophrenia.
A select group of universities throughout the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction
choose the recipients.
National Heritage Museum
Opened in 1975 as a bicentennial gift to the nation from the 32°
Scottish Rite Masons, the National Heritage Museum provides changing
exhibits of Americana, interspersing the role of the fraternity in American
life. The facility is located in Lexington, Massachusetts adjacent to
the Supreme Council headquarters and is open to the public seven days
a week with no admission charge.
In addition to the exhibition galleries, the building also contains
an extensive Masonic library and a large collection of fraternal paraphernalia.
Traveling exhibits expand the museum's scope to reach those living at
a distance.