The Ancient Order of Free Gardeners is of Scottish origin, with the earliest surviving record being the Minute of a Lodge of Free Gardeners held in Haddington, East Lothian, dated the 16th of August 1676. This document establishes the Order as one of Scotland’s oldest recorded fraternal and mutual-aid traditions.
The earliest Lodges were operative in nature, composed primarily of gardeners employed on large estates and country houses. During this period, estate gardening was both a skilled and highly valued profession. Plants, horticultural knowledge, and even gardeners themselves were frequently imported from the European continent, contributing to the exchange of ideas and practices.
Within these early Lodges, members provided support for one another in times of sickness or hardship and ensured care for the families of deceased brethren. In this respect, the Free Gardeners functioned as an early form of mutual aid and social welfare organization.
Over time, these operative Lodges gradually admitted non-operative members, adopting a structure similar to other fraternal organizations of the period. By the nineteenth century, membership expanded significantly, and thousands of Lodges were established throughout Scotland and beyond.
This era preceded the modern Welfare State, and the Order functioned largely as a Friendly Society, providing financial assistance, social security, and communal support to its members. These Friendly Societies flourished until 1946, when the creation of the Welfare State in the United Kingdom rendered many such organizations unnecessary. As a result, the majority of Free Gardeners’ Lodges closed, and by the mid-1950s the Order was largely dormant.
A revival of the Free Gardeners tradition began in 2002 with the formation of a small number of independent Lodges seeking to preserve and restore the historic Order. Among these was Ayrshire Bluebell Lodge No. 7, instituted in November 2003. Further developments followed in Scotland and England, contributing to a gradual reawakening of the tradition.
On the 20th of March 2024, The Rose of England Lodge consecrated the Wild Mandrakes of Montana Lodge No. 1 in the United States of America. This event marked the beginning of a new phase in the international restoration of the Order.
Subsequently, Wild Mandrakes Lodge formed the Great Blue Aster Lodge No. 2 in New York on the 13th of July 2024, followed by the creation of Orange Blossom Lodge No. 3 in Florida on the 2nd of August 2024. These Lodges united to form a confederation, establishing the foundation of what would become the International Confederation of the Ancient Free Gardeners of Scotland.
As 2024 progressed, requests for additional Free Gardeners’ Lodges were received from various regions. With the adoption of the settled name International Confederation of the Ancient Free Gardeners of Scotland (ICAFGS), additional Lodges were created, including Cantuta Lodge No. 4 in Bolivia on the 11th of November 2024 and Respectable Arbol de Acacias Lodge No. 5 in Colombia on the 25th of November 2024.
Meadowsweet Lodge No. 6 (Spain) was subsequently consecrated on the 17th of December 2025, establishing the Confederation’s warranted presence in Spain under constitutional authority.
During this period, a Lodge operating in the Philippines under the designation Lodge No. 4 was reviewed by the Confederation. Following findings of unauthorized activities conducted under its then Worthy Master, that Lodge was constitutionally absorbed into Orange Blossom Lodge No. 3 in Florida, United States.
By authority of the Most Worthy Grand Master Gardener, Angel L. Guerra, President of the International Confederation of the Ancient Free Gardeners of Scotland 1676 | 2024™, Orange Blossom Lodge formally adopted the historic title Ancient Fleur de Lys Lodge while retaining its original number as Lodge No. 3.
This action ensured continuity, constitutional integrity, and the preservation of the Confederation’s jurisdictional order.
In addition to warranted and fully constituted Lodges, the Confederation recognizes the following Lodges as operating under dispensation (public listing by name and location only):
No member names are published on this page. This history page exists for continuity, public clarity, and institutional record.