AN EPIC DELIVERY – LONDON MASONS DELIVER 37 600 FACE VISORS

W Bro Tony Shepherd SLGR MetDepGDC describes this epic delivery.

Back in the middle of April 2020, barely a month into the Masonic Suspension and
the nationwide social Lockdown, a time when the Thursday Evening 8pm Clap for NHS Workers was the highlight of our collective week, Phase One of the joint UGLE / MCF response to the Coronavirus Pandemic was launched.

This was to address the rapidly emerging needs of huge swathes of our communities in terms of mental health, personal isolation, the lack of basic day-to-day living essentials and the urgent and pressing need for a whole range of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE).

In response, Assistant Metropolitan Grand Master VW Bro Andrew Manasseh PGSwdB assembled a London COVID- 19 Response group (LCRG) to deliver on a variety of initiatives including: to purchase and deliver 115 Samsung Galaxy tablets for the Intensive Care Units of twenty four London hospitals (to enable patients to communicate with relatives), £25,000 for West London Masonic Centre to cook and deliver 800 meals per week to local, vulnerable and disadvantaged people and £20,000 to the Felix Project and City Harvest London.

With the growing awareness that PPE would play a vital role in helping to keep safe the army of frontline clinical workers – doctors, nurses, care workers in hospitals, care homes, nursing homes and hospices – one of the boldest initiatives of the LCRG was devised, in conjunction with the Provinces of Surrey, Sussex, East & West Kent to commission, manufacture and ship a vast quantity of face visors from China to help protect these key workers.

A team of Metropolitan Deputy Grand Directors of Ceremonies were tasked with identifying needy establishments within the capital who were struggling to source protective face visors and then co- ordinate and manage the delivery of the visors. It was agreed with Bro Andrew that London hospital intensive care units, hospices and non-profit care homes would be contacted once the visors were on British soil and definitive lists were compiled for this purpose.

Members of both the Metropolitan Grand Stewards Lodge and Chapter were approached to assist in this endeavour and a small army of volunteers was assembled to make calls to the potential recipients or personally deliver the visors. Other London brethren, who learned of the initiative, also volunteered their time.

 

Once the visors were manufactured and boxed, there followed a frantic fortnight of air cargo slots being gazumped or being missed due to frantic and fever-pitch activity on the ground in China, so it was quickly accepted that the most reliable method of delivery would be by sea and cargo space on a ship was secured.

The boxes were loaded onto a cargo ship at the Port of Shanghai and the visors travelled 11,866 nautical miles on a 49- day sea journey on board the proverbial ‘Slow boat from China’.

London’s 36,700 visors (at a cost of 95p each) eventually arrived at Freemasons’ Hall in the middle of July and were stored, by kind permission of UGLE, in the anteroom of the Gallery Suite on the ground floor. A total of 183 boxes, each containing 200 visors with a combined gross weight of over thirteen tonnes.

 

By the time, the visors were ready for delivery, London hospital ICUs had confirmed they had enough PPE, but London hospices and non-profit care homes were still reporting chronic shortages. Thirty London brethren then began the mammoth task of telephoning each one of the 355 identified potential recipients to establish if they had a need for the visors, and if they did, to arrange delivery.

Sixteen volunteer drivers, again all London Masons, were provided with a dispatch list, designed where possible to incorporate destinations within a few miles radius of where they lived. Each driver was responsible for arranging suitable delivery dates and times with his recipients. Each volunteer driver was personally met at FMH – in a socially distanced manner – by a member of the MetDepGDC team, thanked for their time and efforts and handed their boxes. Many of the deliveries were undertaken during the punishing heat and humidity of the mid-summer heatwave, but despite this, every recipient that requested visors received their allocation.

The hugely successful appeals for the London Air Ambulance, the Cyberknife, the London Ambulance Rapid Response Vehicles and the most recent London Fire Brigade Arial Platforms appeal provided essential hardware and technology to enable London’ s frontline workers to help keep us safe. The visor initiative went one step further by providing personal protection for the frontline workers themselves, something greatly appreciated by them, as they continue to work in the most challenging of environments and circumstances.

 

From a personal point of view, it was an incredible and rewarding experience to be a cog within a wheel of so many moving parts, driven entirely by the dedication, energy and commitment of London Freemasons. As volunteers, we came together as friends and brethren as part of the wider London Masonic family and I know I speak on behalf of all the volunteers when I say it was more of a privilege than a duty to be involved in this wonderful initiative.

In the midst of the scary, changeable and unprecedented times that currently exist, the core values of Freemasonry were called upon and a small army of London Freemasons modestly heeded the call on behalf of every single London Brother, Companion, Lodge and Chapter.


Some of the wonderful responses we’ve had from our recipients:


“We are extremely grateful for the London Freemasons’ generous donation of 1,000 protective visors. Their support has been a great help to our efforts in caring for the Chelsea Pensioners, and keeping our staff safe whilst they carry out their duties.”

Susan Williams – Matron, Royal Hospital Chelsea (Chelsea Pensioners)

“Thank you so much for these high-quality visors. Most appreciated!!! It’s good to know that London Freemasons are supporting the London care homes sector. It really makes a difference and makes us feel that people in the community really do care.”
Tiny Sissau, Ambient Care Home, Harrow

“Thank you so much to London Freemasons for such a generous donation of 800 face visors. We took a call during the summer offering us the visors at a time when we most needed them. They have been gratefully received, making a huge difference to all our staff, and enabling them to safely carry out our vital work. We really appreciated one of the Freemason volunteers personally delivering them, it made us feel particularly valued. ”
Adila Ahmed, Haven House Children’s Hospice, Waltham Forest

“The Visors generously donated by the London Freemasons have ensured the Hospice has been able to continue to provide care to the Patients in our care, during this pandemic.”
Dawn Poon, Saint Francis Hospice, Havering

 


And some of the thoughts from our drivers:

“I thoroughly enjoyed being a part of this project. One of the care homes I delivered to had just run out of visors the day before and were so grateful to receive new ones. I was asked where they had come from and I explained about some of the projects that London Freemasons work on. They were very impressed and seemed genuinely touched that we had helped them like this.”

Andy Cooper

“It was a real privilege for me, as a London Mason to be so actively involved in personally delivering protective items to the key workers that keep us all safe: clinical workers who not only needed the face visors, but were so grateful to receive them.”

Daniel Cohen

“Such a rewarding project to be involved in. Being able to personally deliver an allocation of visor boxes to Royal Hospital Chelsea where I have visited on a many of occasions over the past 20 years. This is also the home to a number of ‘Scarlet Tunic’ Brethren who I Know well. The care homes and hospices were thrilled to receive my boxes of visors and it felt like an honour to personally deliver them on behalf of all London Freemasons.”

Liam Nammock

“I have been moved and humbled delivering these important visors, so needed by these establishments. I was privileged to meet with some of their senior management and see in their faces the gratitude and appreciation of these gifts from us. It has been a worthy project that I’ve been proud to be involved with and would love to do it all over again.”
Philip Salama

“I found the Care Homes and Hospice that I called and delivered to extremely grateful that we as an organisation, had taken the time to consider their needs during the crisis! It was also great that I could be involved in promoting the charitable side of Freemasonry!”
Andrew Graham

“Thrilled to have been a part of this great initiative by helping to keep those on the front line safe and a real privilege to be in a position to personally deliver the visors to a few different destinations.”
James Stroud

“What an absolute privilege it’ s been to be part of such a fantastic initiative and because the sites receiving the visors were smaller, more independent establishments, they were absolutely thrilled to receive the visors.”
David Varney

“Personally, I found as much pleasure in delivering the visors as the recipients did in receiving them. It made giving up just a day of my time completely worthwhile.”

Naftali Ayieko

“I rang a number of care homes to gauge their interest in receiving face visors and they were all very friendly and appreciative, with most happily accepting the offer. Some shared stories of what it is like working in care homes with the Covid-19 risk whilst keeping their care personal. One nurse recounted how she had worked in one of our Masonic care homes and what a lovely place it was for both residents and staff. It was all great to hear. I then delivered face visors to care homes in south west London and again they were all very friendly and grateful.”

Ian Wadie

 

    

   

   

With thanks to:

Tes Adamou
Mark Bingham
Andrew Graham
Nick Jenkins
Liam Nammock
James Stroud
Gus Addow
Simon Chen
Kevin Havlin
Andrew Johnson
Adam Parry
Doug Syrett
Michael Aminzade
Daniel Cohen
Paul Hicks
George Lawrence
Jaimin Patel
Ian Tait
Iain Wadie
Naftali Ayieko
Andy Cooper
Kevin Howard
Thomas Matthias
Philip Salama
Lee Thomas
Simon White
Ron Bain
Scott Dunn
Neil Hutchings
Stuart McColm
Gur Samuel
Tony Traversh
Simon Bennett
Stuart Field
James Jarvis
James Milne
Tim Spriggs
David Varney



This article is part of the Arena Magazine, Issue 42 October 2020 edition.
Arena Magazine is the official magazine of the London Freemasons – Metropolitan Grand Lodge and Metropolitan Grand Chapter of London.

Read more articles in the Arena Issue 42.