The Colonel's Rough Ashlar: How Harland Sanders Built KFC with Temper, Grit & Masonic Steel Podcast By  cover art

The Colonel's Rough Ashlar: How Harland Sanders Built KFC with Temper, Grit & Masonic Steel

The Colonel's Rough Ashlar: How Harland Sanders Built KFC with Temper, Grit & Masonic Steel

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What if the finger-lickin' good icon behind a global fried chicken empire was a hot-tempered, gun-slinging, twice-married Freemason who started franchising at 65 with nothing but a pressure cooker, a Social Security check, and over 1,000 rejections?

In this no-BS episode of The Masonic Files, we skip the white suit legend and grab the working tools. Colonel Harland Sanders dropped out in 7th grade, lost jobs in fistfights, survived a deadly roadside shootout over gas station signs, navigated affairs and rocky marriages, then perfected 11 herbs & spices under pressure — literally.

From Indiana farm kid to Kentucky café owner to global icon, Sanders lived the Masonic journey: knocking off rough edges with relentless hard work, integrity, and brotherly mentorship (including guiding a young Dave Thomas toward Wendy's). He was initiated in 1917, raised a Master Mason in 1919, later affiliated in Corbin, and rose to 33° Scottish Rite — all while his bullheaded passions tested every compass and square.

This isn't a sanitized saint story. It's the real labor of a flawed brother who proved you're never too old, too broke, or too many knock-downs to build something that feeds millions and endures.

Key moments:

  • The 1931 Corbin shootout that nearly ended everything
  • Pressure-cooker experiments that changed fast food forever
  • Hitting the road at 65 with $105/month
  • Quiet Masonic philanthropy and mentorship

If you're grinding through setbacks, rejections, or your own rough edges — this one's for you.

Want more unfiltered Masonic stories of brothers who lived the obligation instead of just reciting it? Dive deeper, access exclusive files, resources, and the full archive at https://kingsolomonspassport.com

Subscribe, share with your lodge brothers, and never lay down your tools.

Stay on the square. Stay relentless.The Masonic Files

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